2026 World Series of Poker

Day: 2
Event Info
2026 World Series of Poker
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$3,426,277
Total Entries
2,581
Players Left
9
Average Chip Stack
7,169,444
Total Chips
64,525,000
Next Payout
Place 9
$40,009
Level Info
Level
30
Blinds
100,000 / 150,000
Ante
150,000
Players Info - Day 2
Entries
191
Players Left
15
Players Left 9 / 2,581
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Walters Locks Up Board

Level 22 : Blinds 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante

Vincent Albert and Christopher Walters got all their chips into the middle in a blind-on-blind situation, with Walters the covering stack.

Vincent Albert: AQ105 All in
Christopher Walters: A874

Albert was slightly in the lead preflop, and managed to flop trips but still go behind on 4AA. He wasn't dead, however, as his had to a better full house were still live. The 8 turn gave Walters a better boat, and it remained the nuts on the 8 river, as Walters had essentially every boat on the board.

Tags: Christopher WaltersVincent Albert

Estes Pushes Off Renaud on River

Level 22 : Blinds 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante

Phillip Mighall opened to 80,000 from early position before Robert Renaud called from the hijack. Michael Estes opted to re-raise to 355,000 on the button. Mighall folded in response, but Renaud stuck around with a call.

The flop came 94A before Renaud checked.

Estes jammed to put Renaud all in, who had 230,000 behind. Renaud went into the tank for a significant amount of time before he folded.

Estes clapped his hands in excitement after Renaud conceded the pot as he dragged in the chips.

Tags: Michael EstesPhillip MighallRobert Renaud

Coleman Goes to Broadway

Level 22 : Blinds 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante

Maxx Coleman opened for 85,000 from cutoff. Massimo Morabito called in the big blind.

The flop came 3610 and both players checked.

The turn K fell and Morabito led out with 205,000. Coleman called. On the river A, Morabito checked prompting Coleman to go all in for 120,000. Morabito called.

Coleman tabled AQJ8 for a Broadway straight to double up.

Tags: Massimo MorabitoMaxx Coleman

64th-71st Place Finishers ($6,440)

Level 22 : Blinds 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante

Seward Leaves Harder on Fumes

Level 22 : Blinds 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante
Christian Harder
Christian Harder

Action was heads up to the KK4 flop with 170,000 sat in the middle.

Nicholas Seward checked from the big blind and Christian Harder bet out for 60,000 from middle position. Seward called.

The Q came on the turn and Seward check-called once again, this time for 125,000.

On the 9 river Seward checked it over to Harder once more, who sized up a bet of 370,000 and pushed it out into the middle, leaving himself one 5,000 chip behind.

Seward went deep into the tank for two to three minutes before he tossed in the call.

Seward tabled A9Q7 for a rivered flush and had Harder's AKJ3 crushed. Seward was pushed the sizeable pot and Harder was left nursing a half bowl of rice before he was eliminated the very next hand.

Tags: Christian HarderNicholas Seward

72nd-79th Place Finishers ($5,560)

Level 22 : Blinds 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante

Level: 22

Blinds: 10,000/25,000

Ante: 25,000

How to Avoid Tilt in Poker

Level 21 : Blinds 10,000/20,000, 20,000 ante
WSOP Cards
WSOP Cards

Poker is often described as a game of skill, psychology, and patience. Yet for many players, the toughest opponent they face is not the player across the table, but their own emotional state. Few concepts illustrate this better than tilt.

Tilt is responsible for countless blown sessions, early tournament exits, unnecessary bankroll damage, and talented players quitting the game altogether. Understanding what tilt is, why it happens, and how to control it is one of the most important steps a poker player can take toward long-term improvement.

Shack-Harris Doubles Through Zipfel

Level 21 : Blinds 10,000/20,000, 20,000 ante
Brandon Shack-Harris
Brandon Shack-Harris

Action folded to Jason Zipfel in the cutoff, who raised pot to 70,000. Brandon Shack-Harris, on the button, re-potted, which was enough to put him all in for 210,000. Action came back to Zipfel, who snap-called.

Brandon Shack-Harris: AK43 All in
Jason Zipfel: J976

No help for Zipfel on the AJ4 flop, and he was drawing to a Jack to send Shack-Harris to the rail.

The Q didn't change anything, and when the 4 on the river filled Shack-Harris' boat, he was sent the pot for a double-up.

Tags: Brandon Shack-HarrisJason Zipfel

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