2024 World Series of Poker

Event #48: $1,000 Pot-Limit Omaha (8-Handed)
Day: 1
Event Info

2024 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
k1074
Prize
$262,734
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,000
Prize Pool
$1,946,560
Entries
2,212
Level Info
Level
32
Blinds
125,000 / 250,000
Ante
265,000
Players Info - Day 1
Entries
2,212
Players Left
128

Four Card Fun Takes Center Stage at 2024 WSOP

Stephen Nahm
Stephen Nahm

Welcome back to PokerNews, the official media partner of the 2024 World Series of Poker and home of live updates from all bracelet events.

Today sees the start of Event #48: $1,000 Pot-Limit Omaha here at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.

This three-day event gets underway at 2 p.m. local time, with late registration open for nine levels. There will be 15-minute breaks every three levels, with a 60-minute dinner break at the end of Level 9 (~6:40 p.m.). Players are permitted two reentries.

The starting stack is 20,000 chips, with the plan for Day 1 to play 17 40-minute levels or down to 15 percent of the field, whichever is later. For the surviving players, Day 2 resumes at 12 p.m. Wednesday, where level duration increases to 60 minutes. A winner will be crowned on Day 3.

Last summer, Stephen Nahm conquered the massive field of 2,071 entries and scored a double knockout on the final hand to win his first bracelet and the $267,991 up top.

“Every poker player, obviously, comes here—you dream of this shit, right? I kinda made my dream come true a little bit; I’m not going to lie.” Nahm told PokerNews after his victory.

2023 WSOP Main Event champion Daniel Weinman is also a previous winner of this event, reigning supreme in 2022.

YearEntriesWinnerCountryPayout
20232,017Stephen NahmCanada$267,991
20221,891Daniel WeinmanUnited States$255,359
20211,069Dylan WeismanUnited States$166,461
2020-Not held--
20191,526Luis ZedanUnited States$236,673
2018986Filippos StavrakisUnited States$169,842

Planning on playing this event? PokerNews activates MyStack for every WSOP event, regardless of that tournament's buy-in, allowing you to directly adjust your chip counts in our live reporting

MyStack is a free poker tool that puts you in control of your chip counts on our live reporting pages. Once you have created a free PokerNews account, you can use MyStack to update your chip counts in real time; hopefully, your stack will continue increasing throughout the event!

Become a Bigger Part of the Action With MyStack

What Else is Happening at the WSOP?

Scott Seiver
Scott Seiver

Tags: Stephen NahmDaniel Weinman