Kabrhel & POY Frontrunner Lonis Bust on Day 3 of WSOP Paradise Super Main Event

Connor Richards
Senior Editor U.S.
3 min read
Martin Kabrhel

Day 3 of the $25,000 Super Main Event at 2025 World Series of Poker Paradise in the Bahamas wrapped up late Wednesday morning as the record-setting event reached its final three tables.

Leading the final 24 players is Canada's Pascal LeFrancois, while fellow Canadian William Blais is second in chips after running kings into the aces of Alex Kulev and flopping a set in the biggest pot of the tournament so far.

Pascal Lefrancois
Pascal Lefrancois

Other big stacks include Daniel Reijmer, who scored a double knockout to end the day, as well as Day 2b chip leader and elder Frenchman Jean-Noel Thorel

Also in contention are eight-time bracelet winner Benny Glaser, poker coach Faraz Jaka, GGPoker ambassador Felipe Ramos, Natasha Mercier, high-stakes pros Eric Wasserson and Leonard Maue, former PokerNews live reporter Terrance Reid, and recent $50,000 PLO High Roller winner Charles Hook.

Each returning player has locked up at least $335,000, while all eyes are on the glimmering bracelet and $10 million top prize that await the eventual champion. Should LeFrancois keep up the pace, he could treat the poker world to another shirtless bracelet winner's photo, as he did in 2010.

WSOP Paradise Super Main Event Top 10 Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Pascal LeFrancoisCanada126,400,00063
2William BlaisCanada123,300,00062
3Daniel ReijmerNetherlands115,400,00058
4Jean-Noel ThorelFrance101,200,00051
5Charles HookUnited States94,200,00047
6Bernhard BinderAustria89,500,00045
7Natasha MercierLebanon88,000,00044
8Belarmino De SouzaBrazil86,500,00043
9Leonard MaueGermany70,000,00035
10Faraz JakaUnited States63,300,00032

Heroes, Villains & All-Ins

It would be hard to match the drama of Day 2b after a rowdy 10-minute hand centered around chaos agent James Caputo, but there was no doubt there would be exciting moments with poker villain Martin Kabrhel having the chip lead.

Martin Kabrhel

Kabrhel was on message and then some on Day 3. At one point, he tried out a new catchphrase — "This guy is on fiiiiiiiireeeeeeee" — but it didn't seem to stick. After some time on both the feature tables and main floor, Kabrhel was eventually eliminated by Wasserson, whom he had been calling "Wassy boy."

There was a potential shake-up in the GPI Player of the Year race as Jesse Lonis, according to GPI, needed to finish in 61st place or better to re-take his POY lead over Punnat Punsri after Punsri's 99th-place finish worth $92,500. Despite being the victim of a bold bluff by Ryuta Nakai that saw Lonis folding a set of kings, the apex predator made it deep into the evening and finished in 55th place to maintain his spot at the top of the poker food chain.

Jesse Lonis
Jesse Lonis

In another highlight, Gustavo Silva Campos won the $10,300 buy-in GGMillion$ High Roller for $223,824, which he was playing online before finishing 53rd in the Super Main for $180,000 — quite the day for the Brazilian.

With more than a billion in chips in play, it didn't take long for eight-figure pots to start forming. Perhaps the biggest of the day took place between Blais and Kulev, an aces versus kings cooler with a twist as Blais flopped a set of kings to put a gross beat on the stoic Kulev.

The big hands kept coming as the event reached its last five tables, as reigning GPI Player of the Year David Coleman doubled up Natasha Mercier. He would later complete his swing from over 80 million in chips to out at the hands of Mercier in a double-knockout that also involved Ivan Stokes.

Natasha Mercier
Natasha Mercier

Double knockouts became a bit of a theme late in the evening as Reijmer picked up pocket queens to eliminate Tomas Kubaliak and Lautaro Guerra.

Other players who were eliminated on Day 3 include 20-time Circuit ring winner Ari Engel (33rd - $270,000), Alejandro Lococo (86th - $92,500), recent Triton Invitational winner Kayhan Mokri (88th - $92,500), defending champion Yinan Zhou (94th - $92,500) and Joe Cada (103rd - $80,000), who was the last Main Event champ standing.

Action will resume at noon local time on with 36:02 left in Level 31 with blinds of 1,000,000/2,000,000/2,000,000 for the penultimate day of action ahead of a winner being crowned on Thursday.

Stay tuned as the PokerNews live reporting team is on-site and ready to provide updates on the WSOP Super Main Event here on Paradise Island in the Bahamas.

WSOP Paradise Super Main Event Remaining Payouts

PlacePrize
1$10,000,000
2$6,000,000
3$4,000,000
4$3,000,000
5$2,350,000
6$1,800,000
7$1,400,000
8$1,100,000
9$850,000
10-11$665,875
12-15$520,000
16-23$415,000
24$335,000
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Connor Richards
Senior Editor U.S.

Connor Richards is a Senior Editor U.S. for PokerNews and host of the Life Outside Poker podcast. Connor has been nominated for three Global Poker Awards for his writing.

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