2026 World Series of Poker

Event Info
2026 World Series of Poker
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$85,634,400
Total Entries
9,208
Players Left
174
Average Chip Stack
3,175,172
Total Chips
552,480,000
Next Payout
Place 174
$57,500
Level Info
Level
24
Blinds
25,000 / 50,000
Ante
50,000
Players Info - Day 1c
Entries
1,573
Players Left
1,166
Players Left 174 / 9,208
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“Michael Mizrachi" 26 search results

Defending Champion Michael Mizrachi Eliminated on Day 5 of WSOP Main Event; Shaun Deeb Set Up for Deep Run

Level 24 : Blinds 25,000/50,000, 50,000 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

Day 5 of the most prestigious poker tournament on earth, Event #82: $10,000 WSOP Main Event NLH World Championship of the 2026 World Series of Poker, is in the books.

After five levels of play at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas, only 174 players of the original 9,208 remain, and, most notably, defending champion Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi is no longer among them.

Mizrachi’s quest to claim the $10,000,000 top prize two years in a row came to an end in 241st place, netting him $50,000. The Grinder was coolered with a flush against a higher flush midway through the day. Although he hung on for quite a while, he ultimately could not recover and ran into 2019 Main Event champion Hossein Ensan’s aces to be eliminated.

On the other side of the coin, Mizrachi’s fellow nine-time WSOP bracelet winner Shaun Deeb did survive the ten hours of poker Day 5 had in store. After a rocky start, Deeb doubled in the second level of the day and steadily rose through the ranks afterward. Although he lost a sizable pot during the final hands of the day, he ended with an above-average stack of 4,305,000, good for over 70 big blinds at the start of Day 6 as he eyes the biggest payouts of the gargantuan $85,634,400 prize pool.

Deeb’s stack was not quite enough to propel him into the top ten counts at the end of the night, however. Daewoong Song closes out the elite stacks with 6,565,000 in chips, while the chip lead is in the hands of Zhao Liu. Liu bagged 10,150,000, being the only person to reach eight figures. Notably, Liu has now made two consecutive Day 6s in the Main Event, having finished in 161st place in 2025.

Zhao Liu
Zhao Liu

End of Day 5 Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Zhao LiuUnited States10,150,000169
2Dhiraj SharmaCanada9,840,000164
3Xingyu LiuChina9,040,000151
4Allan SannierFrance8,680,000145
5Sachin JoshiUnited Kingdom8,385,000140
6Mario BoosFrance7,850,000131
7Justin ManjaresUnited States7,760,000129
8Tyler GastonUnited States7,055,000118
9Malcolm TraynerAustralia6,740,000112
10Daewoong SongKorea, Republic of6,565,000109

Deeb's Thoughts

"That was unfortunate," Deeb commented regarding his last hand after he was done bagging his chips. "If I somehow suck out, I have, you know, nine million. But I'm still happy to be over average. I feel bad for everyone who gets thrown on my table the rest of this tournament. I'm just going to try and win every chip that's in the pot that I can."

Adding a Main Event win to his legacy would elevate Deeb's status among the greatest players of all time; it's a place he arguably already holds. However, it is not something Deeb is particularly worried about. "I think my legacy is solidified," he stated. I don't really think, even if I end up winning the Main Event, it really drastically changes the opinion of me as a poker player in most people's eyes."

Deeb is currently third in a tight-knit race for WSOP Player of the Year (PoY), looking to become the first player to capture that prestigious title for the third time. "I'm still conscious of PoY. I know if I somehow final table this, it gives my PoY shots very high, but it's very hard. That's kind of one of the issues I have with this PoY system. I've been in this tournament for really a f**king whole week and missed a bunch of sh*t because of it. I have less points than final table of a turbo that was done in six hours. It's kind of an unfortunate thing, but there's a lot of money up top."

Shaun Deeb
Shaun Deeb

Big Names Rise and Fall

Daniel Hachem (3,895,000) and Todd Brunson (3,690,000) both made it through to Day 6 with good stacks, seeking to follow in their fathers’ footsteps and claim the ultimate poker title by coming out on top in the Main Event. Recent WSOP Paradise fourth-placed finisher Terrance Reid (2,685,000) is looking to repeat his success in Las Vegas and add another seven-figure score to his resume. Wesley Fei (4,580,000), Francisco Fragoso (3,910,000), and Andy Tsai (3,685,000) are all regulars on streamed nosebleed cash games, but are proving their tournament prowess by making a deep run in poker’s most elite event.

Meanwhile, Mizrachi was joined on the rail by fellow Main Event winners Greg Raymer (279th) and Ryan Riess (282nd), who both earned the same sum as their newest colleague, leaving Ensan as the last champion standing as he ended Day 5 with 3,450,000.

