2026 U.S. Poker Open

Event #8: $15,000 NLH
Day: 2
12
Event Info
2026 U.S. Poker Open
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
kj
Prize
$292,800
Event Info
Buy-in
$15,000
Total Entries
61
Level Info
Level
20
Blinds
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
80,000
Players Info - Day 2
Entries
6
Players Left
1
Players Left 1 / 61
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Event #8: $15,000 NLH

Day 2 Completed

Joao Simao Claims U.S. Poker Open Event #8 Title After Dominating Final Table Performance

Level 20 : Blinds 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Joas Simao
Joas Simao

The 2026 U.S. Poker Open Event #8 champion Joao Simao put on a dominant final-day performance to capture the title, closing out the tournament with authority after defeating Zach Bruch heads-up. From the moment action resumed on Day 2, Simao controlled the tempo and never allowed his opponents to gain much traction, ultimately sealing the victory in convincing fashion.

The $15,000 No-Limit Hold’em event, held inside the PokerGO Studio, attracted 61 entries, with six players returning for the final day to battle for the title and a $292,800 top prize.

By the time heads-up play began, Simao held a commanding advantage and wasted little time finishing the job against Bruch, capping off a wire-to-wire style run and adding his fourth PokerGO Tour victory to his growing list of accomplishments.

Event #8 $15,000 No Limit Hold'em Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Joao SimaoBrazil$292,800
2Zach BruchUnited States$183,000
3Justin ZakiUnited States$128,100
4Dylan LindeUnited States$91,500
5Aram ZobianUnited States$68,625
6Shannon ShorrUnited States$50,325
7Paul RoyUnited States$36,600

Not as Easy as it Looked

After the victory, Joao Simao revealed that his path to the title was far from straightforward, despite how dominant the final day appeared on paper.

When asked about how he was feeling after his victory, Simao responded with “It feels great, of course,” before adding that “my journey was a very tough Day 1. Never more than three stacks, always a very short stack.”

That early grind made his eventual takeover even more impressive. According to Simao, the turning point came late in the tournament when momentum finally shifted in his favor. “Eventually the night came and I tried to win a lot of pots… preflop, postflop,” he explained, noting that once he built a stack, everything began to flow. “Very smooth final table as well.”

A key storyline throughout the event was his battle with runner-up Zach Bruch, whom Simao jokingly dubbed “Zach Attack” for his aggressive style. “He’s a very tough guy to play against,” Simao said. “He always put us in hard spots with very high variance, big pots.”

Zach Bruch
Zach Bruch

One of the most pivotal moments came late on Day 1 when Simao faced a massive decision holding ace-high, ultimately using nearly all of his time extensions-13 of them- before making a fold. “My strategy was to reduce the variance since I had a lot of chips,” he said. “I was trying to make sure I don’t make any mistake that could cost me a lot.”

Despite his instincts telling him to call, Simao went against his gut but ended folding his ace-ten high, only to be shown a worse ace high. “Everything was saying, ‘call, call, call… he’s bluffing,’ but I was scared,” he admitted. “In the end, I decided to just fold my hand—and he definitely made a good play.”

From there, Simao rebounded and carried the biggest stack into the final day of 2026 U.S. Poker Open Event #8 and never looked back. “The chip distribution was very convenient to me,” he said. “I just did what I was ready to do,” using his stack to apply pressure and control the pace in route to victory.

Joao Simao
Joao Simao

Final Day Action

The final day of 2026 U.S. Poker Open Event #8 got off to a fast start, with the short stack coming into the day, Shannon Shorr eliminated in the opening hands by Bruch to bring the field down to five.

Bruch continued to surge shortly after, delivering one of the most brutal hands of the tournament to send Aram Zobian to the rail in fifth place. Holding pocket nines, Bruch found a rivered straight to crack Zobian’s pocket queens in a massive pot, swinging the momentum firmly in his favor.

Despite Bruch’s early charge, Simao began to assert control as the table shortened. Dylan Linde, who entered as the clear short stack four-handed, managed to stay alive by doubling through Simao twice. However, the third attempt proved one too many, as Linde was unable to spin it up again and ultimately exited in fourth place.

With three players remaining, Simao shifted into another gear, applying relentless pressure and raising nearly every hand. His aggression quickly wore down both opponents, with their stacks slipping below the million mark. Although Bruch managed to find a crucial double to stay in contention when he was down to 260,000.

The end came quickly after that for Justin Zaki, as Simao finished him off in third place to take a commanding lead into heads-up play against Bruch.

Justin Zaki
Justin Zaki

No Drama for Simao

Heads-up play began with Simao holding a commanding chip advantage of roughly 10-to-1 over Bruch, setting up a classic David-versus-Goliath battle.

Bruch, an entrepreneur and CEO of MyPrize, was named to the Forbes 30 Under 30 list in 2021 and entered the event with just five career tournament cashes and no recorded victories. Across the felt stood Simao, one of the most accomplished players in the field, boasting more than $17 million in live tournament earnings and a resume filled with high-stakes success.

