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 7
Entries
57
Players Left
24
Players Left 1 / 9735
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Freitas Takes From Padron

Level 34 : Blinds 250,000/500,000, 500,000 ante

Richard Freitas raised to 1,000,000 in the hijack with K6 and Joey Padron defended A4

The K53 flop gave Freitas top pair and he bet 700,000. Padron called with a straight draw and they both checked the 5 turn.

Freitas made two pair on the 6 river and bet 3,200,000. Padron considered calling with his ace-high for a minute, but eventually laid down his hand as Freitas claimed the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Richard Freitas br
Richard Freitas
31,000,000
2,050,000
2,050,000
Profile photo of Joey Padron us
Joey Padron
15,650,000
800,000
800,000

Tags: Joey PadronRichard Freitas

Hendrix Wins This Round

Level 34 : Blinds 250,000/500,000, 500,000 ante

Lautaro Guerra KJ raised to 1,000,000 in early position and picked up calls from Adam Hendrix A8 in the cutoff and Daehyung Lee in the big blind. The flop came A94 and Guerra continued with a bet of 1,400,000. Hendrix called and Lee got out of the way.

The 9 paired the board on the turn and Guerra slowed down with a check. Hendrix made a small bet of 1,550,000 and that was enough to force Guerra's hand into the muck.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Adam Hendrix us
Adam Hendrix
39,000,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
Profile photo of Daehyung Lee kr
Daehyung Lee
25,000,000
2,175,000
2,175,000
Profile photo of Lautaro Guerra es
Lautaro Guerra
20,000,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Adam HendrixDaehyung LeeLautaro Guerra

Dombrowski Tries to Lay a Trap, Padron Doesn't Bite

Level 34 : Blinds 250,000/500,000, 500,000 ante

Chris Dombrowski picked up KK under the gun and raised to 1,000,000. Joey Padron called in the small blind.

Dombrowski hit top set on the K37 and tapped the felt after Padron checked to him. The turn was the 4 and Dombrowski bet 1,600,000. Padron quickly laid down J10.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Joey Padron us
Joey Padron
14,650,000
1,000,000
1,000,000
Profile photo of Chris Dombrowski us
Chris Dombrowski
12,250,000
6,950,000
6,950,000
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Chris DombrowskiJoey Padron

Three-Bet Pot for Perati Against Schulze

Level 34 : Blinds 250,000/500,000, 500,000 ante

Out of the small blind, Sebastian Schulze made it 1,600,000 to go with the KJ and was three-bet to 4,200,000 by Muhamet Perati in the big blind, who had the dominating AQ. Schulze called and whiffed the Q43 flop which he checked. Perati made it 2,050,000 to go and won the pot right there.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Muhamet Perati it
Muhamet Perati
51,350,000
5,450,000
5,450,000
Profile photo of Luka Bojovic rs
Luka Bojovic
31,150,000
1,250,000
1,250,000
Profile photo of Maksim Pisarenko ru
Maksim Pisarenko
24,300,000
250,000
250,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Stefan Nemetz at
Stefan Nemetz
18,950,000
Profile photo of Joseph Ozimok us
Joseph Ozimok
14,950,000
250,000
250,000
Profile photo of Sergio Veloso pt
Sergio Veloso
12,950,000
Profile photo of Jarod Minghini us
Jarod Minghini
12,900,000
1,250,000
1,250,000
Profile photo of Sebastian Schulze de
Sebastian Schulze
10,975,000
2,950,000
2,950,000
Day 5 Chip Leader

Tags: Muhamet PeratiSebastian Schulze

Arai Pulls Ahead on the Turn to Double Off Ponce

Level 34 : Blinds 250,000/500,000, 500,000 ante

Diego Ponce raised to 1,000,000 on the button and Kohei Arai called in the big blind.

The flop came A82 and Ponce bet 1,200,000. Arai called and the 7 fell on the turn.

Ponce then took off his sunglasses to take a good look at Arai's remaining stack before moving all in. Arai quickly called for his last 4,600,000.

Ponce showed A3 for top pair, but Arai had turned two pair holding 87. The river was the J and Arai held on to double up.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Diego Ponce mx
Diego Ponce
14,900,000
10,050,000
10,050,000
Profile photo of Kohei Arai jp
Kohei Arai
14,350,000
5,050,000
5,050,000

Tags: Diego PonceKohei Arai

Kohei Arai Eliminated in 25th Place ($360,000)

Level 34 : Blinds 250,000/500,000, 500,000 ante
Kohei Arai
Kohei Arai

On the last hand of the night, Joey Padron raised to 1,000,000 in the hijack and Kohei Arai three-bet to 3,500,000 in the small blind. Padron then moved all in, and Arai called for 14,350,000.

