Heads-up on a board of 10♥J♥2♣8♦, Joe McKeehen bet from the hijack and James Obst raised in the big blind. McKeehen called, and the K♦ fell on the river.
Obst then led out with a bet, and McKeehen called. Obst turned over 9♣7♠ for a straight, and McKeehen mucked.
It was a small, intimate affair yesterday on the opening day of Event #38: $10,000 Limit Hold’em Championship, but the remaining field of 40 who return for Day 2 at 1 p.m. local time certainly isn’t lacking for star power.
Jeremy Ausmus, the six-time bracelet winner and Hall of Fame candidate who’s already made two final tables at the 2026 World Series of Poker, leads the way with 319,000. Josh Arieh, whose win in this event in 2023 stands as just one of his seven WSOP bracelets, also begins the day inside the top five with 268,000. Ryan Johnson (285,000), Kyle Ray (275,000), and Maximilian Schindler (255,000) complete the rest of the top of the leaderboard.
Day 2 Top Ten Chip Counts
Rank
Player
Country
Chip Count
Big Bets
1
Jeremy Ausmus
United States
319,000
40
2
Ryan Johnson (AZ)
United States
285,000
36
3
Kyle Ray
United States
275,000
34
4
Josh Arieh
United States
268,000
34
5
Maximilian Schindler
United States
255,000
32
6
Batmunkh Unubukh
Mongolia
240,000
30
7
Ryuta Nakai
Japan
182,000
23
8
Daniel Negreanu
Canada
182,000
23
9
Charles Thomas
United States
172,000
22
10
James Obst
Australia
171,000
21
The rest of the leaderboard is littered with Hall of Famers and some of the biggest names in poker. Daniel Negreanu, who proclaimed yesterday his own personal “Wine Night,” came back from a short stack and takes 182,000 into Day 2. Other big stacks include James Obst (171,000), Brian Rast (160,000), and Shaun Deeb (142,000).
Further down the leaderboard are Jesse Lonis (96,000), John Hennigan (95,000), David Baker (90,000), Gus Hansen (90,000), Joe McKeehen (82,000), Scott Seiver (60,000), and Chris Brewer (7,000).
A total of 87 players have entered the event so far, but that number will surely increase today as late registration remains open for the first level of the day. The action on Day 2 picks up on Level 11 with blinds of 2,000/4,000 and limits of 4,000/8,000. The plan is to play 10 60-minute levels, with a break after every two levels and a 60-minute dinner break at the end of Level 15.
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Stay tuned as PokerNews follows all the action and provides live updates from this talent-packed field.