Early in the final day, Michael Mizrachi moves all-in for 11,400,000 from first position with . John Wasnock, with a stack slightly smaller than Grinder, finds himself in the hijack facing a decision with . After a bit of mental debate, Wasnock calls.
The dealer opens , and Mizrachi, stunned by such a start, is left with only 1,900,000.

In the next hand, he gets , but he doesn't know it yet – seeing only one ace, he announces all-in. Everyone folds to Daniel Iachan on the button. With The young mathematician thinks for a long time, then isolates his long-time opponent to 3,200,000. The second card turns out to be a pleasant surprise for Michael. He wins in an all-in.
After a few hands he pushes 2,300,000 . Everyone folds until the big blind, and there's Braxton Dunaway with a good stack and – confident call.
"Did you only see an ace again?" one of Michael's neighbors asks.
"No, now you started with a six," Mizrahi says.
The six turns out to be the key card: the first card to be laid on the table is the king of hearts, and then, one after another, four spades – and Mizrachi doubles up, having collected a flush!
The extravaganza continues.
After folding to a stack of 7,300,000, Mizrachi decides that enough to resteal a big stack open from early position. Dunaway calls with . Once again, Mizrachi makes a one-card flush, this time a diamond. His stack returns to a more or less comfortable 16,000,000.
Mexican Tomas Szwarcberg, with a stack of less than 10bb, is willing to take any pair to go all-in and doesn't hesitate when he gets – pushing all in for 5,400,000. Joey Padron is found in the cutoff , and he decides to isolate more than a third of his stack – 11,000,000.
A bleak situation for Szwarcberg is improved by a hand! Richard Freitas moves all-in for 29,600,000 in the big blind. The pressure on Padron is huge, the pair is not that big, and he is forced to part with it. Freitas turns over , ends up behind Szwarcberg's very small pair, loses the hand, but wins the chips! The only loser here is Padron.

Leo Margets is especially pleased – she sits next to Schwartzberg and happily communicates with him in Spanish. Schwartzberg, by the way, generally does not like to be eliminated from the main tournaments of the World Series – last year he finished 30th, and now he managed to improve this incredible result even more.
Daniel Iachan limpit from the small blind, Tony Gregg checks to the BB . On the flop Iachan posts one blind, gets called. Turn – , both check. Who would have thought that by slow playing the straight, Tony would lose the pot?
River – , a shared straight on the board. Iachan is first to act, and this is a case where position can only hurt. Iachan bets 2,400,000 into a 3,000,000 pot. Gregg knows that calling the split is a mathematically negative idea, and pretending in a limped pot, no one can on the blinds. With a disappointed look, he folds his cards.
Sergio Veloso raises 1,200,000 from the button with , Maksim Pisarenko calls with on BB.
On the flop Veloso makes a continuation bet of one blind, Maksim calls.
Turn – Maksim has no reason to lead, and Veloso decides to slow down – his ace is the weakest, and there is no need to worry about the lower straight draw.
But the top one has to. On the river comes .
Maksim checks slyly. Veloso bets 3,000,000, perhaps hoping to hit with the king. In response, Veloso check-raises to 8,500,000. After thinking for a few minutes, Veloso gives up. Maksim now has 24,000,000.
John Wasnock limpets from the small blind, Iachan with raises to 2,100,000, classically realizing a polarized preflop range. Wasnock calls decisively.
Flop – Wasnock may not be so keen on check-calling, so he immediately takes the initiative and bets half the pot – 2,400,000. Iachan calls with a difference.
Thorn – . The main intrigue is whether the relatively inexperienced amateur will have enough courage for a second barrel. But, Wasnock proves that he is not here by accident. Seeing a bet of 4,500,000, again half the pot, Iachan literally freezes into the chair. It is completely unclear how this runout could help his opponent, but calling is becoming too expensive. And Iachan gives up.
Chris Dombrowski's kings and Diego Ponce' tens clash in the blinds, leaving little choice. All-in preflop, the kings win, leaving Ponce with just 4,500,000.
Muhamet Perati raises 1,200,000 from early position with . Pisarenko finds in the cutoff and raises to 3,200,000. Call follows.
Flop – – innocent enough to make a small continuation bet of 1,800,000. Perati is cautious – check-call.
Turn – The Italian checks, and Maksim decides to check after him.
River – . Perati checks and folds to a big bet of 6,400,000.

