2026 World Series of Poker

Event #82: $10,000 WSOP Main Event NLH World Championship
Event #82: $10,000 WSOP Main Event NLH World Championship Event #85: $1,000 No-Limit Hold'em Event #86: $600 Ultra Stack No-limit Hold'em Show All Events
Day: 1a
1a1b1c1d
Event Info
2026 World Series of Poker
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$75,860,100
Total Entries
8,079
Players Left
6,141
Average Chip Stack
78,935
Total Chips
484,740,000
Level Info
Level
5
Blinds
300 / 600
Ante
600
Players Info - Day 1a
Entries
772
Players Left
543
Players Left 6,141 / 8,079
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Ryuta Nakai Leads the Way as WSOP Main Event Returns with a Bang

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Ryuta Nakai
Ryuta Nakai

Wherever you play your poker, and however seriously you take it, the answer tends to be the same. From high-stakes regulars with hoods up and headphones in, to recreational players enjoying a few beers at a home game, ask anyone in the room to name poker’s pinnacle, and they’ll likely point to one thing: winning the World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event and becoming world champion. 



That simple fact is what brings a swarm of poker’s crushers, up-and-comers, and fairytale dreamers to the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas each year, each embarking on their own journey in pursuit of poker immortality and the chance to join the legends whose championship banners hang proudly from the Horseshoe rafters.



The opening flight of Event #82: $10,000 WSOP Main Event NLH World Championship saw 772 hopefuls enter the fray, and with ten hours of play in the books, 543 of those showed their tournament stamina to bag chips and move on to Day 2.

Leading from the front, Ryuta Nakai was a mainstay at the top of the leaderboard throughout the day. His day centred around winning a lot of pots frequently, with a relentless aggressive style. The Japanese pro already has a third-place finish in this year's WSOP, falling just shy of a bracelet in the $25,000 Heads-Up Championship.

Closest to the chip leader, Igor Pansovoi scored a late-night pot to move him up the leaderboard, bagging 300,300, while Gregory Sly makes it an international affair on the podium, having ended the day with 254,500.

Main Event Day 1a - Top Ten Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Ryuta NakaiJapan323,000404
2Igor PansovoiUnited States300,300379
3Gregory SlyAustralia254,500318
4Arie KliperIsrael254,100318
5Go KatoUnited States245,700307
6Domenico GalaItaly241,000301
7Richard RohrUnited States229,100286
8Masato YokosawaJapan221,800277
9Earl GoodmanUnited States221,600277
10Matthew RussellUnited States217,300272
Joe Cada
Joe Cada

Plenty of poker's elite turned out for the first of four starting flights, and there is no shortage of firepower further down the leaderboard. Former Main Event champions Joe Cada (133,600), Greg Merson (81,200), Daniel Weinman (79,300), Phil Hellmuth (66,000), and Damian Salas (54,900) all punched their tickets to Day 2.

There is also 25K Fantasy Draft picks and bracelet winners galore, as Scott Seiver (177,300), Dimitar Danchev (175,200), Qiang Xu (152,300), Sam Soverel (112,600), Jeremy Ausmus (109,300), Andrew Lichtenberger (94,700), Erik Seidel (86,400), Stephen Chidwick (83,400), Greg Merson (81,200), Zdenek Zizka (78,000), Brandon Wilson (64,500), and Jason Koon (18,700) are all still in the mix.

Billy Baxter
Billy Baxter

Another who opted to play the first starting flight was 2006 Poker Hall of Fame inductee, Billy Baxter. Baxter spent the day regaling tales of World Series’ past, and was still in the field come day's end, having bagged 19,800.

“The main change is the amount of players. Now, no matter who you are, it’s ten days; it’s very gruelling to get through that. You need to play really good, [and be] really lucky. You need a little bit of both", Baxter told PokerNews.

Remarkably, Baxter chose not to play the Main Event for his first 22 years in Las Vegas.



“I came here in 1975; I never played the main event until 1997. When I first came out here, I was really a lowball player. The main game I played every day was no-limit 2-7. That year [1997] I staked Stu Ungar, and he talked me into playing it.”

