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A thrilling day of poker on Day 30 of the 2023 WSOP saw three bracelets won in style at both the Horseshoe Las Vegas and Paris casinos. Sin City was alive as ten tournaments saw players of all levels chase glory and gold at the World Series of Poker.

 

Pavel Plesuv Wins Millionaire Maker for $1.2m and Moldovan Glory

 

An exciting finale to Event #53, the Millionaire Maker, saw Moldovan player Pavel Plesuv win the first-ever bracelet taken by a Moldovan. He got the better of Florian Ribouchon heads-up for an exciting victory as the Frenchman earned a million too, as two players were made seven-figure winners.

 

An entertaining final table was broadcast live on PokerGO as early-event tournament leader Andreas Kniep slid out in fourth place for $501,182. Getting heads-up against Ribouchon, Plesuv’s stunning victory saw the Moldovan win a record score for his career.

 

"It feels amazing,” he told reporters after the event. “I had some deep runs in the World Series but no bracelets. So, it’s really nice to win my first bracelet in such a big field, and for such a big amount my best cash. We’ll see. First of all, I will pay my taxes. Second, I will have some beer and a party, and I will continue supporting Ukraine and people in need. Maybe I’ll buy a house we will see.”

 

With this win, Plesuv not only got the monkey off his back but claimed the poker result of his career. The Moldovan is sure to be a big threat in the remaining weeks of the World Series.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #53 $1,500 Millionaire Maker Results:

Rank

Player

Country

Prize

1st

Pavel Plesuv

Moldova

$1,201,564

2nd

Florian Ribouchon

France

$1,003,554

3rd

Paul Gunness

United States

$650,058

4th

Andreas Kniep

Germany

$501,182

5th

Anton Smirnov

Russia

$373,524

6th

Myles Mullaly

United States

$287,522

7th

Vitor De Souza Coutinho

Brazil

$222,749

8th

Andras Matrai

Hungary

$173,683

9th

Charles Benoit

Canada

$136,302

 

Lau Lights Up PLO High Roller Event for $2.3m

 

The biggest win of Hong Kong player Ka Kwan Lau’s career took place on the five-handed final day of event #57, the $25,000 buy-in PLO High Roller event. Broadcast on PokerGO, Lau won $2,294,756 as he beat Spanish player Sergio Martinez Gonzalez heads-up for the bracelet. There was a lot on the line, and during the final day, American Roger Teska laddered up, while Mads Amot from Norway busted first.

 

After another exciting final table, Andjelko Andrejevic from Serbia also won a record score as he bagged $989,464 in third place. With the rail packed with supporters from all five different nationalities, it was a thrilling end to an event which also saw players such as Chinese player Quan Zhou (6th for $370,498) and Jeremy Ausmus (8th for $209,392 also made the final stages of yet another bracelet event.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #57 $25,000 PLO High Roller Results:

Rank

Player

Country

Prize

1st

Ka Kwan Lau

Hong Kong

$2,294,756

2nd

Sergio Martinez Gonzalez

Spain

$1,418,270

3rd

Andjelko Andrejevic

Serbia

$989,464

4th

Roger Teska

United States

$701,522

5th

Mads Amot

Norway

$505,588

6th

Quan Zhou

China

$370,498

7th

Firas Kashat

United States

$276,141

8th

Jeremy Ausmus

United States

$209,392

 

Schulz Scores Freezeout Victory for $675k

 

The $3,000-entry NLHE Freezeout Event #59 saw German player Robert Schulz claim gold as he got the better of a quality final table. Barak Wisbrod (4th for $233,657) went into the last day of action with the lead but was unable to see out his maiden WSOP bracelet victory, falling just before the podium places.

 

Elsewhere at the final table, Dario Sammartino finished 5th for $166,404 and Jesse Lonis crashed out in ninth as three players without WSOP titles made the final trio of bracelet hopefuls. After Philippines player James Mendoza busted in 3rd place for $303,884, Schulz went into the final duel with a 4:1 chip lead and saw it out with ace-high beating queen-high in the final hand.

