2023 World Series of Poker

Event #27: $1,500 Eight Game Mix
Day: 2
Event Info

2023 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
k10
Prize
$198,854
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$1,053,315
Entries
789
Level Info
Level
34
Blinds
0 / 0
Ante
0
Players Info - Day 2
Entries
218
Players Left
21

Caiaffa Draws Good to Triple Up

Level 16

2-7 Triple Draw

Rafael Caiaffa was all in on the first draw from the small blind and up against Dario Sammartino and Jake Schwartz. Schwartz bet from the cutoff and Sammartino called in the big blind.

Sammartino took two, while Schwartz and Caiaffa each took one. Schwartz bet again and this time Sammartino folded.

Schwartz stood pat and revealed a jack-eight low. Caiaffa had 7x8x3x2x showing and took one as he peeled a 6x to make an 8-7 and triple up.

"I was obviously going to break it if you patted," Schwartz told him after the hand.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Dario Sammartino it
Dario Sammartino
140,000
-14,000
-14,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Jake Schwartz us
Jake Schwartz
80,000
-1,300
-1,300
Profile photo of Rafael Caiffa
Rafael Caiffa
70,000

Tags: Dario SammartinoJake SchwartzRafael Caiaffa

Saechao Aborts Mission on the River

Level 16

Limit Hold'em

After Kao "Flexx" Saechao and Hussain Sajwani exchanged four bets each preflop, the duo saw a flop of J?9?8?.

Sajwani bet and got snap-raised by Saechao. The more methodical Sajwani took his time before calling.

On the 8? turn, Sajwani check-called a quick bet from Saechao, and on the 9? river Sajwani checked again.

Saechao bet again, but Sajwani took a moment before raising. Saechao quickly folded his hand to send the pot across the table.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Kao "Flexx" Saechao us
Kao "Flexx" Saechao
110,000
-169,500
-169,500
Profile photo of Hussain Sajwani us
Hussain Sajwani
94,000
58,600
58,600

Zinno Shows Down a Full House

Level 16

Limit Hold'em

Masaki Nakamura was already all in and standing up from his seat filming the action with his phone as Anthony Zinno and Fu Wong built a side pot on a board of Q?8?J?7?Q?.

Zinno, in the small blind, bet and Wong called. Zinno turned over J?J? for the flopped set that turned into a full house on the river as Nakamura flashed A?7? for a beaten flush as he headed for the rail.

"That's so mean. Not you. The runout," tablemate Scott Clements told Zinno after the hand.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Anthony Zinno us
Anthony Zinno
220,000
42,200
42,200
WSOP 4X Winner
Profile photo of Fu Wong us
Fu Wong
10,000
Profile photo of Masaki Nakamura jp
Masaki Nakamura
Busted

Tags: Anthony ZinnoFu WongMasaki Nakamura

Arieh Score an Early Elimination

Level 16
Josh Arieh
Josh Arieh

Pot-Limit Omaha

After Viktor Blom opened to 5,000 under the gun and got a call from Josh Arieh in the small blind, Kevin Song three-bet to 20,000 in the big blind.

Only Arieh called to see a flop of 6x5?7?. He then checkered and Song moved in the rest of his roughly 25,000 remaining chips which Arieh called.

Kevin Song: K?K?10?5?
Josh Arieh: A?10?8?4?

Song's overpair was crushed by the now five-time WSOP bracelet winner's flopped straight, and after the board completed Q?Q?, Arieh had scored one of the first elimination of the day.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Josh Arieh us
Josh Arieh
213,000
52,200
52,200
Team Lucky
WSOP 6X Winner
Profile photo of Viktor Blom se
Viktor Blom
57,000
9,500
9,500
Profile photo of Kevin Song us
Kevin Song
Busted
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Josh AriehKevin SongViktor Blom

Ace-High Good For Bach to Take Big Pot

Level 16

Limit Hold'em

David Bach and Nai Hu had already put in several bets heading to the turn on a board of 9?6?7?2?. Bach, in the cutoff, bet and Hu called from under the gun.

