2021 World Series of Poker

Event #67: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Main Event World Championship
Event Info

2021 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
107
Prize
$8,000,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$62,011,250
Entries
6,650
Level Info
Level
41
Blinds
1,200,000 / 2,400,000
Ante
2,400,000
Players Info - Day 9
Entries
3
Players Left
1

Jack Oliver Eliminated in 3rd Place ($3,000,000)

Level 40 : 1,000,000/2,000,000, 2,000,000 ante
Jack Oliver
Jack Oliver

Hand #168: Jack Oliver jammed for 35,700,000 in the small blind and Holmes in the big blind asked for a count. After one minute and 11 seconds of consideration, Holmes made the call.

Jack Oliver: {a-Clubs}{8-Diamonds}
George Holmes: {q-Spades}{j-Spades}

The {8-Hearts}{7-Hearts}{5-Spades} flop kept Oliver in the lead with a pair of eights but the {j-Clubs} turn improved Holmes to the superior pair.

Nothing changed on the {9-Hearts} river and that spelled the end for Oliver in third place. He takes home $3 million for the efforts and there will now be a short break before heads-up play gets underway.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Koray Aldemir de
Koray Aldemir
261,900,000
Day 8 Chip Leader
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of George Holmes us
George Holmes
137,400,000
35,700,000
35,700,000
Profile photo of Jack Oliver gb
Jack Oliver
Busted

Tags: George HolmesJack Oliver

A New World Series of Poker Main Event Champion Will be Crowned

The Final Three
The Final Three

Out of a field of 6,650 total entries, only three contenders remain in the hunt for the title in the 2021 WSOP Main Event. The biggest slice of the $62,011,250 prize pool will be up for grabs today and the next world champion will earn the top prize of $8,000,000.

Germany's Koray Aldemir retained his role as the overwhelming chip leader heading into the nine-handed final table and leads the trio of hopefuls by a wide margin. He returns with a stack of 264,600,000 and that represents more than his two final opponents have at their disposal combined.

After a dramatic end to Day 8 the previous evening, the UK's Jack Oliver claimed the second-biggest stack of 77,300,000 while Atlanta, Georgia's George Holmes returns with 57,400,000 in chips. While he is the shortest stack, Holmes still has 36 big blinds worth when the action resumes at 2 p.m. local time at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino.

2021 WSOP Main Event Chip Counts

SeatPlayerChip CountCountryBig Blinds
1Koray Aldemir264,600,000Austria165
2Jack Oliver77,300,000United Kingdom48
3George Holmes57,400,000United States36

No longer in contention for the title of world champion are Joshua Remitio (4th - $2,300,000), Ozgur Secilmis (5th - $1,800,000), Hye Park (6th - $1,400,000), Alejandro Lococo (7th - $1,225,000), Jareth East (8th - $1,100,000), and Chase Bianchi (9th - $1,000,000) as they were eliminated throughout the first 125 hands of the final table.

Final Table Results and Remaining Payouts

PlaceWinnerCountryPrize (in USD)
1  $8,000,000
2  $4,300,000
3  $3,000,000
4Joshua RemitioUnited States$2,300,000
5Ozgur SecilmisTurkey$1,800,000
6Hye ParkUnited States$1,400,000
7Alejandro LococoArgentina$1,225,000
8Jareth EastUnited Kingdom$1,100,000
9Chase BianchiUnited States$1,000,000

The action resumes with one hour and 45 minutes remaining in Level 39 at blinds of 800,000/1,600,000 and a big blind ante of 1,600.000. All levels will last two hours each until a winner is crowned and the significant pay jumps among the final three spots will certainly play a pivotal role.

Stay tuned for the conclusion of the pinnacle live poker event of the year right here on PokerNews, as the live reporting team will provide hand-for-hand coverage until a winner is crowned. The final showdown can also be followed on the PokerGO streaming platform which provides cards-up coverage and commentary on a security delay of one hour.

Tags: Alejandro LococoChase BianchiGeorge HolmesHye ParkJack OliverJareth EastJoshua RemitioKoray AldemirOzgur Secilmis