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: 1b
1a1b1c1d
Event Info
2026 World Series of Poker
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$74,595,300
Total Entries
7,962
Players Left
6,559
Average Chip Stack
72,834
Total Chips
477,720,000
Level Info
Level
4
Blinds
300 / 500
Ante
500
Players Info - Day 1b
Entries
1,038
Players Left
759
Players Left 6,559 / 7,962
Filter (1)

Filter

Filter By
Sort By

Nakanishi and Yong Among Big Stacks After Day 1b of the 2026 WSOP Main Event

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Cassandra Yong
Cassandra Yong

There is a common saying that you cannot win the World Series of Poker Main Event on Day 1, but many hopes and dreams can be shattered in the most cherished live poker tournament of the year. It is a bucket list item for people from all over the world to play the Main Event, some taking part for the first time, others not missing it for decades in a row.

The price tag hasn't changed, still $10,000 to enter, but the location and field size have changed throughout the last few decades. With the new home set at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas, hundreds of poker players took their seats, with the second of four starting flights attracting a total of 1,038 entries to bring the overall tally to 1,810. However, thousands of hopes and dreams will be added to the equation in the next few days with two more starting flights and another two levels of Day 2 remaining for entry, which will significantly boost the attendance figure.

There was no runaway chip leader on Day 1b with Brazil's Osmar Rockenbach likely finishing atop the leaderboard on a stack of 286,900, followed by Michael Stembera (270,300) and Damarjai Davenport (263,000). The WSOP bracelet winners Ali Eslami (256,200) and Shota Nakanishi (242,000) advanced with very healthy stacks, as did Cassandra Yong who scored a late double to jump into the unofficial top ten after bagging up 224,300.

Unofficial Top Ten Chip Counts for Day 1b

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Osmar RockenbachBrazil286,900478
2Michael StemberaUnited States270,300451
3Damarjai DavenportUnited States263,000438
4William WatsonUnited States262,000437
5Shawn SavageUnited States261,500436
6Ali EslamiUnited States256,200427
7Shota NakanishiJapan242,000403
8Adam MatuesUnited States228,000380
9Cassandra YongUnited Kingdom224,300374
10Tomas TeranVenezuela223,500373
Michael Mizrachi Bracelet Ceremony
Michael Mizrachi Bracelet Ceremony

Michael "The Grinder" Mizrachi was handed his ninth WSOP gold bracelet during the first break and then got to work at the tables in his attempt for an unprecedented title defence in recent years. During the final three levels, Mizrachi was on the live stream table and bagged up 73,200 in chips. He was joined there for the last few minutes by fellow WSOP Main Event champion Greg Raymer, who advanced with 122,300.

Fan-favorite Nicholas Rigby, who already has two deep runs in the WSOP Main Event to his name, ran up a stack early on and peaked at nearly three times the starting stack but had to settle for 75,700 upon completion of Level 5. However, that is still more than double what Antonio Esfandiari put in his bag as he finished the night with a mere 34,300 on the other feature table.

The unfortunate honor of being the first casualty of Day 1b went to Stephen Lee, who flopped a set of sevens after around 45 minutes of play and was up against the pocket aces of Shraga Vrubel. Running diamonds gave Vrubel the nut flush and Lee a bad beat story to tell. Vrubel made it through with an above-average stack of 136,000, although he already held a lot more than that during a topsy-turvy affair.

Siegfried Friedl ended the hopes of Kelly Lucas in the second level of the day when he made the right call holding a low flush on a paired board to take almost all of Lucas' chips and her bid to become the last woman standing in the competition once again came to a very early end.

Speaking of an early end, the tournament could have been over for Justin Young in the very first hand after entering somewhat late in level one. Right after sitting down, he found pocket aces and got the entire stack in against Benjamin Purser, who was on the wrong end of a cold deck with pocket queens. The same pocket pair also ended the 2026 WSOP Main Event for Jean-Robert Bellande when he ran into the pocket kings of Scott Nicol.

