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2024 World Series of Poker

Event #81: $10,000 WSOP Main Event World Championship
Event Info

2024 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
83
Prize
$10,000,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$94,041,600
Entries
10,112
Level Info
Level
44
Blinds
2,500,000 / 5,000,000
Ante
5,000,000
Players Info - Day 1c
Entries
2,528
Players Left
1,907

Hemingway Shows Bluff

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante

The board read Qx2?8?Jx8? on the river. Jared Hemingway bet 3,000 and his opponent gave it up after a few moments, folding KxQx face up.

Hemingway tabled the 7?5? for a bluff and took the pot as he continued his strong finish to the night.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Jared Hemingway us
Jared Hemingway
252,000
44,000
44,000
Profile photo of Michael Soyza my
Michael Soyza
122,000
122,000
122,000
Profile photo of Daniela Rodriguez co
Daniela Rodriguez
78,000
-57,000
-57,000

Tags: Jared Hemingway

Official End of Day Chip Counts (full)

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Zyad Qasem us
Zyad Qasem
390,300
60,300
60,300
Day 1C Chip Leader
Profile photo of Leonard Herrmann at
Leonard Herrmann
306,000
306,000
306,000
Profile photo of Ardit Kurshumi us
Ardit Kurshumi
297,400
297,400
297,400
Profile photo of Colin Beveridge us
Colin Beveridge
295,500
295,500
295,500
Profile photo of Mo Nuwwarah us
Mo Nuwwarah
273,300
3,300
3,300
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of David Simon us
David Simon
269,800
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Manuel Pochat ar
Manuel Pochat
255,200
255,200
255,200
Profile photo of Royce Cohen us
Royce Cohen
254,500
254,500
254,500
Profile photo of Patrice Brandt de
Patrice Brandt
254,400
254,400
254,400
Profile photo of Thomas Hulley au
Thomas Hulley
239,200
239,200
239,200
Profile photo of Alexandru Papazian ro
Alexandru Papazian
235,000
20,000
20,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Stoyan Obreshkov bg
Stoyan Obreshkov
232,300
232,300
232,300
Run It Once
Profile photo of Sandro Hirn de
Sandro Hirn
231,000
231,000
231,000
Profile photo of Walker Miskelly us
Walker Miskelly
230,700
Profile photo of Yuan Yu cn
Yuan Yu
230,200
-14,800
-14,800
Profile photo of Simon Wilson ie
Simon Wilson
230,000
230,000
230,000
Profile photo of Giovanni Zanette za
Giovanni Zanette
229,100
229,100
229,100
Profile photo of Joseph Fishella us
Joseph Fishella
226,200
226,200
226,200
Profile photo of Jared Hemingway us
Jared Hemingway
221,800
-30,200
-30,200
Profile photo of Arthur Morris us
Arthur Morris
221,800
66,800
66,800
Profile photo of Jangkyu Lee kr
Jangkyu Lee
216,500
16,500
16,500
Profile photo of Garrett Garvin us
Garrett Garvin
216,400
14,400
14,400
Profile photo of Anthony Nguyen us
Anthony Nguyen
215,800
215,800
215,800
Profile photo of Terence Clee au
Terence Clee
215,500
215,500
215,500
Profile photo of Kevin Appleyard us
Kevin Appleyard
211,100
211,100
211,100

Read full

Arthur Morris Bags Big, Phil Hellmuth Makes Spectacular Entrance on Day 1c of the 2024 Main Event

Level 5 : Blinds 300/600, 600 ante
Arthur Morris
Arthur Morris

The 2024 World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event continued today with its third opening flight that attracted more than 2,500 entries over the course of five 120-minute levels. Being played at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas, there were plenty of tables spread throughout the casino with action in every corner.

As play was about to begin, the Poker Hall of Famer Johnny Chan wished everybody luck and uttered the famous words of "Shuffle up and Deal,". From there, fewer than 2,000 players managed to bet, check, and fold their way to a bag at the end of Day 1c of the spectacle that is the Main Event.

Among the top stacks was Arthur Morris who bagged an impressive 221,800 chips by the culmination of Day 1c. Morris has a WSOP ring on his poker resume but a bracelet still eludes the American player who is approaching $3,000,000 in live tournament earnings.

