2023 World Series of Poker

Event #9: $1,500 Seven Card Stud
Day: 1
Event Info

2023 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Prize
$110,800
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$480,600
Entries
361
Level Info
Level
35
Blinds
0 / 0
Ante
0
Players Info - Day 1
Entries
361
Players Left
101

Dzmitry Urbanovich Bags Day 1 Chip Lead of $1,500 Seven Card Stud

Level 15
Day 1 Chip Leader Dzmitry Urbanovich
Day 1 Chip Leader Dzmitry Urbanovich

Day 1 of Event #9: $1,500 Seven Card Stud has come to an end at the 2023 World Series of Poker with Dzmitry Urbanovich emerging as the Day 1 chip leader after amassing 292,000 through 15 levels of play.

The event drew a total of 339 players, which surpassed last year's field of 329 and generated a total prize pool of $480,600. Only 101 of them will return to the action today. The final 54 players will make the money with the eventual winner taking home a cool $110,800 in addition to a WSOP bracelet.

Urbanovich, who has an EPT title and more than $6 million in reported tournament earnings, built his stack steadily throughout the day and is in pole position to make a run at his first WSOP bracelet.

Other notables who survived into Day 2 include Shaun Deeb (255,500), Victor Ramdin (187,500), John Cernuto (123,000), Ari Engel (115,000), Barry Greenstein (97,500), and Nick Schulman (241,500), who scooped a massive pot late in the day to bag as one of the chip leaders.

Top Ten Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Bets
1Dzmitry UrbanovichPoland292,00037
2Chris HundleyUnited States261,50033
3Shaun DeebUnited States255,50032
4Nick SchulmanUnited States241,50030
5John MonnetteUnited States222,50028
6Joseph VillellaUnited States208,00026
7Ben YuUnited States191,00024
8Tim FrazinUnited States189,50024
9Victor RamdinUnited States187,50023
10Kevin IacofanoUnited States185,50023

Among the less fortunate were Brandon Shack-Harris, Eli Elezra, Ethan "Rampage" Yau, Alex Foxen, David Williams, and Daniel Negreanu — all of whom busted out before the day's end.

Absent was defending champion Alex Livingston, who instead was running deep in overlaying Event #6: $5,000 Mixed No-Limit Hold'em/Pot-Limit Omaha. Livingston ended up getting third place in the event for $235,062.

The remaining 101 players will return June 3 at 1 p.m. to play an additional 12 levels, which will be extended to 60 minutes each. The money bubble will burst once the field gets down to 54 players as mentioned before.

Be sure to stick with PokerNews as we continue to bring you all the action from this and other WSOP bracelet events throughout the day at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.

Tags: Alex LivingstonBrandon Shack-HarrisChris HundleyDzmitry UrbanovichEli ElezraJohn MonnetteNick SchulmanSean Deeb