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The WSOP Main Event trimmed its field from 149 to 49 on Day 6 of the biggest World Championship in poker history. On a busy day of action at both the Horseshoe and Paris casinos in Las Vegas, there were two more bracelets won, including a sixth career WSOP title for poker legend Josh Arieh in the $25,000 H.O.R.S.E. High Roller event.

 

Main Event Led by Joshua Payne with 49 Remaining

 

The sixth day of action in the WSOP Main Event saw 149 players start the day. Across five more two-hour levels, 100 players lost their tournament lives, as big names fell in general. Of the 49 remaining players, only four players have ever won a WSOP bracelet before, with no-one having won two. One of the remaining hopefuls will walk away with the biggest Main Event prize of all time - $12.1 million.

 

The chip leader after Day 6’s conclusion is Joshua Payne, who bagged up and incredible stack of 47,950,000 after eliminating the Day 5 chip leader Zachary Hall late in the day. Payne by name, pain by nature for the former pace-setter, but while the American’s lead is a big one, so too was Hall’s 24 hours ago and the 23-year-old Payne – who came 553rd last year for $25,500 - will be taking nothing for granted with Juan Maceiras Lapido (40.5 million) and Daniel Weinman (24,375,000) just behind him in the podium places.

 

 There are plenty of big players behind the top trio, with Alec Torelli (21m) surfacing in sixth place after a late flurry not dissimilar to the chip leader. Daniel Scroggins (20,800,000) and Nick Gerrity (18m) also made the top ten.

 

Outside of the top ten, two men who have already clashed in a huge hand survived to make Day 7, in British poker hero Toby Lewis (15.2m) and Daniel Vampan (17m). Vampan, if you’ve forgotten, bluffed Lewis off a big pot on Day 5, but the pair are both still involved, although they missed each other in the Day 7 table draw. Lewis is at a table including no fewer than four British players, who in total represent seven of the 49 players remaining, a high proportion for any country outside America.

 

With big names such as Tony Dunst – who lost to Andrew Hulme’s straight flush – and Nicholas Rigby both departing on Day 6, there will be more drama tomorrow as the deep end really is reached, with another five two-hour levels expected across Day 7. Barstool Nate, a.k.a. Nathan Silver, lost his stack in 91st place on Day 6, with the overnight chip leader, Zachary Hall, seeing his stack disappear in 51st place.

 

In a year where many were predicting a female player would reach the final table, it transpired that no ladies would reach Day 7. India's Nikita Luther and France's Estelle Cohuet both busted before the end of the day, with Cohuet's run to 68th place the deepest female run of the Main Event this year.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #76 $10,000 Main Event World Championship Day 6:

Rank

Player

Country

Chips

1st

Joshua Payne

United States

47,950,000

2nd

Juan Maceiras Lapido

Spain

40,500,000

3rd

Daniel Weinman

United States

24,375,000

4th

Richard Ryder

United States

22,650,000

5th

Tim Van Loo

Austria

21,700,000

6th

Alec Torelli

United States

21,075,000

7th

Daniel Scroggins

United States

20,800,000

8th

Pierpaola Lamanna

Italy

18,875,000

9th

Nicholas Gerrity

United States

18,075,000

10th

Ryan Tamanini

United States

17,325,000

 

Josh Arieh Wins Sixth Bracelet in H.O.R.S.E. Heroics

 

Winning two bracelets this summer, Josh Arieh joined Chad Eveslage and Chris Brewer in achieving that particular landmark by taking down the $25,000 H.O.R.S.E. High Roller Event #80. Even better, the man known as ‘Golfer Josh’ put himself into second place on the WSOP Player of the Year leaderboard, now only behind Ian Matakis with between ten and a dozen events or so to come.

 

At a top-quality final table, Arieh denied Dan Heimiller the chance to scoop gold and outlasted a final table including Joao Vieira and John Hennigan, both of whom finished inside the top six. Mike ‘The Mouth’ Matusow slid out in fifth after Razz was his nemesis and Arieh claimed another victim on his path to glory.

