Aneris Adomkevicius opened to 120,000 from a middle position with J?J?. Stephen Song three-bet to 375,000 having picked up A?A? in the small blind.
The flop came 7?5?10? and Song bet to 375,000, which Adomkevicius called.
The 4? came on the turn and Song, still ahead, opted to check. Adomkevicius bet 275,000 which was met with a raise from Song to 675,000. Adomkevicius took some time but found a call, taking the players to the river.
The 7? completed the board and the action was on Song. He raised to 1,200,000, putting Adomkevicius all in. After a long tank, the clock was called and Adomkevicius was given 30 seconds to act before his cards were automatically mucked.
Adomkevicius eventually made the call with just seconds left on the clock. Song showed his aces, which eliminated Adomkevicius from main event just 10-minutes before the end of Day 5.
The emotions were flying high when Abdullah Al-Shanti and Neal Corcoran got their chips into the middle after a preflop raising war when the former was the player at risk. "Kings versus aces, I got aces in a huge pot," Al-Shanti told Iaron Lightbourne on a nearby table and his British rail.
Abdullah Al-Shanti: A?A?
Neal Corcoran: K?K?
The A?10?9? flop gave Al-Shanti top set and the 3? turn locked up the large double as a now meaningless 8? river completed the board. Al-Shanti doubled for 2,480,000 and then apologised for his outburst, even bumped fists with Corcoran.
Just prior, Al-Shanti had lost a big pot and recovered the losses in this setup hand.
On the last hand of the night, Michail Grigorev moved all in for 1,000,000 in the small blind and Andrew Arbogast called in the cutoff.
Michail Grigorev: A?K?
Andrew Arbogast: A?Q?
Grigorev had Arbogast dominated for a late-night double up as the flop came 2?10?10?. The Q? turn, though, gave Arbogast two pair and left Grigorev one card away from elimination.
Instead, he spiked the J? on the river to make a straight and book his ticket for Day 6.
"Why did you give me the queen," Arbogast told the dealer as he handed over the pot.
Day 5 of the 2024 World Series of Poker $10,000 Main Event No-Limit Hold'em World Championship was the most dramatic yet, with bad beats and coolers taking center stage inside the Horseshoe Event Center.
Early in the session, Cameron Mixson found himself on the right side of the ultimate setup. His aces held strong against kings and queens in a massive pot, propelling the Lodge Poker Card Club representative up the chip counts. The Texan rode the momentum from that hand through the remainder of Day 5, eventually bagging 4,015,000 chips, good for 50 big blinds.
Speaking to PokerNews, Mixson expressed his excitement: "I couldn't believe it when I heard that both of them went all in. It was just an incredible moment in the tournament right there," he said, adding that it was his favorite spot he's ever been in while playing poker.
While the Poker Gods giveth, they certainly taketh away. Poker superstar Adrian Mateos felt the full wrath of the card deities. Starting the day second in chips, Mateos earned widespread adulation for correctly folding pocket kings to pocket aces in a four-bet pot. However, his reward was one of the worst beats of the Main Event thus far. Mateos' pocket aces fell to ace-king, which went runner-runner to make a flush in a six-million-chip pot after all the chips went in preflop.
Speaking to PokerGO after the hand, Mateos reflected on the tough beat: "During all the days, all my reads were on point. I feel like I probably played my best tournament ever. But that's poker. Two hands: kings against aces and aces against ace-king, and the dream is over. The only thing is to stay focused on the next tournament and try to play my best. That's the only thing I can control, and that's my plan."
Main Event maestro and $25K Fantasy pick Alex Livingston also faced a heartbreaking exit. The Canadian flopped Broadway, but his opponent turned a set and rivered a full house, sending Livingston out in 295th place.
Some of poker's biggest names continued to hit the rail as Day 5 progressed. Phil Ivey, Bin Weng, Jonathan Little, Nacho Barbero, Parker Talbot, and Alejandro Lococo all bowed out of the tournament.
PokerStars ambassador Lococo, who made the final table in 2021 and finished 39th the following year, was all smiles despite his premature exit. "I know it's tough to make a deep run in this kind of tournament," said Lococo. "My game was the best it has ever been. This time, I played better than before. I'm happy because I know this was the best Main Event in my life."
Main Event Reaches Its Final 160 Players
Ahead of the shuffle-up and deal, 464 players returned for Day 5 to continue their pursuit of the Main Event title and $10 million first-place prize, and after another five levels of play, just 160 remain from the record-breaking field of 10,112.
Stephen Song (12,310,000) continues to lead the way and remains in pole position for the eight-figure windfall. He is followed by Portuguese duo Carlos Caldas (12,110,000) and Diogo Coelho (9,950,000), who round out the top three chip counts.
Song is one of the most accomplished players still in the mix, with a bracelet and more than $6 million in live earnings to his name. He's on course to surpass his best finish in the Main Event in 2021, where he placed 83rd.
Second in chips, Caldas has already locked up his biggest live cash according to The Hendon Mob and is in a great spot to multiply his $170,545 in recorded earnings. Compatriot Coehlo is a regular fixture on the European Poker Tour, where he tasted victory in a $10K High Roller at EPT Paris in 2023 for $857,037.
Online legend Niklas "Lena900" Astedt also finds himself in the upper echelons of the chip counts after spinning up his stack of 385,000 to 7,900,000. Poker Hall of Famer Brian Rast (6,325,000), Ren Lin (5,660,000), Kristen Foxen (5,400,000), Brandon Cantu (4,600,000), and Tony Dunst (3,190,000) are also just a handful of notable names still in contention.
Alongside Foxen, three more women remain in the mix: Ma Li (4,050,000), Shundan Xiao (3,205,000) and Danielle Andersen (1,725,000). The last woman poker player to make a WSOP Main Event final table was in 1995, where Barbara Enright placed fifth and since then Gaelle Baumann's run to tenth-place is the best finish in the Main Event for a female in the 21st Century.
Plan for Day 6
Day 6 of the 2024 WSOP Main Event kicks off at noon local time on Friday, July 12. The day starts on Level 26, where the blinds will be 40,000/80,000/80,000 and closes after the completion of Level 30.
There will be 20-minute breaks after each level, with the 75-minute dinner break scheduled after Level 28 at approximately 6:40 p.m.
Level
Duration (mins)
Small Blind
Big Blind
Big Blind Ante
26
120
40,000
80,000
80,000
20-minute break
27
120
50,000
100,000
100,000
20-minute break
28
120
60,000
120,000
120,000
75-minute dinner break - Remove T-5,000 chips
29
120
100,000
150,000
150,000
20-minute break
30
120
100,000
200,000
200,000
The remaining players have all locked up $70,000, with the six-figure payouts starting at 125th place.
Place
Prize
Place
Prize
1
$10,000,000
14-17
$450,400
2
$6,000,000
18-26
$350,000
3
$4,000,000
27-35
$300,000
4
$3,000,000
36-44
$250,000
5
$2,500,000
45-53
$200,000
6
$2,000,000
54-62
$160,000
7
$1,500,000
63-71
$140,000
8
$1,250,000
72-80
$120,000
9
$1,000,000
81-125
$100,000
10-11
$800,000
126-134
$85,000
12-13
$600,000
135-162
$70,000
As always, be sure to stick with PokerNews to keep up with all the action from the 2024 WSOP Main Event and all the other bracelet events taking place at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.