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 9
Entries
9
Players Left
4
Players Left 1 / 9735
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Michael Mizrachi on the Verge of History With Four Left in the 2025 WSOP Main Event

Level 40 : Blinds 1,000,000/2,000,000, 2,000,000 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

They call him “The Grinder” and he was down to two and a half big blinds on the final three tables. Fast forward to the penultimate tournament day of the 2025 World Series of Poker Main Event and Michael Mizrachi is on the verge of making history with more than three quarters of the chips in play with four players still in contention. He has the eyes firmly set on WSOP bracelet number eight and the $10 million top prize.

Even before the first part of the rather short-lived final table, many people in the poker community called it one of live poker's most incredible achievements and even demanded he'd be inducted into the WSOP Hall of Fame after missing out on that feat in the current year. When the final day resumes on Wednesday, July 16, 2025, there will be 234 big blinds in play and Mizrachi will have 178 of them because that's just what kind of day it has been.

After winning the $50,000 Poker Players Championship for the fourth time earlier in the summer and bringing up his bracelet tally to seven, Mizrachi reached the WSOP Main Event final table for the second time after 2010. Back then, he was the chip leader but had to settle for fifth place and he returned with a vengeance to become the odds-on favourite with just four hopefuls out of 9,735 players remaining.

"I’m feeling great, but I’ll be feeling much better when I have 100 percent," Mizrachi said when asked about his overwhelming lead on the cusp of victory.

To get into such an overwhelming lead, Mizrachi needed some luck on his side especially when he was all-in and at risk against then chip leader John Wasnock with ace-king versus pocket kings and spiked an ace on the river. That very hand changed everything and Mizrachi stormed to 445,500,000 in chips in just one and a half levels to increase his tally by more than half of the total chips in play.

"It was one of the best feelings. It was like when I had my first-born. It was a great feelling. That changed everything. That ace saved my tournament and everything. Made a lot more money with that ace, for sure That was definitely the biggest card of my career. Before it was against Duhamel, when I had threes against ace-nine, but that was bigger. That pot was so huge."

Wasnock survived the tormenting tornado next to him and made it through with the second-largest stack of 94,500,000 while the other two contenders have a mountain to climb. Braxton Dunaway has 25,500,000 at his disposal while Kenny Hallaert sits at the bottom of the leaderboard with 19,000,000. Hallaert had been the chip leader on Day 6 and 7, while Mizrachi topped Day 1b to then regain the top spot two weeks later in incredible fashion.

Leo Margets Final Table
Leo Margets

There was also the story of Leo Margets, who became the second woman in history to reach the final table of the WSOP Main Event after Barbara Enright in 1995. Her journey ended in bittersweet fashion, but seventh place came with a payday of $1.5 million. Adam Hendrix bowed out only two hands later as the frantic pace continued to wreak havoc at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.

The quartet has already locked up at least $3 million for their efforts but each pay jump is worth seven figures with the biggest individual pieces of the $90,535,500 prize pool still up for grabs. Many will have little doubt that it is going to be Mizrachi who is claiming the top prize of $10 million tomorrow.

Seat Assignments for the Final Day

SeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Kenny HallaertBelgium19,000,0008
2Braxton DunawayUnited States25,500,00010
3John WasnockUnited States94,500,00038
4Michael MizrachiUnited States445,500,000178
Final Four, Michael Mizrachi, Kenny Hallaert, John Wasnock, Braxton Dunaway
The Final Four Players

While all eyes will be on Mizrachi, the story of 50-year-old investment banker Wasnock is certainly one to remember. He has only participated in the WSOP Main Event for the second time and already parlayed that into a payday of at least $3 million with plenty of reasons to be full of confidence ahead of tomorrow's showdown.

"Still feeling good. Other than that one beat I took on the river, feel pretty good. Obviously, I feel pretty good about how that hand played, just not the result. But I still feel confident. We’ve got a couple of short stacks left. I’ve got enough chips to do some damage if it comes to that."