 

Exhausted by filled with pride, Schulz admitted afterward that his temperament really helped him at the final table. “I think I’m on the calmer side,” he said. “Usually, it takes pretty extreme things to put me out of balance. exhausted, relieved, and proud as well. I think I played fine.”

 

Fine enough for a terrific top prize of $675,275 and the moment of his poker career so far.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #59 $3,000 NLHE Freezeout Results:

Rank

Player

Country

Prize

1st

Robert Schulz

Germany

$675,275

2nd

Julien Sitbon

France

$417,338

3rd

James Mendoza

Philippines

$303,884

4th

Barak Wisbrod

Israel

$233,657

5th

Dario Sammartino

Italy

$166,404

6th

Robert Burlacu

Romania

$125,170

7th

Nazar Buhaiov

Ukraine

$95,203

8th

Kunal Patni

India

$73,225

9th

Jesse Lonis

United States

$56,963

10th

Shon Aroeti

Israel

$44,823

 

Brad Ruben Leads NL 2-7 Single Draw

 

Five players are still chasing a bracelet in Event #60, the No Limit 2-7 Single Draw event with a $1,500 buy-in and a $151,276 top prize. Ruben leads the way with 4,265,000 chips, but he has stellar company just behind him in second and third place on the leaderboard.

 

Erik Seidel will shoot for his 10th WSOP bracelet with 3,065,000 chips, while Jason Mercier will fire for his sixth bracelet behind a stack of 2,565,000. Mike ‘Sir Watts’ Watson (2,350,000) and Jon Turner (1,390,000) are the short stacks, but no-one is out of the race yet.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #60 $1,500 No Limit 2-7 Single Draw Leaderboard:

Rank

Player

Country

Prize

1st

Brad Ruben

United States

4,265,000

2nd

Erik Seidel

United States

3,065,000

3rd

Jason Mercier

United States

2,565,000

4th

Mike Watson

Canada

2,350,000

5th

Jon Turner

United States

1,390,000

 

Super Seniors Event Reaches Day 2

 

The record-breaking Super Seniors Event #61 saw Day 2 drama as just 109 players stayed in their seats to count up chips at the close of play. Chip leader was Iranian Farhad Davoudzadeh (2.4m) who was well clear of Jeanclaude Perrot (1,615,000) in second place and Mark Gerecke (1.6m) in third.

 

Only two former bracelet winners exist from 109 entries, meaning its far more likely that a new player wins gold tomorrow night. The top prize of $371,603 will drive players onto glory too, with life-changing money on the line.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #61 $1,000 Super Seniors NLHE Leaderboard:

Rank

Player

Country

Prize

1st

Farhad Davoudzadeh

Iran

2,400,000

2nd

Jeanclaude Perrot

United States

1,615,000

3rd

Mark Gerecke

United States

1,600,000

4th

Ronald Lane

United States

1,525,000

5th

Federico Trujillo

Argentina

1,425,000

 

Carmi in Charge on Day 2 of Event #62

 

The third day of action was reached in Event #62, the $1,500-entry Mixed NLE/PLO event where just 28 players survived until the end of Day 2 of the tournament. Eran Carmi (4,255,000) leads the remaining players, with Charles Honkonen (4,160,000) and Bart Lybaert (4,050,000) in closest attendance.

