Dylan Weisman raised in the cutoff and was faced with a three-bet from Scott Clements on the button. Weisman called to the K♦Q♦J♠ flop, where check-called Clements' continuation-bet.
Weisman checked again on the 8♥ turn. Clements fired another bet into the pot, forcing a fold from Weisman after some deliberation.
On the first hand of the day, Jason Kluska limped in from the small blind and Phil Hellmuth raised in the big blind. Kluska called, and they went heads-up to the 9♠10♠Q♥ flop.
Both players checked to the 8♣ turn, where Kluska led out with a bet. Hellmuth called, and Kluska bet his last chips on the 9♥ river. Hellmuth called to put him at risk.
Kluska showed A♥7♦6♦5♦, while Hellmuth had A♦Q♣9♣4♠ for a full house to win the pot.
"Pleasure playing with you for 38 seconds," Kluska joked as he graciously went around the table to shake each of his opponents' hands before making his exit.
Starting at 1 p.m. local time, the 15 remaining players in Event #9 of the 2026 World Series of Poker, the prestigious $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship, will assemble at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas for the final day of the tournament. Today, they will decide who captures the golden bracelet and walks away with the top prize of $450,176, the largest share of the $1,897,200 prize pool
Defending champion Ryan Bambrick is still among the final ones standing from the total field of 204 entries. Last year, Bambrick denied the ever-so-popular Daniel Negreanu a bracelet when he defeated him heads up in this very tournament. Now, Bambrick is looking to repeat history somewhat as another of poker's all-time greats stands between him and a repeat victory, that being all-time bracelet leader Phil Hellmuth, who is looking for a record-extending 18th bracelet.
Phil Hellmuth
Coming back with 405,000 in chips, worth just over five big bets, Bambrick finds himself in the bottom third of the field. However, the gap with Hellmuth seems surmountable, as even though the "Poker Brat" will return sixth in chips for the final day, he plays just three big bets more with 665,000. Meanwhile, chipleaders Scott Clements and Dylan Weisman tower over the rest of the field with stacks of 1,980,000 and 1,940,000 respectively.
Top Ten Chip Counts
Rank
Player
Country
Chip Count
Big Bets
1
Scott Clements
United States
1,980,000
25
2
Dylan Weisman
United States
1,940,000
24
3
Todd Brunson
United States
1,280,000
16
4
Nam Le
United States
1,180,000
15
5
Josh Arieh
United States
1,120,000
14
6
Phil Hellmuth
United States
665,000
8
7
John Esposito
United States
650,000
8
8
James Chen
United States
580,000
7
9
James Obst
Australia
530,000
7
10
David Lin
United States
490,000
6
While Hellmuth is sure to gather a crowd of railbirds for Day 3, he is far from the only interesting storyline remaining in the event. For instance, Josh Arieh is looking to become only the tenth player in history to obtain eight bracelets, while Nam Le is aiming to join his brothers Allan and Tommy on the ever-growing list of WSOP winners. Speaking of successful poker families, Todd Brunson, will return third in chips as the Hall of Famer is on the hunt for his first bracelet in over two decades, while Robert Mizrachi is eyeing bracelet six with his short stack of 330,000, which would put him just two victories away from getting on par with his brother, reigning WSOP Main Event champion Michael Mizrachi.
Todd Brunson
The 15 returning players have all secured a payday of $21,313, with a pay jump to $25,900 set to take place after one elimination. Six-figure rewards await the top five finishers, but the vast majority of the remaining field will likely only be content when they hoist the coveted bracelet at the end of the night.
Remaning Payouts
Place
Prize
Place
Prize
1
$450,176
7
$54,214
2
$299,228
8-9
$41,334
3
$203,242
10-11
$32,305
4
$141,126
12-14
$25,900
5
$100,231
15
$21,313
6
$72,849
When the tournament resumes, the blinds will be at 20,000/40,000, with limits of 40,000/80,000. Each level will be 90 minutes long, and a short break is scheduled after every one of them. A 60-minute dinner break is planned after the completion of four levels, after which the remaining contenders will play down to a single winner.
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PokerNews will be on the Las Vegas tournament floor to live report the final day of the $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo Championship from start to finish, so stay tuned to this page as the cards will be sent into the air shortly.