Event #60: $50,000 Poker Players Championship
Day 2 Completed
Event #60: $50,000 Poker Players Championship
Day 2 Completed
The $50,000 Poker Players Championship rolled on inside Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas on Monday, with another six levels completed and late registration officially coming to a close in one of the marquee events of the 2026 World Series of Poker.
Just 39 players remain, and it is Kristopher Tong who sits atop the leaderboard after turning his Day 1 stack of 784,000 into 2,428,000. The bracelet winner finished just ahead of mixed-game standout Benny Glaser, who more than doubled his overnight stack of 826,000 to bag 2,286,000.
Tong and Glaser were the only players to eclipse the two-million mark. Maxx Coleman (1,917,000), Chris Hunichen (1,670,000), and Matt Glantz (1,480,000) round out the top five.
| Rank | Player | Country | Chip Count |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kristopher Tong | United States | 2,428,000 |
| 2 | Benny Glaser | United Kingdom | 2,286,000 |
| 3 | Maxx Coleman | United States | 1,917,000 |
| 4 | Chris Hunichen | United States | 1,670,000 |
| 5 | Matt Glantz | United States | 1,480,000 |
| 6 | Chris Brewer | United States | 1,253,000 |
| 7 | Yosuke Miki | Japan | 1,127,000 |
| 8 | Maksim Pisarenko | Russian Federation | 1,083,000 |
| 9 | Alex Livingston | Canada | 1,060,000 |
| 10 | Ryan Miller | United States | 968,000 |
Another 21 entries came in on Day 2, bringing the field to 108 and edging past last year's turnout by a single entry. The remaining players are battling for a share of the $5,130,000 prize pool, with the top 17 spots paying. A min-cash is worth $100,934, while the winner will earn $1,343,764 and the Chip Reese Memorial Trophy.
There's also a strong chance the trophy will have a new owner. Of the former champions who entered this year's edition, only one remains in the hunt: Brian Rast.
The Poker Hall of Famer captured the title in 2011, 2016, and 2023, and now has the chance to join Michael Mizrachi atop the all-time list with a fourth Poker Players Championship victory. Mizrachi set the benchmark with his record-breaking triumph last summer. However, Rast has plenty of work to do, as he bagged the smallest stack of the advancing players.
| Place | Prize | Place | Prize |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $1,343,764 | 7 | $176,732 |
| 2 | $895,837 | 8-9 | $144,054 |
| 3 | $600,698 | 10-11 | $122,709 |
| 4 | $417,607 | 12-14 | $109,459 |
| 5 | $301,405 | 15-16 | $102,474 |
| 6 | $226,172 | 17 | $100,934 |
One of the Day 2 entrants was all-time bracelet leader Phil Hellmuth, who after "seven days of being sick with COVID," bagged a strong stack.
The 17-time bracelet winner showed no signs of a diminished appetite. Shortly after taking his seat, Hellmuth tucked into a burrito in his own unique way, eating it from the middle outward.
Whatever the strategy, it worked. The Poker Brat turned his 300,000 starting stack into 900,000 to finish 16th in chips heading into Day 3.
Hellmuth, who finished runner-up to Rast in 2011, wasn't the only former second-place finisher back in the field. Defending runner-up Bryn Kenney advanced with 335,000, while Bryce Yockey (950,000), Josh Arieh (902,000), and Yuri Dzivielevski (140,000) also punched their Day 3 tickets.
Other familiar faces moving on include Jesse Lonis (906,000), Phil Ivey (694,000), Jason Mercier (634,000), and Gus Hansen (632,000).
More than half of the Day 2 field fell by the wayside during the day, with 48 players hitting the rail. Former champions Daniel Negreanu and Phil Hui were among the casualties, as were Viktor Blom, Nick Schulman, and Shaun Deeb. Esther Taylor, last year's third-place finisher and the only woman in the field, was also unable to survive the day.
Day 3 gets underway at 1 p.m. local time with 39 players returning to the Paris Ballroom. Action resumes on Level 13, where the limit flop and draw games will be played with 10,000-20,000 blinds and limits of 20,000-40,000.
In the stud variants, players will post a 5,000 ante and 5,000 bring-in, with betting limits of 20,000 and 40,000. During the no-limit and pot-limit rounds, blinds will be 5,000-10,000.
Players will contest six more levels on Tuesday, with 15-minute breaks after each level and a 60-minute dinner break scheduled after Level 15 at approximately 6:30 p.m.
As always, stick with PokerNews to keep up with all the action from the 2026 WSOP.
Day 2 has come to a close, with 39 players remaining. Stay tuned for chip counts and a recap of the days action.
Pot-Limit Omaha
Action folded to Phil Ivey in the hijack, who just limped in. It then folded to John Monnette on the button who limped in as well, and big blind Carlo van Ravenswoud checked his option.
The flop came 7♣J♦7♥ and it was checked to Monnette, who bet out 18,000. Van Ravenswoud called and Ivey folded.
Both players checked after the 5♥ on the turn, to see the 8♥ on the river. Van Ravenswoud bet out 30,000, which was enough to get out Monnette, who folded to give the pot to Van Ravenswoud.
Seven Card Stud
Michael Moncek: 9♠9♦/9♣6♣4♦A♣/3♥
Jason Mercier: Q♠J♠/10♠8♠K♦Q♥/A♠
Michael Moncek got his last few chips in on sixth street against Jason Mercier. Moncek was ahead with his trip nines, but Mercier made a flush on seventh street to send "Texas Mike" packing.
"That was the first time in my life I was rolled up," a dejected Moncek said before he departed the tournament area.
Day 2 will close when three more hands play out. There are 39 players remaining.
No-Limit Hold'em
On the tail end of a 7♣3♣3♠ flop, David "ODB" Baker bet 55,000 from under the gun and Dara Taherpour called on the button. On the 4♠ turn, Baker went into the tank for nearly two minutes before he bet 80,000 to force a fold from Taherpour.
Brian Rast then raised to 23,000 from under the gun and Baker defended the big blind to check-call for 20,000 on the 7♠7♥7♦ flop. After the 10♠ turn, Baker checked and folded when Rast bet 76,000.
Seven Card Stud
Brian Rast: XxXx / 4♠8♥7♣5♠ / Xx
Dara Taherpour: XxXx / J♣2♠10♣J♥ / Xx
Taherpour completed in the first hand of Stud and Rast called. Taherpour's bet on fourth was called before they checked fifth street. On sixth street, Taherpour bet, Rast raised and picked up a call. They checked seventh street and Taherpour tabled his A♦J♠9♥ in the hole for a set of jacks to win the pot.
While the hand played out, Ariel Mantel was eliminated by Ray Dehkharghani in Razz.
Razz
Maxx Coleman: XxXx / 5♣7♦Q♦2♣ / Xx
Yosuke Miki: XxXx / 7♥A♠10♣5♦ / Xx
Yuri Dzivielevski; XxXx / 7♠7♣ - folded on fourth street
Yosuke Miki completed before Yuri Dzivielevski raised. Maxx Coleman made it three-bets and both players called.
Miki found an ace on fourth street and bet, folding out Dzivielevski's open sevens. Coleman called.
Coleman then called bets on fifth and sixth street, and was then checked to on seventh street. Coleman bet and was met with a quick call.
Some time was taken to work out who had the best low, and the pot went to Colemann as his A♦6♦J♣ was good for 7-6-5-2-A, besting Miki's 3♥6♥K♦, which made a no good 7-6-5-3-2.