Maksim gets 30,200,000.
Iachan raises to 1,200,000 in early position with kings. Daehyung Lee picks up aces in the hijack and reraises to 3,300,000. Iachan ponders for a moment how best to play his hand 20 million deep before deciding to move all-in.
The Korean player doubles up with aces, and the sad Iachan, whose mother is closely watching his performance in the stands, has 9 million left.
Maksim Pisarenko gets aces for the second time in a short time. In front of him, Muhamet Perati raises from middle position with . Maxim is on the button, and his 3-bet sizing decreases slightly to 3,000,000.
Perati 4-bet 8,000,000 and predictably folds to a 5-bet of 26,000,000. Maksim rises to almost 40 million. Unfortunately, the hands stopped winning after that...
Stefan Nemetz raises to 1,200,000 from the button, Joseph Ozimok shoves to 10,900,000 from the BB with . The German calls with , but instead of a knockout, a knockdown occurs – a four comes on the flop, Ozimok doubles up, and Nemetz is left with two and a half blinds.

Padron raises to 1,200,000 in middle position with . Freitas with bluffs 3-bet from the button, choosing a very small sizing of 2,600,000. So small that Padron goes to see the flop even with A9o.
And a killer flop comes out for Freitas. .
Padron – check. Freitas – 2,800,000. Padron – check-raise 6,000,000. Freitas is all-in. Padron, undeterred by an overpair, calls and finds himself far ahead.
The turn and river don't help Freitas, who finishes 24th and takes home $360,000.
Oklahoma native, now Texas-based live pro (or very regular amateur, depending on how you count) oilman Braxton Dunaway raises to 1,700,000 from the small blind with . The Korean ex-baseball player defends BB with .
Flop – . Dunaway checks slyly, and his opponent checks back.
Turn – . Dunaway bets 3,700,000. Villain calls.
River – . Dunaway bets 8,900,000. Lee is hard to fold, of course – nothing hit, no draws closed, and it’s hard to believe in a good ace with wide blind vs. blind ranges. Lee calls, giving Dunaway (60,800,000) the chip lead.
Lautaro Guerra min-raises from first position with 24bb and Dunaway enters on the button with .
On the flop Guerra bets 1,600,000. Dunaway raises to 3,800,000. He has the best hand in the hand – Guerra folds. . But even with stronger aces, he might have had a hard time. Although money is unlikely to put pressure on Lautaro, since his main specialization is very expensive cash.
Sebastian Schulze is all-in for 9,100,000 with , and Perati calls in the BB with . No one steps up, and Perati knocks out the German with ace-high.

23rd place, $360,000. How long will Schulze remember that hand from Day 7 where he folded AQ against a bluffing Hallert? Maybe Fedor Holz will even give a seminar on it, where it will be revealed that Schulze did everything right.
In general, the current main tournament will provide a lot of material for the work of tournament poker experts. We can already begin to anticipate.
The German is followed by the German. Veloso somewhat recklessly shoves 65o from the small blind into the 5,100,000 stack. The German covers him with K8o.
Veloso flops top pair and rivers a straight.
Stefan Nemetz finished 22nd and earned $360,000.
Lautaro Guerra mini-raises from early position. Kenny Haellert moves it up to 3,100,000 with from the hijack.
Dunaway in the small blind , he makes a small 4-bet to 7,800,000. Only Haellert calls.
Board . This does not inspire enthusiasm in either player, and they check to the end. Hallaert probably knows on the river that his ace is no good, but he is not ready to test his opponent's tenacity. Dunaway wins the pot on his second high card and strengthens his lead.

21st place and $360,000 goes to Thomas Schwartzberg.
Adam Hendrix opens with a min-raise from the cutoff with . Szwarcberg 3-bets to 7,700,000 in the small blind , leaving himself with a few chips. Hendrix calls.
Flop – . Szwarcberg checks and calls the all-in. The turn and river don't help him out.

