2026 World Series of Poker

Day: 2
123
Event Info
2026 World Series of Poker
Event Info
Buy-in
$25,000
Prize Pool
$5,029,000
Total Entries
214
Players Left
14
Average Chip Stack
2,292,857
Total Chips
32,100,000
Next Payout
Place 14
$61,964
Level Info
Level
20
Blinds
20,000 / 40,000
Ante
40,000
Players Info - Day 2
Entries
134
Players Left
14
Players Left 14 / 214
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Event #64: $25,000 High Roller PLO/NLH Mixed

Day 2 Completed

Garza Looks to Go Two-In-a-Row as He and Helppi Stand Way Above the Rest

Level 20 : Blinds 20,000/40,000, 40,000 ante
Lou Garza
Lou Garza

Day 2 of Event #64: $25,000 High Roller PLO/NLH Mixed at the 2026 World Series of Poker had it all: Hold’em and Omaha pros battling it out, the bubble bursting, max late reggers, and coolers galore. And also some more max late reggers. The 60 players who opened bags to begin the day quickly became 134, as the number more than doubled with late reg open for two levels. of those, 41 turned up at the latest possible opportunity, sitting with just 18 big blinds, prepared to begin the spin.

The anti-max late reg crowd will be delighted to hear that, of those, a grand total of 0 will be returning for the third and final day of play, with all of the remaining 14 players left having bought in beforehand. Those 14 are led by Juha Helppi, who bagged up the chip lead with 6,370,000 chips, good for 127 big blinds when play resumes tomorrow. This massive stack is largely in part due to a huge hand in the final level of play, as he clashed with tablemate Dan Smith after turning the nuts.

Juha Helppi
Juha Helppi

Coming in slightly behind in a respectable second place is reigning champion Lou Garza, with 5,365,000, also bagging up over 100 big blinds for Day 3. He'll be looking to put them to good use in his attempt to go back-to-back in the competition.

Rounding out the podium is Sergio Martinez Gonzalez. Although he still ended up with a large number of chips, he and the rest of the field are miles behind the two runaway leaders, as his 2,755,000 is only just more than half of the second place finisher's count.

Day 3 Top Ten Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Juha HelppiFinland6,370,000127
2Lou GarzaUnited States5,365,000107
3Sergio Martinez GonzalezSpain2,755,00055
4Edward LeonardUnited States2,690,00054
5Eelis ParssinenFinland2,425,00049
6Sean WinterUnited States2,410,00048
7Yang WangChina2,150,00043
8Dylan WeismanUnited States1,705,00034
9Dylan LindeUnited States1,530,00031
10Dominykas KarmazinasLithuania975,00020

Further down in the counts, Sean Winter (2,410,000) bagged up a healthy stack, with Dylan Weisman (1,705,000) and Dylan Linde (1,530,000) all still in the hunt for the crown, alongside some precious $25k Fantasy points for their respective teams.

Also scoring some points for his team is short stack Daniel Negreanu, who will be bringing back a sub-ten big blind stack of 435,000. That being said, if anybody can find a way to get back into the mix, it's DNegs.

Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu

Players who missed out on the money, as well as the all important points, include Erik Seidel, Chino Rheem, Punnat Punsri, Ren Lin, and recent heads-up competitors Santhosh Suvarna and Joao Simao.

Andjelko Andrejevic was the bubble boy, with Dan Shak the first money-maker to go. Nick Schulman lost to the overpair of Eelis Parssinen, and the same fate awaited John Riordan at the hands of Dan Smith.

Cary Katz was the last to head home of the night, as his two pair lost out to the rivered trips of Parssinen.

Cary Katz
Cary Katz

During play, the huge prize pool of $5,029,000 was confirmed, with a total of $1,172,196 for the player who ends up topping the charts. Each of those remaining has locked up a minimum of $61,694, but they undoubtedly won’t be fulfilled without lifting up the coveted WSOP gold bracelet alongside the seven-figure score.

Remaining Payouts

PlacePrize
1$1,172,296
2$781,500
3$540,754
4$381,950
5$275,509
6$203,041
7$152,954
8$117,835
9$92,887
10 -11$74,959
12-14$61,964

Play is set to resume at 1:00 p.m. local time in the Gold section of Paris Ballroom, with blinds restarting at the 25,000/50,000 level. The ante will be equal to the big blind in PLO, but will be elevated to 75,000 for the Hold’em portion of the tournament. The day will not end until a victor has been named.

