2021 World Series of Poker

Event #67: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Main Event World Championship
Event Info

2021 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
107
Prize
$8,000,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$62,011,250
Entries
6,650
Level Info
Level
41
Blinds
1,200,000 / 2,400,000
Ante
2,400,000
Players Info - Day 7
Entries
36
Players Left
9

Day 7 of the WSOP Main Event Begins at 12 P.M. PT

Hye Park
Hye Park

Welcome to Day 7 of the 2021 World Series of Poker $10,000 Main Event, which begins on Monday, November 15 at 12 p.m. PT at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino. Just 36 of the 6,650 entries remain in the hunt for their quest to be crowned the 2021 World Champion of Poker. That field of 36 will be whittled down to just nine players following today's play.

Those who have successfully navigated through six days of Main Event action have already locked up a six-figure payday of $198,550 but of course, everyone will have their eyes on the aforementioned title and the $8 million first-place prize.

A total of $62,011,250 has been generated for the prize pool and the United States' Hye Park is in pole position to receive the lion's share of the winnings. The New Jersey resident has 21 cashes at the WSOP and further five on the WSOP Circuit. His efforts under the WSOP umbrella has resulted in $239,553 in earnings and one WSOP Circuit ring, which came in July in the WSOP Summer Circuit Event #8 - $50,000 GTD NLH Deep Turbo 2x Re-entry for $14,398.

Park's rise to the top of the chip counts came after the dinner break on Day 6, where we would go on to knock out Jon Shoreman and Gabriel Sack in back-to-back hands. The chip leader then sent Jason Osser to the rail after both players flopped a pair of aces and got their chips in the middle. Park's ace-queen held versus the ace-jack of his opponent to reach 21 million in chips.

PokerStars Player Championship winner and Day 4 chip leader Ramon Colillas also finds himself in a good position to make the final table. It would be quite the story for the Spanish national who was a relative unknown in the poker world until he won the world's largest $25,000 buy-in poker tournament of all time. To put into perspective, Colillas has $5,247,716 in live earnings from 24 recorded cashes, with his largest payout being $5.1 million.

POSITIONPLAYERCOUNTRYCHIP COUNTBIG BLINDS
1Hye ParkUnited States29,500,000123
2Demosthenes KiriopoulosCanada24,905,000104
3Joshua RemitioUnited States21,490,00090
4Chase BianchiUnited States20,765,00087
5Koray AldemirGermany18,905,00079
6George HolmesUnited States18,425,00077
7Ramon ColillasSpain18,200,00076
8Alejandro LococoArgentina17,950,00075
9Ozgur SecilmisTurkey14,700,00061
10David CabreraSpain14,530,00061

Chance Kornuth finished the day just outside of the top 10 and continues to shine in the 2021 WSOP, during which he won his third career gold bracelet in Event #29: $10,000 Short Deck No-Limit Hold'em. Other notables returning for Day 7 include Jareth East, Jesse Lonis, the WSOP bracelet winners Robert Mitchell and Mitchell Halverson, as well as Nicolas Dumont.

Two GGPoker qualifiers are also still in the hunt for the top prize of $8 million. Sean Ragozzini made it through with 13,435,000 in chips while ClubGG qualifier Vasu Amarapu follows not far behind with 10,290,000.

Day 7 will kick off at 12 p.m. Las Vegas time on Monday, November 15. Action will resume in Level 31 with blinds at 120,000/240,000/240,000.

Be sure to keep it here all day long for updates from the PokerNews team live at the 2021 World Series of Poker Main Event.

The 2021 WSOP Main Event in Numbers

DayPlayers Total for DayPlayers Total CumulativePlayers Surviving
1a523523348
1b8451,368611
1c6001,968433
1d2,5504,5181,933
1e7975,315590
1f1,0456,360782
    
2abd2,9006,4961,440
2cef1,8106,650922
    
32,3626,6501,000
41,0006,650292
52926,55096
6966,55036

Tags: Chance KornuthGabriel SackHye ParkJareth EastJason OsserJesse LonisJon ShoremanSean RagozziniVasu AmarapuRamon ColillasNicolas DumontMitchell Halverson