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 4
Entries
1,476
Players Left
522
Players Left 1 / 9,735
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2012 Champ Greg Merson Among 522 Players To Survive the Money Bubble and Day 4 of the 2025 Main Event

Level 20 : Blinds 10,000/20,000, 20,000 ante
Greg Merson
Greg Merson

For the past 13 years, Greg Merson has gotten to experience something nearly every poker player can only dream of. Whenever he enters the Horseshoe Event Center, he sees his banner hanging on the wall among the other legends and great champions of this game.

It’s this prestige that brings thousands out every year to play the $10,000 WSOP MAIN EVENT No-Limit Hold'em World Championship, trying to join Merson in the pantheon of poker’s immortals. Merson already knows what it feels like to lift the bracelet over his head. Now, all these years later, he’s back trying to do it all over again.

Merson is one of 522 players out of a starting field of 9,735 who survived the money bubble on Day 4 and will return tomorrow at noon local time to chase the title. Merson sat beside Will Kassouf on the main feature table to end the night. While the ever-loquacious Brit got the better of him in a few pots, he still ended up with 1,495,000 as he tries to do the unthinkable and win the Main Event for a second time.

Day 4 Top Ten Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Harold LamUnited States4,195,000210
2Jeremy KottlerUnited States3,725,000186
3Julien MarianiFrance3,600,000180
4Kohei AraiJapan3,585,000179
5Benjamin WilliamsUnited States3,550,000178
6Arsenii KarmatckiiRussian Federation3,445,000172
7Ramon PessoaBrazil3,400,000170
8Michael HawkerUnited States3,400,000170
9Mounir TajiouSweden3,250,000163
10Luke ChungUnited States3,180,000159

“It’s been nice, smooth sailing. I’ve been running super hot. I didn’t do well on this feature table, but I started the day with 560,000 and I ended it with 1.5 [million], so it was a good day,” the 2012 Main Event champion said.

Among the lessons Merson took from his win in 2012 and another deep run the following year is the value of patience and not getting too caught up in where you are on the leaderboard. Merson, after all, came back from one big blind at one point to win it all back then. He knows, just as well as any player left in the field, that it’s still anyone’s bracelet for the taking.

“I think just the ability to switch gears based on what your table draw is and what your chip stack is, and understanding the true marathon of the tournament,” he said. “Like, I literally just lost a million chips in the last hour, but it doesn’t matter. Not getting too attached to where you were. Taking it one hand at a time is a bit of a cliche thing to say, but it’s very true.”

Kassouf took a big chunk off Merson during the last level when Merson called him down with ace-high, but Kassouf had two sevens to win the sizeable pot as he bagged up 2,450,000. Kassouf, with his non-stop table banter, has been the subject of controversy in the poker world ever since he was first shown on Main Event broadcasts in 2016. Merson, though, was among the few who actually enjoyed the experience of tangling with him.

Will Kassouf
Will Kassouf

“It’s great. I told him that. I know he’s very polarizing in poker, but any type of entertainment is good. Hellmuth is polarizing as well, and he’s like the most famous poker player in the world. But it was fine. We didn’t get to play that long. He didn’t slow the game down, and he was entertaining, so it was fun,” he said.

Merson and Kassouf still have to get through more than 500 opponents over the next few days to secure a spot at the final table. Harold Lam is the man to catch, making a late charge to take the chip lead with 4,195,000. Jeremy Kottler (3,725,000), Julien Mariani (3,600,000), Kohei Arai (3,585,000), and Benjamin Williams (3,550,000) round out the top five.

Wagner Wysotchanski used a late set-over-set cooler to double up in a nearly three-million-chip pot and finish among the top stacks with 3,070,000. Other big stacks include Arsenii Karmatckii (3,445,000), Nick Pupillo (3,150,000), Chad Power (3,010,000), 2016 November Niner Kenny Hallaert (2,805,000), three-time WPT champion Eric Afriat (2,710,000), and Adam Hendrix (2,550,000). Although many notables remain in the field, the most famous name belongs to René-Charles Angelil, the son of music legend Celine Dion and her late husband and manager Rene Angelil. Angelil bagged up 2,550,000.

Further down the leaderboard are PPC champion Michael Mizrachi (2,270,000), 2018 finalist Alex Lynskey (2,050,000), Stephen Chidwick (1,940,000), Isaac Haxton (1,915,000), Viktor Blom (1,455,000), Matt Affleck (900,000), Joseph Cheong (850,000), Nate Silver (805,000), and Francis Anderson (800,000). Merson isn’t the only past champion remaining in the field, as 2020 champ Damian Salas ended up with 450,000. Inaugural WSOP Paradise champion Stanislav Zegal also survived the day with 630,000.