He didn't crumble like many others may have had after the crucial preflop contest with Mizrachi that turned the tides entirely, and remained consistent while being fully aware of Mizrachi's super aggressive playing style.

"Can’t change what happened. I still had more chips than I started the day with. We’re so deep. These pots have been so many bigs deep, sometimes unnecessarily, so it’s been going fast. But we’ve still got a lot of play if you look at how deep-stacked we are."

The Action of the Day

The final table started in unprecedented fashion as South Korea's Daehyung Lee was eliminated in the very first hand. Having raised with ace-queen, Lee flopped top pair and top kicker against chip leader Wasnock but had a mountain to climb against the bottom set of Wasnock. Some hope came with a gutshot on the turn but Wasnock rivered a full house for good measure to further cement his top spot. Just like that, the South Korean flags vanished from the rail and it wouldn't be the first clash in the opening stages.

Only a few minutes later in hand seven, the next short stack made his move. Former snowboarder Jarod Minghini raised and then called all-in when Kenny Hallaert moved all-in with the covering stack. It was a classic flip for the tournament life of Minghini, who failed to improve with ace-queen suited against pocket fours to become the second casualty.

Things became even more heated shortly after. In a limped battle of the blinds between Luka Bojovic and Adam Hendrix, the latter four-bet a queen-high flop to force a fold from Bojovic and showed six-deuce for bottom pair.

The start of the new level saw a shift in momentum when Wasnock pulled away from the pack thanks to a showdown pot against Braxton Dunaway. However, there would be a dramatic change soon after when Mizrachi got it in with ace-king against Wasnock's kings and spiked an ace on the river to let the Horseshoe Event Center burst into motion.

Little did everyone know that the drama was just getting started. Leo Margets had become the second woman ever to reach the WSOP Main Event final table and took a flip with ace-ten suited against the pocket sixes of Hallaert. An ace on the turn propelled Margets into the lead but Hallaert rivered a flush to end her run in seventh place.

On Day 8, the Spanish poker pro had been on the other side of this coin when she rivered a flush with jacks against the ace-king of Sergio Veloso but Margets had to settle for $1.5 million this time.

Two hands later, the rail exploded yet again when Mizrachi got it in preflop with ace-king against the pocket jacks of Hendrix. The number one on the all-time money list of Alaska remained ahead on the flop but Mizrachi's fortune continued with a king on the turn, no miracle two-outer came thereafter and just like that the field was down to the final five already with fewer than two hours played.

Once Mizrachi held the commanding lead, the pressure of “The Grinder” was relentless and he soared up to more than half of the chips in play. The largest pot without a showdown also went to Mizrachi when he fired three barrels against Hallaert and was good with two pair against top pair to skyrocket up to seventy-two percent of the chips in play.

“We will rock you,” the chants came from the rail and suddenly there were five contenders left and three of them below 15 big blinds. The shortest stack belonged to Bojovic, who was at risk for eight blinds with ace-king against the ace-jack of Wasnock. Three clubs on the flop were a huge sweat for the Vienna-based grinder and the turn brought a jack to give Wasnock a huge lead. The river was a brick and Bojovic departed in fifth place.

Only a few more hands were played thereafter with most of them seeing the chips pushed to Mizrachi, and he bagged up the overwhelming lead for tomorrow's grand finale. The tournament may have even been over this evening if the action continued given the chip distribution.

"I wanted to keep going. I didn’t want to stop. We would’ve been done in an hour if we kept going. I wanted to finish it off today, but I know they can’t. They have a schedule," Mizrachi said before heading out of the Horseshoe Event Center.

