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 1b
Entries
1,096
Players Left
798
Players Left 1 / 9735
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End of Day 1b Chip Counts (full)

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Michael Mizrachi us
Michael Mizrachi
297,000
29,000
29,000
Day 9 Chip Leader
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 8X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Profile photo of Dakota Baggett us
Dakota Baggett
270,400
39,400
39,400
Profile photo of Raoul Kanme nl
Raoul Kanme
270,000
153,000
153,000
Profile photo of Juliet Hegedus us
Juliet Hegedus
267,000
3,000
3,000
Profile photo of Joseph Ozimok us
Joseph Ozimok
265,000
265,000
265,000
Profile photo of Eric Thompkins us
Eric Thompkins
264,000
264,000
264,000
Profile photo of Adrien Guyader fr
Adrien Guyader
259,700
9,700
9,700
Profile photo of Michael Hager us
Michael Hager
254,800
42,700
42,700
Profile photo of Kestutis Jungevicius lt
Kestutis Jungevicius
248,600
40,100
40,100
Profile photo of Brian Tolley us
Brian Tolley
247,400
47,400
47,400
Profile photo of Espen Sandvik no
Espen Sandvik
240,000
66,000
66,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Jacob Beck us
Jacob Beck
236,700
210,700
210,700
Profile photo of Ruben Correia pt
Ruben Correia
236,100
3,900
3,900
Profile photo of Giorgiy Skhulukhiya ge
Giorgiy Skhulukhiya
232,300
232,300
232,300
Profile photo of Ronald Ibbetson us
Ronald Ibbetson
230,000
38,000
38,000
Profile photo of Leandro Da Silva br
Leandro Da Silva
228,800
228,800
228,800
Profile photo of Alessandro Pagliuso it
Alessandro Pagliuso
225,200
200
200
Profile photo of Vinicius Camargo br
Vinicius Camargo
222,000
222,000
222,000
Profile photo of Jeremy Wien us
Jeremy Wien
221,300
2,700
2,700
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Thad McNulty us
Thad McNulty
217,700
12,300
12,300
Profile photo of Nicholas Marchington gb
Nicholas Marchington
217,300
2,700
2,700
Profile photo of Daniel Erlandsson se
Daniel Erlandsson
215,900
80,900
80,900
Profile photo of Kevin Williams gb
Kevin Williams
213,200
16,700
16,700
Profile photo of Michael Zelman us
Michael Zelman
208,200
208,200
208,200
Profile photo of Peter Mugar us
Peter Mugar
205,400
205,400
205,400

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Michael Mizrachi in Fine Form on Day 1b; Phil Hellmuth Rocks His Way to a Bag

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

In 2010, Michael Mizrachi pulled off the incredible double of winning the $50,000 Poker Players Championship and making it to the World Series of Poker Main Event final table. Fast forward 15 years later, and Mizrachi again is the owner of the Chip Reese Memorial Trophy for a record fourth time and is already poised to challenge that magical summer’s deep Main Event run

Mizrachi ended topping the counts with 297,000 as 798 players bagged up at the end of the night. It’s already been a triumphant summer for “the Grinder,” whose 11 cashes include the $50,000 PPC title for his seventh career bracelet, putting him on a direct path to making it to the Poker Hall of Fame. He’s followed by Dakota Baggett (270,400), Raoul Kanme (270,000), Ladies Event finalist Juliet Hegedus (267,000), and Adrien Guyader (259,700).

Day 1b Top Ten Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Michael MizrachiUnited States297,000371
2Dakota BaggettUnited States270,400338
3Raoul KanmeNetherlands270,000338
4Juliet HegedusUnited States267,000334
5Joseph OzimokUnited States265,000331
6Eric ThompkinsUnited States264,000330
7Adrien GuyaderFrance259,700325
8Michael HagerUnited States254,800319
9Kestutis JungeviciusLithuania248,600311
10Brian TolleyUnited States247,400309

A total of 1,096 players came out on the second of four starting flights, but only one of them was accompanied by a rock ‘n roll band (featuring Dan “Jungleman” Cates on guitar). Phil Hellmuth, whose will-he-or-won’t-he participation in the Main Event has been a topic of discussion for months, finally settled the matter when he showed at 5 p.m. local time to the tune of AC/DC’s “Highway to Hell,” remixed to “Highway to Hellmuth.” Hellmuth took his seat at the main feature table, complete with an ‘80s hair band wig, and ended the day with 85,000.

Phil Hellmuth Main Event Entrance
Phil Hellmuth Main Event Entrance

While Hellmuth arrived late, Daniel Negreanu made it a point to show up for the first hand as he’s done every year since 1998. Negreanu more than doubled his starting stack on Day 1b, finishing with 122,500. Other players to bag big today included Espen Sandvik (240,000), Jeremy Wien (221,300), 2019 finalist Nick Marchington (217,300), 2023 WSOP Europe champion Max Neugebauer (193,300), and 2015 November Niner Max Steinberg (180,000).