Makism Pisarenko raises to 1,500,000 from the small blind with , Ozimok calls in the BB with .
On the flop Makism continues his aggression with a micro bet of 800,000, Ozimok with a pair and a flush draw makes a simple call.
Turn both are checking.
River . Makism bets 1,300,000. Ozimok reraises to 4,600,000. Maxim makes a hero call, and his stack drops to 25,100,000.
Leaders after the end of the first level of Day 8:
Dunaway – 76,200,000
Hendrix – 69,000,000
Hallaert – 45,200,000
Padron – 43,300,000
Bojovic – 42,000,000
After the break, the blinds rise to 400k/800k/800k. In one of the first hands, Lautaro Guerra doubles up in a preflop all-in in the blinds against Kenny Hallaert, K8o>A5o. Lautaro had only 10bb left.
Even shorter stack Chris Dombrowski waits for a better hand, KJs, though, and moves all-in from the BB after Leo Margets opens from the high deck. Margets calls with AJo. An ace flops.
Chris Dombrowski – 20th place and $360,000.

The pocket pair clashes continue. Leo Margets raises to 1,600,000 from the cutoff with queens. Diego Ponce moves all-in to 11,200,000 with jacks. The board doesn't help anyone, but it doesn't hurt either. Diego Ponce finishes in 19th place, still with $360,000.

Tony Gregg raises to 1,600,000 and is called by Dunaway on the button. Mizrachi, who doesn't seem to play the intermediate bets at all, moves all-in to 17,800,000.
Gregg thinks for a long time and calls with nines. Dunaway folds. Mizrachi has two red queens.

Mizrachi doubles up and Gregg is down to just under 10bb.
The remaining 18 players are seated at two tables. Maksim Pisarenko finds himself at the main TV table, his stack is 25,000,000. Almost the same as at the beginning of the day – 31 blinds.
Tony Gregg doubles up on Perati – 55>ATo.

Hallert raises to 1,600,000 from middle position. Perati finds the small blind . His stack is 17,000,000 and it looks like he has no choice. The Italian moves all-in. Hallert calls with .

The first card on the flop is a queen! "I still rate my chances high," Hallaert suddenly demonstrates his belief in positive thinking...
Flop – . on the turn gives Hallaert extra outs. The river is ! Finally, Kenny manages to win a big pot.
Muhamet Perati, who nearly threw away a top set against Andrey Pateychuk a few days ago, is in 18th place and gets the same $360,000 as most of the players who busted at three tables. The $450,000 payouts start only from 17th place.
Padron raises to 1,600,000 from the hijack. Ozimok in the small blind raises to 6,500,000. Padron has two queens, but doesn't raise – he just calls.
He will regret it after the deal.

On the flop, Ozimok checks, Padron bets 7,500,000. Ozimok calls.
Turn – . Both check. River . Ozimok checks. Padron tries to get 10,000,000, but the aces are too weak to call – 22-year-old crypto investor Ozimok thinks for a couple of minutes and folds.
Stacks during dinner break:
Dunaway – 96,300,000
Hendrix – 61,900,000
Mizrachi – 47,100,000
Veloso – 45,700,000
Bojovic – 39,000,000
Hallaert – 38,900,000
Daehyun Lee – 37,000,000
Padron – 34,500,000
Ozimok – 32,400,000
Pisarenko – 23,600,000
Margets – 22,200,000
Guerra – 21,500,000
Minghini – 19,700,000
Correa – 18,000,000
Gregg – 16,200,000
Wasnock – 15,100,000
Iachan – 15,100,000
After the meal, the blinds rise to 500k/1m/1m.
Serbian pro and another Fedor Holz student Luka Bojovic raises to 2,000,000 from early position. Iachan, in the big blind with 15 big blinds, goes all-in with nines. Bojovic calls with AKs. An ace comes on the turn, and the WSOP Main Event is over for Daniel Iachan – 17th place and $450,000.

Who will take over from Michael Mizrachi in his absence?
Maksim 3-bets for value, but is forced to fold to a 4-bet.

“It’s not a bluff, I’m just a coward,” he explains to his neighbors.
He has 16,400,000 left.
Leo Margets raises to 2,000,000 from the hijack. Sergio Veloso in the small blind sees and simply goes all-in for 32,700,000.
At the young lady's , and she makes the call. The Portuguese player's tournament life is in jeopardy.
Huge pot! The flop comes with an ace: . Thorn – . River – ! Leo gets the flush.