The river came the 2? and Hu checked over to Bach, who checked behind and turned over A?K?. Hu mucked his hand as Bach took down the big pot with just ace-high.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of David Bach us
David Bach
200,000
16,900
16,900
WSOP 3X Winner
Profile photo of Nai Hu tw
Nai Hu
85,000
-12,800
-12,800

Tags: David BachNai Hu

Kipnis Takes From Harder

Level 16

Pot-Limit Omaha

Sean Harder raised to 5,000 from early position and was called by Adam Kipnis in the big blind.

The flop came 10?4?3? and Harder continued for 6,000. Kipnis called to the 2? turn, where he check-called another bet of 8,000.

The 6? fell on the river and Kipnis checked for a third time. "One pair," Harder said as he checked behind.

"Straight," Kipnis answered, showing 5?5?6?6? to add to his stack early on Day 2.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Sean Harder us
Sean Harder
145,000
-18,100
-18,100
Profile photo of Adam Kipnis us
Adam Kipnis
130,000
27,700
27,700

Tags: Adam KipnisSean Harder

Level: 16

Limit Flop/Draw: 2,000-4,000, 4,000-8,000 Limits
Stud Games: 1,000-4,000, 4,000-8,000 Limits, 1,000 Ante
Pot-Limit & No-Limit: 1,000-2,000, 2,000/3,000 Ante

218 Survivors Race to the Money on Day 2 of Event #27: $1,500 Eight Game Mix

Sampo Ryynanen
Sampo Ryynanen

A total of 218 players are looking up at Shaun Deeb’s sparkling hat when Day 2 of Event #27: $1,500 Eight Game Mix begins at 1 p.m. local time.

Deeb, chasing his sixth World Series of Poker bracelet, put himself in pole position as he carries a chip-leading stack of 311,200 into Day 2. Right behind him are Sampo Ryynanen (282,000), Kao “Flexx” Saechao (279,500), Chad Campbell (263,400), and Daniel Vargas (261,700).

Day 2 Top 10 Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip Count
1Shaun DeebUnited States311,200
2Sampo RyynanenFinland282,000
3Kao SaechaoUnited States279,500
4Chad CampbellUnited States263,400
5Daniel VargasUnited States261,700
6David "Bakes" BakerUnited States238,000
7Hugh JoinerUnited States211,800
8Nicolas BartheFrance208,800
9Paul MartinoUnited States205,600
10Ryan RoederUnited States202,600

A record-setting field of 789 filled up the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas yesterday, and many of poker’s biggest names came out for mixed-game action. David “Bakes” Baker (238,000), David Bach (183,100), Anthony Zinno (177,800), and Chino Rheem (141,900) are among those with healthy stacks heading into Day 2. Josh Arieh won his fifth bracelet in the $10,000 Limit Hold’em Championship and jumped right into this event, bagging up 160,800 as he tries to win his second tournament in a row.

Further down the leaderboard are Phil Hellmuth (84,700), Calvin Anderson (84,600), Nick Schulman (81,300), Daniel Negreanu (63,900), and online legend Viktor “Isildur1” Blom, who is trying to cash in a live WSOP event here in Las Vegas for the first time in more than a decade but has his work cut out for him as he carries a stack of 47,500 into Day 2.

The first order of business once play resumes is to reach the money. Only 119 will take home part of the $1,053,315 prize pool, with nearly 100 players leaving today’s action empty-handed. Day 2 consists of 10 60-minute levels, with a 60-minute dinner break after Level 21, which should come around 7:30 p.m.

The race to the money is on. Then it’s a quest to build up a stack and put yourself in a position for the final table. PokerNews will be following the action the entire way, providing live updates and chip counts through the bursting of the bubble and on towards the final table.

Tags: Anthony ZinnoCalvin AndersonChad CampbellChino RheemDaniel NegreanuDaniel VargasDavid BachJosh AriehKao SaechaoNick SchulmanPhil HellmuthSampo RyynanenShaun Deeb