Did we mention pocket queens yet? They can also be on the right side of variance, too, as proven by Konstantin Held during the final hands of the night, albeit at the expense of Oscar Dorantes in very cruel fashion. Dorantes had flopped a full house with pocket nines, but a quartet of fours on the river gave Held the victory by high card to leave the entire table flabbergasted.

Konstantin Held
Konstantin Held

Former WSOP Main Event finalist Malo Latinois flopped a royal flush and his opponent held broadway to lose plenty of chips, eventually vaulting the Frenchman to a healthy 136,900 in chips. In contrast, last year's fourth-place finisher Kenny Hallaert has plenty of work cut out as he advanced with just 22,400.

The third and penultimate starting day kicks off at 11 a.m. local time and historically has a lower turnout given it's Independence Day in the United States. However, the final flight thereafter tends to test the table capacity at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas, with thousands of players from all over the world expected to join.

Stay tuned for the continued PokerNews live coverage of the 2026 WSOP Main Event from Las Vegas to find out who will be poised for a deep run within the next two weeks.

Tags: Adam MatuesAli EslamiAntonio EsfandiariBenjamin PurserCassandra YongDamarjai DavenportGreg RaymerJean-Robert BellandeJustin YoungKelly LucasKenny HallaertKonstantin HeldMalo LatinoisMichael MizrachiMichael StemberaNicholas RigbyOscar DorantesOsmar RockenbachScott NicolShawn SavageShota NakanishiShraga VrubelSiegfried FriedlStephen LeeTomas TeranWilliam Watson

Held Ends Dorantes Night Early With Brutal Beat

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Konstantin Held
Konstantin Held

On one of the last hands of the day, the board read 4944, and with around 30,000 in the pot, Konstantin Held bet 12,000 from the small blind. Oscar Dorantes jammed for around 40,000, and Held quickly called.

Oscar Dorantes: 99 All in
Konstantin Held: QQ

Dorantes had flopped a full house and looked destined to end Day 1b with a healthy double-up.

However, the poker gods had other ideas. The 4 river counterfeited Dorantes' hand, leaving him playing the board. Held's queen-kicker played, giving him quad fours with a queen to win the pot, while Dorantes departed the Paris Ballroom with a brutal bad beat to remember.

Tags: Konstantin HeldOscar Dorantes

Yong Doubles Through Blackwood in Classic Hold'em Cooler

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Cassandra Yong
Cassandra Yong

Gary Blackwood opened to 1,400 from middle position and was three-bet to 5,000 by Cassandra Yong in the big blind. Blackwood responded with a four-bet to 11,500 and Yong five-bet to 25,000. Blackwood called.

The rest of Yong's 86,200 in chips went into the middle on the K109 flop and Blackwood called with a covering stack for a massive showdown.

Cassandra Yong: KKAll in
Gary Blackwood: AA

Yong had flopped a set against Blackwood's aces, and the 46 runout changed nothing — awarding a massive double-up for Yong and knocking Blackwood down to just 21,000.

Tags: Cassandra YongGary Blackwood

Stewart Wins a Multi-Way Pot

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Scott Stewart
Scott Stewart

Jacob Naquin raised to 1,300 from under the gun, with Scott Stewart calling in middle position, Matthew Blagg calling on the button, and Jorge Rios calling from the small blind.

After two checks on the Q62 flop, Stewart fired 2,000. Only Blagg and Rios called.

The 10 turn and 4 river checked through between the three remaining players, and Stewart tabled 99 for a pair of nines, which was good enough to earn him the pot.

Tags: Jacob NaquinJorge RiosMatthew BlaggScott Stewart

Main Event Gets a Little Playful

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Table 112
Table 112

You wouldn't know it was the $10,000 Main Event on Table 112 in the Paris Gold section.

All eight players at the table have agreed that each time a player wins a hand, they will show one of their cards to the table.

The first to show a card was Kevin Romer. After seeing a raise and a call ahead of him, he moved all in for around 18,000. Nobody called, and Romer flipped over the 10.

