2025 World Series of Poker

Event #25: $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship
Day: 3
Event Info
2025 World Series of Poker
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
kkq8774
Prize
$295,008
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$1,181,100
Entries
127
Level Info
Level
26
Blinds
0 / 0
Ante
0
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
9
Players Left
1
Players Left 1 / 127
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Rheem Makes a "Little F****** Play"

Level 19
Chino Rheem
Chino Rheem

Dan Heimiller: XxXx / A - folded on third street
Paul Volpe: XxXx / 10926 / Xx
Chino Rheem: 332 / K2310

Dan Heimiller completed before Paul Volpe raised. Chino Rheem made it it three-bets, which folded out Heimiller. Volpe decided to call.

Volpe called bets from fourth to seventh street, where Rheem tabled threes full of deuces at showdown.

There were some comments at the table about Rheem’s play that clearly irked him. He responded with something along the lines of, “Everyone always has something to say about how I play a hand.”

"I just didn't put you on that hand," said Matusow, who meant no offense.

"Isn't that the f****** point?" replied Rheem. "I knew he [Heimiller] had ace-high, him [Volpe] a pair of tens, so let's make a f****** little play."

"I actually liked it, that was gangster," Matusow chimed back as the next hand got underway.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Chino Rheem us
Chino Rheem
1,650,000
250,000
250,000
Day 2 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Paul Volpe us
Paul Volpe
400,000
284,000
284,000
WSOP 3X Winner

Tags: Chino RheemDan HeimillerPaul Volpe

Rheem Versus Heimiller Part II

Level 19

Chino Rheem: A43 / A10A3
Dan Heimiller: XxXx / J81010 / Xx

Action picked up on fourth as Rheem bet and Heimiller called, and he called another bet on fifth.

On sixth, Rheem led, Heimiller raised, and Rheem called.

Heimiller attempted to lead dark on seventh but was told he didn't have the high hand on board.

"What are you doing?" joked Rheem, "Okay I check."

Heimiller immediately fired about a bet and Rheem instantly tossed in a raise. Heimiller reluctantly called after a small tank. Rheem showed his full house, aces full of threes, to drag a sizeable pot.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Chino Rheem us
Chino Rheem
1,400,000
340,000
340,000
Day 2 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Dan Heimiller us
Dan Heimiller
1,075,000
225,000
225,000
WSOP 3X Winner

Tags: Chino RheemDan Heimiller

Heimiller Dents Rheem with a Flush

Level 19
Daniel Heimiller
Daniel Heimiller

Dan Heimiller J57 / 499J
Chino Rheem: XxXx / 539J / Xx

Dan Heimiller completed and Chino Rheem called from two spots over. Heimiller check-called a bet on fourth street before leading out with open nines on fifth street. Rheem called and the same action took place on sixth street.

On seventh street, Rheem raised Heimiller's bet. The latter quickly called and tabled a flush to leapfrog his opponent in the chip counts.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Dan Heimiller us
Dan Heimiller
1,300,000
304,000
304,000
WSOP 3X Winner
Profile photo of Chino Rheem us
Chino Rheem
1,060,000
190,000
190,000
Day 2 Chip Leader

Tags: Chino RheemDan Heimiller

Friedman Stops Xu Making It Three in a Row

Level 19

Adam Friedman: 33 / Q276 / 2
Qiang Xu: XxXx / 4K69 / Xx

Adam Friedman completed. The action folded to Qiang Xu, who was the bring-in. He called and then action checked through on fourth street. Xu then check-called bets on fifth, sixth and seventh street.

"Two pair," announced Friedman, who had threes and deuces. Xu couldn't best the small two pair and the pot went to Friedman.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Qiang Xu cn
Qiang Xu
1,380,000
170,000
170,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Adam Friedman us
Adam Friedman
1,200,000
162,000
162,000
Day 1 Chip Leader
WSOP 5X Winner

Tags: Adam FriedmanQiang Xu

Xu Gets The Higher Board to Fold

Level 19

Dave Rogers: XxXx / 210105 - folded on sixth street
Qiang Xu: XxXx / J434

Qiang Xu completed for a second consecutive hand, and Dave Rogers called as the bring-in.

Rogers called a bet on fourth street, before leading out on fifth street after he made open tens. Xu stuck around.