Sergio Veloso exits in 16th place for $450,000, giving Leo Margets $71 million and a real chance to become the first woman since Barbara Enright to finally reach the final table of a World Series of Poker Main Event. After four-tenths of a place!

The most high stakes live Omaha professional, Lautaro Guerra, finishes the tournament in 16th place. On a raise from Hendrix from the cutoff, Guerra decides to push 16 blinds from the button with KJo. Hendrix calls with AKo and improves first to a pair of aces, and then to a flush.

Ruben Correia opens from middle position to 2,400,000. Luka Bojovic manages to fold two nines in the hijack. John Wasnock in the cutoff moves all-in for 26,300,000 with (Maybe Bojovic saw his cards and didn't want to take a risk? Or is this even a correct ICM fold at two tables of the WSOP Main Event?)
The word is now back to Padron on the button, who also has a good hand – two jacks! He asks to count Wasnock’s stack and decides that it’s too expensive – he folds.
Now it's Correia's turn to choose. He has 17 million behind him and he makes the call!
A straight is placed on the table to the nines that were thrown out in the fold – .
Ruben Correia leaves the tournament in 14th place and receives $450,000. A small pay jump follows.
The shortest is Maksim Pisarenko, and he is, unfortunately, next in line to leave. Having received , he raises to 5,000,000 from first position, about half his stack. Minghini moves all-in from middle position with – looks like courage bordering on recklessness, but he is used to it.
Everyone folds, and Maksim, who has done everything he could, calls.
They put it on the table , and Maksim takes 13th place. His prize is $560,250.

In an interview, Maxim says that he is very happy.

Do we believe him?
An interesting ICM spot for Tony Gregg comes preflop when he gets a raise from Leo Margets and a call from the small blind from Mizrachi. Gregg has 20 blinds and . He decides to call.
He flops top pair but finds himself in a sandwich after Mizrachi leads for 5,000,000.

Gregg quickly chooses the most conservative option. Leo also folds, suggesting that they continue the conversation about Andorra, a small country between Spain and France, a tax and ski paradise where she lives. The country's sporting potential enthuses the former professional snowboarder Minghini.
In the next hand, Gregg tries to outplay Mizrachi in a different way, but instead of going all-in, he chooses a small 3-bet.

“All in,” Mizrachi says readily, and Gregg quickly throws away his best hand.
Nick Shulman said that he always had a lot of trouble playing against Tony Gregg – he couldn't read, he always made the wrong decisions. But Mizrachi has no problems with this opponent!
Hallaert raises 2,700,000 from first position. Dunaway in the BB calls with .
On the action flop of , both are checking.

Dunaway bets 3,000,000.
"Dunaway is leading on 'our' card, usually for value. I'd like to see a raise," says Shulman.
Hallaert raises to 9,500,000.
Dunaway looks at his opponent a little puzzled, then studies the board closely. Hallaert is impenetrable. Dunaway eventually comes to the call.
River – . Dunaway checks. The pot is 26,200,000, and he needs to pick a sizing. Hallaert bets 17,000,000. Dunaway looks like a pure bluff catcher, and Kenny doesn't have many natural bluffs (Shulman came up with And with a heart, but it's Shulman...). Nevertheless, Dunaway makes a call relatively quickly and decisively.
Hallaert is up to 80.5 million, Dunaway is still first with 85.6 million.
Almost immediately, Kenny is forced to give several million to the Mizrahi fund.

Michael makes a bold all-in move and Hallaert can't call.
Dunaway raises to 2,400,000 with but Mizrachi on the button doesn't fold . He fusses with his chips for a long time, it seems like he's about to 3-bet, but in the end he makes a less than orthodox call!
Flop – . Dunaway bets 3,000,000. Michael quickly calls.
Turn – . The pair reduces their desire to barrel, Dunaway checks. Mizrachi checks back.
River – Dunaway certainly has showdown value, but it's weak. And he tries to push through – 7,300,000, a little more than half the pot.
“The king of spades is a pretty good card to call,” Shulman says as Mizrachi thinks.
And Mizrachi makes that call!
Both players are very happy.

