2025 World Series of Poker

Event #58: $3,000 Nine Game Mix
Day: 2
123
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
Filter (1)

Filter

Filter By
Sort By

Koji Fujimoto Eliminated in 19th Place ($9,682)

Level 22
Koji Fujimoto
Koji Fujimoto

Razz

Koji Fujimoto: 5x2x / 3x10x9x8x / Xx All in
Philip Sternheimer: 8xAx / 6xJx6x3x / Xx

Fujimoto completed, Sternheimer raised, and Fujimoto called all-in.

On sixth, Fujimoto had a nine and Sternheimer had a jack-eight. Fujimoto caught a Kx and Sternheimer caught a 5x to improve to an eight to eliminate Fujimoto.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Philip Sternheimer gb
Philip Sternheimer
975,000
315,000
315,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Koji Fujimoto jp
Koji Fujimoto
Busted

Tags: Koji FujimotoPhilip Sternheimer

August Takes From Zaichenko

Level 22

Razz

Leonard August: 10x8x7x/3x5x3x9x
Andrey Zaichenko: XxXx/7x5x5x7x/Xx

Heads-up on fourth street, Andrey Zaichenko called bet from Leonard August until seventh street and then both players checked down.

August turned over 8x7x for a nine-eight and Zaichenko sent his hand into the muck.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Leonard August us
Leonard August
520,000
84,000
84,000
Profile photo of Andrey Zaichenko ru
Andrey Zaichenko
420,000
250,000
250,000
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Andrey ZaichenkoLeonard August

River Rat Rich Trips Up Bach

Level 22

Limit Hold'em

Yueqi Zhu raised from the button and David Bach called in the big blind.

On the A108 flop, Zhu continued before Bach check-raised, and Zhu called.

Bach led on the 7 turn, Zhu raised, and Bach called.

On the 10 river, Bach reluctantly check-called a bet as Zhu revealed 109 for the winner with trip tens

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Yueqi Zhu cn
Yueqi Zhu
1,150,000
227,000
227,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of David Bach us
David Bach
895,000
21,000
21,000
WSOP 3X Winner

Tags: David BachYueqi Zhu

Play Has Ended

Level 22

The final 18 players have ended play for the night.

Stay tuned to PokerNews for full chip counts and a full day recap.

End-of-Day Chip Counts

Level 22
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Jonathan Glendinning us
Jonathan Glendinning
1,446,000
154,000
154,000
Day 2 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Jon Kyte no
Jon Kyte
1,425,000
165,000
165,000
Profile photo of Thomas Taylor ca
Thomas Taylor
1,278,000
138,000
138,000
Profile photo of Jeff Madsen us
Jeff Madsen
1,200,000
100,000
100,000
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 4X Winner
Profile photo of Fu Wong us
Fu Wong
1,200,000
759,000
759,000
Profile photo of Yueqi Zhu cn
Yueqi Zhu
1,160,000
10,000
10,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Hiroshi Tanaka jp
Hiroshi Tanaka
1,021,000
181,000
181,000
Profile photo of Philip Sternheimer gb
Philip Sternheimer
975,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Robert Wells gb
Robert Wells
969,000
169,000
169,000
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of David Bach us
David Bach
840,000
55,000
55,000
WSOP 3X Winner
Profile photo of Anthony Ribeiro br
Anthony Ribeiro
778,000
338,000
338,000
Profile photo of Nicolas Barthe fr
Nicolas Barthe
773,000
87,000
87,000
Profile photo of Yuri Dzivielevski br
Yuri Dzivielevski
705,000
212,000
212,000
Defending Champion
WSOP 5X Winner
Profile photo of Kelvin Kerber br
Kelvin Kerber
700,000
270,000
270,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Leonard August us
Leonard August
515,000
5,000
5,000
Profile photo of Ari Rabin-Havt us
Ari Rabin-Havt
465,000
85,000
85,000
Profile photo of Michael Wolff us
Michael Wolff
448,000
132,000
132,000
Profile photo of Andrey Zaichenko ru
Andrey Zaichenko
401,000
19,000
19,000
WSOP 1X Winner

Day 3 Seating

Level 22
TableSeatPlayerCountryChip Count
FT31Jonathan GlendinningUnited States1,446,000
FT33Kelvin KerberBrazil700,000
FT34Robert WellsUnited Kingdom969,000
FT35Anthony RibeiroBrazil778,000
FT36Hiroshi TanakaJapan1,021,000
FT37Michael WolffUnited States448,000
     
FT21Jeff MadsenUnited States1,200,000
FT22Ari Rabin-HavtUnited States465,000
FT23Nicolas BartheFrance773,000
FT24Yueqi ZhuChina1,160,000
FT25Jon KyteNorway1,425,000
FT27David BachUnited States840,000
     
FT11Thomas TaylorCanada1,278,000
FT12Philip SternheimerGermany975,000
FT13Andrey ZaichenkoRussian Federation401,000
FT14Fu WongUnited States1,200,000
FT15Leonard AugustUnited States515,000
FT16Yuri DzivielevskiBrazil705,000

