2023 World Series of Poker

Event #25: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship
Day: 1
Event Info

2023 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
k1085
Prize
$492,795
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$1,971,600
Entries
212
Level Info
Level
27
Limits
150,000 / 300,000
Ante
0
Players Info - Day 1
Entries
188
Players Left
102

Drinan, Radanov, and Williams Bag Big on Day 1 of $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship

Level 10 : Limits 3,000/6,000, 0 ante
David Williams
David Williams

The next Championship Event of the 2023 World Series of Poker at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas has kicked off and it was yet another strong turnout for the high-stakes action in Sin City. Throughout ten levels in Event #25: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship, a field of 188 unique players has emerged and 102 contenders advanced.

The attendance of the previous year, which drew a field of 196 entries, has been all but reached and may very well be surpassed as the late registration remains open until the start of Day 2 on Sunday, June 11, at 1 p.m. local time in the Purple Section of the Grand Ballroom at the Paris Hotel.

Defending champion and 2022 WSOP Player of the Year Daniel Zack entered during the later stages and bagged up 77,000 in chips, which puts him in the bottom half of the Day 1 survivors. Connor Drinan secured the top spot with 340,000 in chips followed by Damjan Radanov (299,000) and David Williams (293,000) while the overnight top ten also include Bryce Yockey (270,000) as well as Event #10: $10,000 Dealer's Choice Championship third place finisher Zachary Freeman.

Top 10 Chip Counts After Day 1

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig BlindsBig Bets
1Connor DrinanUnited States340,0008543
2Damjan RadanovUnited States299,0007537
3David WilliamsUnited States293,0007337
4Jason DalyUnited States286,0007236
5Bryce YockeyUnited States270,0006834
6Kyle RayUnited States255,0006432
7Steve ChanthabouasyUnited States237,0005930
8Zachary FreemanUnited States231,0005829
9Alan SternbergUnited States225,0005628
10Ilkka HeikkilaFinland211,0005326

In a field filled with some of the biggest names of the international and mixed games poker scene, notables such as Erik Seidel (162,000), John Hennigan (161,000), Brad Ruben (137,000), David "Bakes" Baker (134,000), and Brandon Shack-Harris (103,000) all advanced. Furthermore, the likes of Sam Farha (139,000), Todd Brunson (100,000) and Jen Harman (47,000) made a rare appearance and advanced to Day 2.

Sam Farha
Sam Farha

Among the well-known casualties were Frankie O'Dell, Joao Simao, Brian Yoon, Robert Mizrachi, Eli Elezra, Yueqi Zhu, Elior Sion and Phil Hui to name all but a few. The WSOP bracelet winners Anthony Zinno and Anson Tsang saw their chips scooped up in consecutive hands on the same table, whereas John Monnette and Tom Koral saw their chips vanish in multi-way action, too.

Late entrants have until 1 p.m. local time on June 11 to enter the fray and will start their journey with 60,000 in chips. That represents 15 big blinds and 7.5 big bets in level 11, which features blinds of 2,000-4,000 and limits of 4,000-8,000. As of Day 2, the level duration increases to 90 minutes each with a break every level. It is expected that the second of four tournament days will get close to or even beyond the money bubble.

The PokerNews live reporting team will be back on the floor until a winner has been determined within the next three tournament days, which are set to include numerous split pots, three quarters, and scoops en route to crowning a champion.

Tags: Anson TsangAnthony ZinnoBrad RubenBrandon Shack-HarrisBrian YoonBryce YockeyConnor DrinanDamjan RadanovDaniel ZackDavid WilliamsEli ElezraFrankie O'DellJen HarmanJohn MonnettePhil HuiSammy FarhaTodd BrunsonTom KoralYueqi ZhuZachary Freeman

Three Hands: Two Seat Open and a Chop

Level 10 : Limits 3,000/6,000, 0 ante
Anson Tsang
Anson Tsang

Anthony Zinno was already all-in and multi-way action behind unfolded with Zachary Freeman betting the K104K turn when checked to. Anson Tsang called from under the gun while Van Law folded.

