The 10th day of action in the 2023 World Series of Poker saw Isaac Haxton finally end his WSOP hoodoo as he captured his first bracelet and in doing so, topped the $25,000 High Roller for $1.7 million in prize money. Elsewhere, there were another half dozen events as gold was won and final tables were set at the Horseshoe Las Vegas and Paris casinos.
Haxton Takes the Title as Elias Goes Close
The final day of Event #16, the $25,000-entry High Roller saw two players reach the final three who might well have topped the ‘Best Never to Win a Bracelet’ list in Isaac Haxton and Darren Elias. When the dust settled, Elias lost out luck-wise and Haxton was the hero as the ‘Year of Isaac’ continued in stunning fashion at the final table.
When the final table got underway, there were eight players still in the hunt for final table gold, but just before a scheduled dinner break, that number became seven. Joao Vieira was short when he called with in the big blind. The aggressor in the hand, Brian Rast in the small blind, had moved all-in pre-flop with and the board favored the American, coming as it did to send the Portuguese player home with $155,037.
Despite that win, the dinner break was only respite for Rast, as he followed his repast with an exit in seventh for $202,532. All-in with , he lost to Lewis Spencer’s when the latter hit a five on the flop. Rast was hardly at the rail before another fell, Frank Funaro doubling up once but swiftly then losing out to Spencer too to cash for $270,238 in sixth place.
The overnight chip leader in the event, Roman Hrabec, busted next in fifth place for a score of $368,134. His couldn’t hit more than a jack against Darren Elias’ and the latter went one step closer to taking his own WSOP monkey off his back. Spencer fell next, cashing for $511,782 in fourth place when Elia’s pocket tens were too good for Spencer’s and three-handed poker looked to be anyone’s to profit from.
Elias led, with as many chips as his two combined at one point, but Haxton won a flip to double through his rival for a debut bracelet and on such moments do poker dreams die. Elias got it in extremely good soon in his final hand, but was no good against Ryan O’Donnell’s after a cruel board of gave the British player a Broadway straight on the river.
Elias was crushed, out for a little over $725,000, but there was still the matter of a debut bracelet to be won, and Haxton seized his chance. Working his way into a strong lead from having a slim advantage going into heads-up play, Haxton’s beat O’Donnell’s , though not without one last twist. The money was all-in pre and the flop was one to give O’Donnell hope of another miraculous three-outer recovery, coming . The turn of a [ was blank, but the river gave Haxton the superior pair and with it the first WSOP bracelet of an incredible poker career.
The ’Year of Isaac’ goes on.
WSOP 2023 Event #16 $25,000 High Roller Results: |
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Place | Player | Country | Prize |
1st | Isaac Haxton | United States | $1,698,215 |
2nd | Ryan O’Donnell | United Kingdom | $1,049,577 |
3rd | Darren Elias | United States | $725,790 |
4th | Lewis Spencer | United Kingdom | $511,782 |
5th | Roman Hrabec | Czechia | $368,134 |
6th | Frank Funaro | United States | $270,238 |
7th | Brian Rast | United States | $202,532 |
8th | Joao Vieira | Portugal | $155,037 |
Brazilian Rail Cheers Rafael Reis to Glory in Six-Max
The Brazilian player Rafael Reis also won his first-ever WSOP bracelet as he took over from overnight chip leader Sarah Herzali to claim gold in Event #15, the $1,500-entry No Limit Hold’em Six-Max event. The final day began with the French player Herzali in control, but her advantage ebbed away across a frustrating day at the felt for her and all fans of female poker players. No bracelets from 15 events seems an unjust return for some superb play from female players so far, and Herzali was unlucky to lose out.
Heads-Up was almost a battle of rails as much as it was between Reis and his Spanish challenger Daniel Barriocanal. At one point, Reis, led by his rail’s reaction, thought he had hit a straight to win, but it was a misread and he had to refocus, calling it “Coming back to Narnia from the WSOP”. Eventually, the win was real and the Brazilian rail went crazy, perhaps not for the last time this World Series.