Stay tuned as PokerNews offers full live coverage of the final day of Event #64, as well as many more across the remainder of the WSOP, hosted by Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.

Tags: Andjelko AndrejevicCary KatzChino RheemDan ShakDan SmithDaniel NegreanuDominykas KarmazinasDylan LindeDylan WeismanEdward LeonardEelis ParssinenErik SeidelJoao SimaoJohn RiordanJuha HelppiLou GarzaMartinez GonzalezNick SchulmanPunnat PunsriRen LinSanthosh SuvarnaSean WinterSergio Martinez GonzalezYang Wang

End of Day 2

Level 20 : Blinds 20,000/40,000, 40,000 ante

The 14 surviving players have bagged their chips and headed into the night.

They will return tomorrow, Thursday, 25 June, at 1:00 p.m. local time, with the tournament playing down to a winner.

Stay tuned for the full chip counts and a recap of the day's action.

End of Day Chip Counts (full)

Level 20 : Blinds 20,000/40,000, 40,000 ante

Read full

Cary Katz Eliminated in 15th Place ($61,964)

Level 20 : Blinds 20,000/40,000, 40,000 ante
Cary Katz
Cary Katz

Pot-Limit Omaha

The action was joined with roughly 200,000 in the pot, and a K67 flop face up on the felt.

Cary Katz then worked his stack, roughly 260,000, into the middle after a couple of bets, and was at risk versus Eelis Parssinen.

Cary Katz: 7654 All in
Eelis Parssinen: K954

The 2 turn and K river improved Parssinen's hand to trips, seeing Katz eliminated in the last hand of the day.

Tags: Cary KatzEelis Parssinen

Nick Pupillo Eliminated in 16th Place ($52,500)

Level 20 : Blinds 20,000/40,000, 40,000 ante
Nick Pupillo
Nick Pupillo

Pot-Limit Omaha

Nick Pupillo raised to 140,000 from the hijack and Sergio Martinez Gonzalez called in the big blind.

The flop rolled out A107, and Gonzalez check-called a jam of Pupillo worth 210,000.

Nick Pupillo: KKJ4 All in
Sergio Martinez Gonzalez: A1076

Gonzalez filled up on the turn 10 and nothing changed on the river 6 to see him eliminate the WSOP bracelet winner from the tournament.

Tags: Martinez GonzalezNick PupilloSergio Martinez Gonzalez

Kihara Falls to Garza

Level 20 : Blinds 20,000/40,000, 40,000 ante

No-Limit Hold'em

Naoya Kihara and Lou Garza got all of their chips into the middle preflop, with Garza holding a dominating hand, as well as the covering stack.

Naoya Kihara: J10 All in
Lou Garza: K10

Kihara was turned dead on the 42K76 runout, as Garza added to his mammoth chip stack.

Tags: Lou GarzaNaoya Kihara

Final Two Hands

Level 20 : Blinds 20,000/40,000, 40,000 ante

The tournament clock has been paused, and the dealers have been advised to deal two more hands. Upon their completion, the surviving players will bag their chips and advance to the final day.

Van Ravenswoud Falls, Leonard Sweetens the Pot

Level 20 : Blinds 20,000/40,000, 40,000 ante

No-Limit Hold'em

Sean Winter raised to 95,000 in middle position, and quickly faced aggression when Carlo van Ravenswoud moved all in for 385,000 one seat to his left. The action folded to Edward Leonard in the small blind, who called the all-in. Once he did, Winter moved his own stack all in for 1,510,000, and Leonard quickly folded.

Carlo van Ravenswoud: AQ All in
Sean Winter: KK

The queen-high 23Q flop gave Van Ravenswoud some extra outs, but it wasn't to be, as the 10 turn and 9 river completed the board, sending him to the payout desk.

Tags: Carlo van RavenswoudEdward LeonardSean Winter

Gonzalez Doubles Through Kihara

Level 20 : Blinds 20,000/40,000, 40,000 ante

Pot-Limit Omaha

Sergio Martinez Gonzalez raised to 140,000 from the hijack and, in the cutoff, Naoya Kihara raised to 480,000 to see Gonzalez call.

The flop rolled out KQ4, and Gonzalez ripped all in for 630,000 to see Kihara call.

Sergio Martinez Gonzalez: QJJ9 All in
Naoya Kihara: AA98

Gonzalez spiked his set on the turn J to hold up on the river 2 and he doubled at the expense of the two time WSOP bracelet winner.

Tags: Martinez GonzalezNaoya KiharaSergio Martinez Gonzalez

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