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Day 4 of the WSOP Main Event saw 1,517 players begin the action at the Horseshoe and Paris casinos in Las Vegas, with just 44 surviving to the end of the day. Some previous world champions busted while others survived as stars of the felt battled to make it really deep in the big one, but there were three other events in progress too, as players such as Josh Arieh thrived in the $25,000-entry H.O.R.S.E. High Roller.

 

Bubble Bursts on Day 4 of Main Event

 

The record-breaking field of 10,043 players in this year’s WSOP Main Event has already been trimmed to just 441 survivors. Day 4 of the world’s biggest-ever Main Event saw drama, excitement and some of the biggest players in the world make their way from the tables as former champions fell at either the Horseshoe or Paris casinos in Las Vegas.

 

At the close of play, it was the American player Ryan Tosoc (5,120,000) who held the chip lead, just one big blind ahead of Mitchell Halverson (5.1 million), who made it all the way to the last two tables just 24 months ago. With players such as Scott Berko (4.7m) and John Racener (3.71m) in the top ten, no-one is likely to be holding the chip lead for too long a period over the next couple days at the felt.

 

The biggest news on Day 4 of the Main Event was that the money bubble burst, with three players being busted on the same hand. They split the first two money places of $15,000 three ways, meaning they each got their money back, with an extra $10,000 ‘bubble prize’ of entry into next year’s Main Event going to Jeppe Bisgaard.

 

Big names such as 2023 bracelet winner Jason Mercier, chess grandmaster Alexandra Botez, Day 1 boss Doug Polk, Allen ‘Chainsaw’ Kessler, ‘Boston Rob’ Mariano, British crusher Stephen Chidwick, and Michael ‘Grinder’ Mizrachi all busted inside the money places but outside of a deep run.

 

Four of the highest-profile former Main Event winners lost their tournament lives on Day 4, with 2006 winner Jamie Gold crashing out. The double world champion from 1987 and 1988, Johnny Chan, also lost his stack, while the 2009 WSOP Main Event champion Joe Cada and the more recent winner Scott Blumstein slid out of contention too.

 

Another strong day went into the books for Nicholas Rigby, as the ‘Dirty Diaper’ soared for most of the day before dropping a little to 3.65 million by the close of play, still good for 12th place out of the 441 players who remain. It is still anyone’s $12.1 million top prize and title of world champion.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #76 $10,000 Main Event World Championship:

Rank

Players

Country

Chips

1st

Ryan Tosoc

United States

5,120,000

2nd

Mitchell Halverson

United States

5,100,000

3rd

Aditya Systla

India

5,075,000

4th

Scott Berko

United Kingdom

4,700,000

5th

Bradley Moskowitz

United States

4,145,000

6th

Juan Maceiras Lapido

Spain

3,985,000

7th

Jon Cohen

United States

3,815,000

8th

Gabi Livshitz

Israel

3,800,000

9th

John Racener

United States

3,710,000

10th

Quan Zhou

China

3,705,000

 

Scarborough Faring Well as Last Day in Lucky 7’s Looms

 

Anthony Scarborough leads the final five players into the action in the $777-entry Lucky 7’s Event #77. With a massive stack of 140 million chips, he’d got almost double his nearest challenger’s stack, as French player Julien Montois bagged up 70.7 million in second place.

 

The leaderboard may be limited but it is packed with quality. Shawn Daniels (47.4m) will still feel supremely confident of winning his first bracelet, as will Hungarian Istvan Briski (32.4m) with Charles La Boissonniere (13.4m) hoping for a miracle from short stack. Whoever wins, it will be the first time they’ve worn the gold WSOP bracelet.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #77 $777 Lucky 7's Leaderboard:

Rank

Players

Country

Chips

1st

Anthony Scarborough

United States

140,000,000

2nd

Julien Montois

France

70,700,000

3rd

Shawn Daniels

United States

47,400,000

4th

Istvan Briski

Hungary

32,400,000

5th

Charles La Boissonniere

Canada

13,400,000

 

Seth Davies Stars on Opening Day of Event #79

 

American pro Seth Davies bagged the biggest chip stack on Day 1 of the $2,500-entry NLHE Event #79 on Monday, with his stack of 1,113,000 joined by Ramon Fernandez as the only two stacks above a million from 310 survivors.

 

A total of 2,068 entries saw others such as bracelet winners Alex Lindop (858,000), Galen Hall (743,000) and Brent Shaffer (615,000) make the top dozen, while big names Renan Bruschi (493,000), Rafael Reis (475,000) and David Miscikowski (394,000) easily cruised into the upper limits of the leaderboard too.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #79 $2,500 No Limit Hold'em Leaderboard:

Rank

Players

Country

Chips

1st

Seth Davies

United States

1,113,000

2nd

Ramon Fernandez

Spain

1,025,000

3rd

Alex Lindop

United Kingdom

858,000

4th

Valentyn Shabelnyk

Ukraine

776,000

5th

Daniel Rudd

United Kingdom

774,000

6th

Diego Vazsorgatto

Brazil

757,000

7th

Galen Hall

United States

743,000

8th

Alex Greenblatt

United States

739,000

9th

Elias Fisz

Netherlands

690,000

10th

Ignas Jasinevicius

Lithuania

682,000

 

Arieh the Leader in H.O.R.S.E. Race

 

Josh Arieh top-scored on Day 1 of the $25,000-entry H.O.R.S.E. High Roller Event 80. The five-time WSOP bracelet winner, who already has a bracelet win this summer, crushed the opposition to pile up a massive 621,500 chips on Day 1 of this high-roller event.

 

With stars of the mixed game circuit such as Nacho Barbero (504,000), Matt Glantz (463,000), Andres Korn (461,000) and Michael Moncek (415,000), who also chases his second bracelet win this summer, still in the top 10, Arieh will not have it all his own way. He’ll be tough to stop too, however, as he pursues yet another bracelet and the outside shot at the WSOP Player of the Year title he won just two years ago. Of 98 entries so far, only 56 found a bag and none fuller than Arieh’s.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #80 $25,000 H.O.R.S.E. High Roller Leaderboard:

Rank

Players

Country

Chips

1st

Josh Arieh

United States

621,500

2nd

Motoyoshi Okamura

Japan

565,000

3rd

Yehuda Buchalter

United States

511,000

4th

Nacho Barbero

Argentina

504,000

5th

Hal Rotholz

United States

478,000

6th

Matt Glantz

United States

463,000

7th

Andres Korn

United States

461,000

8th

Max Hoffman

United States

451,000

9th

Michael Noori

United States

445,000

10th

Michael Moncek

United States

415,000

 

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PokerGO, WSOP, John Racener, Chris Moneymaker, Nicholas Rigby, johnny chan, 2023 WSOP, WSOP 2023