Christian Rudolph Is The WCC Main Event Final Table Chip Leader

Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor
3 min read
Christian Rudolph

The partypoker World Cup of Cards Main Event has reached its nine-handed final table. Some 1,008 partypoker players bought into the tournament for $1,100 but only nine of them remain in the hunt for what is a $166,993 top prize. There is a familiar name at the top of the chip counts, a certain Christian Rudolph.

World Cup of Cards Main Event Final Table Chip Counts

PlacePlayerCountryChips
1Christian RudolphAustria45,461,136
2Mikhail MikheevRussia38,006,492
3Pedro FernandesBrazil31,841,707
4Joel NystedtAustria24,053,330
5Peter ChienCanada17,771,040
6Nikita KalininRussia12,451,304
7Andras NemethHungary12,241,476
8Dmitry YurasovBelarus11,289,173 
9Finn KruckGermany8,484,342

Christian Rudolph Wins WPT Online Series Main Event ($487,443)

Rudolph’s peers regard him as one of the best No-Limit Hold’em poker tournament players of his generation; he has won it all. Rudolph can boast of being a World Series of Poker bracelet winner, and only last month he took down the WPT Online Series Main Event for $487,442. Now Rudolph looks set to get his hands on an additional six-figure prize in another partypoker event.

While Rudolph is the pre-final table favorite, all eyes are on the man in second place. Russian grinder Mikhail Mikheev may not be a household name just yet, but he has already made a name for himself. Mikheev won his $1,100 seat via one of partypoker’s popular Mega Satellites. He turned that $109 into 2,269,677 chips on Day 1B and built from there. Mikheev is guaranteed at least $13,606 for his efforts but has his eye on one of the two six-figure prizes waiting to be won.

World Cup of Card Main Event Final Table Payouts

PlacePrize
1$166,993
2$115,038
3$79,105
4$51,740
5$35,502
6$27,455
7$21,680
8$17,212
9$13,606

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The rest of the final table is littered with stellar names, each of whom has a legitimate chance of becoming the WCC Main Event champion. Joel Nystedt returns to the virtual felt in fourth place with Canada’s Peter Chien one place behind.

Slightly further down the chip counts, you find the Hungarian superstar that is Andras Nemeth with Dmitry Yurasov sitting down at the final table as the second-shortest stack. Despite his lowly position at the restart, Yurasov still has more than 20 big blinds in his stack.

Watch The Main Event Final Table Action

The WCC Main Event final table is brimming with stars and should make spectacular viewing. Cards are in the air from 8:05 p.m. BST on July 8 and you can watch the epic cards-up coverage via partypoker’s Twitch channel from 8:30 p.m. BST.

Join James Dempsey and Henry Kilbane as they provide insightful, entertaining commentary as the action unfolds before your very eyes.

Time to Join partypoker?

Do not worry if you missed out on the chance to become the World Cup of Cards Main Event champion because partypoker has plenty more events in the pipeline. Now is the time to join partypoker if you do not already have an account because the site has recently improved its welcome offer.

Download partypoker via PokerNews, create your free account, and get ready to choose your welcome bonus. Deposit at least $10 to receive $10 worth of SPINS and tournament tickets. Increase that deposit to $20 and $30 worth of tickets are all yours.

Deposit $10 to receive $10 in tickets over the course of a week:

  • Day 1: 2x $1 SPINS tickets + 1x $3.30 MTT ticket
  • Day 2: 4x $0.25 SPINS tickets
  • Day 4: 1x $3.30 MTT ticket
  • Day 6: 4x $0.25 SPINS tickets

Deposit $20 and receive $30 worth of tickets over the course of a week:

  • Day 1: 1x $5 SPINS ticket + 1x $3.30 MTT ticket
  • Day 2: 2x $1 SPINS ticket + 1x $5.50 MTT ticket
  • Day 4: 1x $5.50 MTT ticket
  • Day 6: 2x $3 SPINS tickets + 1x$3.30 MTT ticket

Furthermore, your first deposit comes with a 100% up to $600 first deposit bonus. The more you deposit, the larger your bonus is. It is that simple.

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Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor

Matthew Pitt hails from Leeds, West Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom, and has worked in the poker industry since 2008, and worked for PokerNews since 2010. In September 2010, he became the editor of PokerNews. Matthew stepped away from live reporting duties in 2015, and now concentrates on his role of Senior Editor for the PokerNews.

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