Related Articles
The 34th day of the World Series of Poker saw three players score titles, including Rainer Kempe finding the first bracelet of his career in the $10,000 Super Turbo Bounty. In the $1,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better, Blaz Zerjav reached the finish line first for his second bracelet of the summer.
The Super Seniors event also reached a conclusion with Lonny Weitzel winning his first bracelet. Here’s a look at Friday’s action from the Horseshoe and Paris casinos in Las Vegas.
Germany’s Rainer Kempe grabbed first gold bracelet and scored $892,701 in Event #72: $10,000 Super Turbo Bounty No-Limit Hold’em (8-Handed). That haul included an extra $30,000 in bounty winnings. The longtime pro now has more than $23 million in live tournament winnings.
The super turbo format wrapped up in just a single day and Kempe said “it feels like cheating a little bit” because the tournament wrapped up so quickly. Kempe topped a field of 809 entrants that created a $7.7 million prize pool.
Rank | Player | Country | Prize |
1st | Rainer Kempe | Germany | $892,701 |
2nd | Yuya Arito | Japan | $595,078 |
3rd | Ryuta Nakai | Japan | $415,755 |
4th | Xiaoyao Ma | China | $295,133 |
5th | Martin Kabrhel | Czech Republic | $212,926 |
6th | Raoul Kanme | Netherlands | $156,166 |
7th | Colin Dentan | United States | $116,468 |
8th | Chad Thyzel | United States | $88,352 |
Slovenia's Blaz Zerjav (pictured above) completed the double this summer, securing his second bracelet of the series in Event #69: $1,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better. He topped a field of 6,115 entries for an $816,413 prize pool and top payout of $153,487. Huck Seed ($102,281) finished runner-up and came close to his first bracelet win since 2003.
The win was something “he never dared to dream of,” Zerjav said after securing his second career bracelet. He was also complimentary of his heads-up opponent, who won the WSOP Main Event in 1996.
“He is really tough to play against. I enjoyed every moment of it, and learned a few things,” Zerjav noted. Earlier in the series, Zerjav also won the $25,000 No-Limit Hold'em Six-Handed High Roller earlier in the series for $1.7 million.
Rank | Player | Country | Prize |
1st | Blaz Zerjav | Slovenia | $153,487 |
2nd | Huck Seed | United States | $102,281 |
3rd | Sergei Tolkachov | United States | $70,071 |
4th | Michelle Konig | United States | $48,931 |
5th | Jay Kerbel | United States | $34,842 |
6th | Denis Strebkov | Russia | $25,307 |
7th | David Lin | United States | $18,758 |
8th | Michal Frejka | United States | $14,195 |
Lonny Weitzel, of Texarkana, Texas, came out on top in Event #64 $1,000 Super Seniors No-Limit Hold’em for $356,494 and brings his career live tournament winnings to almost $900,000. The tournament brought in 3,338 players aged 60 and over for a $2.9 million prize pool. Weitzel was thrilled to win some WSOP hardware.
“It’s an achievement. It’s a personal goal for me,” he said afterward. “Money is not as important as getting to win and being in the WSOP in a world-class event like this.”
Rank | Player | Country | Prize |
1st | Lonny Weitzel | United States | $356,494 |
2nd | Damir Stefanic | Canada | $237,521 |
3rd | Richard Jutte | United States | $177,222 |
4th | Martin Kohler | United States | $133,228 |
5th | Lawrence Whyte | United States | $100,915 |
6th | Richard Frandsen | United States | $77,025 |
7th | Wesley Cameron | United States | $59,243 |
8th | Edwin Huston | United States | $45,920 |
9th | Zaher Sayegh | United States | $35,872 |
Michael Mizrachi has the chance to become the first player to win the $50,000 Poker Players Championship four times if he can seal the deal on Saturday. The six-time bracelet winner leads the remaining eight players with 10,440,000, nearly twice the amount of Andrew Yeh, who sits in second with 5,285,000.
Bryn Kenney sits just behind him with 5,045,000. Mizrachi won the tournament in 2010, 2012, and 2018, and only Brian Rast has also won the PPC three times. Others returning include Ben Lamb, Joao Vieira, and Esther Taylor.
Seat | Player | Country | Chips |
1 | Esther Taylor | United States | 3,170,000 |
2 | Joao Vieira | Portugal | 3,640,000 |
3 | Andrew Yeh | United States | 5,285,000 |
4 | Michael Mizrachi | United States | 10,440,000 |
5 | Bryn Kenney | United States | 5,045,000 |
6 | Ben Lamb | United States | 1,140,000 |
7 | Albert Daher | Lebanon | 3,360,000 |
Just 16 players remain in Event #68: $3,000 No-Limit Holdem with Uruguay’s Fabrizio Gonzalez leading the pack with 11,525,000 after three days of action. China’s Yilong Wang is second with 8,375,000. The tournament drew 1,882 runners with a $6.2 million prize pool and the winner collects $830,685. Some other players returning include bracelet winners Romain Lewis and Yuliyan Kolev, along with Ren Lin and Olivier Busquet.
