2024 World Series of Poker

Event #9: $1,500 Limit Hold'em (8-Handed)
Day: 1
123
Event Info
2024 World Series of Poker
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
q8
Prize
$121,074
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$591,405
Entries
434
Level Info
Level
31
Limits
150,000 / 300,000
Ante
0
Players Info - Day 1
Entries
434
Players Left
118
Players Left 1 / 434
Filter

Filter

Filter By
Sort By

Engelbert Pulls out a Straight

Level 1 : Limits 200/400, 0 ante

The player in the hijack made the first bet and the cutoff player, Glenn Engelbert, three-bet. The button called the two bets, as did the hijack, and the flop came out as J810. Both out-of-position players checked and the button bet. Engelbert raised and the button called.

The turn was the A bringing a few draws to the table and Engelbert bet out. The button raised and Engelbert placed the three-bet. Only the button called.

The river 10 was a juicy card and Engelbert bet. The button called, and mucked when Engelbert showed KQ for the straight.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Glenn Engelbert us
Glenn Engelbert
27,000
27,000
27,000

Tags: Glenn Engelbert

Lemos Finds Value

Level 1 : Limits 200/400, 0 ante

Action started with a raise to 400 from the hijack, the cutoff called, and Victor Lemos put in another raise to 600 from the button.

The big blind called, and the hijack put in another raise 800. The cutoff called and Lemos bumped it up to 1,000. All players called and went four ways to a flop.

That flop was 2K5 and Lemos fired out 200 which the hijack and cutoff both called.

The 6 came on the turn, and Lemos put out 400 this time and only the hijack made the call.

The 6 was the river, and Lemos bet 400 again which the hijack called. Lemos flipped over AK and it was the winner.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Victor Lemos pa
Victor Lemos
28,500
28,500
28,500

Tags: Victor Lemos

Strzalka Chips Up With a Flush

Level 1 : Limits 200/400, 0 ante

There was an under the gun raise to 400, the button, small blind, and big blind all called the raise.

The flop came J92, action checked around to the button who bet 200, Kevin Strzalka called from the big blind and the other two players folded.

The turn was the Q, Strzalka checked, the button bet 400 and was met with a raise to 800 which he called.

The river was the J, Strzalka bet 400 and the button raised to 800 which Strzalka called.

Kevin Strzalka: K6
Button: J10

Strzalka's flush bested the trips of the button, and he took down the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Kevin Strzalka us
Kevin Strzalka
28,200
28,200
28,200

Tags: Kevin Strzalka

Players Filter in Slowly

Level 1 : Limits 200/400, 0 ante

The WSOP is well-staffed and dealers are lined up as players continue to take seats in Event #9: $1,500 Limit Hold'em. Those who are in their seats have buckled up for a long day. It can be expected that many notables will be late registering for this event when the blinds have increased significantly.

Mundian Strikes First

Level 1 : Limits 200/400, 0 ante

Action started with a raise to 400 from under the gun. Maninderpal Mundian called on the button and the blinds called as well.

Players went four ways to a flop of 733.

The big blind led out for 200 and Mundian bumped it up to 400, the big blind made the call.

The 3 peeled off and Mundian fired 400 which the big blind called again.

The K slowed the action down and both players checked. Mundian tabled 76 and the big blind mucked 44.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Maninderpal Mundian us
Maninderpal Mundian
27,000

Tags: Maninderpal Mundian

Level: 1

Blinds: 100-200
Limits: 200-400

Event #9: $1,500 Limit Hold'em Gets Underway at 2 p.m.

Vadim Shlez
Vadim Shlez

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 #9: $1,500 Limit Hold'em (8-Handed) here at Horseshoe and Paris, Las Vegas.

This three-day event gets underway at 2 p.m. local time with late registration open for nine levels. There will be 15-minute breaks every three levels, with no dinner break scheduled on Day 1.

The starting stack is 25,000 chips with the plan for Day 1 to play 15 levels. Day 2 resumes at 1 p.m. Saturday when levels increase to 60 minutes.

Last year's event saw 527 players generate a prize pool of $703,545. The winner was Vadim Shlez, who defeated Rostyslav Sabishchenko heads up in a Ukrainian one-two. Shlez took home $146,835 and his first WSOP bracelet.

“I’ve been working on it for pretty much my whole life,” Shlez told PokerNews. “I started poker pretty much with the World Series of Poker [...] I didn’t expect to win in this discipline, even though it was my favorite game when I started.”

YearEntriesWinnerCountryPayout
2023527Vadim ShlezUkraine$146,835
2022522Michael MoncekUnited States$145,856
2021422Yuval BronshteinIsrael$124,374
2019541David BakerUnited States$161,139
2018596Robert NehorayanUnited States$173,568

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

MyStack is a free poker tool that puts you in control of your chip counts on our live reporting pages. Once you have created a free PokerNews account, you can use MyStack to update your chip counts in real time; hopefully, your stack will continue increasing throughout the event!

Become a Bigger Part of the Action With MyStack

What Else is Happening at the WSOP?

Chips Cards Branding
Chips Cards Branding

Event #9: $1,500 Limit Hold'em (8-Handed)

Day 1 Started