WSOP 2023 Event #15 $1,500 NLHE Six-Max Results: |
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Place | Player | Country | Prize |
1st | Rafael Reis | Brazil | $465,501 |
2nd | Daniel Barriocanal | Spain | $287,679 |
3rd | Sarah Herzali | France | $207,720 |
4th | Nikolaos Angelou | Greece | $151,559 |
5th | John Monnette | United States | $111,755 |
6th | Grant Wang | United States | $83,289 |
Collopy Ends Epic Final Battle with Third Bracelet
Jim Collopy took four hours to win his third WSOP bracelet in the small hours of a dying Vegas night as he bettered Nick Kost in an all-American fight for gold in Sin City. At a final table that included both chip leaders from Day 2, Kyle Cartwright (7th for $27,986) and Kyle Burnside (3rd for $85,977), Collopy and Kost went at it after the experienced James Obst had bowed out in 5th for $47,838.
Heads-up was not for the faint-hearted, and Collopy referenced his previous heads-up, which had been one of the longest in WSOP history. Kost told his rail that fact and that he was “going nowhere either”, which pre-empted the end as if by magic. Kost slunk, exhausted, to his rail $117,404 better off, but Collopy had the crown to go with a need for his head to hit the bed. That and the top prize of $162,266.
WSOP 2023 Event #17 $1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Results: |
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Place | Player | Country | Prize |
1st | Jim Collopy | United States | $162,266 |
2nd | Nick Kost | United States | $117,404 |
3rd | Kyle Burnside | United States | $85,977 |
4th | Qinghai Pan | United States | $63,737 |
5th | James Obst | Australia | $47,838 |
6th | Aubrey Gilbert | United States | $36,358 |
7th | Kyle Cartwright | United States | $27,986 |
Gladiators Ready as Day 1b Books Another 4,500
An incredible day of poker saw 4,571 players take on the $300 buy-in Gladiators of Poker Event, also known as Event #18. With Justin Arnwine (3,080,000) Matthew Krieger (2,760,000) and Bernard Muhire (2,485,000) taking the podium places, only 151 players remained in the tournament after the day closed, with 687 players making the money.
WSOP 2023 Event #18 $300 Gladiators of Poker Leaderboard: |
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Place | Player | Country | Chips |
1st | Justin Arnwine | United States | 3,080,000 |
2nd | Matthew Krieger | United States | 2,760,000 |
3rd | Bernard Muhire | United States | 2,485,000 |
4th | Handrianto Minderman | United States | 2,265,000 |
5th | Dylon Chafin | United States | 2,245,000 |
6th | David Dunlap | United States | 2,230,000 |
7th | Lee Johnson | United States | 2,145,000 |
8th | Mateusz Moolhuizen | Netherlands | 2,070,000 |
9th | Weston Pring | Canada | 2,060,000 |
10th | Henry Theiling | United States | 2,030,000 |
Trio of Bracelet Winners Remain in Hunt for Gold
Three former WSOP winners remain in the chase for WSOP victory in Event #19, the $2,500-entry Freezeout event. Frenchman Alexandre Reard (4.8 million), Argentina’s Andres Korn (4.76m) and British poker legend Niall Farrell (1.7m) all remain on the lookout for their second bracelet, but it is the Chinese player Qiang Xu (7,760,000) who has a massive lead going into Day 2 with a top prize of over $435,000 up for grabs.
WSOP 2023 Event #19 $2,500 NLHE Freezeout Leaderboard: |
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Place | Player | Country | Chips |
1st | Qiang Xu | China | 7,760,000 |
2nd | Alexandre Reard | France | 4,800,000 |
3rd | Andres Korn | Argentina | 4,760,000 |
4th | Girish Reknar | United States | 4,285,000 |
5th | Timothy Miles | United States | 3,775,000 |
6th | Ankit Ahuja | India | 3,505,000 |
7th | Adam Swan | United States | 3,080,000 |
8th | Valentino Konakchiev | Bulgaria | 2,475,000 |
9th | Ruben Costa | United States | 2,185,000 |
10th | Niall Farrell | United Kingdom | 1,700,000 |
Baker Chasing Badugi Crown
Just 13 players remain from 516 total entries in Badugi’s inaugural ‘solo’ event at the WSOP, with Serhii Popovych (1,885,000) hoping to prevent David ‘ODB’ Baker (1,400,000) from claiming his third title at the World Series tomorrow. Others such as Hong Kong’s Danny Tang (1,180,000) and Owais Ahmed (620,000) will also be looking to use their experience in previously winning WSOP gold to do so again.
