Richard Alsup Beats 11,933-Player Monster Stack for Biggest Score of Career

4 min read
Richard Alsup

They say seven is a divine number. Minnesota’s Richard Alsup may share that sentiment after he spiked a seven to take down a seven-figure score after defeating Salvatore Dicarlo to win a whopping $1,302,125 in Event #18: $1,500 Monster Stack No Limit Hold’em at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.

This is the second World Series of Poker bracelet of his career. With this win, Alsup now pulls into second in the Minnesota all-time money list. For Alsup, this had little meaning to him compared to what the score means for him and his family.

“I just stayed positive and I just really felt it, that I was going to win when I won, and even on the last hand when I got it in with a (ace) seven against ace king, I just felt it was going to come,” said Alsup in the afterglow of his victory.

“I got a new baby run good, so that probably helped out a little bit. I’m just very thankful to get a big score and provide for my family.”

Event #11: $1,500 Monster Stack Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Richard AlsupUnited States$1,302,125
2Salvatore DicarloUnited States$900,000
3John RipnickUnited States$700,000
4Aaron MasseyUnited States$520,000
5Matthew MillerUnited States$400,000
6Pierce MckellarUnited States$305,000
7Kevin EysterUnited States$240,000
8Nikolaos AngelouGreece$190,000
Richard Alsup

Winner's Reaction

The aforementioned top prize was the biggest single cash prize of Alsup's career, smashing his previous best of $273,430.

Alsup entered the heads-up match with Dicarlo possessing two-thirds of the chips in play. This deficit grew to as much as a four-to-one chip lead for Dicarlo, but Alsup got his foot in the door after hitting trip sixes on the river to crack Dicarlo’s aces.

Alsup shared with PokerNews that his first bracelet was meaningful because he had a swap with a friend and WSOP roommate back in 2022, but that this one hit different.

“It was really special that we both won the same event, but you can’t compare anything to the monster field this big,” Alsup said.

Final Table Action

Alsup came into the final day sixth in chips, but was healthy with 65 big blinds. Alsup stayed in the background to start the day, as it was Aaron Massey who got it in with aces against the big slick of Kevin Eyster and the pocket kings of Nikolaos Angelou. Massey took it down to eliminate Angelou in eighth place.

Kevin Eyster
Kevin Eyster

Eyster, who began the day as the chip leader, was unable to recover from that point forward. Eyster doubled up Pierce Mckellar before he put in his final two big blinds and lost to go out in seventh place.

Mckellar may have doubled up against Eyster, but he was the next to go when he jammed from the small blind holding an ace and was called by Salvatore Dicarlo, who woke up with big slick to knock out Mckellar in sixth place.

Dicarlo was in control of the final table, but Alsup put a wrench in the plan when he rivered trip kings to crack Dicarlo’s aces.

John Ripnick

John Ripnick doubled through Dicarlo as he continued to take hits to his stack. Dicarlo rebounded with an elimination of Matthew Miller in fifth place.

It was Alsup’s turn next to play the role of eliminator when he clashed in a flip against Massey. Alsup hit his overcards and sent Massey packing in fourth place.

It didn’t take long for the next bust to occur when Dicarlo was back at it again with a knockout of Ripnick. Ripnick three-bet jammed into Dicarlo’s pocket kings and was unable to hit his ace. He was sent out in third place.

The heads-up battle went on for nearly three hours, with Alsup and Dicarlo battling it out for the $400,000 difference between second and first place. Alsup got his foot in the door when he cracked Dicarlo’s aces and took the chip lead when he four-bet jammed and elicited a fold from Dicarlo.

Salvatore Dicarlo
Salvatore Dicarlo

“I just limped every pot,” said Alsup. “Just put the pure limp strategy with that many bigs, and it just worked. The stars aligned.”

The two would stay in a close heat as both jockeyed for position. Dicarlo sank in the chip count, but rebounded when he got paid with a full house by Alsup to climb back into the lead.

This was far from the end of the battle, as Dicarlo rallied back to a three-to-one chip lead when he got paid with pocket kings, which became a full house with three aces on board versus the aces full of jacks held by Alsup.

The two would trade blows, with Alsup knotting it up, before Dicarlo pushed off Alsup with a check-raise when he hit a full house on the river to retake the chip lead.

It was all Alsup from that point forward. The duel culminated when Alsup got it in with ace seven versus ace king and hit the seven on the river to lock up the top spot.

This concludes the coverage for Event #18: $1,500 Monster Stack No-Limit Hold'em. Check back here at PokerNews for continued coverage of the 2026 World Series of Poker at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.
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In this Series

1 Jerome Neppl Dominates Event #3: $500 Industry Employees No-Limit Hold'em For Career-Highlight Win2 Daniyal Gheba Awarded First Bracelet in WSOP's Mothership Arena for $502,9853 "It's Nice to Get a Win to Start The Summer" Jason Daly Wins Third Bracelet in $1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo4 "This is the Pinnacle" James Cheung Captures First WSOP Bracelet in $1,500 Stud5 Yang Wang Denies Jesse Lonis Heads-Up in Event #5: $5,000 Pot-Limit Omaha6 Chess Master Michael Casella Flips the Board on Poker Legends to Win First Bracelet7 Flying High: Dimitar Danchev Fights Jet Lag to Claim $25,000 Heads-Up Championship Title8 Poker Legend Helps Philip Chun Achieve WSOP Dream and Win $400,0009 Scott Clements Denies Hellmuth and Brunson in $10k Omaha Hi-Lo Championship10 Karapet Galstyan Winds His Way Strategically To Victory for Second WSOP Bracelet11 Unstoppable Hubbard Seals First Bracelet in $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw12 PhD Student Turns First WSOP Cash Into Bracelet and $346K Score13 All-or-Nothing Attitude Provides Tennessee Business Owner WSOP Gold14 Heads-Up Cooler Hands Naseem Salem WSOP Bracelet in GGMillion$ High Roller15 "'Well Overdue" Justin Liberto Wins Second WSOP Bracelet After 11-Year Wait16 Viva Las Vargas: American Brings It Home in WSOP U.S. Circuit Championship17 Naoya Kihara Comes Back From Single Chip to End 14-Year WSOP Drought18 Jeff Madsen Gunning for Second WSOP PoY Title After Fifth Bracelet Win19 Normand Wins First WSOP Bracelet Despite Never Playing Game Before20 Foxen Finally Beats the Best to Win "Dream" WSOP $25K High Roller Title21 Naoya Kihara Wins Back-to-Back $10K Championship WSOP Bracelet Events22 This Is the Best Father-Son Story of the 2026 WSOP23 Artur Martirosian Beats Final Table's 'Best Opponent' to Win Fourth WSOP Bracelet24 WSOP Main Event Finalist Braxton Dunaway Survives 'Roller Coaster' for Second Bracelet25 "Daddy’s Got Two Now": Mike Holtz Wins Second WSOP Bracelet in Super Turbo Bounty26 Bryce Yockey Wins Third WSOP Bracelet in $10k Dealer's Choice27 Missouri Grinder Defeats Star-Studded Field in WSOP $600 Mixed Event28 Quads and Pocket Aces: Dennis Weiss Rides His Luck to Third WSOP Title29 "It's Like a Dream" Santhosh Suvarna Wins Third WSOP Bracelet in $50,000 High Roller30 Richard Alsup Beats 11,933-Player Monster Stack for Biggest Score of Career

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