Phil Hellmuth Entrance 2024 Main Event
Phil Hellmuth Entrance 2024 Main Event

Main Event Day 1c Top Ten Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Zyad QasemUnited States390,300488
2Leonard HerrmannGermany306,000383
3Ardit KurshumiUnited States297,400372
4Colin BeveridgeUnited States295,500369
5Mo NuwwarahUnited States273,300342
6David SimonUnited States269,800337
7Manuel PochatArgentina255,200319
8Royce CohenUnited States254,500318
9Patrice BrandtGermany254,400318
10Thomas HulleyAustralia239,200299

Action of the Day

No Main Event would be complete without the traditional Phil Hellmuth entrance and this year's much-anticipated arrival was a Kung-Fu-based act with the music to match. He finished Day 1c with 66,700 in chips.

The Main Event isn't just about gaining chips, but also about saving them and one player who saved himself a chunk of change was Rupom Pal who folded top full house holding pocket queens, which was the second nuts, to a river three-bet shove from Jamie Sanfilippo. After Pal folded, Sanfilippo showed pocket jacks for quads, which proved Pal's fold to be correct.

Dan Bilzerian made an appearance, albeit a very brief one, and was eliminated just two hands after taking his seat in the Horseshoe Grand Ballroom. First, Bilzerian bluffed all three streets, and the majority of his stack, into Derek Reid, who held pocket aces. The very next hand, Jonathan Dwek delivered the final blow as his ace-jack called the shove of Bilzerian, who had queen-five.

Jamie Gold, who won the Main Event back in 2006, bagged up 111,100 chips and caught up with PokerNews at the end of the day to share his thoughts.

"I had been down for almost eight days, really sick and I wasn't even sure I could make it today, but I really wanted to be with the 20 players on my Commerce Pro poker team that 16 of them made Day 2. We were all supposed to play together on Day 1a, but I was just too sick," said Gold on why he played Day 1c.

Gold was asked if he feels like he has a target on his back in the Main Event.

"I mean, you know, in general it's a bad thing in normal tournaments because, you know, when you have aces and you get five callers because everybody wants to be in a hand with you makes it very difficult. But the Main Event, I'm now finding how to navigate it. I didn't, for a long time, maybe 10 years. I didn't really understand how to play properly against everyone who was just automatically gonna kind of call me down, but now I take it as I'm just gonna get paid off where most people don't get paid off in a lot of spots because people don't like to play big cards."

Jamie Gold
Jamie Gold

Arden Cho had an eventful day and ended up bagging 168,800 — but it wasn't all clear sailing for Cho. During Level 2, Cho was at risk with top set holding pocket aces against the turned straight of her opponent, but an ace on the river improved her to quads which kept her in the tournament.

Cho caught up with PokerNews after the day came to an end to speak about the hand and how her day played out.

"You know, you look down at aces and you get a little excited. I'm in the small blind, I three-bet, and I get two callers. I'm very excited. I flop a set and I bet, and I get a caller. I'm very excited. Needless to say it was a pretty wet board, but I rivered quads. So, yay, it's not often you get quads and not often you get a full double. So that was very exciting," replied a clearly excited Cho.

"I think it definitely made me feel a bit lucky. It made me feel like, oh, this could be a lucky day and I do think you have to have a bit of that optimistic attitude to survive in these and to grind it out right to stay patient."

Arden Cho
Arden Cho

Some notables who made it through the day were Justin Bonomo (174,100), Christopher Brewer (156,800), Adrian Mateos (143,100), Adam Hendrix (134,500), Michael Soyza (134,600), Ben Lamb (124,600), Isaac Haxton (124,900), and Andrew Lichtenberger (108,900).

Those who were unfortunate in their pursuit of a bag were the likes of Chino Rheem, Eshaan Bhalla, Punnat Punsri, Shaun Deeb, Chris Moorman, and Martin Kabrhel who lost most of his stack early on after he called a four-bet with nine-five.

Those that made it through the day will join the survivors from Day 1a and 1b on Sunday, July 7, to play out Day 2abc.

Day 1d kicks off at noon on Saturday, July 6, and registration remains open until the end of Level 7 on Day 2.

Keep your eyes glued to PokerNews throughout the rest of the Main Event and all remaining bracelet events to keep up to date with the latest action from the baize.

Tags: Adam HendrixAdrian MateosAndrew LichtenbergerArden ChoArthur MorrisBen LambChino RheemChris MoormanChristopher BrewerDan BilzerianDerek ReidEshaan BhallaIsaac HaxtonJamie GoldJamie SanfilippoJonathan DwekJustin BonomoMartin KabrhelMichael SoyzaParis Las VegasPhil HellmuthPunnat PunsriRupom PalShaun Deeb

Event #81: $10,000 WSOP Main Event World Championship

Day 1c Completed