2026 World Series of Poker

Day: 1
12
Event Info
2026 World Series of Poker
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$1,850,700
Total Entries
199
Players Left
64
Average Chip Stack
186,563
Total Chips
11,940,000
Level Info
Level
13
Limits
0 / 0
Ante
0
Players Info - Day 1
Entries
156
Players Left
73
Players Left 64 / 199
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Event #80: $10,000 8-Game Mixed Championship

Day 1 Started

Poker Royalty Set to Battle It Out in the $10,000 8-Game Mixed Championship

Mike Gorodinsky
Mike Gorodinsky

One of the most prestigious mixed-game events of the summer arrives with Event #80: $10,000 Eight Game Mixed Championship (6-Handed) at the 2026 World Series of Poker (WSOP). Cards are in the air at 2:00 p.m. local time on July 1 at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas, with a stacked field of all-around specialists expected to take their seats.

With eight different variants in rotation, including No-Limit Hold’em, Razz, Omaha Hi-Lo, and 2-7 Triple Draw, there’s no hiding place in this one. Players will need to navigate constant format changes and shifting dynamics, making this a true test of versatility across the full spectrum of poker disciplines.

📌 Event Snapshot

  • Event: #80 – $10,000 Eight Game Mixed Championship (6-Handed)
  • Date(s): July 1–3, 2026
  • Time: 2:00 p.m. local time
  • Buy-In: $10,000
  • Format: Eight Game Mixed (6-Handed)
  • Late Registration: Open for 11 levels (≈ 2:15 p.m. on Day 2)
  • Starting Stack: 60,000 chips
  • Levels: 40 minutes (Levels 1–6), 60 minutes (Levels 7–20), 90 minutes (Level 21+)
  • 2025 Winner: Mike Gorodinsky ($422,421)
  • 2025 Field Size: 195
  • 2025 Prize Pool: $1,813,500

Structure and Schedule

Day 1 begins at 2:00 p.m. local time on July 1, with players set to complete 10 levels. Levels last 40 minutes for the first six, before increasing to 60 minutes from Level 7 onward. Breaks are 15 minutes after every two hours of play.

Day 2 resumes at 1:00 p.m. on July 2, with another 10 levels scheduled. Players take 15-minute breaks every two levels, along with a 60-minute dinner break after Level 15 (around 6:30 p.m.).

Day 3’s restart time is to be confirmed, with the remaining field playing down to a champion. Ten-minute breaks take place after every level, and a dinner break will be announced during play. As always, the schedule may be adjusted if the final table is selected for live streaming.

In flop games, the ante is posted from the big blind, while pot-limit and no-limit rounds feature a big blind ante structure that only counts toward the pot after the flop.

Why This Event is Significant

Eight Game formats are widely regarded as the ultimate test of a poker player’s all-around ability. With short-handed tables and a demanding rotation of games, this championship consistently attracts the most complete players in the world and rewards those who can adjust quickest.

Past Champions & History

Mike Gorodinsky added another major title to his résumé in 2025, taking down this event for $422,421 and his 5th WSOP bracelet, after overturning a 7-to-1 chip disadvantage against Eric Wasserson in heads-up play.

After the win, Gorodinsky told PokerNews, "It's late, being sick the whole day, especially when you're focusing and playing. I was just kind of hoping to make it through the last hour and get out of there. So I'm glad I did.”

This year represents the third running of this event at the WSOP, with Calvin Anderson the only other winner, meaning whoever takes this down will join some pretty esteemed company.

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Tags: Calvin AndersonDaniel NegreanuEric WassersonMike GorodinskyParis Las Vegas

Level: 1

Limit Flop/Draw: 300-600, 600-1,200 Limits
Stud Games: 100 Ante, 200 Bring-In, 600 Completion, 600-1,200 Limits
Pot-Limit & No-Limit: 300/500 Ante, 200-300 Blinds

First Entries

Level 1

Richey Rakes In First Pot

Level 1

Omaha Hi-Lo

Viktor Blom raised his button, and Brett Richey defended in the big blind. Blom continued with a bet on the 3310 flop. Richey check-raised, and Blom called.

The 10 fell on the turn. Richey tossed in one more bet, ending the hand as Blom snap-mucked.

Tags: Brett RicheyViktor Blom

Panagiotou Raises Blom on the River

Level 1

Omaha Hi-Lo

Viktor Blom bet from under the gun on a flop of 9102 and Vitor Wagner called on the button, as did Menikos Panagiotou in the big blind.

The turn was the 10 and Panagiotou led out with a bet. Blom then raised and Wagner folded, while Panagiotou called.

Blom bet again on the A river, and Panagiotou then raised. Blom took a minute, but he eventually gave up his hand.

Tags: Menikos PanagiotouViktor BlomVitor Wagner

More Entries

Level 1

Eslami Bets Out Amit

Level 1

Omaha Hi-Lo

Ali Eslami just took his seat in the tournament and three-bet out of the big blind on his first hand. Rafi Amit called on the button, and Eslami pretended to throw a card away as if playing triple draw as they went to a flop of J68.

Eslami then led out with a bet and Amit raised. Eslami called, and he bet again on the 2 turn. Amit called.

Eslami bet on the K river, and Amit folded this time. Eslami showed A943 as he took the pot.

Amit turned over a deuce and complained that the card was already marked. "There's cheating going on. It's my first hand, so you can't blame me," Eslami said.

Tags: Ali EslamiRafi Amit

Ten Wins It For Vitch

Level 1

Razz

Christopher Vitch: XxXx/AxAx3xQx/Xx
Alex James: XxXx/2x7xJx8x/Xx

Christopher Vitch completed and Alex James called.

James bet on fourth street and Vitch called. James bet again on fifth, and Vitch raised. James called.

Both players checked down sixth and seventh, and Vitch turned over 10x9x6x for 10-9-6-3-A to win the pot.

Tags: Alex JamesChristopher Vitch

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