Kohei Arai: AK All in
Joey Padron: KK

Arai found himself at risk for the second straight hand, but this time he was in need of help against Padron's kings. The Q83 flop gave him a flush draw, but he missed the 4 turn and 9 river and was sent to the rail right before the players bagged up for the night.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Joey Padron us
Joey Padron
30,000,000
15,350,000
15,350,000
Profile photo of Kohei Arai jp
Kohei Arai
Busted

Tags: Joey PadronKohei Arai

Nemetz Concludes the Night With Five-Bet Shove

Level 34 : Blinds 250,000/500,000, 500,000 ante

Muhamet Perati raised it up to 1,000,000 with the J10 in the hijack and then saw a three-bet to 3,000,000 by Stefan Nemetz on the button with the AK. Out of the small blind, Maksim Pisarenko then four-bet to 6,300,000 and Perati got out of the way.

Nemetz then moved all-in and Pisarenko got out of the way to take a hit at the very end of Day 7.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Muhamet Perati it
Muhamet Perati
50,100,000
1,250,000
1,250,000
Profile photo of Stefan Nemetz at
Stefan Nemetz
23,200,000
4,250,000
4,250,000
Profile photo of Maksim Pisarenko ru
Maksim Pisarenko
18,900,000
5,400,000
5,400,000
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Maksim PisarenkoMuhamet PeratiStefan Nemetz

End of Day 7 Chip Counts

Level 34 : Blinds 250,000/500,000, 500,000 ante
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Kenny Hallaert be
Kenny Hallaert
63,600,000
1,600,000
1,600,000
Day 7 Chip Leader
pokerstars
Profile photo of Braxton Dunaway us
Braxton Dunaway
51,100,000
5,100,000
5,100,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Muhamet Perati it
Muhamet Perati
50,100,000
1,250,000
1,250,000
Profile photo of Adam Hendrix us
Adam Hendrix
39,500,000
500,000
500,000
Profile photo of Luka Bojovic rs
Luka Bojovic
33,900,000
2,750,000
2,750,000
Profile photo of Richard Freitas br
Richard Freitas
32,500,000
1,500,000
1,500,000
Profile photo of Joey Padron us
Joey Padron
29,900,000
100,000
100,000
Profile photo of Daniel Iachan us
Daniel Iachan
28,100,000
1,100,000
1,100,000
Profile photo of Ruben Correia pt
Ruben Correia
26,700,000
1,750,000
1,750,000
Profile photo of Daehyung Lee kr
Daehyung Lee
25,600,000
600,000
600,000
Profile photo of Stefan Nemetz at
Stefan Nemetz
23,200,000
4,250,000
4,250,000
Profile photo of Tony Gregg us
Tony Gregg
22,500,000
2,500,000
2,500,000
Profile photo of Maksim Pisarenko ru
Maksim Pisarenko
18,900,000
5,400,000
5,400,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Lautaro Guerra es
Lautaro Guerra
18,000,000
2,000,000
2,000,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Leo Margets es
Leo Margets
17,800,000
2,250,000
2,250,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Winamax
Profile photo of Joseph Ozimok us
Joseph Ozimok
15,100,000
150,000
150,000
Profile photo of Diego Ponce mx
Diego Ponce
14,900,000
Profile photo of Jarod Minghini us
Jarod Minghini
14,200,000
1,300,000
1,300,000
Profile photo of Michael Mizrachi us
Michael Mizrachi
11,400,000
1,725,000
1,725,000
Day 9 Chip Leader
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 8X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Profile photo of Sergio Veloso pt
Sergio Veloso
11,200,000
1,750,000
1,750,000
Profile photo of Sebastian Schulze de
Sebastian Schulze
11,000,000
25,000
25,000
Day 5 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Chris Dombrowski us
Chris Dombrowski
11,000,000
1,250,000
1,250,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of John Wasnock us
John Wasnock
9,500,000
2,500,000
2,500,000
Day 8 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Tomas Szwarcberg mx
Tomas Szwarcberg
5,400,000
3,025,000
3,025,000

Day 8 Seat Draw

Level 34 : Blinds 250,000/500,000, 500,000 ante

Prior to the restart for Day 8, there will be balancing from table 3 to table 1 in order to ensure eight players each across the final three tables.

TableSeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
11Joey PadronUnited States16,400,00027
12Diego PonceMexico14,900,00025
13Chris DombrowskiUnited States11,000,00018
15Richard FreitasBrazil28,950,00048
17Leo MargetsSpain15,550,00026
18Tomas SzwarcbergMexico5,400,0009
19Ruben CorreiaPortugal28,450,00047
      
21Sebastian SchulzeAustria9,675,00016
22Muhamet PeratiItaly50,100,00084
23Sergio VelosoPortugal15,350,00026
25Stefan NemetzAustria23,200,00039
26Maksim PisarenkoRussian Federation18,900,00032
27Joseph OzimokUnited States15,100,00025
28Jarod MinghiniUnited States14,200,00024
29Luka BojovicSerbia33,900,00057
      
31Braxton DunawayUnited States51,100,00085
32Daehyung LeeSouth Korea25,600,00043
33Michael MizrachiUnited States11,400,00019
34Lautaro GuerraSpain18,000,00030
35Kenny HallaertBelgium61,000,000102
36John WasnockUnited States9,500,00016
37Daniel IachanUnited States28,100,00047
38Adam HendrixUnited States39,500,00066
39Tony GreggUnited States22,500,00038

Kenny Hallaert Remains at the Top After Day 7 of $10,000 Main Event World Championship

Level 34 : Blinds 250,000/500,000, 500,000 ante
Kenny Hallaert
Kenny Hallaert

Just 24 of the game's finest players have bagged up chips after Day 7 of the 2025 World Series of Poker $10,000 Main Event No-Limit Hold'em World Championship in the gambling capital of the world, Las Vegas. Another five levels have been knocked off the schedule, with just one day to go before the lights shine on the final table. Once again, it was Kenny Hallaert who led the day from start to finish, bagging up a stack of 63,600,000 chips.

For someone who has been in the game for decades and claims to have seen "Everything," Day 7 certainly brought back some good and forgettable memories for Hallaert, who made a deep run to sixth place in 2016 for a payday of over $1.4 million.

"In 2016, nine years ago, I think Will [Kassouf] hasn't changed much. I think I've changed a little bit since then, so it was easy for me to block out the noise. The experience from then definitely made me feel more comfortable," Hallaert reflected after another grueling day at the felt.

The good memories for the Belgian tournament director go back to the feeling of being grateful to once again be in this spot out of the 9,735 hopefuls that registered for this year's WSOP Main Event. "I'm enjoying the experience, grateful that I'm able to play this event. Luckily, I was one of them to get to this stage of the final twenty-four. I still love the game, whether it's the World Series Main Event or the PokerStars Open event."

Not many players can say they've been in this situation once, let alone twice, within a decade. As for Hallaert, he believes that his second go around in the late stages of this event will turn out even better than the first with the experience that he gained. "I think it's definitely an advantage. Having played this event for the nineteenth time, it just helps. You have an idea of how people play, especially if they're here for the first time."

Speaking of players making another deep run, Michael Mizrachi has the best finish in the WSOP Main Event of all the remaining players. "The Grinder" climbed all the way to fifth place back in 2010 and the four-time Poker Players Champion will be looking to top that performance with plenty of support from his rail in this year's rendition as he heads into Day 8 with a stack of 11,400,000.

Adam Hendrix
Adam Hendrix

Also joining those at the top of the leaderboard is Alaskan-born poker pro Adam Hendrix who finished the day fourth on the leaderboard with a stack of 39,500,000. Despite having over $8 million in career poker earnings, Hendrix will be looking to notch his career-best score if he can make it through to the final table when tomorrow is all said and done.

Last night, Hendrix posted on his social media that over the next couple of days, he has a chance to realize a life dream of his. "Clear mind, full heart, can't lose," is the motto he will be going by every time he takes a peek at his cards.

When asked if the expectations had changed throughout the Main Event journey so far, Hendrix said the following. "I mean the expectation is ... always win the whole thing. Do I think it is possible? It was hard to think that with so many people in the field. Now I am feeling very confident."

Hendrix had been switching to four-card poker for several years, but racked up several big scores in no-limit hold'em over the last few years, which has certainly brought back more confidence to his game with only two cards. "I have always been a no-limit player and picked up PLO because I was getting bored just travelling the circuit and busting in no-limit tournaments, and the cash games were more interesting. So yeah, it makes no-limit a lot more fun in this tournament."