2025 WSOP Main Event Final Table Results and Remaining Payouts

RankWinnerCountryPrize (in USD)
1  $10,000,000
2  $6,000,000
3  $4,000,000
4  $3,000,000
5Luka BojovicSerbia$2,400,000
6Adam HendrixUnited States$1,900,000
7Leo MargetsSpain$1,500,000
8Jarod MinghiniUnited States$1,250,000
9Daehyung LeeSouth Korea$1,000,000

Recommencing blinds in level 41 will be 1,000,000-2,500,000 with a big blind ante of 2,500,000. The second and most important part of the 2025 WSOP Main Event final table will once again recommence at 2 p.m. local time on July 16, 2025, with cards-up coverage and commentary on PokerGO with a one-hour delay.

The hand-for-hand coverage on PokerNews will follow the delay of the live stream action in order to not spoil any of the action on the final day of the 2025 WSOP in Las Vegas.

Final Four, Michael Mizrachi, Kenny Hallaert, John Wasnock, Braxton Dunaway
Final Four, Michael Mizrachi, Kenny Hallaert, John Wasnock, Braxton Dunaway

Tags: Adam HendrixBraxton DunawayDaehyung LeeJarod MinghiniJohn WasnockKenny HallaertLeo MargetsLuka BojovicMichael Mizrachi

Luka Bojovic Eliminated in 5th Place ($2,400,000)

Level 40 : Blinds 1,000,000/2,000,000, 2,000,000 ante
Luka Bojovic
Luka Bojovic

Hand #55: Luka Bojovic moved all in for 16,500,000 in the cutoff as the table folded around to John Wasnock, who snap-called in the big blind.

Luka Bojovic: AK All in
John Wasnock: AJ

Bojovic had Wasnock dominated and was poised for a double-up, but the 342 flop not only gave Wasnock a flush draw, but he also picked up outs to a chop.

The J fell on the turn and Wasnock took the lead with a pair of jacks. Bojovic, surrounded by his supporters on the rail, watched helplessly as the 6 completed the board on the river to send him to the rail in fifth.

Luka Bojovic
Luka Bojovic
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of John Wasnock us
John Wasnock
108,000,000
17,500,000
17,500,000
Day 8 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Luka Bojovic rs
Luka Bojovic
Busted

Tags: John WasnockLuka Bojovic

Hand #54: Mizrachi Bombs the River on Hallaert to Take a Massive Chip Lead

Level 40 : Blinds 1,000,000/2,000,000, 2,000,000 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

Hand #54: Michael Mizrachi raised to 4,000,000 in the cutoff with Q10 and Kenny Hallaert called in the small blind with KJ, as did Braxton Dunaway in the big blind holding 97.

The flop came K103, and once it checked to Mizrachi, he bet 5,500,000 with middle pair. Only Hallaert called to see the Q turn.

Mizrachi then bet 21,500,000 as he turned two pair, and Hallaert again called. The river was the 4, and Mizrachi slid forward a chunky bet of 60,000,000.

Hallaert ripped off his sunglasses and leaned back, taking a sip from his water bottle and checked the other stacks at the table before he made the call. Mizrachi then showed his two pair to win the pot and jumped out of his seat in celebration as he climbed above 400,000,000.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Michael Mizrachi us
Michael Mizrachi
421,700,000
97,000,000
97,000,000
Day 9 Chip Leader
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 8X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Profile photo of Braxton Dunaway us
Braxton Dunaway
30,300,000
7,000,000
7,000,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Kenny Hallaert be
Kenny Hallaert
24,400,000
91,000,000
91,000,000
Day 7 Chip Leader
pokerstars

Tags: Braxton DunawayKenny HallaertMichael Mizrachi

Break Time

Level 40 : Blinds 1,000,000/2,000,000, 2,000,000 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

The remaining five players are heading on a short break.

When they return, Level 40 will resume with one hour left, which has blinds of 1,000,000/2,000,000 and a 2,000,000 big blind ante.

Here's a look at some of the highlights from the opening two hours.

Adam Hendrix Eliminated in 6th Place ($1,900,000)

Level 40 : Blinds 1,000,000/2,000,000, 2,000,000 ante
Adam Hendrix
Adam Hendrix

Hand #30: First to act, Mizrachi opened to 4,300,000 and Adam Hendrix three-bet to 12,000,000 in the cutoff. It folded back to Mizrachi and he moved all in. Hendrix called for 56,600,000.

