2021 WSOP Day 9: FiveThirtyEight's Nate Silver Headlines $10K Limit Final Table; Racener Leads

Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor
5 min read
Nate Silver

The ninth day of the 2021 World Series of Poker (WSOP) saw the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino packed to the rafters thanks to six events taking place. Two of those tournaments crowned their champions, with the other four reaching various stages of play.

Harvey Mathews will have a weekend to remember after he won the $371,914 top prize in Event #13: $3,000 Freezeout No-Limit Hold’em. Mathews also secured his first WSOP bracelet, of course.

Rafael Lebron was the other player who became a WSOP champion on Day 9. Lebron triumphed in Event #14: $1,500 Seven Card Stud. He captured the $82,262 top prize and his second bracelet, having taken down the $3,000 Limit Hold’em Six-Handed event in 2016.

Four other events marched towards their conclusions, including the $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship. John Racener leads that event, but there is a certain Nate Silver at the final table, which is sure to garner plenty of interest outside of the poker community. Silver is an elite statistician and writer whose analysis and systems have been used to predict a whole range of outcomes from sporting events through to the U.S. Presidential race.

This is only Silver's fourth WSOP cash — his previous three total $9,310 — but he is guaranteed a career-best score regardless of his finishing position. His systems correctly predicted 48 out of 50 states correctly in the 2020 election. PokerNews wonders where Silver has predicted he will finish in this $10,000 buy-in event.


John Racener Leads Stacked $10,000 Limit Hold’em Championship Final Table

John Racener
John Racener

John Racener leads the way in Event #16: $10,000 Limit Hold’em Championship where only ten players remain from the starting field of 92.

Day 2 lasted 13 hours, slightly longer than anticipated so that the field could be whittled to only ten players. Brian Rast’s elimination in the early hours of October 9 brought the curtain down on an action-packed day.

Racener was the clear chip leader when the dust settled, the former November Niner was the only player to finish with a seven-figure stack in front of them (1,090,000). The ball may be in Racener’s court right now, but he will not have matters his own way at a stacked final table.

Five of the final ten, including Racener, have WSOP bracelets on their poker resume. Jason Somerville (670,000), Kevin Song (515,000), Ray Dehkharghani (315,000), and triple winner John Monnette (270,000) are all gunning for glory.

Throw into the mix Eric Kurtzman (975,000), Scott Tuttle (650,000), FiveThirtyEight's Nate Silver (440,000), and Terrence Chan (350,000) and you have all the ingredients of a classic showdown. There's $245,680 up top and the event kicks off at 4 p.m. PST.

Event #16: $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship Final Table Seating & Chip Counts

SeatPlayerCountryChip Count
1Scott TuttleUnited States650,000
2John MonnetteUnited States270,000
3Ray DehkharghaniUnited States315,000
4Nate SilverUnited States440,000
5Jason SomervilleUnited States670,000
6Christopher ChungUnited States250,000
7Eric KurtzmanUnited States975,000
8Kevin SongUnited States515,000
9Terrence ChanCanada350,000
10John RacenerUnited States1,090,000
Jason Somerville
Jason Somerville

Follow all the action from this star-studded final table


Jeremy Malod Leads Final 8 of Event #15: $1,500 6-Handed No-Limit Hold'em

Jeremy Malod
Jeremy Malod

Only eight players remain in contention to become the champion of Event #15: $1,500 6-handed No-Limit Hold’em after the 96 returning Day 2 players were whittled down over the course of ten levels.

With no former WSOP champions remaining in the field, this event will see a brand new addition to the gold bracelet fraternity. France’s Jeremy Malod will fancy his chances courtesy of finishing the evening with a tournament-leading stack of 7,570,000 chips.

None of the returning players have less than 21 big blinds, so all will fancy their chances of poker glory. Second in chip Bradley Jansen has the more favorable table draw because he is seated with the shorter stacks of the tournament.

