2025 World Series of Poker

Event #94: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em 6-Handed Championship
Day: 4
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Event Info
2025 World Series of Poker
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
j10
Prize
$986,337
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$5,077,800
Entries
546
Level Info
Level
30
Blinds
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
200,000
Players Info - Day 4
Entries
4
Players Left
1
Players Left 1 / 546
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Isaac Kempton in Contention With Four Remaining in $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Six-Handed Championship

Isaac Kempton
Isaac Kempton

After three days and nearly 12 hours of nonstop action on each, the $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Six-Handed Championship returns for an unscheduled Day 4, and it’s shaping up to be a memorable finish at the 2025 World Series of Poker. What began as a short-handed showdown among professionals has now become a four-handed war, with nearly seven figures and one of the summer’s most coveted bracelets on the line.

Sam Soverel enters as the overwhelming chip leader with 22,125,000, more than double the combined stacks of his remaining opponents. It’s been a masterclass performance so far, with Soverel navigating a minefield of crushers, winning key flips, and coolering some of the biggest names in the game. But the job’s not done yet, and only time will tell if he can close it out inside Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.

Final Day Seat Draw

SeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Isaac KemptonUnited States3,875,00019
2[Removed:548]Austria1,025,0005
3Daniel VicenteSpain5,750,00029
4Sam SoverelUnited States22,125,000111

Chasing him are Daniel Vicente, Isaac Kempton, and [Removed:548], each hoping to flip the script and write their name into the WSOP history books. They return at 1 p.m. local time to the Horseshoe Event Center to play for the championship.

Final Table Remaining Payouts / Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1  $986,337
2  $649,925
3  $437,276
4  $300,521
5Eric WassersonUnited States$211,068
6Leonard MaueGermany$151,567
7Yuliyan KolevBulgaria$111,338

All four players are guaranteed a six-figure score, but there’s still plenty of money left to play for. The next player to fall will take home $300,521, while a third-place finish is worth $437,276. The runner-up will earn a massive $649,925, and whoever emerges victorious will claim the WSOP gold bracelet along with the $986,337 top prize.

Stay tuned to PokerNews as we bring you exclusive updates and every all-in until the winner is crowned.

Tags: Daniel VicenteEric WassersonIsaac KemptonLeonard MaueSam SoverelYuliyan Kolev

[Removed:548] Eliminated in 4th Place ($300,521)

Level 30 : Blinds 100,000/200,000, 200,000 ante

In the first hand dealt, [Removed:548] made it 700,000 on the button and Sam Soverel called from the big blind.

On the 985 flop, Soverel checked, [Removed:549] shoved for 325,000, and Soverel snap-called.

[Removed:548]: 66 All in
Sam Soverel: 76

Soverel flopped the nuts, which left [Removed:549] drawing extremely thin. A J on the turn meant only a chop was possible for [Removed:549], but the 4 river wasn't it, leaving him out in fourth.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Sam Soverel us
Sam Soverel
23,500,000
1,375,000
1,375,000
Day 3 Chip Leader
WSOP 4X Winner
Profile photo of [Removed:548] at
[Removed:548]
Busted

Tags: Sam Soverel

Isaac Kempton Eliminated in 3rd Place ($437,276)

Level 30 : Blinds 100,000/200,000, 200,000 ante
Isaac Kempton
Isaac Kempton

After losing a few chips being shoved on by Sam Soverel, Isaac Kempton made it 1,400,000 from the button, and Soverel shoved from the big blind. Kempton had around 500,000 behind, and quickly called.

Isaac Kempton: JJ All in
Sam Soverel: A4

"That's a good hand," said Soverel to Kempton.

Kempton wasn't ahead for long, though, as the QA6 flop paired Soverel's ace. No jacks appeared on the 62 runout, and Kempton was out in third.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Sam Soverel us
Sam Soverel
27,750,000
4,250,000
4,250,000
Day 3 Chip Leader
WSOP 4X Winner
Profile photo of Daniel Vicente es
Daniel Vicente
5,000,000
750,000
750,000
Profile photo of Isaac Kempton us
Isaac Kempton
Busted

Tags: Isaac KemptonSam Soverel

Daniel Vicente Eliminated in 2nd Place ($649,925)

Level 30 : Blinds 100,000/200,000, 200,000 ante
Daniel Vicente
Daniel Vicente

Daniel Vicente shoved for this last 2,150,000 from the button and Sam Soverel asked for a count. The dealer confirmed the amount for Soverel to call.

