Agharazi Babayev opened to 16,000 under the gun, to which Oleh Hetmaniuk responded by moving all in for 126,000 a few seats to his left. The action folded to Timothy Miles in the big blind, who also moved all in for 145,000. Babayev toiled over a decision but ultimately chose to fold.
Oleh Hetmaniuk: Q♠Q♥
Timothy Miles: A♦K♣
The window card moved Miles into the lead on the A♥10♣J♦ flop, as Hetmaniuk stood up from his seat.
There was renewed hope for Hetmaniuk as the Q♣ rolled off on the turn, but the 7♠ wasn't the board pairing card he was looking for, seeing him fall just shy of the money.
Akshat Bajaj opened to 16,000 in cutoff and got an all-in shove from Samy Dubonnet for 150,000 on the button. After the blinds folded and action went back to him, Bajaj called, taking them to showdown.
Samy Dubonnet: J♠J♣
Akshat Bajaj: A♥6♠
Dubonnet's pocket jacks held on the 2♦3♥8♥ flop. With no ace in sight on the runout 5♠5♥, Dubonnet scored a double and continued his tournament run.
Erick Sarkis opened to 16,000 from under the gun, and quickly faced resistance as Justin Nugent moved all in for 123,000 a couple of seats to his left.
It took some time for play to fold back to Sarkis, as multiple players considered calling. When the action returned to Sarkis, he folded, seeing Nugent scoop the pot uncontested.
On a nearby table, Michael Berk incorrectly hero-called a river shove by Killian Desnos for his tournament life, which caused him to be among the earliest eliminations of the day.
Day 2 of Event #16: $1,700 U.S. Circuit Championship at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas is set to get underway at 12 p.m. local time.
One of the newest additions to the 2026 World Series of Poker (WSOP) schedule, the event attracted 2,148 entries in yesterday's opening flight, generating a prize pool of $3,231,666.
A total of 381 players advanced from the starting flight and will return for Day 2. With only 323 spots paid, the field is less than 60 eliminations away from the money, where a min-cash of $3,420 awaits. Beyond that, players will be chasing the coveted WSOP gold bracelet and the top prize of $439,605.
Top Ten Chip Counts
Rank
Player
Country
Chip Count
Big Blinds
1
She Wong
United States
994,000
124
2
Michael Wilklow
United States
852,000
107
3
Scott Horvath
United States
823,000
103
4
Zachary Gergen
United States
755,000
94
5
Cezar Quiambao
Philippines
746,000
93
6
Antonio Vargas
United States
739,000
92
7
Christos Argyriadis
Greece
690,000
86
8
David Schneider
United States
644,000
81
9
Ivan Ruban
Russia
637,000
80
10
Joshua Wang
China
598,000
75
Leading the way heading into Day 2 is She Wong, who topped the overnight leaderboard with 994,000 chips. With more than $1.1 million in recorded live tournament earnings, Wong is well positioned to add another deep run to an already impressive résumé.
Sitting second in chips is Michael Wilklow, who enjoyed a fast start to the tournament. The reigning Mystery Millions champion from last summer bagged 852,000 and will be one of the players to watch when action resumes.
Shiina Okamoto
Several bracelet winners also remain in contention, including Austrian Daniel Rezaei (560,000), seven-time bracelet winner Josh Arieh (421,000), two-time Ladies Championship winner Shiina Okamoto (359,000), and 2015 WSOP Main Event winner Joe McKeehen (240,000).
Further down the chip counts are Norwegian poker pro Jon Kyte (88,000), one of the picks in the 25K Fantasy Draft, double bracelet winner Renji Mao (71,000), 2024 WSOP Main Event champion Jonathan Tamayo (65,000), and Shannon Shorr (40,000), all of whom will be looking to build momentum early in the day.
Jonathan Tamayo
Play resumes at Level 16 with blinds of 4,000/8,000 and an 8,000 big blind ante. The schedule calls for ten 60-minute levels, with the remaining players advancing to Day 3 at the end of the night.
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As always, PokerNews will be on the floor providing live updates, chip counts, and all the key moments from the 2026 World Series of Poker at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.