Adam Hendrix: JJ All in
Michael Mizrachi: AK

The QQ4 flop kept Hendrix in the lead but the K turn propelled Mizrachi into the huge lead, leaving Hendrix with just two outs. None of the two remaining jacks came, instead the 3 on the river ended the run of Hendrix in sixth for $1,900,000.

Adam Hendrix
Adam Hendrix
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Michael Mizrachi us
Michael Mizrachi
214,400,000
61,600,000
61,600,000
Day 9 Chip Leader
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 8X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Profile photo of Adam Hendrix us
Adam Hendrix
Busted

Tags: Adam HendrixMichael Mizrachi

Leo Margets Eliminated in 7th Place ($1,500,000)

Level 40 : Blinds 1,000,000/2,000,000, 2,000,000 ante
Leo Margets
Leo Margets

Hand #28: Leo Margets limped in from the small blind before Kenny Hallaert moved all in from the big blind. Margets leaned back in her seat and took a moment, before she called off her stack of 39,600,000.

Leo Margets: A10 All in
Kenny Hallaert: 66

Margets ran over to her rail to await the flop, which came J75. The A fell on the turn and her Spanish supporters erupted in celebration before realizing that Hallaert had picked up a flush draw.

The river was the 9. Margets was turned away from the action and seemed stunned when she realized that Hallaert had made his flush. Hallaert immediately ran over to console her, as Margets' valiant and history-making run came to an end in seventh place.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Kenny Hallaert be
Kenny Hallaert
139,900,000
39,600,000
39,600,000
Day 7 Chip Leader
pokerstars
Profile photo of Leo Margets es
Leo Margets
Busted
WSOP 1X Winner
Winamax

Tags: Kenny HallaertLeo Margets

Hand #25: Mizrachi Stuns Wasnock on the River

Level 40 : Blinds 1,000,000/2,000,000, 2,000,000 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

Hand #25: Braxton Dunaway raised to 4,000,000 in the cutoff with Q9 before John Wasnock three-bet to 10,000,000 on the button. Michael Mizrachi was in the small blind and pointed up to signal to the dealer he was raising. He then put in 30,000,000.

Dunaway folded, but Wasnock moved all in. Mizrachi snap-called for his stack of 71,700,000.

Michael Mizrachi: AK All in
John Wasnock: KK

Mizrachi had run into Wasnock's kings and needed an ace to stay alive. The entire Horseshoe Event Center got onto their feet to await the flop, which came J97.

The Q turn gave Mizrachi additional outs with a straight draw going to the river. With Mizrachi a card away from elimination, he found the A on the river and leapt to his feet in celebration as he doubled up into the chip lead.

"Fourth time in two days," Wasnock said to Mizrachi.

"I suck out when I need it," Mizrachi replied after retaking his seat.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Michael Mizrachi us
Michael Mizrachi
151,400,000
79,700,000
79,700,000
Day 9 Chip Leader
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 8X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Profile photo of John Wasnock us
John Wasnock
110,300,000
71,700,000
71,700,000
Day 8 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Braxton Dunaway us
Braxton Dunaway
81,100,000
4,000,000
4,000,000
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Braxton DunawayJohn WasnockMichael Mizrachi

Jarod Minghini Eliminated in 8th Place ($1,250,000)

Level 39 : Blinds 800,000/1,600,000, 1,600,000 ante
Jarod Minghini Elimination
Jarod Minghini Elimination

Hand #7: Jarod Minghini raised to 3,200,000 on the button, Kenny Hallaert moved all in from the big blind, and Minghini snap-called for 23,600,000.

Jarod Minghini: AQ All in
Kenny Hallaert: 44

Minghini needed to survive the flip to keep his tournament hopes alive, but didn't find any help as the flop came 632. The 8 turn kept Hallaert in the lead while Minghini remained by the rail with his supporters to await the river, which came the 10 and sent him to the rail in eighth.