Daniel Vicente: 97 All in
Sam Soverel: J10

The flop came QK5 to keep Soverel ahead and even pick up the open-ended straight draw.

The turn was the 4, which gave Vicente some hope, as they could chop the pot, but the river completed the board with the 4 instead, allowing Soverel to win his third bracelet. They shook hands and Vicente made his way out of the tournament area towards the cashier to collect his winnings for finishing in second place.

Sam Soverel Wins Event #94 $10k NLH 6-Max
Sam Soverel Wins Event #94 $10k NLH 6-Max
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Sam Soverel us
Sam Soverel
32,750,000
2,150,000
2,150,000
Day 3 Chip Leader
WSOP 4X Winner
Profile photo of Daniel Vicente es
Daniel Vicente
Busted

Tags: Daniel VicenteSam Soverel

Sam Soverel’s Speedy Sweep Secures Third Bracelet in $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Six-Handed Championship

Level 30 : Blinds 100,000/200,000, 200,000 ante
Sam Soverel Wins
Sam Soverel Wins

In the end, Sam Soverel didn’t just win Event #94: $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em Six-Handed Championship, he dominated it. The high-stakes veteran needed just 19 minutes on an unscheduled Day 4 to eliminate all three of his remaining opponents and capture the $986,337 top prize along with his third gold bracelet.

Soverel came into the final day with a commanding chip lead and never gave his opponents a chance to get comfortable. [Removed:548] was the first to fall, followed swiftly by Isaac Kempton and Daniel Vicente, who had no answer for Soverel’s relentless pressure and uncanny timing.

The victory capped off a dominant run through a 546-entry field that generated a $5,077,800 prize pool, one of the largest for a six-handed event at the 2025 World Series of Poker. Soverel now adds another major title to his resume, doing it in style with one of the fastest finishes of the summer inside Horseshoe and Paris, Las Vegas.

Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Sam SoverelUnited States$986,337
2Daniel VicenteSpain$649,925
3Isaac KemptonUnited States$437,276
4[Removed:548]Austria$300,521
5Eric WassersonUnited States$211,068
6Leonard MaueGermany$151,567

Running Well at All-Ins

“I ran exceptionally well in all-ins,” Soverel said with a grin. “I feel like I’ve been running hot all summer. Day 2 of this one went well, but I kept losing all-ins toward the end. Then on Day 3, I just started winning the most ridiculous ones. I kept shoving on people with absolute dust, and they’d call with jacks or something, and I’d just drill a queen or king or ace. It’s nice to win every all-in for once.”

Asked about his impact on the 25K Fantasy Draft, Soverel laughed it off. “I don’t have a team and don’t pay attention to that stuff at all. But they did disrespect me and only priced me at $4. I have no idea what that was about.”

Sam Soverel Wins Event #94 $10k NLH 6-Max
Sam Soverel Wins Event #94 $10k NLH 6-Max

Despite the momentum, Soverel isn’t planning to stick around for the rest of the series. “I think this is my last tournament for a while. It’s nice to end it with a win.”

As for what’s next, Soverel is keeping things casual. “I’m kind of retired, so I don’t know about the grind. I pretty much only play local tournaments now when I feel like it. I might go visit my family in Florida and I might play if I'm out there, but no tournaments.”

Speed Run to the Bracelet

Soverel wasted no time dispatching his final three opponents on Day 4. [Removed:549] was the first to fall on the opening hand, after raising most of his stack with pocket sixes. Soverel called with seven-six, and the rest of the chips went in on a flop that gave Soverel a straight, sending [Removed:549] to the payout desk just minutes into the day.

Shortly after, Kempton got his chips in ahead with pocket jacks against Soverel’s ace-four. An ace on the flop continued Soverel’s incredible run of winning all-ins, something he openly acknowledged in his winner’s interview.

Daniel Vicente
Daniel Vicente

Vicente entered heads-up play as a more than five-to-one underdog, and the gap only widened before the final hand. He shoved with nine-seven and Soverel called with jack-ten. A clean runout later, Vicente had to settle for second place while Soverel clinched the bracelet and a near seven-figure payday.

It was an emphatic finish on one of the biggest days of the summer. Today marks the penultimate day of the 2025 WSOP and the start of the Main Event final table. But for Soverel, the job is already done and done in record time.

Stay with PokerNews for full coverage of the Main Event finale and every bracelet still up for grabs.

Tags: Daniel VicenteEric WassersonIsaac KemptonLeonard MaueSam SoverelYuliyan Kolev