2023 World Series of Poker

Event #3: $1,000 Mystery Millions
Day: 1a
Event Info

2023 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
q7
Prize
$1,000,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,000
Prize Pool
$4,587,950
Entries
18,188
Level Info
Level
48
Blinds
6,000,000 / 12,000,000
Ante
12,000,000
Players Info - Day 1a
Entries
2,023
Players Left
102

Flurry of Action Highlights Day 1a of Mystery Millions

Level 22 : Blinds 15,000/30,000, 30,000 ante
Francis Anderson
Francis Anderson

Francis Anderson leads the way after Day 1a of Event #3: $1,000 Mystery Millions, amassing a stack of 2,750,000 chips at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.

A total of 2,023 entries created an opening day prize pool of $1,800,470. The final 304 players standing received at least a min-cash of $1,062.

Anderson built his stack late in the night when his aces held to climb up the leaderboard. From there, the American pro only added to his stack to lead the remaining 102 players into Day 2. Anderson will be looking to add to his resume, which includes more than $2,000,000 in live cashes.

Event #3: $1,000 Mystery Millions Day 1a Top 10 Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Francis AndersonUnited States2,750,00069
2Bohdan SlyvinskyiUnited States2,310,00058
3David GoniaUnited States2,245,00056
4Dan ColpoysUnited States2,000,00050
5Mattias HansenDenmark1,950,00049
6Justin WrightUnited States1,925,00048
7Rostyslav SabishchenkoUkraine1,550,00039
8Darin UtleyUnited States1,440,00036
9Jimmy D'AmbrosioUnited States1,415,00035
10Tyson RampersadCanada1,370,00034

Fellow Americans Bohdan Slyvinskyi, David Gonia and Dan Colpoys find themselves in the top three stacks as the only players above the 2,000,000 chip mark.

Other notable players bagging at the end of the night include Matt Glantz, Alex Livingston, Daniel Weinman, Maria Konnikova and Ludovic Geilich.

Kelsey Plum
Kelsey Plum

Day 1a Action

The day began with WNBA star Kelsey Plum kicking off play, and Plum later took her seat in the field, looking to add a WSOP bracelet to her new WNBA Championship ring. Unfortunately, her day did not last long after running into Yong Chen’s full house.

Other notable entries who failed to complete the day included comedian Jim Jefferies, along with Dan Shak, Farah Galfond, Lexy Gavin-Mather, Barry Shulman, Josh Arieh and Vanessa Kade. This list also featured a pair of WSOP Main Event Champions in Ryan Riess and Jamie Gold.

The bubble burst rather quickly late in Level 17, and eliminations were fast and furious afterwards. Players have three more chances to qualify for Day 2, as the final three flights will be played beginning June 1. All remaining players will then combine for Day 2, with the mystery bounties in play and the guaranteed top prize of $1,000,000 at stake.

The PokerNews team will continue to follow the event until the mystery bounties are claimed, and a new champion is crowned.

Tags: Alex LivingstonBarry ShulmanDan ColpoysDan ShackDaniel WeinmanFarah GalfondFrancis AndersonJamie GoldJim JeffriesJosh AriehKelsey PlumLexy GavinLonny HarwoodLudovic GeilichMaria KonnikovaMatt GlantzRyan ReissVanessa KadeYong Chen

Aces Hold in Massive Pot for Anderson

Level 21 : Blinds 10,000/25,000, 25,000 ante
Francis Anderson
Francis Anderson

Action was picked up on the turn with the board showing 33K6. The players were heads up and about 150,000 was in the middle. Francis Anderson bet 95,000 from late position and his opponent in the small blind called.

The small blind checked and Anderson announced all in, covering his opponent's stack of roughly 400,000. The small blind was clearly put on a difficult decision but in the end reluctantly put in the call.

Small Blind: K7
Francis Anderson: AA

The river was an inconsequential 4. Anderson's overpair was enough to beat the small blind's top pair and propel his stack to 1,250,000.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Francis Anderson us
Francis Anderson
1,250,000
1,040,000
1,040,000
Day 1A Chip Leader
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Francis Anderson

Livingston's Pocket Pair Holds

Level 19 : Blinds 8,000/16,000, 16,000 ante
Alex Livingston
Alex Livingston

Facing an all-in from the cutoff, Alex Livingston immediately slid his chips into the middle leaving the hands heads up after the rest of the table folded.