Garry Gurevich and Robert Buckenmayer were on opposite sides of the poker spectrum today. Gurevich, who just turned 21 in April, is the youngest player remaining in the field and takes 480,000 into Day 5. Buckenmayer, meanwhile, is the oldest at 80 and is among the shortest stacks remaining with 120,000.

Garry Gurevich
Garry Gurevich

A total of 1,476 players returned for Day 4, just 15 spots away from the money. Play went hand-for-hand five players away from the bubble, and among those to fall short was five-time bracelet winner Brian Yoon. Jacob Kim ran his kings into Gonzalo Jose’s aces to bust, while Kosaku Akashi made a flush on the river to bust Adam Rude and bring the field two away from the money. After nearly two hours, Marco Dickner, Mathew Frankland, and Sachin Joshi were all eliminated on the bubble and split two min-cashes ($15,000) for $10,000 each. Frankland additionally won the flip for a $30,000 package into the WSOP Paradise Super Main Event in December.

Mathew Frankland, Marco Dickner, Sachin Joshi
Mathew Frankland, Marco Dickner, Sachin Joshi

A barrage of bustouts followed the bursting of the bubble. Yuri Dzivielevski (1,402nd), Phil Laak (1,385th), Day 1 chip leader Riva Arthur (1,330th), Vanessa Kade (1,162nd), Landon Tice (1,131st), $50,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller champion Dylan Linde (1,068th), Loni Hui (1,054th), Darren Elias (1,046th), James Obst (935th), Japanese vlogging superstar Masato Yokosawa (884th), Mike Matusow (770th), Jason Mercier (707th), and Liv Boeree (645th) were among those whose Main Event dream died today. Jason Sagle and Andres Gonzalez were the only members of last year’s final table to make the money, but both fell during the day, Sagle in 957th and Gonzalez in 555th, ensuring that nine new players will make up the final table this year.

Due to the lengthy hand-for-hand process, an early end to the day was called halfway through Level 20. The remaining players return tomorrow to play the last 60 minutes of the level with blinds of 10,000/20,000 and a 20,000 big blind ante. Anyone eliminated at the start of the day will take home $32,500.

All 522 share the same dream, and it’s the one that Merson and Salas have already experienced: to see their huge banners hanging above the crowd. For Merson, it’s a feeling that never goes away.

“It’s awesome. It doesn’t get old, for sure. For my family to come see it and stuff. It’s something no one can ever take away from me. But that being said, I try to do my best every year in this, and this is the farthest I’ve gone in 12 years, so I’m not taking it lightly, for sure,” he said.

Four days are done, but there is still a long way to go until a new world champion is crowned. Follow along as PokerNews returns tomorrow to provide updates from Day 5 of the Main Event.

Tags: Adam HendrixArsenii KarmatckiiBenjamin WilliamsChad PowerDamian SalasEric AfriatFrancis AndersonGarry GurevichGreg MersonHarold LamIsaac HaxtonJeremy KottlerJoseph CheongJulien MarianiKenny HallaertKohei AraiMatt AffleckMichael MizrachiNick PupilloRené-Charles AngelilRobert BuckenmayerStanislav ZegalStephen ChidwickViktor BlomWagner WysotchanskiWill Kassouf

Jackson Holds for Huge Double-Up

Level 20 : Blinds 10,000/20,000, 20,000 ante
Benjamin Jackson
Benjamin Jackson

After several raises, Ben Jackson had called off his stack of 820,000 in the big blind against Marc Fiorentino on the button.

Ben Jackson: AK All in
Marc Fiorentino: A4

Fiorentino's preflop move did not work out as Jackson made two pair on the 873AK runout to double up to a stack of over 80 big blinds during the final few hands of Day 4.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Mounir Tajiou se
Mounir Tajiou
3,000,000
250,000
250,000
Profile photo of Michael Mizrachi us
Michael Mizrachi
2,100,000
150,000
150,000
Day 9 Chip Leader
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 8X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Profile photo of Pedro Padilha br
Pedro Padilha
1,925,000
1,025,000
1,025,000
Profile photo of Ben Jackson gb
Ben Jackson
1,670,000
1,413,000
1,413,000
Profile photo of Jon Kyte no
Jon Kyte
765,000
250,000
250,000
Profile photo of Matthew Belcher gb
Matthew Belcher
525,000
110,000
110,000
Profile photo of Andreas Putz at
Andreas Putz
270,000
70,000
70,000
Profile photo of Marc Fiorentino us
Marc Fiorentino
250,000
800,000
800,000

