Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
James "richrdparker" Taylor |
94,992
64,992
|
64,992 |
DeionSanders |
90,905
90,905
|
90,905 |
Dylan "PokerNpizzA" Hortin |
90,016
25,592
|
25,592 |
Mikhail "shlap" Shiapakou
|
77,777
32,427
|
32,427 |
Mark "Nostradonkus" Liedtke
|
75,293 | |
Martin "bathroomline" Zamani
|
73,002
43,002
|
43,002 |
Anthony "heheh" Zinno
|
71,601
71,601
|
71,601 |
Chad "Alienprobed" Richard |
69,632
69,632
|
69,632 |
David "Arikato" Mzareulov |
68,798
68,798
|
68,798 |
|
||
James "aggie69" Agate |
66,840
66,840
|
66,840 |
2021 WSOP.com Online Bracelet Events
This summer, the World Series of Poker (WSOP) will hold 66 gold bracelet events online between WSOP.com and GG Poker.
The former client will cater to players in Nevada and New Jersey (players in Delaware are NOT able to participate), while the latter will serve the international base.
WSOP.com will hold 33 events – one each day for the month of July – while the other 33 will take place on GG Poker.
For players either in Nevada or New Jersey (remember, you must be 21+ to participate), or those planning to travel in, PokerNews put together all the information you need to know and also answered some lingering questions, which you can read here.
Download WSOP.com
The first step in getting set up to play on WSOP.com is to download the client. You can do so for both mobile (Android and iOS) and desktop (Windows 7 or higher and Mac OS X 10.6.8).
Also, the WSOP.com client can only support playing one table at a time on mobile.
Finally, pot-limit Omaha (PLO) games and tournaments are not compatible on mobile and must be played via a computer.
Players are on a quick five-minute break.
Blinds: 80/160
The first player to act raised to 360, "KyzerSoze" three-bet to 720, Jerry "JR0077" four-bet to $2,200, the initial raiser folded and KyzerSoze called.
The flop came . Robinson led with a bet of 1,280 and KyzerSoze called. The came on the turn and action was check-check.
The river was the . KyzerSoze bet 5,610 after a check and Robinson called. KyzerSoze tabled the for the flopped set and won the pot
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
KyzerSoze
|
39,610
39,610
|
39,610 |
Jerry "JR0077" Robinson |
20,915
-9,085
|
-9,085 |
Blinds 80/160
After an initial 355 raise and a "TheJeffX" call from the small blind, "Nvrtsfied" three-bet to 1,510 from the big blind and only "TheJeffX" called to see the flop.
"TheJeffX" check-called the 3,375 continuation bet from "Nvrtsfied" and then did the same for 13,910 after the 92d] turn, utting "Nvrtsfied" at risk.
"TheJeffX"L:
"Nvrtsfied":
"Nvrtsfied" was ahead and the river secured their double up.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Nvrtsfied
|
37,945 | |
TheJeffX
|
1,515 |
Columbus, Ohio's Ross "BlueTang" Gottlieb recorded four cashes in last year's WSOP.com Online Bracelet Series, but it was one huge run that defined his series, and brought him agonizingly close to earning his first career WSOP Gold Bracelet.
In Event #8: $500 NLH Freezeout, Gottlieb found himself at a final table of absolute crushers, including Robert "bustinballs" Kuhn, Scott "miamicane" Davies, and Randy "StayAlive" Ohel among others. Gottlieb was on the shorter side of the counts at the start of the final table, but took the majority of Kuhn's chips with queens to take a commanding lead with five players remaining.
When heads-up play commenced, Gottlieb was back in a 2:1 deficit against Alan "GladiusIII" Goehring, but looked poised to take back command of the battle when the final hand of the tournament took place. Gottlieb, holding king-nine, flopped a king-high straight, while Goehring held ace-three of clubs for a higher straight draw and a flush draw. Gottlieb went from retaking the chip lead to out in one card when the turn was a club, and Gottlieb was forced to settle for $73,942 for a second-place run.
Gottlieb, who describes himself on his Twitter bio as a "full time veterinarian, part time button clicker", is back in action for this year's series, and looks to have a full schedule of events to play in his quest to finish one spot higher in an event this year, and lay claim to a WSOP Gold Bracelet.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Ross "BlueTang" Gottlieb | 30,615 |
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Dylan "PokerNpizzA" Hortin |
64,424
64,424
|
64,424 |
Tommy "cliffiehawg" Hoard |
64,205
64,205
|
64,205 |
Charles "sevenstars" Furey |
53,724
53,724
|
53,724 |
krell82
|
52,970
52,970
|
52,970 |
Mikhail "shlap" Shiapakou
|
45,350
45,350
|
45,350 |
Mohammad "tmomoney" Mufti
|
45,150
15,150
|
15,150 |
tastemybeans |
43,168
43,168
|
43,168 |
JamieS10
|
41,189
41,189
|
41,189 |
Dave "CRISPR" Alfa
|
40,392
40,392
|
40,392 |
Arash "anonymousone" Yazdanpanah
|
40,306
40,306
|
40,306 |
Blinds 50/100
Don "banhmi" Nguyen raised from the hijack only to call the 900 three-bet from Dylan "TheSmith" Smith on the button.
The flop came and Nguyen check-called the 622 continuation bet from Smith bringing the turn. Nguyen check-called once again for 1,597 only to check-fold the river after Smith fired out 7,497
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Don "banhmi" Nguyen |
26,931
-3,069
|
-3,069 |
Dylan "TheSmith" Smith | 19,716 |
Blinds 60/120
"CarlosWelch" raised to 120 under the gun. The next four players to act all called the raise until it got to Jonathan "DaCoolerKing" Kim who three-bet to 810. CarlosWelch and two others called.
The pot was 3,450 as the flop came . Kim bet 1,725 and everyone folded to give him a good pot to start.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jonathan "dacoolerking" Kim
|
32,565
2,565
|
2,565 |
Ye "yuan365" Yuan, also known as Tony Yuan, has a tiny amount of cashes on his Hendon Mob profile, with just $6,774 in career tournament earnings outside of one particularly big outlier. Yuan, a Ph.D Candidate of Mathematics and Probability at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, overcame the odds and made the final table of the 2020 WSOP $10,000 Main Event, after pushing through a field of 705 entrants.
“I still can’t believe it." Yuan told PokerNews about his run to the final table. "I don’t know how I made it, but someone I did. I was quite lucky to have some big hands. I won a coinflip when short-stacked with pocket nines against my opponent’s ace-jack offsuit." Yuan also was confident in the transition to the live final table, as opposed to online, saying, "I’m a live guy. I think my live play is better than my online play. I can read people.”
Yuan finally succumbed in fifth-place, losing a flip with ace-ten to the pocket fours of Joseph Hebert, but the $286,963 payday certainly helped put a big dent in his college tuition. Now, with another summer of online events waiting, Yuan will be looking to make another deep run payoff in similar fashion.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Ye "yuan365" Yuan
|
30,240
240
|
240 |