Hossein Ensan
Hossein Ensan

Six-time bracelet winner Brian Hastings exited in 471st for $35,000. Esteemed super high roller Chris Hunichen (424th) received the same amount, while his peer Stephen Chidwick fell in 394th for $40,000. Alex Foxen departed in 263rd for $50,000 after spending all day at the feature table, while toward the end of the night, Tony Dunst (215th), Artur Martirosian (211th), Sergio Aido (202nd), and Josh Arieh (198th) picked up their payout of $57,500.

The same sum will be awarded to the first elimination of Day 6, with the next pay jump set to happen when 161 contenders remain. Six-figure sums will be handed out to the top 80 players, while the eye-watering million-dollar payouts will have to wait until the final table of nine.

Remaining Payouts

PlacePrizePlacePrize
1$10,000,00014-17$410,475
2$6,000,00018-26$325,000
3$3,750,00027-35$265,000
4$2,750,00036-44$215,000
5$2,250,00045-53$180,000
6$1,750,00054-62$150,000
7$1,500,00063-71$125,000
8$1,250,00072-80$105,000
9$1,000,00081-89$90,000
10-11$750,00090-98$75,000
12-13$510,00099-161$65,000
  162-174$57,500

The Main Event will continue on July 12 at 11 a.m. local time. Day 6 will restart with blinds at 30,000/60,000 with a 60,000 big blind ante. Five additional two-hour levels are scheduled to be played, with a break after every level. An extended 70-minute break takes place after the second level of the day.

PokerNews will continue providing extensive live coverage of the Main Event on Day 6, so make sure to tune back in when the pinnacle of poker resumes.

Tags: Alex FoxenAllan SannierAndy TsaiArtur MartirosianBrian HastingsChris HunichenDaewoong SongDaniel HachemDhiraj SharmaFrancisco FragosoGreg RaymerHossein EnsanJosh AriehJustin ManjaresMalcolm TraynerMario BoosMichael MizrachiRyan RiessSachin JoshiSergio AidoShaun DeebStephen ChidwickTerrance ReidTodd BrunsonTony DunstTyler GastonWesley FeiXingyu LiuZhao Liu

The Grinder's Attempt at Title Defence Is Over

Level 23 : Blinds 20,000/40,000, 40,000 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

Reigning champion Michael Mizrachi had been grinded down to 365,000, which he jammed in from early position. He received a call from a player in middle position before 2019 WSOP champ Hossein Ensan rejammed in the small blind. The other player got out of the way and the hands were turned up.

Michael Mizrachi: KQ All in
Hossein Ensan: AA

Mizrachi had no outs remaining after the 7797 turn. He shook hands with fellow Main Event champion Ensan as the 10 river completed the board, then left the feature table.

Tags: Hossein EnsanMichael Mizrachi

Mizrachi Starts His Comeback

Level 22 : Blinds 15,000/30,000, 30,000 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

Michael Mizrachi was all in for 200,000 in middle position. Hossein Ensan looked him up in the big blind.

Michael Mizrachi: 44 All in
Hossein Ensan: AK

Ensan could not pair his hole cards on the 37663 board, doubling up the reigning champion.

Tags: Hossein EnsanMichael Mizrachi

Mizrachi Doubles Through Ensan Again

Level 22 : 15,000/30,000, 30,000 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

Hossein Ensan had three-bet an earlier open to 205,000 in the hijack, and he called off when Michael Mizrachi shoved his 445,000 in from the small blind.

Michael Mizrachi: AK All in
Hossein Ensan: A8

Mizrachi's kicker remained in play on the 6662Q runout, securing him another double-up.

Tags: Hossein EnsanMichael Mizrachi

Mizrachi Left Short After Flush Over Flush Cooler

Level 22 : Blinds 15,000/30,000, 30,000 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

Heads up to the 32687 river, with 490,000 in the middle, Lara Eisenberg checked from the small blind to Michael Mizrachi on the button. Mizrachi bet 500,000, Eisenberg raised all in to 565,000, and Mizrachi called.

Eisenberg showed A2 for the nut flush. Mizrachi had J10 for a lower flush, and paid the bet to be left with just over four big blinds.

Tags: Lara EisenbergMichael Mizrachi

Defending Champion Doubles Up

Level 20 : 10,000/20,000, 20,000 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

Michael Mizrachi raised to 40,000 under the gun. Bradley Oubre called in the hijack before Voor three-bet to 140,000 in the small blind. Mizrachi moved all in for 485,000, quickly getting rid of Oubre's A10.

