WSOP 2024: Seiver on the Brink of Fifth Bracelet, Both Million-Dollar Bounties Won in Mystery Millions

There was drama and action in five different WSOP bracelet events on Monday as two players found a $1m bounty in the Mystery Millions event, stars such as Brandon Cantu and Scott Seiver got close to winning their next gold and the $10,000 Dealer’s Choice Championship begun.

Brown Bags Lead in Mystery Millions After Bounties Won

Both million-dollar bounties were won in the $1,000-entry Mystery Millions event as Ukraine’s Valentyn Shabelnyk and American player DJ Buckley each won a cool million dollars. The Mystery Millions is the sort of event that footage of which is designed to go viral. After all, how exciting would it be to win $1,000,000 from a $1,000 buy-in without having to go on and win the tournament? It turns out, for both Buckley and Shabelnyk, not that exciting.

To much fanfare and an enthusiastic Jeff Platt at the side of the stage upon which the GGPoker-sponsored bounty chest sat, Shabelnyk was the first to withdraw the slip worth a million bucks and reacted with the kind of shy pride that a schoolchild might if they’d just received a participation award on school sports day. Buckley was a trifle more excited but both men were clearly ‘in the zone’ so much they couldn’t escape it for one moment and returned to the felt.

DJ Buckley
DJ Buckley holds up his million-dollar bounty with the enthusiasm of a man who has just received an overdue utility bill.

Both busted, of course, leaving Jake Brown as the chip leader on 76.5 million. There is still a chance that Brown outscores both Shabelnyk and Buckley by winning the top prize of $1m in the tournament proper and as chip leader, this is a distinct possibility. One would imagine that if he does so, it would be hard to be less enthused by the prospect as the two million-dollar bounty winners were earlier today.

WSOP Event #5: $1,000 Mystery Millions Final Day Chipcounts:
Place Place Country Chips
1st Jake Brown United States 76,500,000
2nd Carson Richards United States 74,600,000
3rd Michael Miller United States 68,400,000
4th Christopher Battenfield United States 59,700,000
5th Eugene Tito United States 55,100,000
6th Jefferson James United States 49,000,000
7th Kyle Mizell United States 48,600,000
8th Pei Li Canada 48,300,000
9th Christopher Castellan United States 41,300,000
10th Oshri Azran United States 40,100,000

Seiver Hunting Bracelet #5 in Omaha Event

Scott Seiver has never won a WSOP bracelet in an Omaha event and the American has four of them. He’ll be keener than ever to take home gold tomorrow when he comes back top of four hopefuls left chasing the Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship title. Seiver has 3.94 million chips, and with Jonathan Cohen on 3.67m, nothing is cut and dried yet.

Scott Seiver
Scott Seiver is just one day and three opponents away from bracelet #5.

Calvin Anderson (2.5m) and Paul Zappula (1.69m) will wish to spoil the top two’s private party as Anderson also goes for his fifth WSOP title. Cohen goes for his second while Zappula would become a debut champion.

WSOP Event #10: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Results:
Place Place Country Prize/Chips
1st Scott Seiver United States 3,945,000
2nd Jonathan Cohen Canada 3,670,000
3rd Calvin Anderson United States 2,515,000
4th Paul Zappula United States 1,695,000
5th Sami Saad El-Dein United States $101,853
6th Benny Glaser United Kingdom $75,678
7th Jake Schwartz United States $57,570
8th Jared Bleznick United States $44,864
9th Patrick Moulder United States $35,838

Just 10 Remain in Hunt for Badugi Gold

Tobias Leknes leads from poker legends in the Badugi event, which saw the Norwegian build up a leading stack of 2,225,000 chips in Event #11. Closesly following Leknes is David Prociak, who showed his PokerStake investors exactly why they should have faith in his ability, piling up 2,175,000 to sit only a tiny bit behind the leader.

Overnight leader Joseph Wagganer made eight place with 540,000 but has work to do if he is to end up with all the chips when the gold is awarded tomorrow.

WSOP Event #11: $1,500 Badugi Final Table Chipcounts:
Place Place Country Chips
1st Tobias Leknes Norway 2,225,000
2nd David Prociak United States 2,175,000
3rd Brandon Cantu United States 1,825,000
4th Tomasz Gluszko Poland 1,575,000
5th Edward Yam Hong Kong 1,330,000
6th Matt Grapenthien United States 980,000
7th David Stamm United States 765,000
8th Joseph Wagganer United States 540,000
9th Yuya Murata Japan 415,000
10th Laurent A Boublil United States 355,000

Zhou Leads 6-Max Fight for Gold

Chinese player Quan Zhou (966,000) leads for stars such as John Gordon (941,000), Michael Miller (867,000), Alex Foxen (533,000), Chance Kornuth (202,000), Landon Tice (133,000), Michael Wang (408,000) and JC Tran (391,000) in the $1,500-entry 6-Max NLHE Event #12.

Players such as former world champions Joe Cada and Ryan Riess, YouTube stars Xuan Liu and Brad Owen, bracelet winners Shannon Shorr and Jeremy Ausmus and the 2004 WSOP Main Event runner-up David Williams all busted on a day where 2,526 players were reduced to just 197 survivors, with a top prize of $439,815 now on the line after the conclusion of Day 1.

WSOP Event #12: $1,500 NLHE 6-Max Day 1 Chipcounts:
Place Place Country Chips
1st Quan Zhou China 966,000
2nd John Gordon United States 942,000
3rd Michael Miller United States 867,000
4th Matthew Dodd United States 752,000
5th Eshaan Bhalla United States 722,000
6th Steve Yea South Korea 720,000
7th Brandon Eisen United States 705,000
8th Jorge Rivera United States 682,000
9th Mark Dube United States 672,000
10th Clement Van Driessche France 655,000

Alexander in Charge

George Alexander (277,000) is the man to beat in the $10,000 buy-in Dealer’s Choice Championship, with Erick Lindgren (217,000), Nick Schulman (184,000), Maxx Coleman (179,000), Dan Zack (177,000) Robert Mizrachi (173,000), Phil Ivey (171,500) and Daniel Negreanu (159,500) all inside the top dozen places.

A total of 124 entries led to only 68 players surviving to Day 2, with John ‘World’ Hennigan, the former Poker Players Championship winner Phil Hui and Shaun ‘Team Lucky’ Deeb all exiting on Day 1. Another member of Team Lucky, Matt Glantz (115,500) did survive  and he, along with others such as Anthony Zinno (83,500), will go again tomorrow to play through the money bubble and get closer to the final table.

WSOP Event #13: $10,000 Dealer’s Choice Championship Day 1 Chipcounts:
Place Place Country Chips
1st George Alexander United States 277,000
2nd Brian Brunner United States 246,000
3rd Michael Martinelli United States 234,500
4th Erick Lindgren United States 217,000
5th Nick Schulman United States 184,000
6th Yingui Li China 180,000
7th Maxx Coleman United States 179,000
8th Daniel Zack United States 177,000
9th Robert Mizrachi United States 173,000
10th Phil Ivey United States 171,500

With thanks to PokerGo for their official WSOP photography. The 2024 World Series of Poker is available to watch exclusively on PokerGO. Subscribe today and watch all the drama play out in Las Vegas!

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