The youngest remaining Main Event participant finishes in 12th place ($560,250).

– This is the best experience of my life. I will definitely be back next year!
– What does your future look like?
– There will be a lot of poker!
Hallaert bluffs in a multiway pot. Minghini raises the flop, gets two calls from the blinds. Minghini flops second pair, and checks back. Hallaert bets about 40% of the pot on the turn with a combo draw. He gets rid of Dunaway, but not Minghini.
On the river, the Belgian continues with another neat bet of a value size, representing a hand like .


But scaring a snowboarder is a hopeless task. Even Jarod's girlfriend said in an interview that he is always drawn to places where there is a smell of danger. Minghini counts out the required amount and makes the call! Leo Margets is impressed – she either pats or strokes Jarod on the shoulder.
Tony Gregg's misadventures against Mizrahi lead to a tragic end.

Already on the turn, Gregg is left without outs – Mizrachi, as usual, collects a flush.
“One of the best tournament players in the history of poker and a wonderful person,” says Nick Schulman, seeing Gregg off.
11th place, $750,000.
Gregg is a friend and backer of Greg Merson, a very strong online reg in the early 2010s, who played under the nickname "wwwBTHEREcom". In 2013, he won one of the first super-expensive tournaments in poker history, the One Drop for $111,111, for which he received $4,830,000. Merson, the 2012 world champion, was asked in an interview what they did for each other over the years of friendship. The former world champion honestly admitted that he hardly did anything for Tony, but he has always been a role model, mentor and source of unconditional support for him.
Gregg himself seems to be the only one of those eliminated who tells the pure truth in a blitz interview:
– It’s a very tough feeling, and tomorrow will be even worse. When you’re in a tournament, all your energy goes into the game, everything is subordinated to the daily routine, which ensures the highest level of play, and after you’re eliminated, you feel a huge emptiness. That’s exactly what happened last time. Fortunately, now my life outside of poker is richer than before. In terms of the game, I have no complaints about myself in general. I would have played a couple of hands differently on other days, but for such a tense tournament, I think I handled it well overall.

The "last time" was in the 2016 Maine, when he finished 50th.
The 10 remaining players sit down at one table.

Three American chip leaders sit next to each other, and Mizrachi has position on the other two.

However, at a 10-max table all this is not so important, the game goes strictly according to the map, until someone breaks...
Padron becomes the final table bubble boy for the 2025 World Series of Poker Main Event.

Bojovic sets a trap with AKo, calling an UTG raise from the amateur Wasnock. Padron, who also appears to be an amateur but far less experienced, decides it's time and squeezes all-in.
Padron flew to Vegas from Alaska to play just two tournaments, the $300 Gladiators of Poker and the $1,000 mini-main. He busted out of both and called his wife before heading home. "You'll never forgive yourself if you don't play the main. Me and the kids, we'll wait..."

Wasnock calls! And Bojovic is confused. It seems like he set a trap, but in fact Wasnock has more chips, so he himself might end up in a trap. After much thought, he refuses to go all-in and adds chips to call.
On the turn, Padron is left without outs and can only save himself if one of his opponents decides to knock the other out of the pot and a call card comes on the river. However, the opponents are not going to fight for a side pot that is equal to zero and check together.

The river is a jack repeat, check – check. Joey Padron gets $750,000 for 10th place. Classic, easy-going, fat amateur from the American heartland, John Wasnock, wins a big pot and doesn't even try to hide his delight.
Happy and Leo Margets.


John Wosnock will start the official final table as the chip leader.

– Three hours ago I had 10 blinds. But I was going well, I played well, and everything worked out. Do what you have to do, and come what may.


Now the nine finalists can try to catch up on their sleep – the next day is a day off for them. And then they will return to play for the most important bracelet of the World Series in two days.

Chip Counts at the End of Day 8
- John Wasnock – 108,100,000
- Michael Mizrachi – 93,000,000
- Braxton Dunaway – 91,900,000
- Kenny Hallaert – 80,500,000
- Leo Margets – 53,400,000
- Luka Bojovic – 51,000,000
- Adam Hendrix – 48,000,000
- Daehyung Lee – 34,900,000
- Jarod Minghini – 23,600,000
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