Tags: Adam KrachAndrew KlivanDallas WhitakerDavid FlowersGideon ChungJoshua TerebeloKevin RomerRichard Kellett

Mossinger Doubles Through Zimmerman

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Erick Mossinger
Erick Mossinger

Erick Mossinger opened to 1,500 from middle position before Diane Zimmerman three-bet to 5,000 from the cutoff. Javier Gonzalez called the three-bet out of the small blind, but Mossinger was not done with the bidding.

Mossinger four-bet to 25,000. Zimmerman five-bet to 55,000, which led to a fold from Gonzalez. Mossinger called to put himself at risk for 52,800 as he went to a showdown against Zimmerman.

Erick Mossinger: AKAll in
Diane Zimmerman: A3

Mossinger was in a good position to double, and the flop did not bring much to worry about when it came 865.

The turn was not as friendly as the 3 peeled to give Zimmerman the lead, but Mossinger was far from down and out with his flush draw and kicker working for him.

Mossinger's flush draw came in handy when the Q river improved him to a flush to save his tournament run.

Tags: Diane ZimmermanErick MossingerJavier Gonzalez

Buzzer Beater by Ruivo

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Alessio Isaia
Alessio Isaia

The action of the hand was recounted to PokerNews by a player at the table.

It was a three-bet pot preflop as both Manuel Ruivo from under the gun and Alessio Isaia from middle position put in 4,000 each.

The 8AJ flop led to a bet of 3,000 from Ruivo, and Isaia made the call.

Both players checked the Q turn to bring the 3 river. Isaia checked the river before Ruivo put out a bet of 5,500.

Isaia decided to play for it all as he responded with a check-raise all in for 43,300. Ruiva went into the tank as he considered the decision. Eventually, Isaia opted to call the clock on Ruiva.

The clock began ticking, and just as the clock ticked to one second, Ruiva slapped down two green chips on the table for a call.

Ruiva's last-second decision was the correct one as Isaia showed KQ for a pair of queens. Ruiva countered with AK to claim the pot and eliminate Isaia.

Tags: Alessio IsaiaManuel Ruivo

Perfect Set Piece Helps Pique Score a Double

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Gerard Pique
Gerard Pique

Alon Haddad made it 1,200 from early position and found three callers, including Charles Tipton in the hijack. Gerard Pique peeked down at his cards in the cutoff and squeezed to 7,500. Only Haddad and Tipton came along.

Three ways to the 1084 flop, the action checked to Pique, who fired a continuation-bet of 8,500. Haddad folded, but Tipton continued with a call.

When the J landed on the turn, Tipton asked to see Pique's stack, which totaled 26,900, before leading for 15,000. Pique stared at the board and looked visibly uncomfortable before eventually deciding to move all in. Tipton reluctantly flicked in a chip to call.

Gerard Pique: JJ All in
Charles Tipton: 99

Pique was well ahead with top set and only needed to dodge Tipton's straight outs to double to around 100,000.

The dealer burned and revealed the 4 to complete the board, and fortunately for the soccer legend, Tipton missed the net as the river paired the board, securing the double-up for Pique with a boat.

Tags: Alon HaddadCharles TiptonGerard Pique

Yong Catches England's Bluff

Level 4 : Blinds 300/500, 500 ante
Cassandra Yong
Cassandra Yong

Cassandra Yong opened to 1,200 from middle position and was called by Kyna England in the big blind.

The flop came QA8 and England checked to Yong, who continued for 1,000. England then check-raised to 2,500 and Yong called.

Both players checked on the 2 turn, but England fired a hefty 7,500 bet into the middle after the 10 completed the board.

Yong went deep into the tank, but eventually stuck in a call. England turned over 86 for a pair of eights and Yong revealed KJ for Broadway.

England let out a disappointed groan and Yong said, "You could have had a flush!" as she collected the pot.

Tags: Cassandra YongKyna England