WSOP 2023 Event #20 $1,500 Badugi Leaderboard: |
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Place | Player | Country | Chips |
1st | Serhii Popovych | United States | 1,885,000 |
2nd | David ‘ODB’ Baker | United States | 1,400,000 |
3rd | Lee Horton | United Kingdom | 1,220,000 |
4th | Jack O’Neill | United Kingdom | 1,200,000 |
5th | Danny Tang | Hong Kong | 1,180,000 |
6th | Jon Turner | United States | 1,100,000 |
7th | Yingui Li | China | 860,000 |
8th | Michael Rodrigues Pires Santos | Portgual | 860,000 |
9th | Matt Vengrin | United States | 830,000 |
10th | Terrence Chan | Canada | 655,000 |
Suk Bang Explodes into Life on Day 1 of PLO Event
American player Suk Bang (1,465,000) and Israel’s Ibo Aboudi (1,020,000) were the only players top a ‘milly’ on Day 1 of the $1,000-entry PLO Event #21. Elsewhere in the Top 10, Mike Dentale (760,000) and Mike Gorodinsky (734,000) made their presences known as 2,017 entries were reduced to just 117 survivors as everyone who stayed in the hunt went to their rest dreaming of winning a bracelet tomorrow along with the $267,991 top prize.
WSOP 2023 Event #21 $1,000 Pot Limit Omaha Leaderboard: |
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Place | Player | Country | Prize |
1st | Suk Bang | United States | 1,465,000 |
2nd | Ido Aboudi | Israel | 1,020,000 |
3rd | Jorge Hou | Panama | 913,000 |
4th | Mike Dentale | United States | 760,000 |
5th | Nicolas Gola | United States | 740,000 |
6th | Amnon Filippi | United States | 735,000 |
7th | Mike Gorodinsky | United States | 734,000 |
8th | Eric Fields | United States | 730,000 |
9th | Thomas Taylor | Canada | 725,000 |
10th | Matthew Hamilton | United States | 635,000 |
Song Chasing In-Form Shimizu on Limit Leaderboard
Japanese player and third-place finisher from Event #12 Nozomu Shimizu (334,000) bagged the lead in another event ending in a two as Day 1 of the $10,000-entry Limit Hold’em Championship concluded with 104 players down to just 46 with Kevin Song (322,000) and 2021 world champion Koray Aldemir (266,000) completing the podium places.
WSOP 2023 Event #22 $10,000 Limit Hold’em Championship Leaderboard: |
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Place | Player | Country | Chips |
1st | Nozomu Shimizu | Japan | 334,000 |
2nd | Kevin Song | United States | 322,000 |
3rd | Koray Aldemir | Germany | 266,000 |
4th | Cary Katz | United States | 251,000 |
5th | Brian Lieberman | United States | 238,000 |
6th | John Elliott | United States | 238,000 |
7th | Carlo Van Ravenswoud | Netherlands | 220,000 |
8th | Nate Silver | United States | 199,000 |
9th | Joe McKeehen | United States | 194,000 |
10th | Ronnie Bardah | United States | 188,000 |
TJ Jurkiewicz is a well-known nutrition and training coach in the poker world and his tips for some nutritious snacks at the World Series of Poker should get players heading for healthy food rather than the usual carb-heavy, slump-inducing fayre.
If you’re looking for some healthy snack options this summer at WSOP, check out this video from @tj_jurk! pic.twitter.com/OF0tIZzp5S
— PokerNews (@PokerNews) June 8, 2023
Bob Mather was full of positivity in the $300-entry Gladiators of Poker event… before the card came.
I would like to rescind this tweet. I am on max bullets and I hate everyone and the deck. pic.twitter.com/LHAKbwt8FN
— Bob Mather Poker (@BobMatherPoker) June 8, 2023
Ahead of Isaac Haxton’s heroics in the $25,000 High Roller, his wearing of a mask was highlighted as a positive thing by one player… and then denounced by many. Ike ended up smiling behind that mask with a $1.7m victory.
I love that @ikepoker is still wearing his mask despite no one else doing it and everyone just deciding to were over Covid (myself included honestly). Just an insane amount of self confidence and swagger. He inspires me to wanna mask up when I get to Vegas. https://t.co/DMo3vyfCPO
— Emceesandt (@EmceeSandt) June 8, 2023
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