Bruch found a quick double early in heads-up play when his pocket tens held against Simao’s pocket fives, briefly giving himself some breathing room. However, the momentum was short-lived. On the very next hand, Bruch found himself dominated and unable to recover, as Simao closed it out to secure the title.

That ends our coverage of Event #8 at the U.S. Poker Open but be sure to follow PokerNews for continued coverage and live updates until the series comes to a close.

Tags: Aram ZobianDylan LindeJoao SimaoJustin ZakiNo DramaPaul RoyPGTPokerGOPokerGoShannon ShorrU.S. Poker OpenUSPOZach Bruch

Zach Bruch Eliminated in 2nd Place ($183,000)

Level 20 : Blinds 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
USPO
USPO

Joao Simao raised all in on the button for Zach Bruch's stack of 1,040,000, and Bruch made the call.

Zach Bruch: J10 All in
Joao Simao: KJ

Simao had Bruch dominated, and the board ran out clean after it came 58K6J to knockout Bruch in second place.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Joao Simao br
Joao Simao
7,630,000
1,120,000
1,120,000
Day 1 Chip Leader
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Zach Bruch us
Zach Bruch
Busted

Tags: Joao SimaoZach BruchZach Bruch's

Good Start For Bruch

Level 20 : Blinds 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante

Zach Bruch open-jammed his stack of 520,000 on the button, and was called by Joao Simao to put Bruch at risk.

Zach Bruch: 1010 All in
Joao Simao: 55

Bruch was in a great spot to double, and he did just that as the board ran out 8458K to chip away at Simao's lead.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Joao Simao br
Joao Simao
6,510,000
440,000
440,000
Day 1 Chip Leader
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Zach Bruch us
Zach Bruch
1,120,000
440,000
440,000

Justin Zaki Eliminated in 3rd Place ($128,100)

Level 20 : Blinds 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Justin Zaki
Justin Zaki

Zach Bruch folded on the button and Justin Zaki moved all in for 405,000 in the small blind, and was called by Joao Simao in the big blind.

Justin Zaki: J10 All in
Joao Simao: Q10

Zaki was dominated and could not find any help on the 910K53 runout to give Simao the pot and end Zaki's run in third place.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Joao Simao br
Joao Simao
6,950,000
405,000
405,000
Day 1 Chip Leader
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Zach Bruch us
Zach Bruch
680,000
Profile photo of Justin Zaki us
Justin Zaki
Busted

Tags: Joao SimaoJustin ZakiZach Bruch

Bruch Finds a Double

Level 20 : Blinds 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante

Joao Simao opened to 465,000 from the button, and Zach Bruch called for his stack of 265,000 in the small blind, and Zaki quickly mucked to leave the players heads up, with Bruch at risk.

Zach Bruch: KJ All in
Joao Simao: QJ

Bruch had Simao dominated and was able to hold on the 810543 runout to secure the double.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Joao Simao br
Joao Simao
6,545,000
120,000
120,000
Day 1 Chip Leader
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Zach Bruch us
Zach Bruch
680,000
60,000
60,000
Profile photo of Justin Zaki us
Justin Zaki
405,000
320,000
320,000

Tags: Joao SimaoZach Bruch

Level: 20

Blinds: 40,000/80,000

Ante: 80,000

Zaki Traps With Aces

Level 19 : Blinds 30,000/60,000, 60,000 ante

Action folded to Justin Zaki in the small blind who limped in with AA, then just called the big blind Joao Simao's rasie to 240,000 with 43.

The flop came J95 and Zaki check-called a bet of 110,000 from Simao.

After the 5 on the turn, both players checked to the 2 on the river. Zaki tried to set the trap once more, and checked to Simao, who decided to check back and give the pot to Zaki with his aces.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Joao Simao br
Joao Simao
4,990,000
90,000
90,000
Day 1 Chip Leader
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Justin Zaki us
Justin Zaki
1,980,000
140,000
140,000
Profile photo of Zach Bruch us
Zach Bruch
660,000
50,000
50,000

Tags: Joao Simao'sJustin Zaki

Big Slick Gives Zaki a Big Double

Level 19 : Blinds 30,000/60,000, 60,000 ante
Justin Zaki
Justin Zaki

Zach Bruch opened to 120,000 on the button, before Justin Zaki three-bet to 700,000, leaving just 160,000 behind. It folded back to Bruch who four-bet all in, and Zaki quickly called to put himself at risk.

Justin Zaki: AK All in
Zach Bruch: A3

Bruch ran into the bigger ace of Zaki, who was looking poised to double up. However, the 652 flop made things sweaty, as Bruch picked a flush draw, and straight draw to knock out Zaki. But the 10 on the turn changed nothing, and the K on the river locked up the double for Zaki.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Joao Simao br
Joao Simao
5,080,000
30,000
30,000
Day 1 Chip Leader
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Justin Zaki us
Justin Zaki
1,840,000
860,000
860,000
Profile photo of Zach Bruch us
Zach Bruch
710,000
890,000
890,000

Tags: Justin ZakiZach Bruch

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