Voor spent some time in the tank, then called with the covering stack.

Michael Mizrachi: QQ All in
Andrew Voor: K10

Mizrachi just needed to fade a king to double up, and he successfully did so when the 58362 board presented no danger to his queens.

Tags: Andrew VoorBradley OubreMichael Mizrachi

Mizrachi Barrels Into Aces

Level 20 : Blinds 10,000/20,000, 20,000 ante

Francisco Fragoso picked up AA in early position and raised to 55,000. Michael Mizrachi defended QJ in his big blind before he led out for 30,000 on the K4J flop.

Fragoso just called to the 9 turn, where Mizrachi added another 55,000 to the pot. This time, Fragoso raised to 205,000, and Mizrachi gave up on the hand after a minute in the tank.

Tags: Francisco FragosoMichael Mizrachi

Artur Martirosian Among Chip Leaders as Final 533 Continue March Toward Main Event Glory

Artur Martirosian
Artur Martirosian

With the money bubble now firmly in the rearview mirror, the focus of every player left in Event #82: $10,000 WSOP Main Event No-Limit Hold'em World Championship has shifted to one thing — making a run at the final table.

Of the 9,208 players who joined and made this year's Main Event the fourth largest ever, just 533 will return to the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas today for Day 5 with hopes of getting one step further toward becoming poker's next world champion.

Leading the way is Florida's own Sam Sweilem, who bagged 3,800,000 at the end of Day 4, good for a whopping 190 big blinds to start Day 5. Close behind is Steven O'Nan with 3,600,000, while the red-hot Artur Martirosian rounds out the top three with 3,495,000.

The Russian poker phenom is fresh off two seven-figure scores this summer — a runner-up finish in the $100,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller worth $1,477,434 and a victory in the $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller for $1,286,285. With a mountain of chips and plenty of momentum behind him, the four-time bracelet winner looms as one of the biggest threats remaining in the field.

Start of Day 5 Top 10 Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Sam SweilemUnited States3,800,000190
2Steven O'NanUnited States3,600,000180
3Artur MartirosianRussian Federation3,495,000175
4Kyle MartUnited States3,480,000174
5Chih Wei FanTaiwan3,365,000168
6Shreesh HebbarCanada3,340,000167
7Felix KuemayrAustria3,125,000156
8Arman BezhanianRussian Federation3,100,000155
9Dan StavilaMoldova3,060,000153
10Farid JattinColombia3,040,000152

Other notables who will bring seven-figure stacks to battle on the felt include Brock Wilson (2,415,000), Sasha Liu (2,340,000), Daniel Hachem (2,110,000), Malcolm Trayner (1,740,000), Caitlin Comeskey (1,740,000), Alex Foxen (1,695,000), Masato Yokosawa (1,545,000), Shaun Deeb (1,500,000), and Tony Dunst (1,245,000). Deeb, currently third in the 2026 WSOP Player of the Year race, could make a serious push for the lead with another deep run as the series winds down and attention turns toward WSOP Paradise in December.

Of the previous champions who entered this year's Main Event, only four remain in contention. Hossein Ensan leads the quartet with a healthy stack worth 2,580,000, while Greg Raymer (535,000), Ryan Riess (455,000), and defending champion Michael Mizrachi (440,000) will all be looking to run up their below-average stacks if they want another shot at a poker's most prestigious title

Hossein Ensan
Hossein Ensan

Everyone remaining has already locked up $32,500 from the $85,634,400 prize pool , but there is still a long journey before someone is awarded the top prize of $10 million and the coveted Main Event bracelet that goes along with it. Here's a look at the remaining payouts heading into Day 5:

Remaining Payouts

PlacePrizePlacePrizePlacePrize
1$10,000,00012-13$510,00090-98$75,000
2$6,000,00014-17$410,47599-161$65,000
3$3,750,00018-26$325,000162-224$57,500
4$2,750,00027-35$265,000225-287$50,000
5$2,250,00036-44$215,000288-350$45,000
6$1,750,00045-53$180,000351-413$40,000
7$1,500,00054-62$150,000414-476$35,000
8$1,250,00063-71$125,000477-533$32,500
9$1,000,00072-80$105,000  
10-11$750,00081-89$90,000  

Day 5 will begin at Level 20, with 10,000/20,000 blinds and a 20,000 big-blind ante. Action will get underway at 11 a.m. local time and continue for five two-hour levels. Breaks will be held after every level, with an extended 70-minute dinner break occurring after Level 22 (~5:40 p.m.)

