2026 World Series of Poker

Event Info
2026 World Series of Poker
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$15,623,347
Total Entries
11,769
Players Left
62
Average Chip Stack
4,745,565
Total Chips
294,225,000
Next Payout
Place 62
$27,300
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
424
Players Left
62
Players Left 62 / 11,769

Bo Chen Denies Rob Kuhn the Day 3 Chip Lead of Event #50: $1,500 Millionaire Maker

Level 30 : Blinds 100,000/150,000, 150,000 ante
Robert Kuhn
Robert Kuhn

After ten levels of play, Day 3 action has come to a close here in Event #50: $1,500 Millionaire Maker at the 2026 World Series of Poker, hosted by the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.

Of the 424 players who began the day, just 62 will return for Day 4 on Tuesday, each having locked up at least $27,300. The remaining competitors will battle for a share of the $15,623,347 prize pool, with the winner set to earn $1,250,000 and the coveted gold bracelet. The eventual runner-up will also become a millionaire, collecting a cool $1,000,000 for second place.

Bo Chen bagged the chip lead with 13,300,000 after playing a massive pot with Rob Kuhn on one of the last hands of the night. Kuhn, who had a top stack for most of the day, will have his work cut out for him as he enters tomorrow with just five and a half big blinds.

Sitting in second, not far behind Chen, is Kunal Patni, who ended the day with 11,600,000. Right on his heels is Seiji Sasaki, who rounds out the podium with 11,400,000.

Day 3 Top Ten Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Bo ChenUnited States13,300,00067
2Kunal PatniIndia11,600,00058
3Seiji SasakiJapan11,400,00057
4Jed FriedmanUnited States10,700,00054
5Jacob GagnonUnited States10,500,00053
6Yifu HeUnited States9,100,00046
7Meng Dian PengChina8,400,00042
8Steven HinkleUnited States7,500,00038
9Irene CareyUnited States6,900,00035
10Jordan MeltzerUnited States6,800,00034
Irene Carey
Irene Carey

Day 3 Action

The beginning of Day 4 set a fast tempo, with the field slimming down with a flurry of bustouts during the first couple of hours. Those who exited in the first level include 2018 Main Event runner-up Tony Miles, high-stakes regular Chris Hunichen, and four-time bracelet winner Joshua Remitio. Ryan Laplante, Xixiang Luo, and Rich Alsup were also eliminated before first break.

Chris Hunichen
Chris Hunichen

A slew of 25K Fantasy draftees saw the door during the early-to-middle stages of the day, including Dan Sepiol, Zdenek Zizka, Frederic Normand, Terrance Reid, and Malcolm Trayner.

Bracelet winners Rafael Reis, Eugene Katchalov, Simeon Spasov and Jason Wheeler didn't make it to the dinner break. Wheeler's bustout hand was especially rough, as his pocket aces were cracked by pocket tens.

Kenny Hallaert, Trishelle Cannatella, Ronnie Day, Marle Spragg, David Jackson, Josh McCully, and Adam Walton were among other notables to be eliminated during the last few levels.

Trishelle Cannatella
Trishelle Cannatella

Matt Affleck was in great shape to score a late-night double up, but suffered a brutal bad beat on the last hand of the night, courtesy of Benoit Fiasson.

Those who managed to stick around and book a ticket into Day 4 include Irene Carey (6,900,000), who bagged a top-ten stack, as well as bracelet winners Ryan Eriquezzo (5,900,000) and Will Givens (5,300,000).

Will Givens
Will Givens

Scott Stewart (4,000,000) and Mark Newhouse (3,700,000), who are no strangers to running deep in big fields, sit in the middle of the pack. Harrison Gimbel (3,500,000) and Bradley Gafford (3,400,000), who both own a piece of WSOP hardware, are also still in the mix.

Mark Newhouse
Mark Newhouse

Remaining Payouts

PlacePrizePlacePrize
1$1,250,00010-11$118,000
2$1,000,00012-13$94,000
3$750,00014-17$75,200
4$530,00018-26$60,600
5$410,00027-35$49,200
6$315,00036-44$40,200
7$245,00045-53$33,000
8$190,00054-62$27,300
9$150,068  

Action will resume at 11 a.m. local time on Tuesday, June 23, and the tournament is scheduled to play down to five players. Play will resume at Level 31 with blinds at 100,000/200,000 with a 200,000 big blind ante, and there will be a 15-minute break every two levels. A one-hour dinner break will take place after Level 37 is completed, at approximately 5:30 p.m.

Be sure to follow PokerNews throughout the remainder of this event and for continued coverage of the 2026 World Series of Poker.

Tags: Ben CollinsBenoit FiassonBo ChenBradley GaffordChris HunichenDan SepiolDavid JacksonEugene KatchalovFrederic NormandHarrison GimbelIrene CareyJacob GagnonJason WheelerJed FriedmanJordan MeltzerJosh McCullyJoshua RemitioKenny HallaertKunal PatniMalcolm TraynerMark NewhouseMarle SpraggMatt AffleckMeng Dian PengRafael ReisRich AlsupRob KuhnRonnie DayRyan EriquezzoRyan LaplanteScott StewartSeiji SasakiSimeon SpasovSteven HinkleTerrance ReidTony MilesTrishelle CannatellaWill GivensXixiang LuoYifu HeZdenek Zizka