Tsang checked the 10 river and folded to a bet by Freeman, who turned over the K642. Zinno's AQ75 was no good and he hit the rail.

Tsang was in the big blind next and check-called on the 983 flop when John Hennigan bet, Brad Ruben check-called as well. Tsang checked the K turn for Ruben to bet and Hennigan to call and the same action repeated on the 2 river. Tsang had a single T-1,000 chip behind and sigh-called all-in.

Ruben tabled the AK87 for kings and eights with a seven low, while Hennigan tabled the AQ95 for the superior low. Tsang's J764 had missed straight outs and he hit the rail, too.

Last but not least, Freeman was scooped on a board of A62J2 when his A1075 could not secure either the low or high. The low belonged to Andrew Brown with the AQ53 as his short-stacked all-in chopped up some profit against the AKK4 of Jake Schwartz.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Zachary Freeman us
Zachary Freeman
230,000
Profile photo of Jake Schwartz us
Jake Schwartz
150,000
87,000
87,000
Profile photo of John Hennigan us
John Hennigan
110,000
110,000
110,000
WSOP 7X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Profile photo of Van Law us
Van Law
95,000
43,000
43,000
Profile photo of Brad Ruben us
Brad Ruben
80,000
-40,000
-40,000
WSOP 4X Winner
Profile photo of Andrew Brown us
Andrew Brown
25,000
-27,000
-27,000
Profile photo of Anson Tsang hk
Anson Tsang
Busted
WSOP 3X Winner
Profile photo of Anthony Zinno us
Anthony Zinno
Busted
WSOP 4X Winner

Tags: Andrew BrownAnson TsangAnthony ZinnoBrad RubenJake SchwartzJohn HenniganVan LawZachary Freeman

Dirksen and Daly Scoop Farha

Level 9 : Limits 3,000/6,000, 0 ante
Dustin Dirksen
Dustin Dirksen

In a four-way four-bet pot preflop, only Dustin Dirksen, Sammy Farha and Jason Daly remained involved on the 653K turn when Dirksen was all-in for the last 5,000, earning two calls. On the 4 river, there was no further action and Dirksen flashed his A842 for the nut low and straight to the six.

Farha was scooped with the 6543 as he made four pair while the 8652 of Daly earned half of the high pot.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Jason Daly us
Jason Daly
175,000
-14,000
-14,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Dustin Dirksen us
Dustin Dirksen
85,000
25,000
25,000
Profile photo of Sam Farha us
Sam Farha
65,000
WSOP 3X Winner

Tags: Dustin DirksenJason DalySammy Farha

Koral Sent to the Rail by Shack-Harris and

Level 8 : Limits 2,500/5,000, 0 ante
Brandon Shack Harris
Brandon Shack Harris

Tom Koral was all-in after the three-way flop of A63 before the K turn and 5 river completed the board. Brandon Shack-Harris bet and Ilkka Heikkila called as the cards were revealed.

Shack-Harris tabled the KK53 for a set of kings, Heikkila had the A532 for the nut low. Koral's A843 for two pair and inferior low earned no portion of the pot and he was eliminated.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Ilkka Heikkila fi
Ilkka Heikkila
135,000
135,000
135,000
Profile photo of Brandon Shack-Harris us
Brandon Shack-Harris
110,000
40,000
40,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Tom Koral us
Tom Koral
Busted
WSOP 2X Winner

Tags: Brandon Shack-HarrisIlkka HeikkilaTom Koral

Levi Eliminated by Rheem

Level 7 : Limits 2,000/4,000, 0 ante
David Levi
David Levi

David Levi had chopped in the previous hand to stay in contention with a severe short stack and was then all-in preflop against Chino Rheem.

