2025 World Series of Poker

Event #58: $3,000 Nine Game Mix
Day: 2
Event Info
2025 World Series of Poker
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
10x7x5x4x3x
Prize
$228,115
Event Info
Buy-in
$3,000
Prize Pool
$1,092,030
Entries
409
Level Info
Level
32
Blinds
0 / 0
Ante
0
Players Info - Day 2
Entries
144
Players Left
18
Players Left 1 / 409

Gus Hansen Brings Big Stack to Day 2 of $3,000 Nine Game

Gus Hansen
Gus Hansen

Event #58 of the 2025 World Series of Poker, the $3,000 Nine Game, attracted 409 entries to the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas. At the end of Day 1, 144 players bagged up, and they will return today at 1 p.m. local time for more mixed-game action.

Among the hopefuls eyeing a share of the $1,092,030 prize pool is poker-boom era legend Gus Hansen. Hansen has made a resurgence at the WSOP this summer, playing a full schedule of predominantly mixed games. A victory for Hansen would mean his first bracelet in 15 years, while the $228,115 first-place prize would mean Hansen's first six-figure cash since 2011.

The road to victory is still long, though, and while Hansen's stack of 238,000 places him in the Top 10 at the start of Day 2, it is still some ways off from chipleader Oliver Tot's 356,000. Defending champion Yuri Dzivielevski is also in front of Hansen with 296,000 in his possession, and 25K Fantasy pick Nicolas Milgrom can be found in the Top 10 as well, with a bag worth 254,500.

Yuri Dzivielevski
Yuri Dzivielevski

Top 10 Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip Count
1Oliver TotSlovakia356,000
2Fu WongUnited States355,000
3Sean AkhaviUnited States331,500
4Matthew WoodwardUnited States307,000
5Yuri DzivielevskiBrazil296,000
6Andrey ZaichenkoRussian Federation270,000
7Nicolas MilgromFrance254,500
8Nicolas BartheFrance248,500
9Fabrice SoulierFrance244,500
10Gus HansenDenmark238,000

As usual in the WSOP mixed game events, many more notable players will make an appearance on Day 2. A small selection includes Hall of Famers Brian Rast (134,000), Phil Hellmuth (87,500), and Huck Seed (63,500), and multi-bracelet winners Brian Yoon (131,500), Nick Schulman (122,000), Calvin Anderson (98,000), Josh Arieh (60,500), and Brad Ruben (24,500).

Over half the field needs to be eliminated before the 64 paid spots are reached, at which point every remaining player will have guaranteed themselves a minimum cash of $6,029. Five-figure payouts will start from place 14 and up, while only the top two finishers will receive six-figure sums.

Payout Structure

PlacePrizePlacePrize
1$228,11510-11$14,839
2$149,15212-14$11,822
3$99,77115-20$9,682
4$68,30421-27$8,158
5$47,88428-34$7,079
6$34,39435-41$6,330
7$25,32842-62$6,029
8-9$19,134  

The tournament will recommence in Level 13, with blinds in the big bet games at 1,000/2,000, and the limits in the fixed-limit games 4,000/8,000. All levels will be 60 minutes in length, and ten of them will be played on Day 2. Breaks of 15 minutes are scheduled after every two levels, with a dinner break set to take place after Level 18, around 7:30 p.m. local time.

PokerNews will be bringing the action from all nine games live from the tournament floor in Las Vegas, so stay tuned to this page for major updates and interesting hands.

Tags: Andrey ZaichenkoBrad RubenBrian RastBrian YoonCalvin AndersonFabrice SoulierFu WongGus HansenHuck SeedJosh AriehMatthew WoodwardNick SchulmanNicolas BartheNicolas MilgromOliver TotPhil HellmuthSean AkhaviYuri Dzivielevski