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MyPlayers
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The dream of becoming the next WSOP Main Event champion is surely beginning to feel within reach for those still standing, but the path only gets tougher from here. With just over five percent of the field remaining, pay jumps escalating and the final table on the distant horizon, every decision could make the difference between a career-defining run and an untimely exit. Be sure to stick with PokerNews for ongoing updates as the 2026 WSOP Main Event enters its final stages.

Tags: Alex FoxenArman BezhanianArtur MartirosianBrock WilsonCaitlin ComeskeyChih FanDan StavilaDaniel HachemFarid JattinFelix KuemayrGreg RaymerHossein EnsanKyle MartMalcolm TraynerMasato YokosawaMichael MizrachiRyan RiessSam SweilemSasha LiuShaun DeebShreesh HebbarSteven O'NanTony Dunst

Sam Sweilem Leads 533 Survivors as the Bubble Bursts on Day 4 of the 2026 WSOP Main Event

Level 19 : Blinds 10,000/15,000, 15,000 ante
Sam Sweilem
Sam Sweilem

Day 4 of the 2026 World Series of Poker Main Event began with players hoping to survive the money bubble, and it ended with just over 500 still with their dreams of achieving poker immortality alive.

Sam Sweilem leads the remaining 533 players after bagging up 3,800,000 at the event’s halfway point. The Florida native took a big chunk off Chris Brewer with a full house, and then rivered a flush to bust Eugene Teibloom in another big pot to climb the leaderboard. Sweilem has just one recorded WSOP cash from 2019 and just over $130,000 in live tournament earnings, according to The Hendon Mob, but is in pole position to change that with a deep run over the coming days.

Day 4 Top Ten Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Sam SweilemUnited States3,800,000190
2Steven O'NanUnited States3,600,000180
3Artur MartirosianRussian Federation3,495,000175
4Kyle MartUnited States3,480,000174
5Chih FanTaiwan3,365,000168
6Shreesh HebbarCanada3,340,000167
7Felix KuemayrAustria3,125,000156
8Arman BezhanianRussian Federation3,100,000155
9Dan StavilaMoldova3,060,000153
10Farid JattinColombia3,040,000152

Sweilem is followed on the leaderboard by Steven O’Nan (3,600,000), Artur Martirosian (3,495,000), Kyle Mart (3,480,000), and Chih Fan (3,365,000). Other top stacks include Dan Stavila (3,060,000), Farid Jattin (3,040,000), WSOP Paradise third-place finisher Belarmino De Souza (2,725,000), Brock Wilson (2,415,000), last year’s 17th-place finisher Daniel Iachan (2,170,000), and Daniel Hachem (2,110,000).

Further down the leaderboard are Alex Foxen, whose day included hitting a royal flush on his way to 1,695,000, as well as Japanese vlogging superstar Masato Yokosawa (1,545,000), Sean Winter (1,525,000), Shaun Deeb (1,500,000), Dylan Smith (1,320,000), and Tony Dunst (1,245,000). The shorter stacks include Ryan Leng (990,000), 2005 finalist Scott Lazar (905,000), Aaron Barone (785,000), Stephen Chidwick (760,000), Chino Rheem (655,000), Josh Arieh (610,000), 2024 finalist Boris Angelov (580,000), Martin Zamani (545,000), David Peters (430,000), and Patrick Leonard (295,000).

Four past champions remain in contention for a second Main Event bracelet. Hossein Ensan leads the group with 2,580,000, while Greg Raymer (535,000), Ryan Riess (455,000), and defending champion Michael Mizrachi (440,000) will have some work to do if they want to make a run at another title.

Hossein Ensan
Hossein Ensan

Comeskey Leads a Women's Boom in Main Event Attendance

Last year, Leo Margets broke poker’s glass ceiling by becoming the first woman in three decades to make the Main Event final table. Her influence was felt in this year’s field, which included a record-high 431 women. While women only accounted for 4.68 percent of the field, that still far exceeded last year’s 3.8 percent.

Caitlin Comeskey has made a career out of making poker a safer place for women to compete. The comedian, vlogger, and content creator is among a host of women moving on to Day 5, bagging up a stack of 1,740,000.

“I’m on cloud nine. I feel amazing. It’s a dream. It’s like I’m walking through a dream,” she said. “I visualized this so many times. I’ve been there in my dreams, and now it’s actually here, and I just got to wait for it to happen, you know?”

Caitlin Comeskey
Caitlin Comeskey

Comeskey’s Main Event got off to a rocky start when she not only had to overcome a host of coolers but also some troublesome opponents. “Day one was really fun. Except for the guy who told me that his friend warned him that I was insufferable. Didn’t love that. But he was rooting me on, and also he stone-bubbled today. Day 2 was shitty. I started the day with Maurice Hawkins, who started antagonizing me almost immediately. I shut it down, but it was still a lot of stress to deal with, and I encountered a lot of coolers on Day 2,” she said.

