The board read ![]()
![]()
. The pot had about 50,000 in it, from the big blind Hirokazu Miyoshi bet 15,000, Justin Chu raised to 40,000.
Miyoshi considered it for some time before folding his hand.
The board read ![]()
![]()
. The pot had about 50,000 in it, from the big blind Hirokazu Miyoshi bet 15,000, Justin Chu raised to 40,000.
Miyoshi considered it for some time before folding his hand.
The action was picked up on a board ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
, with Alfred Atamian being all in for a remaining stack of 81,000 against Chris Wooden who had a similar stack.
Atamian held ![]()
for a full house on the river while Wooden had ![]()
and got eliminated from the event.
In a battle of the blinds, Martins Adeniya raised to 9,500 and Padraig O'Neill three-bet to 22,000. The action moved back to Adeniya, who tanked for a while. It even took so long that another player called the clock on him but Adeniya jammed for around the starting stack before the thirty seconds ran down with O'Neill calling instantly.
Martins Adeniya: ![]()
![]()
Padraig O'Neill: ![]()
![]()
The ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
board delivered no help to Adeniya and he was sent to the rail.
More than a dozen players in the Paris Ballroom already busted and some tables were balanced within the area while others including the ones containing Majid Yahyaei, John Racener and Ryan Laplante were broken and moved to the Bally's.
Among those to depart were Brian "Woody" Wood and Valentino Konakchev to name a few.
Eric Mizrachi started the day with 36,000 and has secured a double-up in the first level of the day.
Doubled up!!!!!! @WSOP #TeamMizrachi https://t.co/Ald53a1ONP
— Eric Mizrachi (@EricMizrachi)
In a three-way pot, the flop read ![]()
![]()
and all checked to see a
on the turn. Andrei Stoenescu checked to Gavin who bet 6,000 this time and only Fredrico Senno made the call in the cutoff.
The river was the
and Lexy bet another 6,000, which Sanno called but only to muck his cards when Gavin revealed ![]()
.
The board read ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
. Mathieu Pontin had jammed all in and Benjamin Hamman was in the tank. Eventually, he called right as clock was called.
Hammann had the ![]()
but it was no match for the ![]()
quads of Pontin who gathered in a double up.
The heads-up action was picked up with a complete board of ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
on the felt and around 100,000 already in the pot.
Shannon Shorr fired for 34,000 from middle position before his opponent, Douglas Arauj Ferreira in the hijack, put in a raise to 95,000. Shorr went into the tank for a minute or two, but eventually made the call, tossing in a single chip.
Ferreira showed ![]()
for a pair of kings, while Shorr turned over ![]()
for a set of kings, plenty to take the pot and build his chip stack even higher.

Barstool Sports is beginning to have a stronger influence in the poker world, and Isaac Haxton isn't sure if that's a good thing or not. But many others — recreational players and pros alike — are fans of the media giant, and support the exposure Barstool brings to the game.
At the 2022 World Series of Poker, a number of Barstool personalities, some from the popular Cracking Aces poker podcast, competed in the Main Event. While most were felted before the end of Day 2, Adam "Smitty" Smith, aka "General Spank," will enter Saturday's Day 3 session with an above-average stack.