Event #15: $1,500 6-Handed NLHE Final Day Seat Draw & Chip Counts

RoomTableSeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
Amazon12Ryan AndradaUnited States4,495,00045
Amazon13Ryan PedigoUnited States4,270,00043
Amazon14Jeremy MalodFrance7,570,00076
Amazon16Jesse YaginumaUnited States5,415,00054
       
Amazon21Jon BaylorUnited States2,130,00021
Amazon23Bradley JansenUnited States6,075,00061
Amazon25Sean HegartyUnited States3,450,00035
Amazon26Mark LiedtkeUnited States2,950,00030

Each of the returning eight players are guaranteed $28,782 regardless of what happens on the final day. There is a cool $313,403 and a WSOP bracelet awaiting the eventual champion, so none of them will want to reel in the smaller amount.

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Yiming Li Bags Millionaire Maker Day 1a Chip Lead

Yiming Li
Yiming Li

The first of two flights in Event #17: $1,500 MILLIONAIRE MAKER No-Limit Hold’em saw 2,568 players buy-in but only 567 of those starters ended the day with their passage to Day 2 secured.

Yiming Li was fastest out of the block, bagging up 487,000 chips at the end of the 11th level. Donavan Dean led right up until the death but finished Day 1a with 391,500 chips, enough for second place.

Scores of established pros safely navigated their way through the Day 1a waters. Mark Dube bagged up 375,000 chips, while Chance Kornuth (324,000), Kitty Kuo (276,500), Asi Moshe (266,500), Craig Varnell (265,500), Jason Wheeler (254,000), and Calvin Anderson (246,500) all finished with healthy stacks.

Further down the overnight chip counts, you find such stars as Anton Wigg (178,500), Shannon Shorr (101,000), Ryan Riess (97,000), and Spain’s Adrian Mateos (70,000).

Event #17: $1,500 Millionaire Maker Day 1a Top 10 Chip Counts

PlacePlayerChips
1Yiming Li487,000
2Donavan Dean391,500
3Mark Dube375,000
4Shan Jing374,500
5R.A. Villaluna366,000
6David Siegel363,000
7Nicholas Lebherz360,000
8Frank Bonacci352,500
9Keyu Qu347,500
10William Nguyen341,000

All your MILLIONAIRE MAKER updates are right here

Day 1b shuffles up and deals at 10:00 a.m. on October 9 and the entrants will play the same 11 levels as the opening flight.


Robert Mizrachi Bags Chip Lead on Day 1 of Event #18: $2,500 Mixed Triple Draw Lowball

Robert Mizrachi
Robert Mizrachi

Robert Mizrachi’s impress form in non-hold’em event continued with him bagging up the chip lead in Event #18: $2,500 Mixed Triple Draw Lowball at the end of Day 1.

Mizrachi has already racked up a third-place finish in the $1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo event, and a seventh-place in the $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo. Now he is on course for a deep run in the $2,500 Mixed Triple Draw tournament.

Day 1 saw 104 of the 253 entrants progress to Day 2, and the field was ridiculously stacked with stars. No fewer than two dozen gold bracelet winners were in the field, showing the lure these events have.

The likes of Julien Martini (180,000), Scott Seiver (177,000), Benny Glaser (129,000), reigning champion Dan Zack (127,500), David Benyamine (112,000), Daniel Negreanu (61,000), Frank Kassela (54,500), and David "ODB" Baker (50,000) and just a handful of bracelet owners to look out for on Day 2. However, none could match Mizrachi’s 201,000 stack.

Event #18: $2,500 Mixed Triple Draw Lowball Top 10 Chip Counts

PlacePlayerChips
1Robert Mizrachi201,000
2Julien Martini180,000
3Scott Seiver177,000
4Carlos Rodriguez174,500
5Domnick Sarle173,500
6Brian Tate173,000
7Philip Sternheimer168,000
8Schuyler Thornton166,500
9Craig Love161,000
10Steve Lee160,000

Play resumes at 2:00 p.m. on October 9 with the plan to play ten hour-long levels. Will Mizrachi still lead at this point? Tune into PokerNews to find out.

Find out if Mizrachi can continue his incredible mixed game form


WSOP Events on Day 10 (October 9)

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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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