 

Other stars of the felt such as Upeshka De Silva (3,165,000), Robert Mizrachi (3,100,000), and controversial pro Martin Kabrhel (1,070,000) all remain in with a chance of scoring gold on the final day of action.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #62 $1,500 Mixed NLHE/PLO Leaderboard:

Rank

Player

Country

Prize

1st

Eran Carmi

Israel

4,255,000

2nd

Charles Honkonen

United States

4,160,000

3rd

Bart Lybaert

Belgium

4,050,000

4th

Guofeng Wang

China

3,960,000

5th

Upeshka De Silva

United States

3,165,000

 

Schindler Top of Leaderboard in Seven Card Stud

 

The 63rd event of the 2023 WSOP saw players 141 pony up the $10,000-entry to player Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better two days ago. Today, only 17 remain in with a chance of taking the title with a $344,677 top prize on offer. With two tables of action left, Max Schindler (1.25m) is clear of Andres Korn (926,000) at the top of the leaderboard.

 

With others such as Joao Vieira (837,000), Dan Colpoys (619,000) and Bryn Kenney (601,000) all still in contention, the battle for the latest bracelet tomorrow will be a big one.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #63 $10,000 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better Leaderboard:

Rank

Player

Country

Chips

1st

Maximilian Schindler

United States

1,250,000

2nd

Andres Korn

Argentina

926,000

3rd

Joao Vieira

Portugal

837,000

4th

Ryan Miller

United States

763,000

5th

Yong Wang

China

752,000

6th

Dan Colpoys

United States

619,000

7th

Bryn Kenney

United States

601,000

8th

Craig Chait

United States

498,000

9th

Bruno Fitoussi

United States

467,000

10th

Eddie Blumenthal

United States

427,000

 

Three More Day 1s Conclude

 

The opening day of Event #64, the $600-entry No-Limit Hold'em Deepstack Championship, saw 4,303 entries build a prize pool of just under $2.2million, After 17 levels of play, just 543 players survived to Day 2, with Steven Stolzenfeld (1,190,000), Adel Kabbani (1,052,000) and Milan Timko (916,000) all high up.

 

Others such as John de Los Reyes (793,000), and Etay Akshuta (753,000) were joined in the counts by bracelet winners Yang Zhang (487,000) and Martin Zamani (480,000) as play gets closer to the $271,032 top prize on offer in this event.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #64 $600 NLHE Deepstack Championship Leaderboard:

Rank

Player

Country

Chips

1st

Steven Stolzenfeld

United States

1,190,000

2nd

Adel Kabbani

France

1,052,000

3rd

Jaime Kaplan

United States

955,000

4th

Milan Timko

United States

916,000

5th

Neel Joshi

India

843,000

 

In Event #65, the $5,000-entry NLHE 6-Max event, Yuliyan Kolev (521,000) leads the field of 381 players, with 1,074 entries overall. Elsewhere in the top five, there were strong performances from Matt Berkey (370,000) and Ren Lin (369,000). Taylor Paur (306,000), Rafael Reis (295,000) and Stephen Song (292,500) are all looking to win another bracelet to add to their collections from positions inside the top 20.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #65 $5,000 NLHE 6-Max Leaderboard:

Rank

Player

Country

Chips

1st

Yuliyan Kolev

Bulgaria

521,000

2nd

Ting Yi Tsai

Taiwan

471,500

3rd

Punnat Punsri

Thailand

422,500

4th

Matt Berkey

United States

370,000

5th

Ren Lin

United States

369,000

 

Hot off a final table appearance, Nick Guagenti (656,000) bagged the chip lead in Event #66 as he rose to the top of the leaderboard in the $1,500-entry PLO Hi-Lo 8 or Better leaderboard.

 

With a total of 1,125 players on Day 1, 168 survivors will battle for a top prize of $259,549 from the prizepool of $1,501,875. Just before the close of play on Day 1, the bubble burst, guaranteeing everyone a return of at least $2,409 when Day 2 resumes the action.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #66 $1,500 PLO Hi-Lo 8 or Better Leaderboard:

Rank

Player

Country

Chips

1st

Nick Guagenti

United States

656,000

2nd

Philipp Krieger

Germany

542,000

3rd

Mike Linster

United States

540,000

4th

Robert Campbell

Australia

497,000

5th

Amnon Filippi

United States

489,000

 

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