2026 World Series of Poker

Day: 4
Event Info
2026 World Series of Poker
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
j6
Prize
$1,159,182
Event Info
Buy-in
$3,000
Prize Pool
$9,793,560
Total Entries
3,668
Level Info
Level
39
Blinds
1,000,000 / 1,500,000
Ante
1,500,000
Players Info - Day 4
Entries
16
Players Left
1
Players Left 1 / 3,668

Yanting Jiang Receives WSOP Title as Birthday Gift

Level 39 : Blinds 1,000,000/1,500,000, 1,500,000 ante
Yanting Jiang
Yanting Jiang

The unassuming and quiet Yanting Jiang was not to be underestimated, as she reigned supreme and proved to be a menace to the rest of the field. She mixed it up and kept her opponents guessing until it was only Jiang left standing out of the 3,668 entries to take home her first-ever World Series of Poker bracelet and by far the biggest score of her career for $1,159,182 at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.

Jiang was in disbelief after putting together a career-best run, as she was humbled by the experience and the newfound glory.

“I still can’t believe it. I feel lucky,” said Jiang to PokerNews during an interview after her victory. “I’m a single mom, and I have two kids, and I just pray for whatever God will give me.”

Yanting Jiang
Yanting Jiang

Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Yanting JiangUnited States$1,159,182
2Chahn JungUnited States$772,580
3Yoon ChoiUnited States$576,099
4Maurice HawkinsUnited States$432,875
5Dylan LewUnited States$327,767
6Punnat PunsriThailand$250,110
7Michael RoccoUnited States$192,347
8Roberto RomanelloUnited Kingdom$149,093
9Vasileios PanagiotidisGreece$116,485

The last 24 hours have been a whirlwind for the newly minted champion. Yesterday was her birthday, and she celebrated it by putting out three-bets and making big calls to close Day 3 as the chip leader with 16 left, but after the dust has settled on her bracelet-winning run, she could only think of her family, her two kids, and celebrating with those she loves.

When asked what she was going to do to celebrate, Jiang brought it back to what is important to her more than money or gold hardware.

“First thing, I just want to take my kids on vacation,” said a relieved Jiang.

Jiang’s journey to a title picked up where she left off on Day 3 as the chip leader got to work scoring an elimination against Petre Ionescu to hold court during the early phases of the final day.

Jiang began her battle with second-place finisher Chahn Jung during this period, as their clashes would become a theme throughout the day. Jiang was knocked off her perch at the top of the chip standings when Jung surpassed her during the first two levels of the unofficial final table, but Jiang would not be denied as she fearlessly entered pots against Jung to engage in skirmish after skirmish.

Jiang eventually recaptured the chip lead, and this proved to be a crossroads between the two competitors. Jiang would ride that momentum the rest of the way as she turned into a tornado that tore through the rest of the final table, scoring the final four knockouts herself to secure an impressive run for her first-ever title.

Final Day Action

Mark Newhouse
Mark Newhouse

The action to start the day was frenetic. Within the first hour, three players fell by the wayside as Peter Yang, Darius Samual, and Mark Newhouse were eliminated to trim the field down to 13 players.

Jose Aguilera
Jose Aguilera

The quick pace was kept up during the second level of play as Petre Ionescu, Barry Shulman, and Jose Aguilera were the next to fall as the tournament went to an unofficial final table.

If the first two hours were characterized by fast play and quick eliminations, the next nearly six hours would display the opposite. A total of 13 double-ups during the six hours ensured that no player was able to score a knockout, as the remaining ten players were at an impasse.

Luis Yepez
Luis Yepez

The traffic jam finally unclogged when Luis Yepez lost to Michael Rocco when his big slick failed to improve to become the first elimination in nearly six hours of play.

Michael Rocco
Michael Rocco

It was as if the dam burst open, and the eliminations began to flow again as Vasileios Panagiotidis was the next to go in ninth place, a little over 15-minutes later. Roberto Romanello went out mere minutes later in eighth place, before Michael Rocco was the next to go in seventh place.

Punnat Punsri
Punnat Punsri

Thailand's Punnat Punsri’s quest for his first bracelet would have to wait as he lost to the ace high of Jung to go out in sixth place.

Dylan Lew
Dylan Lew

Dylan Lew was the next to go when his top pair was no good against Jiang’s set of fives sending him out in fifth.

Maurice Hawkins
Maurice Hawkins

Maurice Hawkins came roaring back from as low as one small blind, but his dream run to his first WSOP bracelet was not meant to be, as the 25-time WSOP ring winner went out in fourth place.

Yoon Choi
Yoon Choi

Yoon Choi was the next to bid farewell as he fell to the rivered flush of Jiang to finish in third.

Chahn Jung
Chahn Jung

Jung was the final obstacle between Jiang and a title. Despite scoring a double early on during the match, it was not enough as Jiang dealt the final blow on her way to a title when she hit a flush on the river to dispatch Jung. Jung would have to settle for a runner-up prize of $772,580 for his performance.

This concludes the coverage of Event $89: $3,000 Mid-Stakes Championship. Check back here at PokerNews for continued coverage of the 2026 World Series of Poker and all your poker updates and news.

Tags: Barry ShulmanChahn JungDarius SamualDylan LewJose AguileraLuis YepezMark NewhouseMaurice HawkinsMichael RoccoPeter YangPetre IonescuPunnat PunsriRoberto RomanelloVasileios PanagiotidisYanting JiangYoon Choi