Action was picked up on the flop in a three way pot between Allen Kessler in early position, another player in the cutoff and another in the small blind.
The board rolled out 10♦Q♦5♣ and action checked over to Kessler who bet and both players called.
Action on the turn 9♦ saw action check to the cutoff who bet and only Kessler called.
Both players checked the river 10♥ with Kessler tabling A♥8♦5♦4♣ for a flush which was good for the pot.
Soner Osman: K♣5♦ / 3♥K♦K♥9♦ / 2♠
Opponent 1: XxXx / 8♣3♦6♥Q♥ / Xx
Opponent 2: XxXx / 6♠4♣10♣J♣~folded on sixth street
Action was picked up on fifth street between Soner Osman and two opponents where Osman bet and was called twice. On sixth street, Osman bet again, and was called by the first opponent, but the second opponent laid down his cards. Both players checked seventh street before Osman showed his third king which was good for the pot as neither player had a low.
A player in first position called with Jeanne David calling in early position, with multiple other players calling behind. The player in the big blind raised and the flop was seen by five players.
The flop rolled out A♣2♦4♦ and the big blind bet, folding out all players except for David, who called.
On the turn 8♥, the big blind checked to David who bet and the big blind called.
David bet the 5♥ river after the big blind checked and the big blind folded, ceding the pot to David.
Welcome back to PokerNews, the official media partner of the 2024 World Series of Poker and home of live updates from all bracelet events.
Today sees the start of Event #61: $2,500 Mixed: Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better; Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better (8-Handed), which gets underway at 2 p.m. local time and sees players start with 35,000 chips and blinds of 200/300 and betting limits of 300/600 here at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.
The first six levels will be 40 minutes in length and will increase to 60 minutes from there on out. Day 1 will play for 12 levels with 15-minute breaks every two hours (no dinner break). Day 2 of the tournament will restart at 1 p.m. Tuesday and will play for ten levels with a 60-minute dinner break reserved after Level 18. Day 3, the start time of which has yet to be determined, will play down to a winner.
Last year's event drew 460 runners for a prize pool of $1,023,500 as Canada's Bradley Smithdefeated heads-up opponent Nghia Le for $221,733 and his maiden bracelet.
"It's always been my dream to win a bracelet," Smith told PokerNews. "Anyone who plays poker, it's their dream to win a bracelet."
2023 $2,500 Mixed: Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better; Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better (8-Handed) Results
Place
Winner
Country
Prize (in USD)
1
Bradley Smith
Canada
$221,733
2
Nghia Le
United States
$137,039
3
Nick Pupillo
United States
$94,681
4
Omar Mehmood
United States
$66,605
5
Timothy Frazin
United States
$47,721
6
Jonah Seewald
United States
$34,836
7
Philip Sternheimer
United States
$25,919
8
Yuval Bronshtein
Israel
$19,662
Planning on playing this event? PokerNews activates MyStack for every WSOP event, regardless of that tournament's buy-in, allowing you to directly adjust your chip counts in our live reporting
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The $50,000 Poker Players Championship is in full swing, and its field is brimming with the best poker talent on the planet. Be sure to check it out if you can.
Santhosh Suvarna banked an incredible $5,415,152 and his second WSOP bracelet by taking down the $250,000 Super High Roller.