David Levi: A962
Chino Rheem: A772

They joked about just chopping it and not dealing a board, which then ran out AJ277 to eliminate Levi.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Chino Rheem us
Chino Rheem
43,000
13,000
13,000
Profile photo of David Levi us
David Levi
Busted

Tags: Chino RheemDavid Levi

Nakamura Rivers a Straight to More Than Double

Level 6 : Limits 1,500/3,000, 0 ante
Tamon Nakamura
Tamon Nakamura

Patrick Stacey raised and Tamon Nakamura three-bet for Sachin Ramrakhani to call, Stacey also stuck around. On the J93 flop, it checked to Nakamura and his bet was called by both opponents. The same action repeated on the 4 turn and Stacey then bet the 2 river.

Nakamura raised all-in for 5,700 and Ramrakhani folded, while Stacey called with the A642. Nakamura tabled the AA53 for a six-high straight and nut low to leap back into contention.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Sachin Ramrakhani us
Sachin Ramrakhani
45,000
-3,500
-3,500
Profile photo of Tamon Nakamura jp
Tamon Nakamura
30,000
-20,000
-20,000

Tags: Patrick StaceySachin RamrakhaniTamon Nakamura

Deeb Scoops With "Two Pair"

Level 3 : Limits 800/1,600, 0 ante
Shaun Deeb
Shaun Deeb

Dylan Lambe raised and Shaun Deeb three-bet for Kyle Ray to call out of the small blind, Lambe also called. On the K104 flop, Ray and Lambe check-called and Ray was then the only one to check-call the K turn and 9 river.

Deeb announced "two pair" to which Ray exposed his A332 for the nut flush. Only then, the cards of Deeb were shown as he flashed the KK102 for quads to rake in the pot. Early on Day 1, Deeb has nearly doubled his stack while Lambe is on fumes.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Shaun Deeb us
Shaun Deeb
105,000
45,000
45,000
Team Lucky
WSOP 6X Winner
Profile photo of Kyle Ray us
Kyle Ray
46,000
-16,000
-16,000
Profile photo of Dylan Lambe us
Dylan Lambe
13,000
-38,000
-38,000

Tags: Dylan LambeKyle RayShaun Deeb

Welcome to the $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship, Kicking Off at 2 PM

Daniel Zack
Daniel Zack

The 2023 World Series of Poker at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas continues with Day 1 of Event #25: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Championship, which begins at 2 p.m. local time.

We’re likely to see a large field of elite players, including defending champion Daniel Zack. At the 2022 WSOP, the all-time high of 196 entries created a total prize pool of $1,827,700, and saw Zack capture his second gold bracelet and the $440,757 first-place prize. Zack reached the promised land after a grueling seven-hour heads-up battle with Dusten Dirksen, on a final table that also included bracelet winner Alex Livingston and Kane Kalas.

Notable players that cashed last year's event include Todd Brunson in 12th, Connor Drinan in 19th, and Mike "The Mouth" Matusow in 29th.

There’s a bit of a tweak to this year’s structure, as Levels 1-6 will drop to 40-minutes from 60-minutes, Levels 7-10 will be 60-minutes long, and Levels 11 and beyond will be 90-minutes, giving players plenty of play as the tournament progresses to run up their 60,000 chip starting stack. Players will play ten levels today and receive a 15-minute break every two hours of play, with late registration open until the start of Day 2.

LevelDuration (min)BlindsLimits 
140300-500500-1,000 
240300-600600-1,200 
340400-800800-1,600 
  15-minute break  
440500-1,0001,000-2,000 
540600-1,2001,200-2,400 
640800-1,5001,500-3,000 
  15-minute break  
7601,000-2,0002,000-4,000 
8601,500-2,5002,500-5,000 
  15-minute break  
9602,000-3,0003,000-6,000 
10602,000-3,0003,000-6,000 

As always, be sure to stick with PokerNews for live coverage of this championship event.