2026 World Series of Poker

Day: 3
123
Event Info
2026 World Series of Poker
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
kjj101052
Prize
$301,970
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$1,209,000
Total Entries
130
Level Info
Level
25
Limits
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
0
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
11
Players Left
1
Players Left 1 / 130
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Brewer Folds Trips to Kessler

Level 19 : 25,000/50,000, 0 ante

Allen Kessler: XxXx / 9KJ2 / Xx
Chris Brewer: XxXx / 74J2 / Xx

A sizable pot had brewed between Allen Kessler and Chris Brewer, where the action was caught on seventh street.

Kessler checked, prompting Brewer to bet. The latter immediately rose out of his seat in frustration after Kessler put in the raise.

Brewer nearly ripped his hole cards in half, revealing to Maksim Pisarenko that he had trip fours.

Brewer began muttering under his breath, implying that Kessler wouldn't be capable of finding any bluffs on his board.

Brewer found the fold, one which Kessler complimented as he had also been able to see Brewer's cards.

Tags: Allen KesslerChris BrewerMaksim Pisarenko

Dan Sepiol Eliminated in 11th Place ($24,181)

Level 19 : 25,000/50,000, 0 ante
Dan Sepiol
Dan Sepiol

Dan Sepiol: KJ / 10A96 / Xx All in
James Cheung: QJ / J28Q / 4

Dan Sepiol completed before James Cheung made it two bets. Sepiol called.

After catching an ace, Sepiol bet and Cheung stuck around. Sepiol threw out another bet on fifth street, and committed the last of stack after Cheung raised.

The cards went on their backs, with Cheung's pair of jacks ahead. Sepiol was drawing to two outs to Broadway after Cheung made queens up on sixth.

Sepiol peeld his final card, only to reveal the 4, which confirmed his exit.

Tags: Dan SepiolJames Cheung

Kluska Doubles Through Cheung

Level 19 : 25,000/50,000, 0 ante
Jason Kluska
Jason Kluska

Jason Kluska: A8/K3J6/KAll in
James Cheung: Q6/89210/5

James Cheung completed and it was folded around to Jason Kluska, who raised to put himself all in. Cheung stuck in a call and boards were run.

Cheung picked up both straight and flush draws by sixth street, but bricked everything to be left with queen-high.

Kluska ended up making a pair of kings and was awarded the double up.

Tags: James CheungJason Kluska

No, Really, Allen Kessler Could Win a WSOP Bracelet Today

Level 19 : 25,000/50,000, 0 ante
Allen Kessler
Allen Kessler

Allen Kessler, the min-cash extraordinaire, is potentially hours away from, after all these years, winning his first World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet.

"The Chainsaw" called his shot in April, predicting he'd finally get off the schneid this summer and capture a coveted gold bracelet.

Kessler first cashed at the WSOP in 2001, a 16th-place finish for $5,710 in $1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo Split, a tournament won by Poker Hall of Famer Scotty Nguyen. Since then, he's been a mainstay at the Series, racking up cashes left and right. But, on Sunday, he just might get over the hump and finish one of these tournaments as the last player standing.

Play Begins

Level 19 : 25,000/50,000, 0 ante

The players, besides Michael Mizrachi, have taken their seats and cards are now in the air.

Level: 19

Ante: 7,000
Low Card: 8,000
Completion: 25,000
Limits: 25,000-50,000

James Chueng and Naoya Kihara Gunning for Second Series Bracelet in Day 3 of $10,000 Stud Championship

James Cheung
James Cheung

Of the 130 entrants who took their shot at World Series of Poker glory in Event #23: $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship, just 11 players will return to the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas for Day 3 to battle for the bracelet.

Sitting atop the leaderboard is Poker Hall of Famer and defending Main Event champion Michael Mizrachi, who, despite being down to less than a big bet on Day 1, went on to rally his stack before soaring up the leaderboard in the last level of Day 2 to end with 1,429,000.

In second position is high-roller regular and two-time WSOP bracelet winner Chris Brewer with 1,301,000, and rounding out the top three is James Cheung, who will return to the felt with 1,242,000.

Cheung, winner of the $1,500 Stud event earlier in the series, declared one of his goals is to become the first player to win both the $1,500 Stud bracelet and the $10,000 Stud bracelet in the same series — a bold ambition that is now one step closer to reality.

Start of Day 3 Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Bets
1Michael MizrachiUnited States1,429,00029
2Chris BrewerUnited States1,301,00026
3James CheungUnited Kingdom1,242,00025
4Ryan MillerUnited States845,00017
5Naoya KiharaJapan702,00014
6Jeremy AusmusUnited States702,00014
7Maksim PisarenkoRussian Federation644,00013
8Allen KesslerUnited States582,00012
9Dan SepiolUnited States187,0004
10Brad RubenUnited States132,0003.5
11Jason KluskaUnited States59,0001

A bit further down the leaderboard sits Naoya Kihara (702,000), fresh off a victory in the $10,000 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw Championship, and now looking to become the first player to win back-to-back WSOP events entered since Benny Glaser achieved the feat at the 2025 WSOP.

Also still in contention is two-time bracelet winner Ryan Miller (845,000), six-time bracelet winner Jeremy Ausmus (702,000), five-time bracelet winner Brad Ruben (132,000), and legendary WSOP grinder Allen Kessler — who will have 582,000 to work with in his bid to capture his maiden bracelet.

This year's total number of entrants in the Stud championship created a prize pool of $1,209,000 and, while everyone remaining has already locked up a cash of at least $24,181, all eyes are sure to be on the $301,970 top prize set aside for the eventual champion.

Remaining Payouts

PlacePrizePlacePrize
1$301,9706$54,458
2$201,3087$42,333
3$139,0368$33,974
4$98,7829$28,179
5$72,25410-11$24,181

Day 3 is set to get underway at 1 p.m. local time and play down until a winner. Play will resume on Level 19, which features 25,000/50,000 betting limits. Levels 19 and 20 will last 60 minutes each, and every subsequent level will be 90 minutes each for the duration of the tournament.

With the finish line within view, who will rise to the top to claim the most prestigious Seven Card Stud title in the world? To find out, be sure to stick with PokerNews as we continue to bring all the action from the floor until just one player is left holding the bracelet!

Tags: Allen KesslerBenny GlaserBrad RubenChris BrewerDan SepiolJames CheungJason KluskaJeremy AusmusMaksim PisarenkoMichael MizrachiNaoya KiharaRyan Miller

Event #23: $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship

Day 3 Started

Seat Assignments for the Final Day

TableSeatPlayerChip CountBig Bets
1212Ryan Miller845,00017
1213Jason Kluska59,0001
1214Michael Mizrachi1,429,00029
1215Dan Sepiol187,0004
1216James Cheung1,242,00025
     
1251Allen Kessler582,00012
1253Brad Ruben132,0003
1254Jeremy Ausmus702,00014
1256Naoya Kihara702,00014
1257Maksim Pisarenko644,00013
1258Chris Brewer1,301,00026
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