Cutoff: AK
Alex Livingston: 55

Livingston's pocket pair was in the lead and faced no danger on the J92310 runout. Livingston wished his opponent well while raking in the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Alex Livingston ca
Alex Livingston
540,000
110,000
110,000
WSOP 2X Winner

Tags: Alex Livingston

Glantz Gaining Ground

Level 14 : Blinds 3,000/5,000, 5,000 ante
Matt Glantz
Matt Glantz

After a raise from early position and a call from the small blind, Matt Glantz came along in the big blind to see the A74 flop.

The small blind's bet of 10,000 was called by Glantz, while the early position player folded. Another 10,000 bet from the small blind followed the 6 turn, with Glantz taking a moment before sliding out a raise to 35,000.

The small blind did not take long to fold, giving Glantz a nice pot to add to his growing stack.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Matt Glantz us
Matt Glantz
275,000
24,000
24,000
Team Lucky

Tags: Matt Glantz

Plum Plummets to Short Stack

Level 11 : Blinds 1,000/2,500, 2,500 ante
Kelsey Plum
Kelsey Plum

With 28,000 in the middle, the board read K7KJ.

Yong Chen was sitting in the big blind and decided to bet 13,000 for Kelsey Plum to make the call from the hijack.

The A completed the board and Chen looked at his cards again before betting 10,000 for Plum to call immediately. Chen tabled the AK for the flopped trip kings and the rivered full house.

Plum mucked, leaving her with a mere 5,000 after playing her first hand of the day.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Yong Chen us
Yong Chen
122,000
122,000
122,000
Profile photo of Kelsey Plum us
Kelsey Plum
5,000
-35,000
-35,000

Tags: Kelsey PlumYong Chen

Gold Builds Early Stack

Level 2 : Blinds 200/300, 300 ante
Jamie Gold
Jamie Gold

Jamie Gold has built a healthy stack early in the tournament. He was under the gun against an opponent in the cutoff to the 976 flop.

Gold bet 600 stating, "Well, I have to bet, the cameras are here."

The cutoff reraised to 2,000, Gold reraised to 5,200 and the cutoff raised all in. Gold snap-called with a flush, showing K5 while the cutoff held 85 for a flopped straight with straight flush redraw.

The cutoff failed to complete his straight flush and Gold chipped up while scoring the early knockout.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Jamie Gold us
Jamie Gold
60,000
60,000
60,000
WSOP Main Event Champion
Commerce Casino & Hotel
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Jamie Gold

Big Field Expected in Event #3: $1,000 Mystery Millions

Quincy Borland
Quincy Borland

The first bounty event of the 2023 World Series of Poker begins at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas with Event #3: $1,000 Mystery Millions.

A large field is expected across four opening flights, as the event continues to grow after last year’s field of 14,112 players created a total prize pool of $12,559,680. Quincy Borland outlasted the field last year to claim the first-place prize of $750,120 to go with the coveted World Series of Poker bracelet. This year, first place will be guaranteed $1,000,000!

The biggest winner of last year’s event was Matt Glantz, who opened the $1,000,000 bounty in addition to earning $20,730 for his 42nd place finish. Multiple million-dollar bounties could be in play this year, with all players surviving into Day 2 eligible for the mystery prizes.

Cards will be in the air at 10 a.m. local time and players begin Day 1a with 40,000 chips. Blinds start at 100/200 with a 200 big blind ante and levels for all opening flights are 30 minutes, with a 20-minute break at the conclusion of every 4 levels. A 75-minute dinner break is also on the schedule, expected to be around 7:00 p.m. The day consists of 22 levels of play and late registration closes after Level 12.

Three more starting flights will follow the same format on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, with all survivors returning for Day 2 on Sunday, June 4th. Players are limited to one reentry per flight, but that means a determined bounty hunter could fire as many as eight bullets in this event.

Be sure to stay tuned to PokerNews for full coverage of this exciting event as we begin the road to the lucky million-dollar bounties and crowning another champion at the World Series Of Poker.

Tags: Matt GlantzQuincy Borland