2026 World Series of Poker

Day: 2
12
Event Info
2026 World Series of Poker
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
kq106
Prize
$171,589
Event Info
Buy-in
$600
Prize Pool
$1,328,544
Total Entries
2,636
Level Info
Level
39
Blinds
600,000 / 1,200,000
Ante
1,200,000
Players Info - Day 2
Entries
117
Players Left
1
Players Left 1 / 2,636

Victory Cigar for Ardire After First WSOP Bracelet Win

Level 39 : Blinds 600,000/1,200,000, 1,200,000 ante
Philip Ardire
Philip Ardire

Poker, like life, can be fickle. It can be circumstantial, and sometimes, it can all come together in a hurry. Philip Ardire is a story that makes the World Series of Poker a special place every summer. Ardire didn’t come to Vegas with specific plan of attending any events at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas, but one thing led to another, and Ardire said, why not me?

Ardire fired in Event #15: $600 Deepstack Pot-Limit Omaha as one of the 2,636 entries with a dream. It wasn’t the first-place prize of $171,589, but the dream of a gold bracelet and WSOP immortality. The 2026 World Series of Poker gave him an opportunity, and Ardire made the best of it to add the biggest feather in the cap of his poker career.

“I never thought I’d be able to get this far,” said Ardire in the afterglow of his first WSOP win. “I was looking for my spot, and I found it twice, and then after that, it was like no looking back.”

Final Table Payouts

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Philip ArdireUnited States$171,589
2Randy JacksUnited States$114,200
3Francisco BaruffiBrazil$82,928
4David AvinaUnited States$60,837
5Daniel HaywoodAustralia$45,092
6Cole GauthierCanada$33,771
7Daniel CarterUnited States$25,560
8Grantel GibbsUnited States$19,552
9Matthew NewcombeUnited States$15,117
Randy Jacks
Randy Jacks

Ardire came into Day 2 ninth in chips, but it was Randy Jacks who appeared to be on the road to a WSOP bracelet after he was a wrecking ball at the final table. Ardire entered the heads-up match as an over four to one underdog, as Jacks had nearly all the chips.

The situation grew even more dire when Ardire sank to roughly just two big blinds in chips. It all but appeared that it was Jacks' night, but fate had other plans as Adire began to rally. One double-up led to another, and in a span of ten minutes, Ardire had turned the tables against Jacks and took the chip lead when his top two pair held.

Ardire had all the momentum, and he ran with it. Not even an hour dinner break could cool off the Tennessee native, as within twenty minutes after returning he was a WSOP champion. Ardire said his attitude from the onset of the tournament was all-or-nothing. He wasn’t going to change course now.

“When you get into the money, you've got to ask yourself, do you want to play for big boy money or do you want to just tell your buddies that you cashed?”, Ardire said. “When you get deep like that, you’re going to have to pick a spot and flip three times to get to the final table unless the deck hits you, and that’s kind of the way I’ve gone is I’m not afraid to go broke.”

Ardire said he used to play tournaments but switched to cash some time ago to help raise his kids and run his business. But recently, the tournament bug struck, and Ardire found himself playing more Omaha events in recent months. This momentum led him to Vegas to play in daily tournaments. The initial venture did not work out as he busted, but he saw the $600 PLO on the WSOP event schedule and decided to delay his fligh, get a room for an extra night, and take a shot at another tournament. It was a decision that paid off big time for the recreational player.

“It was a good social experience, like I think poker should be. Omaha tables seem more social than a Hold’em table in general, I think,” said Ardire.

This social experience led to him befriending a tablemate. They struck up a conversation about cigars.

“He likes cigars, and we were talking about different ones we like,” Ardire said. “He came by and said, ‘Hey, I’m gonna root for you with my wife, and here’s this. Smoke it when you win.”

Philip Ardire
Philip Ardire

The cigar may have proven to be a good luck charm when it was all said and done, as Ardire could be seen donning the Cuban as part of his celebration.

Stay tuned here at PokerNews for continued coverage of the 2026 World Series of Poker at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.

Tags: Big BlindsCole GauthierDaniel CarterDaniel HaywoodDavid AvinaFrancisco BaruffiGrantel GibbsMatthew NewcombeParis Las VegasPhilip ArdireRandy Jacks