Glendinning Leads Final 18; Dzivielevski Looks to Defend Title in $3,000 Nine Game Mix

Level 22
Jonathan Glendinning
Jonathan Glendinning

Day 2 of Event #58: $3,000 Nine Game Mix—affectionately referred to as the "Mini PPC" (Poker Player's Championship) by many players—saw 144 players return to the Horseshoe Convention Center to showcase their skills across multiple poker disciplines. After ten hours of play, Jonathan Glendinning emerged as the leader of the remaining 18 players after bagging up 1,446,000 in chips. Just behind him is Jon Kyte with 1,425,000 and rounding out the top three is Thomas Taylor, who ended with 1,278,000.

Glendinning is a regular at WSOP events with over $1 million in reported live-tournament earnings. Although he has yet to win a bracelet, he does hold one circuit ring and has cashed six times during this series. Glendinning will be looking to best his fourth-place finish in the $1,500 Badugi event a couple of weeks ago.

Glendinning will have stiff competition, however, as less than 300,000 separate the top five players. Additionally, the remaining field is packed with poker talent, including four-time bracelet winner and 2006 Player of the Year Jeff Madsen (1,200,000) and Defending champion Yuri Dzivielevski (705,000) — who will be gunning for his own fourth bracelet.

Day 2 Top Ten Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip Count
1Jonathan GlendinningUnited States1,446,000
2Jon KyteNorway1,425,000
3Thomas TaylorCanada1,278,000
4Jeff MadsenUnited States1,200,000
5Fu WongUnited States1,200,000
6Yueqi ZhuChina1,160,000
7Hiroshi TanakaJapan1,021,000
8Philip SternheimerUnited Kingdom975,000
9Robert WellsUnited Kingdom969,000
10David BachUnited States840,000
Jon Kyte
Jon Kyte

The remaining players have already earned $9,682, but the ultimate goal is the $228,115 first-place prize, which represents the winner's share of the $1,092,030 prize pool.

Remaining Payouts

PlacePrizePlacePrize
1$228,1158-9$19,134
2$149,15210-11$14,839
3$99,77112-14$11,822
4$68,30415-18$9,682
5$47,884  
6$34,394  
7$25,328  

Day 2 Highlights

The returning players represented an absolutely stacked field of poker studs fighting to secure their spot in the money. However, with over 80 eliminations to go before the money bubble burst, the majority found themselves on the rail before cashing. Among those who fell early are Josh Arieh, Luis Velador, Felipe Ramos, Dan Smith, Viktor Blom, Dario Alioto, Mike Matusow, Dave Stann, Nam Le, and Phil Hellmuth.

Meanwhile, Kyte got off to an excellent start after cracking Danny Noam's aces and found himself sitting atop the leaderboard with half a million in chips shortly after the first break. Kyte continued to chip up throughout the night and narrowly missed bagging the chip lead. Kyte has yet to win a bracelet, but holds multiple EPT titles and a runner-up finish in the WSOP last year in a $2,500 Mixed Omaha Hi-Lo Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo event.

Frank Athey was bestowed the unfortunate title of "bubble boy" after getting all in during Razz and ending with a ten against Jarryd Godena's nine. At that point, all the short-stacked players who locked up a min-cash began dropping out en masse, including Gus Hansen, Brad Owen, Chip Jett, Nick Schulman, James Obst, and David "ODB" Baker — whose chips went to Dzivielevski after making an eight-low in Razz against Dzivielevski's seven-low.

Yuri Dzivielevski
Yuri Dzivielevski

As play wound down for the night, Glendinning scored a key knockout against Chad Eveslage after flopping two pair and turning a full house in Omaha Hi-Lo to get a nice boost to his stack. However, the final elimination of the night belonged to Philip Sternheimer, who sent Koji Fujimoto to the rail after drawing to an eight in Razz.

Day 3 will begin at 1 p.m. on Monday, June 23, and the plan is to play down to a winner. Action will resume on Level 23, which features 40,000/80,000 betting limits for limit and stud games and 10,000/20,000 blinds for pot-limit and no-limit games. Levels will continue to last 60 minutes each, and breaks will be held after every two hours of play.

The finish line is now in sight, as just 17 eliminations are all that stand before the eventual champion. Be sure to stick with PokerNews as we continue to bring you all the chops, scoops, and beats until one player is left holding the gold!

Tags: Brad OwenChad EveslageDanny NoamDave StannDavid BachDavid ODB BakerFelipe RamosGus HansenJames ObstJeff MadsenJon KyteJonathan GlendinningJosh AriehKoji FujimotoLuis VeladorMike MatusowNam LeNick SchulmanPhil HellmuthPhilip SternheimerRobert WellsThomas TaylorYueqi ZhuYuri Dzivielevski

Event #58: $3,000 Nine Game Mix

Day 2 Completed