Baxter was all too happy to share the words Ungar said to convince him to play.



“Come on, you should play it [the main event]. I’m going to win it anyway, so it ain’t gonna cost you nothing.”

“And sure enough, he did win it”



Baxter is now a regular entry into the event, and it will stay that way until the very end, with the poker legend continuing to tell and retell his crazy stories. 



“I like to play, and I’ve played a lot since then, and I enjoy it. I’m a little too old for these hours, but I still like to try. I guess until they put me in that box, I’m going to keep playing. I enjoy it [telling those stories]... It was the Wild West back then."

He closed out with one piece of advice for those playing their first WSOP Main Event. 



“Enjoy it, because I can tell you this: it’s going to be very difficult to get through these big fields”

Big Names, Big Hands, Big Action

The theme of the opening day was big collisions, and it took no time at all for them to begin.

In the first few hands of the day, Anthony Marini came racing out of the blocks, and, after six bets preflop, his full stack was in the middle. Unfortunately for Marini, his suited ace-king had run into the pocket aces of Ryan Sands. No miracle arrived, and Marini had the unwanted distinction of becoming the first player eliminated from the 2026 WSOP Main Event.

Scott Seiver
Scott Seiver

Shortly after, Seiver avoided the same fate, laying down pocket queens preflop correctly and avoiding disaster versus his opponent's pocket aces. Throughout the day, quads were beating full houses, and a turned royal flush even found river value. It was cold decks galore, as more players ran into aces to be eliminated.

Among those to fall foul of the deck, Jared Bleznick was two-outered, and 2025 Main Event final tablist Leo Margets ran kings into aces preflop and never managed to recover.

Players such as Adrian Mateos, Tyler Phillips, Seth Davies, Dan Smith, Nicholas Seward, Mike Moncek, Julien Sitbon, Chad Eveslage, David Bach, Frank Funaro Jr, and Espen Oeye all suffered the same fate, and as such, will need to wait another year for a chance at Main Event glory.

Those who were fortunate to survive the day will return for Day 2abc on Monday, July 6, at 11:00 a.m. local time. Three starting flights remain, with Day 1b the next available opportunity to jump in, and late registration remains open for the first two levels of Day 2. 


Stay tuned as the PokerNews live reporting team is out in full force and will be back tomorrow for more coverage of what will likely be a historic WSOP Main Event.

Tags: Adrian MateosAndrew LichtenbergerAnthony MariniBilly BaxterBrandon WilsonDamian SalasDan SmithDaniel WeinmanDimitar DanchevErik SeidelEspen OeyeGreg MersonGregory SlyIgor PansovoiJared BleznickJason KoonJeremy AusmusJoe CadaJulien SitbonLeo MargetsMike MoncekNicholas SewardPhil HellmuthQiang XuRyan SandsRyuta NakaiSam SoverelScott SeiverSeth DaviesStephen ChidwickStu UngarTyler PhillipsWild WestZdenek Zizka

PiacQUADio Flops Four-of-a-Kind

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Anthony Piacquadio
Anthony Piacquadio

Michael Loncar opened to 1,400 under the gun, and received calls from two players on his left: Graham Mathews and Andrei Mjagkov. Anthony Piacquadio then moved all in for 9,100 from the cutoff, which sent button player Paul Coles into the tank. Eventually, he folded, announcing, "That might be an error."

Loncar called, with both Mathews and Mjagkov tank-folding. "I hope it's a flip!" announced Piacquadio

Anthony Piacquadio: 22 All in
Michael Loncar: 33

"Just how I've been running," said Piacquadio upon seeing that it wasn't, in fact, a flip. However, his spirits changed as a deuce in the window was followed by another on the Q22 flop, giving him the stone cold nuts. The 8 turn and 8 river kept him in the lead, as he let the table know that "the heater just started."

Coles let his opponents know that he folded AxQx.

