Dylan Linde raised his button, Naoya Kihara three-bet from the small blind, and Joe Hachem called cold in the big blind. Linde also called, and Hachem and Linde both called when Kihara bet the Q♣3♠6♥ flop.
Kihara then checked the 10♦ turn. Hachem bet, folding out Linde. Kihara called to the 8♣ river, however, where he check-called another one of Hachem's bets.
Hachem tabled A♥K♥Q♠7♥ for top pair and a low. Kihara had the same low with A♣J♥7♦3♦, but his inferior high meant he was only returned a quarter of the pot.
Shortly before the hand played out, Gus Hansen was seen departing from the tournament area.
Jeremy Ausmus raised to 5,000 under the gun, Menikos Panagiotou moved all in for 49,000 on the button, and Ausmus called.
Menikos Panagiotou: K♠J♥
Jeremy Ausmus: A♠Q♥
Ausmus hit top pair on the A♥5♠8♥ flop to leave Panagiotou far behind. Panagiotou picked up some outs on the K♦ turn, but he missed the 8♦ river and was sent to the rail in the closing moments of the day.
Greg Mueller raised to 4,000 on the button before Roy Thung three-bet to 10,000 in the big blind. Mueller took back his raise, an action that was disputed by tablemate David Baker.
"It's bad etiquette," Baker told him.
"It signals I'm either calling or raising. I don't understand why it's bad etiquette," Mueller replied as he eventually put the chips back in. He called to see the K♥3♠10♠ flop, where Thung bet 15,000. Mueller then moved all in for 70,000, and Thung took a minute before folding.
"Can't show you boys that one," Mueller said as he and Baker continued to discuss him pulling his bet back.
Not even a week ago, Taylor Atchison made his first final table at the 2026 World Series of Poker in the $1,500 Stud Hi-Lo and immediately turned it into a victory and a golden bracelet. Afterwards, Taylor made it known that he was not done for the summer yet, and today he has made his first steps en route to a new piece of WSOP hardware by securing a podium spot on the leaderboard after ten levels of play on Day 1 of Event #80: $10,000 8-Game Mixed Championship.
The third edition of the prestigious mixed-game event, which is played as a freezeout, attracted a field of 156 unique entries to the Paris and Horseshoe Las Vegas on Day 1, with only 73 of them surviving to the end of the day. Last year's record turnout of 195 is still in sight, as one more level of late registration remains on Day 2. With 297,500, Taylor bagged nearly five starting stacks, and only trails Clayton Mozdzen (345,000) and Nicholas Marchington (327,000) in the counts.
Clayton Mozdzen
Meanwhile, Naoya Kihara jumped in straight after bubbling the $100k PLO and consoled himself by bagging 233,000 at the end of the night, still giving him a chance at securing a third bracelet of the summer. Closing out the top ten is $10k Dealer's Choice champion Bryce Yockey, who amassed 228,500 on Day 1.
End of Day 1 Chip Counts
Rank
Player
Country
Chip Count
1
Clayton Mozdzen
Canada
345,000
2
Nicholas Marchington
United Kingdom
327,000
3
Taylor Atchison
United States
297,500
4
Wataru Kosugi
Japan
275,500
5
Christopher Vitch
United States
270,500
6
Yuval Bronshtein
Israel
251,000
7
Ray Dehkharghani
United States
238,500
8
Naoya Kihara
Japan
233,000
9
Tomasz Gluszko
Poland
230,000
10
Bryce Yockey
United States
228,500
Two Main Event champions entered the fray today, looking to add a mixed-game bracelet to their prize cabinets. Daniel Weinman could not get much started and was eliminated halfway through the day, but Joe Hachem made it through to Day 2, albeit with less than a starting stack, as he ended with 51,500. Shorter still is Robert Mizrachi, who could only put 24,000 in his bag. Robert's brother, Michael Mizrachi, attempted a run at a tenth bracelet, but was knocked out after just a few hands.
Daniel Weinman
Jennifer Harman joined her fellow Hall of Famer at the rail shortly after, but Brian Rast (134,500) and Todd Brunson (115,000) did survive the day to represent poker's most elite club on Day 2. Other notable players who bagged at the end of the night include David "ODB" Baker (185,000), content creators Jeremy Ausmus (118,000) and Brad Owen (99,000), and Nacho Barbero (88,000), who is hunting just his second cash of the summer.
Some of the other players who have already been eliminated include Player of the Year frontrunner Shaun Deeb, big bet cannons Jesse Lonis and Chris Hunichen, and poker legend Gus Hansen
The 73 remaining contenders will return on June 2nd at 1 p.m. local time, joined by players who late reg. The tournament is scheduled to play ten levels of 60 minutes each on Day 2, starting with Level 11, which has blinds of 1,000/2,000 for no-limit hold'em and pot-limit Omaha, and limits of 4,000/8,000 for the fixed-limit games.
Tune back in at the start of Day 2 as PokerNews will be back on the tournament floor, bringing you all the latest mixed-game action live from the WSOP in Las Vegas.