Further down the leaderboard are Yuri Dzivielevski (161,300), Kevin Rabichow (119,600), UFC fighter Colby Covington (94,500), Nick Rigby (92,900), Jason Mercier (78,700), and Eric Baldwin (69,200). Those who ended up with less than a starting stack included Olga Iermolcheva (59,700), John Hennigan (53,200), and Stephen Chidwick (51,600).

In addition to Hellmuth, three past Main Event champions took to the felt today, and all three made it through to Day 2. Qui Nguyen leads the trio with 94,500, followed by Johnny Chan (57,800) and Greg Merson (51,600).

"This is The Biggest Stack I've Had After Day 1 in Almost 15 Years"

Mike Matusow’s record in the Main Event is almost without parallel. Twice he’s made it to the final table, including a ninth-place finish at the height of the poker boom in 2005. He’s also cashed twice in the last four years. Matusow understands that the event is a grind and a long marathon. He shot out of the blocks today, bagging up 158,200.

Mike Matusow
Mike Matusow

“This is the biggest stack I’ve had after Day 1 in almost 15 years,” he said at the end of the day. “I’m very mentally balanced this year, and I’m really in a good mental frame. I know in this tournament that Day 1 means nothing. Day 2 means nothing, and Day 3 means nothing. You have to get through the minefields.”

Matusow got a late-night boost when he was on the right side of a massive cooler. Thomas Lee had bet 9,000 on the river and Matusow moved all in. Lee called for 25,000 more with a king-high flush, but Matusow had the nut flush to score the knockout. He was just happy to grind through what he described as a slow table where big pots were seldom seen. That hand was a nice little bonus.

“I had a table today that wasn’t tough, but nobody was putting chips in the pot. So you were going to have to earn them and pick your spots. I thought I did that really well to chip up to about 65K at dinner. Nobody was playing hands. You could only pick up 1,200 in blinds so often,” he said. “So I came back from dinner and I made some good hands with bad hands. Defended five-deuce of spades and made a full house. Defended five-six suited and made a full house. And then the big pot when I just called with ace-five of hearts and flopped the world. To finish with 160,000, almost a 3X stack on Day 1, knowing how deep this is and knowing how, if you can get some good table draws, how you can chip up.”

With several deep runs already on his career record, Matusow has fine-tuned a strategy that seems to work perfectly in this event. “You’re never pressed for chips. You just have to be patient. He who’s patient wins. This is the only tournament where you could fold for two and a half hours and your chip stack goes down this much. If I have the patience, and I’m focused, you just have to give yourself a chance,” he said.

“Listen, I’ve been playing with confidence the whole summer. I really thought I was going to win the 50K, I’m not going to lie. I was locked in. I didn’t make any mistakes. But everything happens for a reason, I keep telling myself. I had three or four days off, and maybe I’ll have a deep run. You never know."

The Main Event Dream Dies For Some Notable Names

The poker world gathers anew every year for the most prestigious title in the game, and each year is always different than the last. George Dolofan found that out the hard way today.

Dolofan ended Day 1b as chip leader last year on his way to cashing in 1,084th place. Today, he was the first player out when he hit a set of eights, but James Gorham turned a straight. Shane Martin was also eliminated on one of the first few hands when he flopped the nut straight, but Eben Kurtzman rivered a full house.

Niklas Astedt
Niklas Astedt

Other notables to have their dream end too soon include Nick Schulman, Artur Martirosian, Chino Rheem, and Felipe Ramos. Swedish online legend Niklas Astedt made it all the way to third place last year, but he won’t be repeating that run in 2025 after running kings into Luka Bojovic’s aces in the closing moments of the day.

The 1,096 entries recorded today far exceeded the 831 from last year. Combined with Day 1a yesterday, the field currently stands at 2,019 with two more starting flights to go. Late registration also remains open for the first two levels of Day 2. The survivors from the first three opening flights will return on Sunday, July 6 for Day 2abc.

A new crop of hopefuls will gather inside the Horseshoe and Paris, Las Vegas, for Day 1c tomorrow at noon, and PokerNews will be back providing live updates throughout the day.

Tags: Colby CovingtonDakota BaggettDaniel NegreanuEric BaldwinEspen SandvikGreg MersonJason MercierJeremy WienJohn HenniganJohnny ChanJuliet HegedusKevin RabichowMax NeugebauerMichael MizrachiMike MatusowNick MarchingtonNick RigbyOlga IermolchevaPhil HellmuthQui NguyenRaoul KanmeStephen ChidwickYuri Dzivielevski

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

Day 1b Completed