Daily WSOP Paradise Highlights
Day live Completed
Daily WSOP Paradise Highlights
Day live Completed
Ace-Five suited is a pro favorite, and GTO Wizard dives into the math behind why this hand performs so well. From powerful blocker effects to versatile playability across all stack depths, the analysis shows its hidden strength.
If you’ve ever wondered why elite players keep reaching for it, here’s the breakdown.
A marathon heads-up battle saw Lithuania's Rokas Asipauskas emerging victorious over Alex Keating in Event #6: $5,000 Super COLOSSUS at World Series of Poker (WSOP) Paradise to win $504,950 and his first bracelet.
In doing so, he denied the well-known American pro (who has no relation to popular high-stakes cash game player Alan Keating) his second bracelet. Keating's first bracelet came from a victory in the $5,000 penultimate event at the 2023 WSOP in Las Vegas.
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Viktor "Isildur1" Blom, one of the most legendary online poker players ever, took a shot at his first World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet on Tuesday in the Bahamas. But he fell short in heads-up play thanks to a flop that didn't go his way on the final hand.
The Swedish high roller, one of 284 entrants in WSOP Paradise Event #7: $10,000 Super PLOSSUS, lost in the end to Tom Vogelsang, who didn't just win his first gold bracelet. He earned just his second career WSOP cash, and first since 2021.
Phil Hellmuth made a bit of a run at his 18th bracelet by reaching Day 2, but inevitably bowed out in 16th place for $26,000. Sean Winter, Bryce Yockey, and Kane Kalas were among the 43 players who earned a piece of the $2,754,800 prize pool but didn't reach the final table.
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Mario Mosböck saw this coming.
Before the WSOP Super Main Event began, the high roller tipped Bernhard Binder as a future star. Now Binder is in the final five of the biggest guaranteed tournament in poker history with $2.35 million already secured.
Read the full article on why Mosböck’s prediction is coming true.
It might not be the last bracelet, but one of the last events of the WSOP Paradise festival is in the books, with Imari Love topping the 509-player field to win Event #15: $2,500 The Closer Turbo Bounty.
He defeated Blaz Zerjav heads-up, denying the Slovenian his third bracelet. Both of Zerjav's two bracelets came this summer in the $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Rollerand then the $1,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better a couple of weeks later.
For this result, Zerjav banked $95,400, with Love taking down the tournament for his first bracelet and $145,725 in prize money.
| Place | Player | Country | Payout |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Imari Love | United States | $145,725 |
| 2 | Blaz Zerjav | Slovenia | $95,400 |
| 3 | Sergi Reixach | Spain | $65,800 |
| 4 | Robert Pollmeier | Germany | $46,200 |
| 5 | Daniel Neilson | Australia | $33,100 |
| 6 | Theodore Doukas | Canada | $24,100 |
| 7 | Agustin Naranja | Argentina | $18,000 |
| 8 | David Orlando | United States | $13,700 |
The list of best players without a World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet just got shorter, as David Coleman claimed his first piece of coveted gold hardware by taking down the $125,000 Triton No-Limit Hold'em 7-Handed event at the 2025 WSOP Paradise.
Coleman, who finished agonizingly close to a bracelet last summer, dominated the final stages of the tournament, defeating a 99-entry field to secure a career-best payday of $3,113,000. While runner-up Dominykas Mikolaitis earned $2,104,000, the attention was also on the high-profile exit of third-place finisher Martin Kabrhel, whose $1,367,000 score denied him a third bracelet of the year
Click here to read the full report of Coleman's maiden bracelet victory!
2022 WSOP Main Event Champion Espen Jorstad is back on the felt in WSOP Paradise in the Bahamas after taking a well-deserved break.
Jorstad skipped the summer WSOP in Las Vegas this year, prioritizing his mental health, fitness, and relationships. He told PokerNews the time off helped him realize "Poker isn't everything," allowing him to return to the tables feeling refreshed and playing "without judgment."
He may feel "a bit more rusty," but the poker world is excited to see the $10 million winner back in action! Check out the full interview here!
After years of coming close, Aleksejs Ponakovs has finally done it: he's captured his first career Triton title!
The Latvian pro outlasted a field of 237 entries in the $100,000 Triton Main Event at WSOP Paradise to claim the massive $4,750,000 top prize and his third WSOP bracelet.
Ponakovs entered his 20th Triton final table as the chip leader, but the journey was far from easy. After dropping down the counts, a key double-up with pocket aces at five-handed play turned the tide. He then went on a tear, eliminating his final three opponents, including Brazil's Pedro Padilha in heads-up play for the title.
Find out how Ponakovs navigated the final table to secure his biggest-ever live cash.
Some tournament victories are hard-fought slogs that last until the small hours of the morning, but Kayhan Mokri's triumph in the $250,000 Triton Invitational at WSOP Paradise was an absolute masterclass in dominance.
The Norwegian started Day 3 with a massive chip lead over the final 15 players and never looked back. By the time he dispatched Gabriel Andrade in second place, sealing the massive $7,725,000 top prize, he was still in time to celebrate at the WSOP Player's Party.
This victory marks Mokri's first WSOP bracelet and his third Triton title, propelling him to the top of the Norwegian all-time money list.
Read the full blow-by-blow report on Kayhan Mokri's $7.7 million victory!