Top Ten Chip Counts After Day 7 of WSOP Main Event

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Kenny HallaertBelgium63,600,000127
2Braxton DunawayUnited States51,100,000102
3Muhamet PeratiItaly50,100,000100
4Adam HendrixUnited States39,500,00079
5Luka BojovicSerbia33,900,00068
6Richard FreitasBrazil32,500,00065
7Joey PadronUnited States29,900,00060
8Daniel IachanUnited States28,100,00056
9Ruben CorreiaPortugal26,700,00053
10Daehyung LeeKorea, Republic of25,600,00051

The Kassouf Effect

It was nine years ago when tournament staff, media, and players dealt with the difficult task of handling the erratic Will Kassouf when he made it all the way to 17th place. When they say some things never change, that is certainly the case for the man screaming, "Show time, baby!" throughout the Horseshoe Event Center while being escorted out on multiple occasions.

Kassouf was given a one-round penalty early in the day for calling a table-mate a "prick" and then returned from dinner break to be given another orbit penalty for calling his entire table "little bitches." Throughout all of the drama, he continued to stall his way through pay jumps until Hallaert finally laid a beating on him — a poker one of course — ending Kassouf's run in 33rd place.

"I knew the king was coming," Hallaert said with a smirk in an interview with PokerNews at the end of the day.

Kassouf was dragged away from the table, screaming like a little child, and after his interviews were done, Caesar's security escorted him to payouts. From there, he was asked to leave the property and will not be allowed back for the rest of the series. The players at his table were relieved of his screeching voice and were able to remove their earplugs, ones that Adam Hendrix bought for the entire table on the dinner break.

William Kassouf
William Kassouf

The Mighty Have Fallen on Day 7

There were plenty of big names and familiar faces still in the mix when the day began, but many of them saw their Main Event final table dreams crushed. One early elimination was 2012 WSOP Main Event champion Greg Merson, who was hoping to add his name to the history books as a repeat champion.

He was followed to the payout desk by the likes of Leon Sturm, Thomas Eychenne, Johan Schumacher, Nick Pupillo, and one of the big stacks to start the day, Eric Afriat. After taking a couple of big losses throughout the day, the three-time WPT champion dwindled down to just a couple of big blinds before he saw the last of his chips evaporate.

The final 27 players were redrawn to three tables and it was Joshua Beckenstein who missed out on the most recent pay jump, bowing out in 27th place for $300,000. Pedro Padilha was one of many players to hit the rail holding the dreaded ace-king today when he ran square into the pocket aces of Richard Freitas. The last elimination occurred in one of the last hands of the day, just moments after Kohei Arai doubled his short stack. On the very next hand, Arai also ran his ace-king into a premium pocket pair and was unable to find any help on the runout.

Heading into the final day before the players get a breather with a day off (between reaching the final table and playing for millions of dollars), Leo Margets is still trying to make some history of her own. Although she wasn't ready to speak after bagging up tonight, Margets has already bested her previous performance of a 27th-place finish back in 2009. She is hoping to become the first woman to reach the Main Event final table in 30 years, since Barbara Enright did it back in 1995.

Leo Margets
Leo Margets

Other notables to keep an eye as the action unfolds include 2023 Monster Stack champion Braxton Dunaway, former professional snowboarder Jarod Minghini, long-time legend Tony Gregg, pot-limit Omaha specialist Lautaro Guerra, and Tomas Szwarcberg, who has already improved on last year's 30th-place finish.

The remaining 24 players will return to their same seats tomorrow at 1 p.m. local time with their sights set on reaching the final table. The blinds will resume on Level 35 at 300,000/600,000 and a 600,000 big blind ante. Each player has locked up at least $360,000 thus far, but making it to the official final table will secure the last nine players a seven-figure pay day. The jackpot at the end of the rainbow comes in the form of $10,000,000 and the WSOP Main Event bracelet.

2025 WSOP Main Event Remaining Payouts

PlacePrize
1$10,000,000
2$6,000,000
3$4,000,000
4$3,000,000
5$2,400,000
6$1,900,000
7$1,500,000
8$1,250,000
9$1,000,000
10-11$750,000
12-13$560,250
14-17$450,000
18-24$360,000

That wraps up the coverage from Day 7 of the Main Event at the 2025 World Series of Poker, but keep it locked on PokerNews for all of the live updates throughout Day 8 Sunday to find out who will reach the final table.

Tags: Adam HendrixBarbara EnrightBraxton DunawayDaehyung LeeDaniel IachanEric AfriatGreg MersonJarod MinghiniJoey PadronJohan SchumacherJoshua BeckensteinKenny HallaertKohei AraiLautaro GuerraLeo MargetsLeon SturmLuka BojovicMichael MizrachiMuhamet PeratiNick PupilloPedro PadilhaRichard FreitasRuben CorreiaThomas EychenneTomas SzwarcbergTony GreggWilliam Kassouf