Rogers slowed down and checked on sixth street, and then folded when Xu fired out a bet.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Qiang Xu cn
Qiang Xu
1,550,000
150,000
150,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Dave Rogers us
Dave Rogers
350,000
162,000
162,000

Tags: Dave RogersQiang Xu

Xu Takes the Lead from Rheem

Level 19

Chino Rheem: XxXx / 109610 - folded on sixth street
Qiang Xu: XxXx / KQQQ

Qiang Xu completed, and Chino Rheem called. Rheem called bets on fourth and fifth street but folded when Xu made open trip queens on sixth streett.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Qiang Xu cn
Qiang Xu
1,400,000
125,000
125,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Chino Rheem us
Chino Rheem
1,250,000
101,000
101,000
Day 2 Chip Leader

Tags: Chino RheemQiang Xu

Level: 19

Ante: 5000
Low Card: 7000
Completion: 25000
Limits: 25000-50000

Chino Rheem Seeking First Bracelet Amongst Stacked Final Table for Day 3 of the $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship

David Rheem
David Rheem

Seven Card Stud is one of the most historic, yet difficult, variants of poker. Year after year, the $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship is the least attended championship event at the World Series of Poker. The explanation is clear: the game is tremendously difficult.

A total of 127 entries were tallied for Event #25: $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship, up from the 104 runners in 2024, but just nine remain in contention for the WSOP gold bracelet and the first-place prize of $295,008. Today, one of those nine will stand alone as the champion.

After a long Day 2 that included 37 hands of hand-for-hand and wrapping up at 1:30 a.m., Chino Rheem leads the final nine into the unofficial final table with a stack of 1,351,000. Rheem has a storied career with memorable deep runs in the Main Event and two second-place finishes in WSOP events. The only thing missing from his resume is a bracelet, but he will have the opportunity today to secure his first.

Following the late-night exit of Daniel Negreanu in 11th, George Alexander was eliminated on the final hand of Day 2 as the remaining players will combine at a single table at 1 p.m. local time for battle.

Daniel Negreanu - 11th Place Finisher
Daniel Negreanu - 11th Place Finisher

Coming into the final day in second is China’s Qiang Xu with 1,275,000. Xu has one bracelet to his name coming last year in an $800 No-Limit Hold’em Event. Despite his relative inexperience in mixed games, Xu proved that he belongs in such a strong field.

Rounding out the podium in third place is Adam Friedman with 1,038,000, who was the chip-leader after Day 1. A former winner of this event in 2022, Friedman showcased his aggressive playing style on Day 2 as his stack yo-yo’ed up and down but finished strong as he chases his sixth bracelet.

Adam Friedman
Adam Friedman

Start of Day 3 Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Bets
1Chino RheemUnited States1,351,00027
2Qiang XuChina1,275,00026
3Adam FriedmanUnited States1,038,00021
4Mike MatusowUnited States999,00020
5Dan HeimillerUnited States996,00020
6Paul VolpeUnited States684,00014
7Dave RogersUnited States512,00010
8Nick GuagentiUnited States435,0009
9Mori EskandaniUnited States338,0007

Others still in contention include poker boom legend Mike Matusow (999,000), who explained to PokerNews at the end of Day 2 how a potential win would affect his legacy, newly-minted three-time bracelet winner Dan Heimiller (996,000), and Poker Hall of Famer Mori Eskandani (338,000).

Michael Matusow
Michael Matusow

Also involved for Day 3 are three-time bracelet winner Paul Volpe (684,000), Dave Rogers (512,000), who competed at the $100,000 buy-in Super High Roller Bowl Mixed Games a couple months ago, and high-stakes mixed-game regular Nick Guagenti (435,000), seeking his third bracelet.

Nick Guagenti
Nick Guagenti

Unofficial Final Table Seat Draw

SeatPlayerCountryChipsBig Bets
1Daniel HeimillerUnited States996,00020
2Paul VolpeUnited States684,00014
3Chino RheemUnited States1,351,00027
4Mori EskandaniUnited States338,0007
5Adam FriedmanUnited States1,038,00021
6Mike MatusowUnited States999,00020
7Nick GuagentiUnited States435,0009
8Dave RogersUnited States512,00010
9Qiang XuChina1,275,00026

The stakes for today’s final table extend beyond the money, as the prestige and respect associated with this title transcend the dollars to be won. The final nine have the opportunity to cement their legacy by winning one of the most difficult bracelets of the summer, and the pressure could not be higher.

Remaining Payouts

PlacePrize
1$295,008
2$196,662
3$135,828
4$96,502
5$70,587
6$53,201
7$41,357
8$33,190
9$27,528

Play resumes at 1 p.m. local time in the Horseshoe Event Center. Action will begin in Level 19 with an ante of 5,000 and limits at 25,000/50,000 with an average stack of 850,000, or 17 big bets. This is relatively deep for a limit tournament, so a grueling and intense Day 3 is expected. Levels will be 90 minutes in length through to the conclusion of the event.

Stay tuned to PokerNews for live updates throughout the final table for Event #25: $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship, and all other events at the 2025 World Series of Poker.

Tags: Adam FriedmanChino RheemDan HeimillerDaniel HeimillerDaniel NegreanuDave RogersGeorge AlexanderMike MatusowMori EskandaniNick GuagentiPaul VolpeQiang Xu

Event #25: $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship

Day 3 Started

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