Tags: Ben JacksonMarc Fiorentino

Late-Night Eliminations

Level 20 : Blinds 10,000/20,000, 20,000 ante
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Breno Campelo br
Breno Campelo
Busted
Profile photo of James O'Sullivan gb
James O'Sullivan
Busted
Profile photo of Geronimo Timerman ar
Geronimo Timerman
Busted
Profile photo of Andy Wong us
Andy Wong
Busted
Profile photo of Avery Grande ca
Avery Grande
Busted
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Matthew Roberts ca
Matthew Roberts
Busted
Profile photo of Brandon Harris gb
Brandon Harris
Busted
Profile photo of Xiaozhe Liu cn
Xiaozhe Liu
Busted
Profile photo of Brant Jolly us
Brant Jolly
Busted
Profile photo of David Lee us
David Lee
Busted
Profile photo of Andres Gonzalez es
Andres Gonzalez
Busted
Profile photo of Mark Darner us
Mark Darner
Busted
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Oliver Dingman us
Oliver Dingman
Busted
Profile photo of Jamie Kingston gb
Jamie Kingston
Busted
Profile photo of Michael Dwyer ie
Michael Dwyer
Busted
Jaka Coaching
Profile photo of Dan Sepiol us
Dan Sepiol
Busted
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Joseph Raya us
Joseph Raya
Busted
Profile photo of Corey Hochman us
Corey Hochman
Busted
Profile photo of James Pillon ca
James Pillon
Busted
Profile photo of Raul Pino Arza pa
Raul Pino Arza
Busted
Profile photo of Robert Kim us
Robert Kim
Busted
Profile photo of Kevin Gerhart us
Kevin Gerhart
Busted
WSOP 4X Winner
Profile photo of Gregory Katayama ca
Gregory Katayama
Busted
Profile photo of Marwan Salamoun us
Marwan Salamoun
Busted
Profile photo of Stacey Ceragioli us
Stacey Ceragioli
Busted

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No Loving Left After Hendrix’s Hit

Level 20 : Blinds 10,000/20,000, 20,000 ante
Carlos Loving
Carlos Loving

Adam Hendrix opened to 40,000 and faced a shove from Carlos Loving in the big blind for his remaining 310,000. Hendrix made the call, and the cards went on their backs.

Carlos Loving: 66All in
Adam Hendrix: A9

Hendrix took the lead right on the flop of A3J, pairing his ace. The 9 on the turn gave him two pair and left Loving drawing thin. The 8 river sealed it, sending Loving to the rail as Hendrix stacked the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Adam Hendrix us
Adam Hendrix
2,500,000
310,000
310,000
Profile photo of Carlos Loving us
Carlos Loving
Busted

Tags: Adam HendrixCarlos Loving

Hendrix Keeps Beating His Drum

Level 20 : Blinds 10,000/20,000, 20,000 ante

Albert Calderon raised it up in middle position and was called by Adam Hendrix in the cutoff and Adam Agaev in the small blind. The flop came K76 and Calderon continued with a bet of 50,000. Hendrix raised to 165,000 which put Agaev in the tank for nearly two minutes before he folded. Calderon called and they went heads-up to the J on the turn.

Calderon checked this time and Hendrix counted out a bet of 295,000. Calderon quickly dumped his cards into the muck but pleaded to see at least one of Hendrix's cards. Hendrix slid his cards into the middle but Calderon failed to pick one before the dealer put them in the muck.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Adam Hendrix us
Adam Hendrix
2,190,000
290,000
290,000
Profile photo of Adam Agaev us
Adam Agaev
1,750,000
610,000
610,000
Profile photo of Albert Calderon us
Albert Calderon
1,500,000
1,292,000
1,292,000

Tags: Albert CalderonAdam HendrixAdam Agaev

Tumboli Takes Double-Up From Pupillo

Level 20 : Blinds 10,000/20,000, 20,000 ante

Nick Pupillo raised to 40,000 in the cutoff, after which Zarvan Tumboli three-bet all in for 360,000 in the big blind. Pupillo spent some time in the tank before he eventually called off.

