There were roughly 1,200 chips in the pot on 4♦5♣10♦.
Christos Xanthopoulos in the small blind bet pot on the flop. Jorge Ufano on the button made the call. Xanthopoulos decided to bet 2,500 on the 4♣ turn andUfano called.
Xanthopoulos slowed down with a check on the 3♠ river which induced a bet from Ufano for 7,700 and Xanthopoulos quickly called. Ufano said "you win" and tabled A♠K♥Q♠10♣ for ace-high, Xanthopoulos tabled K♠K♦J♦7♠ for a pair of kings.
There were roughly 10,000 chips in the pot on a board of J♣2♣J♥A♠A♦.
Brett Elder who was on the button bet 4,000 on the river, Dien Le in the cutoff made the call fairly quickly. Elder was reluctant to show his cards so Le took the initiative and tabled the winning hand with A♣6♠5♣5♦.
Have you heard about MyStack by PokerNews? It is a free-to-use tool built into the PokerNews website that puts you in control of your chip counts on our live reporting pages. MyStack directly connects you to PokerNews' live reporting pages, making you an even bigger part of the action in the events you play.
MyStack is a free poker tool and PokerNews activates MyStack for every event it is live reporting from, regardless of that tournament's buy-in. Once you have created a free PokerNews account, you can use MyStack to update your chip counts in real time; hopefully, your stack will continue increasing throughout the event!
Welcome back to PokerNews, the official media partner of the 2025 World Series of Poker, bringing you live updates from every bracelet event.
Today marks the start of Event #91: $1,500 Six-Handed Pot-Limit Omaha, a three-day event that shuffles up and deals at noon. Players sit down armed with 25,000 chips and play 40-minute levels on Day 1. Seventeen levels are scheduled, with 20-minute breaks every three levels. Reach the end of Level 9 at around 6:40 p.m., and you'll head on a 60-minute dinner break.
Late registration is available until the start of Level 10, after the dinner break, at about 7:40 p.m. Eliminated players are allowed up to two reentries.
Day 2 starts at noon on Friday, July 11, with another ten levels planned. Blinds extend to 60 minutes from Day 2 onward. Breaks of 15 minutes happen every two levels, and a 60-minute dinner break is penciled in for after Level 23 at around 6:30 p.m. The third and final day's start time is yet to be determined.
Joseph Sanders is this event's reigning champion. In 2024, he outlasted 1,305 opponents and won a $269,530 prize plus his first WSOP bracelet. Sanders admitted that he ran well on his way to victory, telling PokerNews that he was planning to parlay some of his winnings into the $3,000 version of this event later that series.
“I doubt I’ll run as pure as I did in this one, but I gotta give it a try, ya know?”
2024 $1,500 Six-Handed Pot-Limit Omaha Final Table Results
Stay closer than ever to the action with MyPlayers. This brand new, free feature on PokerNews puts your favorite poker players front and center. Whether you're keeping tabs on legends like Daniel Negreanu or following a friend grinding their way through a Day 2, MyPlayers delivers real-time updates tailored just for you. No subscriptions, no paywalls - just the hands, chip counts, and bustouts that matter most.
It’s simple: log in, search for any player in our live coverage, hit the star, and they’ll be added to your personalized MyPlayers list. You’ll see their progress across all live-reported events, with chip counts and updates pinned right where you need them at the top.
From railbirds to backers, MyPlayers is the smarter way to stay connected to the game.