The Only Mini Thing About the Mini Main Event is Its Name
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 #78: $1,000 Mini Main Event No-Limit Hold'em here at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas. The event is patterned after the Main Event, so it is a freezeout with no reentries allowed.
This three-day event begins at 10 a.m. local time, with late registration open for 12 levels (≈ 5:00 p.m.). There will be 20-minute breaks every four levels or during color-ups. A 75-minute dinner break is scheduled after Level 16 (≈ 7:00 p.m.).
The starting stack is 60,000 chips and Day 1 will consist of 22 30-minute levels. For the surviving players, Day 2 resumes at 11 a.m. local time Wednesday and plays until only five players remain. Day 3 start time has yet to be decided.
Last year’s event drew 5,257 entrants, who created a $4,678,730 prize pool. America's Brad Gafford came out on top, raking in $549,555 and his first WSOP bracelet.
Year | Entries | Prize Pool | Winner | Country | Payout |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2023 | 5,257 | $4,678,730 | Brad Gafford | United States | $549,555 |
2022 | 5,833 | $5,191,370 | Young Sik | United States | $594,189 |
2021 | 3,823 | $3,400,609 | Georgios Sotiropoulos | Greece | $432,575 |
2020 | Not Held | ||||
2019 | 5,521 | $4,968,900 | Jeremy Saderne | France | $628,654 |
Are you planning on playing at this event? PokerNews activates MyStack for every WSOP event, regardless of that tournament's buy-in, allowing you to adjust your chip counts directly in our live reporting pages.
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 2024 WSOP?
- After finishing as the runner-up last year, Japan's Shiina Okamoto triumphed in the $1,000 Ladies No-Limit Hold'em Championship, banking $171,732 and a well-deserved first bracelet.
- WPT announcer Tony Dunst won the third bracelet of his career after taking down a $500 No-Limit Hold'em Deepstack online event for $134,887.
- The $25,000 High Roller Pot-Limit Omaha is down to only five players and Brian Rast is among them. Rast is hunting for a seventh career bracelet to add to his already incredible legacy.