Level 37
: Blinds 500,000/1,000,000, 1,000,000 ante
Adam Walton raised to 2,000,000 from under the gun with the A?K? and Juan Maceiras called from the button with the A?8? before both blinds got out of the way.
The flop was 7?5?7? and both players checked to see K? on the turn. Walton checked again and called when Maceiras bet 3,000,000.
The river was 9? and Walton checked once more. Maceiras bet 5,000,000 and went into the tank when Walton raised to 17,000,000.
Maceiras considered his options for nearly two minutes before he slid out the chips to call. Walton turned over his kings up and won a large pot to take over the lead.
Level 38
: Blinds 600,000/1,200,000, 1,200,000 ante
Jan-Peter Jachtmann opened to 2,500,000 in early position and Jose Aguilera three-bet to 6,700,000 in the hijack. The action folded back to Jachtmann who contemplated his options before just calling.
The flop fell 6?5?4? and Jachtmann stuck in a bunch of chips. Aguilera called off his last 2,500,000 chips and the cards were on their backs.
Jose Aguilera: A?J?
Jan-Peter Jachtmann: A?8?
"Give me a heart," Jachtmann pleaded to the dealer but it was the 7? on the turn that gave him a straight. Aguilera was left drawing to a chop only but the 2? on the river was no help. Aguilera was eliminated in 10th place and the final nine players will now bag their chips and return on Sunday for the first part of the final table.
Level 38
: Blinds 600,000/1,200,000, 1,200,000 ante
The shortest day so far of the $10,000 WSOP Main Event World Championship wrapped up after less than six hours of play as a final table of nine has been set in the record-breaking event at the 2023 World Series of Poker. Leading the final nine at the end of Day 8 is Seattle's Adam Walton with 143,800,000 chips as he looks for his first bracelet and a place in poker history, while Arizona's Steven Jones looks to do the same with a stack of 90,300,000.
Though this isn't Walton's first Main Event run, it is his deepest. He finished 407th in the 2018 edition and bested that in 2021 with a 42nd-place first finish worth $163,900.
“I mean honestly, it feels like a dream," he told PokerNews at the end of Day 8. "It feels fake. I went from randomly playing the Main, I had like 12,000 chips in the beginning, and (now) this is happening. It’s been like the time of my life. It’s crazy.”
2023 WSOP Main Event Final Table
Seat
Player
Country
Chip Count
Big Blinds
1
Steven Jones
United States
90,300,000
75
2
Juan Maceiras
Spain
68,000,000
57
3
Daniel Holzner
Italy
31,900,000
27
4
Adam Walton
United States
143,800,000
120
5
Ruslan Prydryk
Ukraine
50,700,000
42
6
Dean Hutchison
United Kingdom
41,700,000
35
7
Toby Lewis
United Kingdom
19,800,000
17
8
Daniel Weinman
United States
81,700,000
68
9
Jan-Peter Jachtmann
Germany
74,600,000
62
Day 7 chip leader Juan Maceiras, a former PokerStars pro and the son of an online poker aficionado, dipped a bit on Day 8 but is still in contention while he adds to his family's poker legacy.
“The ten-handed was a little bit complicated, but it happens," Maceiras told PokerNews. "I’ve been playing the same way I’ve been playing the whole tournament, but this time those pots didn’t go well. And there’s nothing to regret, I’m just thinking that I’m in the final nine, I’ve got more than 50 blinds.”
Also after the record $12,100,000 first-place prize is Jan-Peter Jachtmann, one of two bracelet leaders still in contention who ended the day by knocking out Jose Aguilera in 10th place for $700,000. The second bracelet winner among the final nine, Daniel Weinman, is still alive after getting a new lease on life when he hit a two-outer to nearly triple one of the most dramatic hands of the tournament so far.
Click on the name for an in-depth profile of each final table player:
The highest-profile and arguably most accomplished player in the record-breaking event, Toby Lewis, ended the day at the bottom of the counts with under 20 big blinds. Lewis, who made a much-discussed fold earlier in the tournament but who managed to stay alive for the final stretch, is the only player not to have locked up his biggest career cash by advancing to Day 9. Lewis will need a seventh-place finish or better to improve on his third-place finish in the 2021 $10,000 Wynn Millions for $1,235,204.
Meanwhile, fellow Brit Dean Hutchison will enter the final table seventh in chips to be in between Ukraine's Ruslan Prydryk and Italy's Daniel Holzner, a farmer who was gifted a Main Event seat for his 30th birthday from his girlfriend, friends and family.
"Yeah, it's nice to be out here on the final table," Holzner said as he bagged. "I guess I have to make a really big, big, big party for them, all of them."
A Short Road to the Final Table On Day 8
Day 8 of the Main Event blew by after a long stretch of 12-hour days that have seen players trading pots late into the night. It took just a few minutes after the late 2 p.m. start for Britain's Jack O'Neill to find himself at risk after three-bet jamming with queen jack in the small blind after a button open. Cong Pham woke up with ace-queen in the big blind to re-shove and O'Neill dominated before his 15th-place exit for $430,200.
But the pain was just beginning. Not long after Hutchison doubled through Jachtmann with aces against tens, there was another preflop confrontation of big pairs. Day 6 chip leader Joshua Payne picked up started things off with a raise after picking up pocket kings. Aguilera upped the price behind him with queens as Weinman woke up on the button with jacks. The bracelet winner opted to ship it with the fishhooks and both players called with Payne being the shortest stack.
A massive triple-up in likely what will be the biggest poker spot he ever finds himself in was imminent for Payne as the flop landed A?7?4?. But it wasn't meant to be as the turn brought the J? to give Weinman the lead as he gasped in utter shock as his friend Josh Arieh cheered from the rail ahead of a blank river.
Payne, the youngest player in the Day 8 field at 23 years old, took the horrific beat in silence and received a hug from Weinman after his 14th-place exit worth $430,200, a career-best sum that will undoubtedly help the engineering student pay tuition.
Sachin Joshi had a bit more standard exit in 13th place as his eights couldn't survive a flip against the Big Slick of Maceiras, who hit an ace on the flop and avoided the two remaining eights for the Spaniard to further cement his chip lead.
Pham, meanwhile, was able to best his previous career-best score of $301,225 when he went out in 12th place for $535,000. The Florida native's chip stack had become a nub before he jammed with eight-seven of hearts and failed to pull ahead of Jachtmann's ace-deuce.
Once players returned from their first break of the day, Conscious Poker's Alec Torelli found himself at risk with jacks against the ace-king of Maceiras. Once again, Maceiras made a pair on the flop to take a big lead in the flip before a brick runout confirmed Torelli's 11th-place finish for $700,000.
It took a full level of play to lose another player after the unofficial final table was set. Holzner was on his way out after getting it in with ace-queen against the ace-ten of Maceiras, who flopped a ten before Holzner rivered a queen as the Mothership discharged into a frenzy.
In a similar confrontation, Aguilera found himself at risk of going out on the final table bubble but was in good shape with ace-jack against Jachtmann's ace-eight. Jachtmann manage to flop a gutshot and a seven on the turn confirmed the tenth-place elimination of the unfortunate Spaniard.
After a day off tomorrow, players will return for Day 10 at 2 p.m. local time on Sunday, July 16. Action will pick back up on Level 38 with blinds of 600,000/1,200,000/1,200,000 with 1:49:10 left in the level.
Be sure to stay with the PokerNews live reporting team as we continue to provide updates throughout the record-breaking 2023 WSOP Main Event.