Jarod Minghini Elimination
Jarod Minghini Elimination
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Kenny Hallaert be
Kenny Hallaert
104,900,000
24,400,000
24,400,000
Day 7 Chip Leader
pokerstars
Profile photo of Jarod Minghini us
Jarod Minghini
Busted

Tags: Jarod MinghiniKenny Hallaert

Daehyung Lee Eliminated in 9th Place ($1,000,000)

Level 39 : Blinds 800,000/1,600,000, 1,600,000 ante
Daehyung Lee
Daehyung Lee

Hand #1: Daehyung Lee raised to 3,200,000 from early position and chip leader John Wasnock called in the big blind. The QJ5 flop was checked by Wasnock and Lee continued for 3,000,000 to get an interested stare from Wasnock. The chip leader then check-raised to 6,500,000, and Lee moved all in for 31,700,000. Wasnock snap-called.

Daehyung Lee: AQ All in
John Wasnock: 55

Wasnock's flopped set was well in the lead, but the 10 on the turn gave Lee some hope. However, the J river sent him to the rail in the very first hand of the final table. For his deep run, he collects $1,000,000 for the efforts and the remaining eight players have locked up $1,250,000.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of John Wasnock us
John Wasnock
143,800,000
35,700,000
35,700,000
Day 8 Chip Leader
Profile photo of Daehyung Lee kr
Daehyung Lee
Busted

Tags: Daehyung LeeJohn Wasnock

Nine Return to Chase Poker's Ultimate Prize at the WSOP Main Event Final Table

Main Event Bracelet, Money
Main Event Bracelet, Money

An aspiring poker player first picks up the game in a messy college dorm with friends, a smoke-filled card room at a local casino, or under the glare of a computer screen on the virtual felt.

In their wildest dreams, though, they are here, under the bright lights of poker’s biggest stage: the World Series of Poker Main Event final table. For the vast majority, it will always remain just a dream. But for nine fortunate players who defy the odds and make their way through a massive sea of opponents, that fantasy becomes a reality.

The final table is where lives are changed, where unknowns become overnight superstars, where poker stars become poker legends. The world championship bracelet is up for grabs, and the nine who outlasted a field of 9,735 to get here begin the journey at 2 p.m. local time for the biggest day of their poker lives.

A week ago, John Wasnock was simply an investment banker from Seattle with just over $140,000 in career earnings, according to The Hendon Mob. His biggest career score came earlier this year in a $500 event at a casino in Pendleton, Oregon.

From these humble beginnings, though, the 50-year-old has risen to the verge of stardom and begins the final table with 108,100,000 and the chip lead. The Main Event is full of underdog stories, starting with Chris Moneymaker to Steve Dannenmann and, most recently, Jordan Griff last year. Wasnock has a chance to become the latest Cinderella story today.

John Wasnock
John Wasnock

Final Table Seat Draw and Chip Counts

SeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Leo MargetsSpain53,400,00033
2Kenny HallaertBelgium80,500,00050
3Braxton DunawayUnited States91,900,00057
4John WasnockUnited States108,100,00068
5Michael MizrachiUnited States93,000,00058
6Daehyung LeeSouth Korea34,900,00022
7Luka BojovicSerbia51,000,00032
8Adam HendrixUnited States48,000,00030
9Jarod MinghiniUnited States23,600,00015

Wasnock was a relative unknown at the start of the event. The same can’t be said of the man right behind him on the leaderboard. Michael Mizrachi (93,000,000) has been one of the faces of the game for two decades. “The Grinder’s” poker resume includes seven WSOP bracelets, an unprecedented four PPC titles, a fifth-place finish in the Main Event in 2010, two WPT titles, and nearly $20 million in live earnings.

Mizrachi already cemented his Hall of Fame credentials a few weeks ago when he took home the Chip Reese Memorial Trophy yet again; a Main Event title, which eluded him 15 years ago, would put him in the conversation of the best ever.

Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

"The Grinder" isn’t the only one at this year’s final table who has been here before. Nine years ago, Kenny Hallaert made it all the way to the final six of the Main Event before running into eventual champion Qui Nguyen’s aces. The long-time poker pro, tournament director, and PokerStars ambassador is back for another shot at what will be his sixth WSOP final table, sitting in fourth place with 80,500,000.

Sandwiched in between Mizrachi and Hallaert is Braxton Dunaway (91,900,000). The Texas oil man has already outlasted one massive WSOP field, winning the Monster Stack two years ago out of 8,317 to win more than $1.1 million. He’s made it through an even-bigger field this time and sits in third place to begin the final table.

For all of Mizrachi’s star power and Hallaert’s steady professionalism, though, the eyes of the poker world will be on one player at the final table, and for the first time in 30 years, it’s not a man. Leo Margets is the first woman to make the Main Event final table since Barbara Enright in 1995.

Women have traditionally made up only a small percentage of the Main Event field, but if there is one thing that can provide a spark for another boom just like Moneymaker did in 2003, it’s a woman winning poker’s biggest prize. The Spanish pro, podcast host, and marathon runner is in fifth place with 53,400,000.

Leo Margets
Leo Margets

Luka Bojovic already has one WSOP Main Event run within the past year: he finished eighth at the WSOP Europe in Rozvadov last October. The Serbian-born doctor has more than $700,000 in live earnings and a WSOP Circuit ring. He starts the final table in sixth place with 51,000,000.

Adam Hendrix is no stranger to WSOP final tables. He’s made 11 of them, along with $2 million in WSOP earnings. But “the Iceman” has yet to capture a WSOP bracelet despite being one of the most steady performers in the past few years. Hendrix, who fully embraced the theatrics of the Main Event when he showed up for Day 1 dressed as Elvis, had many opponents all shook up over the last week on his way to 48,000,000 and seventh place to start the final table, seeking to make his first bracelet the biggest one of all.

Adam Hendrix
Adam Hendrix

While the likes of Johnny Chan, Scotty Nguyen, and Jerry Yang have all been Asian-born Main Event winners, they had all relocated to the United States long before becoming champion. Daehyung Lee (34,900,000) can become the first player based in the Far East to capture the bracelet. The 46-year-old software engineer from Seoul, who only began playing poker in 2021, is already the first Korean to make the Main Event final table, his run only a spark in an already-booming poker market.

Jarod Minghini (23,600,000) rounds out the final table lineup. The 37-year-old former professional snowboarder from Lake Tahoe has five WSOP Circuit rings and nearly $1 million in career earnings, but he’s already surpassed that total with his run to the final table.

The action at the final table picks up with 66:41 remaining in Level 39 with blinds of 800,000/1,600,000 and a 1,600,000 big blind ante. The cards should be in the air around 2 p.m. local time, with action being streamed on PokerGO on an hour delay. Live updates will be provided on a delay to match the stream. The plan is to play down to the final four players today, then return tomorrow to crown a champion. All nine finalists are already guaranteed a $1 million payday, while the champion will earn $10,000,000 and the diamond-encrusted bracelet.

Final Table
Final Table

Final Table 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

This is the date that every poker fan has circled on their calendars all year. The Main Event champion will be immortalized in poker history, their banner hanging alongside the great champions of the past inside the Horseshoe Event Center forever. The final nine have already defeated more than 9,000 opponents to reach this point, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for most. What started as a sea of hardened pros, grinders looking for the score that would change their lives, and homegame heroes crossing an item off their bucket list has been reduced to just these players, each with their own story to tell and history to make.

PokerNews will be following the action all the way, so stay tuned over the next two days until a new world champion is crowned.

Tags: Adam HendrixBraxton DunawayDaehyung LeeJarod MinghiniJohn WasnockKenny HallaertLeo MargetsLuka BojovicMichael Mizrachi