Tags: Andrei MjagkovAnthony PiacquadioGraham MathewsMichael LoncarPaul Coles

Chidwick Doubles Through Reymond

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Stephen Chidwick
Stephen Chidwick

Stephen Chidwick was already all in from the big blind for a bit under 30,000 against William Reymond, who had Chidwick covered from under the gun.

Stephen Chidwick: QQAll in
William Reymond: JJ

It was fortunate timing from Chidwick, who had Reymond's jacks pipped with queens.

The board ran out 73924 — improving neither player to award Chidwick the double up as Day 1a neared its end.

Tags: Stephen ChidwickWilliam Reymond

Rocco Doubles Through McMurray

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Michael Rocco
Michael Rocco

Heads-up on a completed board of KQ795 with a large pot already in the middle, Michael Rocco checked from the small blind and Floyd McMurray bet 25,000.

Rocco then moved all in for 43,600 total and McMurray called with a covering stack.

Rocco tabled J10 for the nuts and McMurray showed he held AK, awarding the double-up to Rocco.

Tags: Floyd McMurrayMichael Rocco

Bilger Leaves Koon in the Danger Zone

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Jason Koon
Jason Koon

From middle position, Raphael Bilger limped in before Jason Koon raised to 1,800 from a few seats over. Bilger came along with a call.

The dealer fanned a monotone 935 flop, and Bilger check-called Koon's continuation-bet of 1,200.

Both players checked the A turn before the 5 completed the board. Bilger led out for 4,000, sending Koon, who had just 5,200 behind, into the tank.

Koon mulled it over for a while before eventually deciding to fold, surrendering the pot to Bilger.

Tags: Jason KoonRaphael Bilger

Margets Unable to Repeat the Feat

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Leo Margets
Leo Margets

Justus Marisco opened to 1,500 from early position, and Hannes Jeschka flatted from late position. Leo Margets then moved all in for 9,500 on the button. Marsico called, and Jeschka folded.

Leo Margets: KQ All in
Justus Marsico: AK

It wasn't to be for Margets, as the 102379 runout sent her to the rail.

Also at the table, Jimmie Lucero has managed quite the spin up, turning his stack of just 400 chips to more than 13,000.

Tags: Hannes JeschkaJimmie LuceroJustus MarsicoLeo Margets

Final Break

Level 4 : Blinds 300/500, 500 ante
Daniel Weinman
Daniel Weinman

Players have been sent on their last 20-minute break of Day 1a. So far, 760 people have entered the 2026 WSOP Main Event. Of those, 601 will return after the break and attempt to secure a bag into Day 2abc.

Here are the latest highlights from Level 4:

Weinman's Two Pair Good in Multi-Way Pot

Level 4 : Blinds 300/500, 500 ante
Daniel Weinman
Daniel Weinman

Curtis Nare in the big blind, Vitalijs Korhs in middle position, and Daniel Weinman on the button, all checked the turn on a board of 92K10.

The 8 completed the board, and Nare led out for 6,100. Korhs and Weinman both called.

Nare tabled J9 for a pair of nines. Weinman quickly revealed K9 for two pair, kings and nines, which proved to be the best hand as he dragged in the pot.

Tags: Curtis NareDaniel WeinmanVitalijs Korhs

Dinner Break

Level 3 : Blinds 200/400, 400 ante
Phil Hellmuth Grand Entrance
Phil Hellmuth Grand Entrance

Players in the field have been sent on a 60-minute dinner break. The Day 1a field continues to grow, with 725 players now having taken their seats. Of those, 632 will return for Level 4 at approximately 6:40 p.m. local time.

Here are the latest highlights:

Baxter Chipping Up

Level 3 : Blinds 200/400, 400 ante
Billy Baxter
Billy Baxter

Joining the action with roughly 7,500 in the middle of a three-bet pot and heading to a 1029 flop, three-bettor David Neiman bet 4,000 from the big blind, and Billy Baxter called in early position.

Neiman slowed down with a check on the 4 turn, and Baxter took over the betting lead to the tune of 8,500. That did the job, as Neiman folded, abandoning his chips in the middle.

Tags: Billy BaxterDavid Neiman

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