Darren Rabinowitz Denies Hellmuth to Claim Second WSOP Bracelet

Stewart Morrison
Live Reporter
5 min read
Darren Rabinowitz

American poker pro Darren Rabinowitz closed out the 2026 World Series of Poker (WSOP) by winning his second bracelet, and he did so by denying all-time bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth a record-extending 18th bracelet.

Less than one week ago, Rabinowitz was making a deep run in the WSOP Main Event, only to see his championship dreams come to an abrupt end when a brutal two-outer sent him to the rail in 145th place.

As the famous saying goes, though, 'It ain't about how hard you hit. It's about how hard you can get hit and keep moving forward; how much you can take and keep moving forward. That's how winning is done!'

Rabinowitz produced his own Rocky Balboa moment inside Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas today, claiming victory in Event #99: $5,000 8-Handed No-Limit Hold'em, a triumph that earned him $695,256 and the second WSOP bracelet of his career.

Phil Hellmuth
Phil Hellmuth

"When you go deep in something, there’s a huge emotional dump afterwards. But I didn’t feel that after the Main. I played well. Yeah, it was unlucky, but it never affected me. All I wanted to do was keep playing poker.

Sometimes you go deep in something and bust, and you want to take three or four days off. But the summer was ending, and I just tried to keep a good mindset. I can’t believe it worked out so well. It’s crazy."

Event #99: $5,000 8-Handed - Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Darren RabinowitzUnited States$695,256
2Phil HellmuthUnited States$464,286
3Nicholas PalmaUnited States$326,136
4Joshua StewartUnited Kingdom$232,570
5Nick PupilloUnited States$168,402
6Victor LiCanada$123,846
7Max KingstoneUnited States$92,527
8Connor BelcherUnited States$70,245
9Josh NorvockAustralia$54,204

The River, The Rail and the Redemption

Darren Rabinowitz
Darren Rabinowitz

Rabinowitz's path to the bracelet was anything but straightforward. With around 30 players remaining, he looked poised to seize control of the tournament before a four-way all-in went disastrously wrong.

"If you watch the video, I couldn't believe it," Rabinowitz admitted. "That's the first time I've reacted to losing an all-in like that in so long."

Having just won a huge pot moments earlier, he suddenly found himself watching what he described as a "dream situation" slip away.

"I lost the hand, got annoyed for one second, let out a little frustration, and then we reset and got back to it."

As the field dwindled and Phil Hellmuth edged closer to an unprecedented 18th bracelet, the atmosphere inside the Horseshoe became increasingly one-sided. Rabinowitz estimated there were 1,500 spectators in the room, joking that, "It felt like 1,400 of them were against me."

While he understood the support for poker's biggest star, he admitted there was extra motivation in denying Hellmuth another historic victory.

"I’m a poker fan, so I understand it, but I really didn't want to lose to this guy," he said. "I wanted to beat him. I wanted to win."

Despite the pressure, Rabinowitz never allowed the moment to overwhelm him. Instead, he retreated into a routine that had served him throughout the tournament.

"Every decision felt so important," he said. "Whenever I started to feel nervous or anxious, I'd put my headphones in, walk around, message a few friends and just try to stay in my own world."

That same mindset had carried over from the Main Event, where a heartbreaking exit just days earlier failed to shake his confidence.

"I played well. It was unlucky, but it never affected me," Rabinowitz said. "All I wanted to do was keep playing poker."

Darren Rabinowitz
Darren Rabinowitz

Fast and Furious

The fast-paced structure of the tournament meant chips were certain to fly as soon as cards were in the air, and sure enough, within the first few minutes of the day, Renan Meneguetti hit the rail, opening the floodgates for eliminations.


By the first break, two hours into play, more than half the field had already seen their final opportunity for a 2026 WSOP bracelet fall flat.

Sean Winter (68th), Niall Farrell (59th), Artur Martirosian (48th), and Jennifer Harman (33rd) were among those unable to survive until the first break.

Once play resumed, Ren Lin (28th) fell shortly after, with Brian Rast (27th) following him out the door after falling victim to the river in a four-way all-in.

The steady pace of eliminations continued on the road to the final table, with David Peters (16th), Nick Guagenti (15th), and Tom Hall (13th) falling in quick succession.


Adam Hendrix’s elimination in 10th place then set the final table lineup. Having gotten his money in good, the deck ultimately turned against him, sending him home one spot shy of the final table.

Phil Hellmuth
Phil Hellmuth

Although nine players made the final table, one storyline dominated the conversation inside the Horseshoe and Paris corridors, as news quickly spread that Hellmuth was the chip leader and chasing a record-extending 18th bracelet.


With every elimination on the final table, and every step Hellmuth took closer to history, the rail behind him grew deeper and louder, sensing that something special was unfolding.


One by one, the players standing in his way fell, until just Rabinowitz remained.

Despite the tournament's fast-paced structure, the heads-up battle lasted more than an hour, with Rabinowitz taking a nearly 2:1 chip lead into the duel.

It didn't take long for Hellmuth, or his rail, to find reason to celebrate, as a turned straight earned him a double-up through Rabinowitz's flopped two-pair.

The swing in momentum didn't faze Rabinowitz, though, as he found himself in the middle of a pressure cooker with a WSOP bracelet on the line.

“This was like, as big of a spot as I’ve had in a while… every decision felt so important, and I was just trying to really lock in and make the right decisions.”

Darren Rabinowitz and Phil Hellmuth
Darren Rabinowitz and Phil Hellmuth

Slowly but surely, Rabinowitz ground Hellmuth down, and by the time the first break of the heads-up battle arrived, the stacks were once again level. From there, Rabinowitz never looked back, building his lead with relentless pressure and winning the majority of the key exchanges.

Eventually, Hellmuth was forced to make a stand, putting his tournament life at risk with bottom pair. It wasn't enough, though, as Rabinowitz's top pair held to secure victory, earning him his second career bracelet and a $695,256 payday.

That concludes coverage of Event #99: $5,000 8-Handed No-Limit Hold’em, as Darren Rabinowitz claims the penultimate bracelet of the 2026 WSOP. Be sure to check out the PokerNews homepage for all the latest news from the poker world.
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Stewart Morrison
Live Reporter

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 Naseem Salem Beats the Best as He Claims Maiden Bracelet in the GGMillion$15 "'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 Career31 Omar Zazay Outlasts Jean-Robert Bellande to Win First WSOP Bracelet in $3,000 NLHE32 Knicks in Five? 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