Tumboli, Hahn Stand Between Mizrachi and Bracelet No. 9
A field of 837 entries turned out for Event #70: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship at the 2026 World Series of Poker, generating a prize pool of $7,774,800. After three days of play, just three players remain in contention for the coveted WSOP gold bracelet and the $1,350,203 first-place prize.
Just two of the remaining three players have previously experienced WSOP success. Eight-time bracelet winner Michael Mizrachi returns with a commanding chip lead after leading at the end of each of the opening three days. Mizrachi bagged 40,225,000 chips, accounting for roughly eighty percent of the chips in play, and will be looking to capture his ninth bracelet and first in Pot-Limit Omaha.
Michael Hahn is from the United States and has over $1,700,000 in earnings and best live score of $190,417. Hahn will be looking for his first WSOP bracelet in Event #70.
Start of Day 4 Chip Counts
| Rank | Player | Country | Chip Count | Big Blinds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Michael Mizrachi | United States | 40,225,000 | 161 |
| 2 | Zarvan Tumboli | India | 5,500,000 | 22 |
| 3 | Michael Hahn | United States | 4,450,000 | 18 |
Standing between Mizrachi and Hahn is Zarvan Tumboli, who won his seat through an $1,100 satellite. Tumboli returns second in chips with 5,500,000 and is guaranteed the biggest live cash of his career regardless of the outcome.
Remaining Payouts
| Place | Player | Country | Prize |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $1,350,203 | ||
| 2 | $900,088 | ||
| 3 | $627,832 | ||
| 4 | Martin Zamani | United States | $445,080 |
| 5 | Ian Matakis | United States | $320,763 |
| 6 | Raj Vohra | United States | $235,073 |
| 7 | Jesse Lonis | United States | $175,233 |
| 8 | Toby Joyce | Ireland | $132,908 |
Action will resume at 3:15 p.m. local time on Monday, June 29, and the tournament will be played out on stream with a 2.5 hour delay. Play will resume at Level 31 with blinds at 125,000/250,000 with a 250,000 big blind ante, and there will be a 15-minute break every two levels. A one-hour dinner break will be determined at the tournament director's discretion.
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