“My last two days have just been a dream. It’s just been fun. Cards have been cooperating. I’ve been in a good mood. It’s been awesome.”

Comeskey hopes that a deep run in the Main Event can serve as an example, not just to women, but to all players that poker should be fun. She recognizes her role as one of poker’s leading women ambassadors, and with history within her grasp, it’s a responsibility she’s ready to take on.

“I take representing women in poker very, very seriously. I take standing up for issues that affect women, and all people in poker. Like, on the PokerNews Podcast, I really talked about how people get mistreated at the table, and I was talking about women, but I was talking about everybody. We need to have more fun at the tables in general. We need less card-throwing, we need less tilting off, we need less cursing and name-calling. And I think that we can get there, and if we can create a more fun, universal environment, we’ll get more women into the game. But it’s not gonna happen if they feel like they have to jump into the lion’s den to play. So I’m just trying to be an advocate for change in that regard.”

Comeskey and hundreds of others have already made it through all the pitfalls and land mines that encapsulate the 9,208-player Main Event field, but there is still a long way to go. The real fun is still to come tomorrow.

“I’m very much looking forward to tomorrow. I feel like every cell in my body’s on fire. I’m gonna go home. I’m gonna eat some Taco Bell. I’m gonna hang out with my friends and just try to enjoy the rest of the ride. I’m in a position to make history, and I hope I’m able to,” she said.

Moneymaker One of Three to Fall on the Bubble

Day 4 began with the field seven spots away from the money bubble. Three eliminations occurred simultaneously on the bubble, including 2003 champion and Poker Hall of Famer Chris Moneymaker, who called off his last chips playing the board against Antonio Vargas, only for Vargas to show down two aces. Inaugural WSOP Online Main Event champion Stoyan Madanzhiev also lost a race with ace-king against Gregory Brown’s fives, while Zhaken Seitbekov ran into Stavila’s flopped set. The three players split a min-cash of $10,000, with Seitbekov winning a three-way flip for a WSOP Paradise Main Event package.

Bubble Main Event WSOP 2026 - Chris Moneymaker
Bubble Main Event WSOP 2026 - Chris Moneymaker

The bustouts started coming fast once the bubble burst, with Kristen Foxen (1,331st), 2012 runner-up Jesse Sylvia (1,167th), Stephen Song (1,049th), Chris Moorman (1,041st), and Olivier Busquet (1,030th) being among the first to bust. They were followed by Jesse Lonis (921st), Alex Livingston (897th), Ren Lin (746th), 2017 champion Scott Blumstein (666th), and 2018 champion John Cynn (617th). Joe Hachem had his bluff picked off by Christopher Storie’s pair of fours as the 2005 champ fell in 803rd, while Charles “Woody” Moore, fully dressed up as Santa Claus, ran into “The Grinch” Nathan Fair’s kings to bust in 678th.

The remaining 533 players return tomorrow at 11 a.m. local time for Day 5. The action picks up on Level 20 with blinds of 10,000/20,000 and a 20,000 big blind ante. Everyone who remains has each locked up $32,500, with the next pay jump to $35,000 coming at 476th place. The plan is to play five more 120-minute levels tomorrow.

Stay tuned as PokerNews returns tomorrow to follow all the action and provide live updates from Day 5 of the 2026 WSOP Main Event.

Tags: Aaron BaroneAlex FoxenArtur MartirosianBelarmino De SouzaBoris AngelovBrock WilsonCaitlin ComeskeyChih FanChino RheemDan StavilaDaniel HachemDaniel IachanDavid PetersDylan SmithFarid JattinGreg RaymerHossein EnsanJosh AriehKyle MartMartin ZamaniMasato YokosawaMichael MizrachiPatrick LeonardRyan LengRyan RiessSam SweilemScott LazarSean WinterShaun DeebStephen ChidwickSteven O'NanTony Dunst

Mizrachi Shows Kuemayr a Straight

Level 19 : Blinds 10,000/15,000, 15,000 ante

Felix Kuemayr raised to 30,000 from the hijack and was called by Michael Mizrachi in the big blind.

Both players checked on the J810 flop and then Kuemayr called a 40,000 bet from Mizrachi on the 7 turn.

The 5 completed the board and both players checked.

"Nuts," Mizrachi said as he turned over 109 for a straight. Kuemayr mucked his cards and Mizrachi padded his stack.

Tags: Felix KuemayrMichael Mizrachi

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