2025 World Series of Poker

Event #81: $10,000 WSOP Main Event World Championship
Event Info
2025 World Series of Poker
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
103
Prize
$10,000,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$90,535,500
Entries
9,735
Level Info
Level
41
Blinds
1,000,000 / 2,500,000
Ante
2,500,000
Players Info - Day 1a
Entries
923
Players Left
634
Players Left 1 / 9735
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Huge Bluff by Kruezi

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante

After a limp in early position, Jeffrey Rogers raised to 3,400 from middle position and was called by Denny Kruezi in the cutoff. Erik Eisen in the big blind raised again to 17,500 and both Rogers and Kruezi called.

All three of them checked the KA2 flop leading to the 7 turn where Eisen bet 20,000. Rogers folded, but Kruezi made the call.

The 10 river was checked by Eisen who saw Kruezi moving all in for 33,800. Eisen went deep into the tank for nearly three minutes while Kruezi tried to talk to him. “You have the ace of diamonds?” he asked repeatedly.

A floorman intervened, warning Kruezi he wasn’t allowed to discuss the hand’s outcome. Eventually, the clock was called on Eisen, but he couldn't make a decision at the end of the countdown and his hand was declared dead.

Kruezi then slammed 74 face up on the table for the third pair and claimed the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Denny Kruezi de
Denny Kruezi
144,000
71,500
71,500
Profile photo of Erik Eisen de
Erik Eisen
65,000
23,000
23,000
Profile photo of Jeffrey Rogers us
Jeffrey Rogers
51,000

Tags: Denny KrueziErik EisenJeffrey Rogers

Lagodich Lets Aronowitz Donate

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante

On the button, Matthew Aronowitz called an early position raise of 1,300, before seeing Frank Lagodich, in the small blind, three-bet to 9,000. The original raiser folded, but Aronowitz made the call.

Lagodich continued with a bet of 5,500 on the 633 flop, and Aronowitz made the call once again.

There was no slowing down for Lagodich on the 8 turn, this time firing out 9,000. Lagodich wasn't going anywhere, though, as he matched the bet.

Aronowitz ceded on the 7 river, checking to Lagodich, who checked behind. Aronowitz showed A4, which was no good versus Lagodich's QQ.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Frank Lagodich us
Frank Lagodich
113,400
43,400
43,400
Profile photo of Matthew Aronowitz us
Matthew Aronowitz
48,800
48,800
48,800

Tags: Frank LagodichMatthew Aronowitz

Bricker Tables Kings

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante

There were roughly 13,000 chips in the pot on 284, Chase Bricker in the big blind checked to Francois Pirault in early position who checked behind.

Bricker led for 3,300 on the 3 turn and Pirault called. Both players decided to check on the 6 river.

Bricker tabled KK to scoop the pot and take his chip count to 92,000.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Chase Bricker us
Chase Bricker
92,000
25,000
25,000
Profile photo of Francois Pirault fr
Francois Pirault
48,000
48,000
48,000

Tags: Chase BrickerFrancois Pirault

End of Day 1a Chip Counts (full)

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante

According to the WSOP+ App, these are the end of Day 1a chip counts.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Victor Vo us
Victor Vo
352,000
107,000
107,000
Day 1A Chip Leader
Profile photo of Justin Yaker us
Justin Yaker
348,000
282,000
282,000
Profile photo of Miguel Coussement be
Miguel Coussement
320,200
126,200
126,200
Profile photo of Marc Spitaleri us
Marc Spitaleri
309,500
30,500
30,500
Profile photo of Jeremy Dan us
Jeremy Dan
282,000
145,000
145,000
Profile photo of Stanislav Zegal de
Stanislav Zegal
256,400
256,400
256,400
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Benjamin Gold us
Benjamin Gold
249,300
9,300
9,300
Profile photo of Wesley Fei
Wesley Fei
246,300
174,300
174,300
Profile photo of Chad Power us
Chad Power
243,900
70,900
70,900
Profile photo of Yamamoto Toshiyuki jp
Yamamoto Toshiyuki
243,200
103,200
103,200
Profile photo of Graham Mathews us
Graham Mathews
238,500
33,500
33,500
Profile photo of Oghenovo Constare gb
Oghenovo Constare
236,900
236,900
236,900
Profile photo of Hieu Ngo vn
Hieu Ngo
236,200
236,200
236,200
Profile photo of Nikolaos Lampropoulos gr
Nikolaos Lampropoulos
235,900
235,900
235,900
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Sam Rayburn us
Sam Rayburn
224,700
47,300
47,300
Profile photo of Artur Koren at
Artur Koren
224,400
224,400
224,400
Profile photo of Mayuko Morita jp
Mayuko Morita
222,000
222,000
222,000
Profile photo of Anthony Kalanj ca
Anthony Kalanj
220,800
220,800
220,800
Profile photo of Steven Merwin us
Steven Merwin
220,800
220,800
220,800
Profile photo of Andres Gonzalez es
Andres Gonzalez
219,500
219,500
219,500
Profile photo of Roberto Bianchi ar
Roberto Bianchi
219,000
13,000
13,000
Profile photo of Tabatha Hilliard us
Tabatha Hilliard
211,500
178,900
178,900
Profile photo of Toby Clifton us
Toby Clifton
210,700
210,700
210,700
Profile photo of Pierre Calamusa fr
Pierre Calamusa
209,800
5,800
5,800
Winamax
Profile photo of Seunghyun Nam us
Seunghyun Nam
208,800
208,800
208,800

Read full

Victor Vo Takes the Lead, Stanislav Zegal Bags Big in Day 1a of Main Event

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Stanislav Zegal
Stanislav Zegal

With a legacy spanning more than five decades, the $10,000 World Series of Poker Main Event No-Limit Hold-em World Championship has remained the premier stage for those chasing poker immortality. After a year of anticipation, the crown jewel of the WSOP returned today, with players from around the globe descending on Las Vegas for Day 1a.