Rank | Player | Country | Chips |
1st | Fabrizio Gonzalez | Uruguay | 11,525,000 |
2nd | Yilong Wang | China | 8,375,000 |
3rd | Martynas Vitkauskas | Lithuania | 8,300,000 |
4th | Steven Jones | United States | 7,925,000 |
5th | Paawan Bansal | India | 7,650,000 |
6th | Romain Lewis | France | 7,225,000 |
7th | Yuliyan Kolev | Bulgaria | 7,200,000 |
8th | Seunghyun Nam | United States | 5,950,000 |
9th | Ren Lin | China | 4,925,000 |
10th | Hamid Toghyan | United Kingdom | 4,475,000 |
A total of 317 women returned for Day 2 of Event #70: $1,000 Ladies Championship and just 50 return for the third day of play. A familiar name sits at the top of the chip stacks – Japan’s Shiina Okamoto, who won the event last year. The tournament created a $1.2 million prize pool and the winner’s purse is $184,094.
A few other players returning for Day 3 include 2023 champion Tamar Abraham, Susan Faber, JJ Liu, three-time bracelet winner and Poker Hall of Famer Barbara Enright, Maria Lampropulos, Angela Jordison, Robbi Jade Lew, Allyn Shulman, and Jessica Marks.
Rank | Player | Country | Chips |
1st | Shiina Okamoto | Japan | 1,495,000 |
2nd | Juliet Hegedus | China | 1,450,000 |
3rd | Una Kelly | Lithuania | 1,260,000 |
4th | Krista Gifford | United States | 1,155,000 |
5th | Elisa Nakagawa | India | 910,000 |
6th | Julie Huynh | France | 890,000 |
7th | Jessica Cai | Bulgaria | 855,000 |
8th | Susan Faber | United States | 850,000 |
9th | JJ Liu | China | 845,000 |
10th | Tanith Rothman | United Kingdom | 709,000 |
Matthew Schreiber staged quite a rally after being below a single big bet early in the Day 2 action of Event #71: $10,000 Limit 2-7 Lowball Triple Draw Championship. He now sits as chip leader with just nine players remaining with 1,835,000.
The lowball action brought in 122 players for a $1.3 million prize pool and first-place payout of $333,054. Some other big names return, including seven-time bracelet winner Nick Schulman and five-time bracelet winner Yuri Dzivielevski.
Rank | Player | Country | Chips |
1st | Matthew Schreiber | United States | 1,835,000 |
2nd | Nick Schulman | United States | 1,265,000 |
3rd | Yuri Dzivielevski | Brazil | 1,200,000 |
4th | Brian Tate | United States | 1,065,000 |
5th | Alexander Wilkinson | United States | 980,000 |
6th | Oscar Johansson | Sweden | 870,000 |
7th | Jonathan Krela | Canada | 470,000 |
8th | Hye Park | United States | 435,000 |
9th | Pedro Bromfman | Brazil | 340,000 |
The first day of Event #73: $1,500 Eight Game Mix saw Louisiana’s John Cressend end as chip leader with 497,000, followed by Brad Ruben with 397,500. The event produced a field of 789 players for a $1 million prize pool and the winner bags a $184,682 payday.
Just 167 players remain and some of those returning include Jon Turner (323,000), Chad Eveslage (196,000), Yueqi Zhu (180,000), Phillip Hui (173,000), Jake Schwartz (141,500), Matt Glantz (126,000), Brian Hastings (110,500), Daniel Negreanu (55,000), and Brandon Shack-Harris (266,500).
Rank | Player | Country | Chips |
1st | John Cressend | United States | 497,000 |
2nd | Brad Ruben | United States | 397,500 |
3rd | Xixiang Luo | China | 357,700 |
4th | Demetrius Campbell | United States | 328,000 |
5th | Jon Turner | United States | 323,000 |
6th | Scott Abrams | United States | 290,000 |
7th | Andrew Kelsall | United States | 274,500 |
8th | Brandon Shack-Harris | United States | 266,500 |
9th | Gennady Shimelfarb | United States | 240,500 |
10th | Schuyler Thornton | United States | 229,500 |
The third starting flight in Event #67: $300 Gladiators of Poker played out on Friday, reaching a total of 16,144 entries for the tournament. That should increase even more during the final starting flight on Saturday with plenty of gladiators left to get in the action. Sweden's Oscar Peleg accumulated 7,285,000 for the overall chip lead in the event.
Rank | Player | Country | Chips |
1st | Oscar Peleg | Sweden | 7,285,000 |
2nd | Joseph Butler | United States | 3,275,000 |
3rd | Nicholas Naughton | China | 2,735,000 |
4th | Hari Sriniva Kamireddi | United States | 2,730,000 |
5th | Rosmel Munoz Cedeno | Venezuela | 2,500,000 |
6th | Daniel King | Australia | 2,345,000 |
7th | Elhanan Cohen | Israel | 2,290,000 |
8th | Ronald Parrish | United States | 2,245,000 |
9th | Jesus Rodriguez | Mexico | 2,220,000 |
10th | Ilan Boujenah | France | 2,155,000 |
Connect with PokerGO.com on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok. Watch daily poker clips on the PokerGO YouTube channel. Join the conversation on the PokerGO Discord server. You can save $20 off your first year of an annual subscription to PokerGO.com by using the code “WSOP25” at checkout.
Related Articles