 

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

Rank

Player

Country

Prize

1st

Josh Arieh

United States

$711,313

2nd

Dan Heimiller

United States

$439,622

3rd

Yingui Li

China

$319,906

4th

Joao Vieira

Portugal

$236,163

5th

Mike Matusow

United States

$176,904

6th

John Hennigan

United States

$134,491

7th

Johannes Becker

Germany

$103,795

8th

Scott Seiver

United States

$81,337

9th

Hal Rotholz

United States

$64,733

 

Bernabeu Leaves Others Drawing Blancos

 

Samuel Bernabeu won his first WSOP bracelet and the top prize of $682,432 as he closed out the $2,500-entry No Limit Hold’em Event #79. James Anderson came in second after the overnight leader Seth Davies fell in fourth place. All the momentum in the final stages was with the Spanish pro, who celebrated with his rail as he won his first bracelet.

 

Fellow Spanish professional Ana Marquez told PokerNews after the event: “He’s a really great guy and poker player. He loves the game and is very creative. He even created his own revolutionary poker deck with five suits instead of four and wants to introduce it to the world at some point.”

 

If this is how good Bernabeu is with four suits, imagine his edge with five.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #79 $2,500 No Limit Hold’em Results:

Rank

Player

Country

Prize

1st

Samuel Bernabeu

Spain

$682,432

2nd

James Anderson

United States

$421,761

3rd

Zlatin Penev

Italy

$310,528

4th

Seth Davies

United States

$310,528

5th

Diego Vaz Sorgatto

Brazil

$230,772

6th

Justin Kindred

United States

$137,121

7th

Ramon Fernandez

Spain

$100,252

8th

Derek Normand

United States

$77,401

9th

Daniel Schill

United States

$60,346

 

Malboubi Mastering the Ultra Stack

 

From a massive field of 4,116 players on Day 1B of the $600-entry Ultra Stack event, just 312 players made it to Day 2 and the money places. A total of 7,207 entries in Event #81 have made it a huge bracelet event to win and it is the American player Rassoul Malboubi (3,615,000) who has given himself the best chance at doing so after bagging the lead late on Day 1B.

 

Malboubi, who has already made the final table of this year’s Super Seniors event, is trailed in the top ten by players such as Leonard Clementi (3,500,000) and David Rich (2,950,000), with bracelet heroes Qiang Xu (2,940,000), Brett Apter (1,520,000) and Scott Bohlman (1,205,000) all present inside the top 65 places.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #81 $600 Ultra Stack Day 1B Leaderboard:

Rank

Player

Country

Chips

1st

Rassoul Malboubi

United States

3,615,000

2nd

Leonard Clementi

United States

3,500,000

3rd

David Rich

United States

2,950,000

4th

Qiang Xu

China

2,940,000

5th

Robert Sherwood

United Kingdom

2,880,000

 

Connor Drinan Chasing WSOP Dream in PLO 6-Max

 

Connor Drinan is one of a number of top professionals in good shape going into Day 3 of the $3,000-entry PLO 6-Max Event #82. Dustin Goldklang (4,225,000) is a big chip leader, but Drinan (3,270,000) was next best after a frantic Day 2 saw 216 players who started the day reduced to just 35 survivors.

 

Overnight chips leader Tyler Gaston (1,745,000) is still hopeful of victory, with WSOP Player of the Year leader Ian Matakis (1,150,000) still in the hunt for a bracelet which could decide that overall leaderboard result.

 

WSOP 2023 Event #82 $3,000 PLO 6-Max Leaderboard:

Rank

Player

Country

Chips

1st

Dustin Goldklang

United States

4,225,000

2nd

Connor Drinan

United States

3,270,000

3rd

Marc Lagaze

United States

2,530,000

4th

Matthew Parry

United States

2,500,000

5th

Benjamin Juhasz

Hungary

2,480,000

6th

Lukas Zaskodny

Czech Republic

2,035,000

7th

Brandon Shack-Harris

United States

1,865,000

8th

Tyler Gaston

United States

1,745,000

9th

Joshua Stefansky

United States

1,670,000

10th

Eric Hayes

United States

1,430,000

 

Two Events End Day 1 Flights

 

Two more events came to a conclusion of their Day 1 flights on Day 44 of the WSOP. In Event #83, the $1,500-entry Short Deck NLHE event, David Prociak ended the day on 2 million chips and leading the final nine. Players such as Robert James (1,622,000) and Ryan Laplante (771,000) will both have designs on denying Prociak the title.

 

In Event #84, the $50,000 High Roller, Yang Wang (2,175,000) topped the counts, with Fedor Holz (1,990,000) close behind. Others to reach the top ten chipcounts included Dylan Linde (1,770,000) and the 2022 WSOP world champion Espen Jorstad (1,340,000) on a day where legends such as Isaac Haxton, Kristen and Alex Foxen and Chris Brewer all busted.

 

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