From the moment poker legend Billy Baxter delivered the ceremonial “Shuffle up and deal!” until the final hand of the night, the atmosphere inside the Horseshoe and Paris, Las Vegas was vibrant and tense as 923 hopefuls took their seats in pursuit of poker’s most coveted bracelet and the title of World Champion.

Leading the way after the first ten hours of play is Victor Vo, whose stellar day left him atop the leaderboard with 352,000. Just behind him is Justin Yaker with 348,000, and rounding out the top three is Miguel Coussement, who bagged 320,200.

Sitting in sixth position is Stanislav Zegal, who had a breakout performance by winning the inaugural WSOP Paradise Main Event in 2023 for a career-best score of $2,000,000. Since then, the German has earned several cashes in WSOP events, but nothing rivaling his life-changing score in the Bahamas. However, with a pile of chips and plenty of momentum on his side, Zegal is in great shape to make another deep run in a WSOP Main Event.

End of Day 1a Top Ten Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Victor VoUnited States352,000587
2Justin YakerUnited States348,000580
3Miguel CoussementBelgium320,200534
4Marc SpitaleriUnited States309,500516
5Jeremy DanUnited States282,000470
6Stanislav ZegalGermany256,400427
7Benjamin GoldUnited States249,300416
8Wesley FeiChina246,300411
9Chad PowerUnited States243,900407
10Yamamoto ToshiyukiJapan243,200405

A total of 634 players managed to earn a Day 2 berth. Other notables outside of the top ten who bagged big include Nikolaos Lampropoulos (235,900), Jon Pardy (187,800), Scott Eskenazi (158,100), Michael Noori (155,300), and Dan O'Brien (130,000).

Day 1a Highlights

No words were wasted as Baxter delivered the ceremonial "Shuffle up and Deal!" — and it didn't take long for the chips to start flying. Within the first hour of play, Lauren Hazelgreen became the first casualty of the 2025 Main Event after running top pair into Pedro Garagnani's set in a bloated four-way pot.

By the time the first break arrived, a dozen players had already hit the rail. Poker Hall of Famer Chris Moneymaker also saw his run come to an early end after a brutal set up left him with a full house against a better full house. Moneymaker suspected he was beat, but couldn't bring himself to fold to bring a swift end to the 2003 Main Event Champ's run.

Faring better in the early stages was Leon Sturm, who received a massive boost to his stack after cracking Goswin Siemsen's aces with trips. From that point, it was smooth sailing for Sturm as he ended with a well above average stack of 157,600.

Shortly after winning his fourth WSOP bracelet in the $1,000 Mini Main Event, echoes of "Not like that!" could be heard from the ballroom as Martin Kabrhel immediately let his presence known upon taking his seat in the Main.

Martin Kabrhel
Martin Kabrhel

Kabrhel was sent to the feature table following the dinner break, where he continued his boisterous antics—and grew his stack—to over 100,000 before slipping a bit. Drama ensued after Kabrhel was informed his table would remain on stream beyond one level, something that didn't sit well with the Czech pro. After some heated back and forth, Kabrhel got his way and his table was returned to the ballroom, where he finished the night with a double up to end with a bag worth 168,700.

Faraz Jaka had a rough day and found himself on the rail during the evening hours on Level 4. His woes began after making an incorrect read with the second-nut flush against Leland Postil's set. Jaka managed to chip up a bit afterwards, but ultimately met his end after getting frisky with seven-deuce and making trips against Benjamin Gold's full house.

Other notables who will have to wait until next year include Michael Moncek, Barny Boatman, Frank Kassela, Jean-Robert Bellande, Joao Vieira, and 2009 Main Event Champ Joe Cada — who ran pocket jacks into Joshua Kay's pocket aces late in the day.

Joe Cada
Joe Cada

Everyone who managed to secure a bag will return for Day 2abc on Sunday, July 6, at 12 p.m. local time. Three more starting flights remain, starting with Day 1b on Thursday, July 3, at noon. Late registration will remain open until the start of Level 8 on either Day 2abc or Day 2d (on Monday, July 7th).

The story of the 2025 Main Event is just beginning to unfold, so be sure to stick with PokerNews for daily coverage all the way through to the crowning of poker’s next World Champion!

Tags: Barny BoatmanBenjamin GoldBilly BaxterChad PowerChris MoneymakerDan O'BrienFaraz JakaJeremy DanJon PardyJustin YakerLauren HazelgreenLeon SturmMarc SpitaleriMartin KabrhelNikolaos LampropoulosParis Las VegasPedro GaragnaniVictor VoWenzhi FeiWSOP Main EventYamamoto Toshiyuki

Event #81: $10,000 WSOP Main Event World Championship

Day 1a Completed