Zarvan Tumboli: 1010 All in
Nick Pupillo: 77

Tumboli's Tens faced no issue on the 93994 runout, securing his double-up.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Michael Hawker us
Michael Hawker
4,050,000
1,050,000
1,050,000
Profile photo of Nick Pupillo us
Nick Pupillo
2,375,000
475,000
475,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Thomas Eychenne fr
Thomas Eychenne
1,100,000
550,000
550,000
Profile photo of Zarvan Tumboli in
Zarvan Tumboli
750,000
243,000
243,000
Profile photo of Chad Bleznick us
Chad Bleznick
480,000
20,000
20,000

Tags: Nick PupilloZarvan Tumboli

Hendrix Finds a River

Level 19 : Blinds 10,000/15,000, 15,000 ante

A completed board of 76499 was spread across the felt with around 200,000 in the middle. Adam Hendrix and Matthew Roberts were heads-up and Roberts splashed in a bet of 100,000.

Hendrix check-raised to 320,000 and Roberts looked him up. Hendrix rolled over 98 for a combo draw that turned into trips while Roberts sent his 1010 face up across the table.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Adam Hendrix us
Adam Hendrix
1,900,000
1,060,000
1,060,000
Profile photo of Matthew Roberts ca
Matthew Roberts
440,000
148,000
148,000

Tags: Matthew RobertsAdam Hendrix

Recent Eliminations

Level 19 : Blinds 10,000/15,000, 15,000 ante
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Miguel Montes es
Miguel Montes
Busted
Profile photo of Daniel Holmes us
Daniel Holmes
Busted
Profile photo of Thomas Vanden Berge us
Thomas Vanden Berge
Busted
Profile photo of Joshua Kay us
Joshua Kay
Busted
Profile photo of Logi Jonsson is
Logi Jonsson
Busted
Profile photo of Alejandro Rodriguez ar
Alejandro Rodriguez
Busted
Profile photo of Robert Lauer us
Robert Lauer
Busted
Profile photo of Jacob Frank us
Jacob Frank
Busted
Profile photo of Kartik Ved in
Kartik Ved
Busted
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Jules Bolton us
Jules Bolton
Busted
Profile photo of Elilton Gouveia us
Elilton Gouveia
Busted
Profile photo of Kimitaka Mori jp
Kimitaka Mori
Busted
Profile photo of James Girouard us
James Girouard
Busted
StakeKings
Profile photo of Douglas Lopes br
Douglas Lopes
Busted
Profile photo of George Roush us
George Roush
Busted
Profile photo of John Holley us
John Holley
Busted
Profile photo of Kathy Liebert us
Kathy Liebert
Busted
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Kazuhiro Shirasawa jp
Kazuhiro Shirasawa
Busted
Profile photo of Alexander Duvall us
Alexander Duvall
Busted
Profile photo of Eduardo Amaral br
Eduardo Amaral
Busted
Profile photo of Cesar Garcia es
Cesar Garcia
Busted
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Bruno Mota us
Bruno Mota
Busted
Profile photo of Joseph Barnard us
Joseph Barnard
Busted
Profile photo of Paul Cross us
Paul Cross
Busted
Jaka Coaching
Profile photo of Heroico Aguiluz us
Heroico Aguiluz
Busted

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Haxton Forces Out Locquet

Level 19 : Blinds 10,000/15,000, 15,000 ante

Romain Locquet opened to 35,000 from under the gun with 97 and Isaac Haxton called from the small blind with AJ.

The flop came 2KQ and Haxton checked. Locquet bet 70,000 and Haxton check-raised to 215,000. Locquet folded and the pot was pushed to Haxton.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Isaac Haxton us
Isaac Haxton
2,205,000
10,000
10,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Romain Locquet fr
Romain Locquet
1,085,000
195,000
195,000

Tags: Isaac HaxtonRomain Locquet

Pupillo Takes from Nex

Level 19 : Blinds 10,000/15,000, 15,000 ante

Heads-up to the turn on a board of K6J5 and with around 300,000 in the pot. Vladimir Nex bet 225,000 from the big blind, and Nick Pupillo called out of an early position.

After a long tank, Nex checked the J river, and Pupillo immediately checked behind. Nex showed ace-high with A9, and lost the pot to Pupillo's QQ for a pair of queens.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Nick Pupillo us
Nick Pupillo
2,700,000
1,600,000
1,600,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Vladimir Nex fr
Vladimir Nex
925,000
101,000
101,000

Tags: Nick PupilloVladimir Nex