Michael Rodrigues
Michael Rodrigues wins his first WSOP bracelet in Event #20 at Horseshoe Las Vegas during the 2023 WSOP.

The 12th day of action in the 54th annual World Series of Poker saw the $50,000-entry High roller Event #23 reach the final five, as Justin Bonomo crashed out in sixth place to leave two men battling at the top of the chipcounts in Las Vegas. There were three bracelets won in other events, with Michael Rodrigues and Stephen Nahm both taking WSOP titles for the first time.

Foxen On Top as Bonomo Busts Last

The penultimate day of the $50,000-entry High Roller Event #23 saw all the drama as play went into the money, to the final table and reached just five combatants in style on Day 12 of this year’s WSOP. The highest profile entry by far was that of Phil Ivey who once again max late-regged as he slid into his seat for the start of Day 2.

Ivey, who has won 10 WSOP bracelets, second in the all-time list behind Phil Hellmuth, got it in extremely good, shoving with ace-ten and being called by Brian Rast with ace-six, but the latter overtook Ivey and busted him. Ivey was not the only big name to get unlucky, as Isaac Haxton, the recent $25,000 High Roller winner, struck out when his pocket kings were overtaken by Kristen Foxen’s pocket jacks, a jack coming on the river for maximum pain.

The money bubble was good for Foxen’s husband and the eventual overnight leader, Alex Foxen. On a flop of Ks6h2c, Foxen had Kd2d and managed to get all the chips into the middle against Kornuth’s AhAc. The turn of 7s was followed by a river Jc that sent Kornuth home with nothing and Foxen to the top of the leaderboard.

By the close of play, that’s exactly where it sat, with Alex Foxen on top with 13.4 million chips and the lead. Close behind him was the player who sent Foxen’s wife Kristen from the felt in 18th place, Dutch professional Jans Arends. When the all-time money list leader Justin Bonomo was busted in sixth place by Alex Foxen, the latter grabbed the lead and took out his most dangerous opponent. We’ll have to wait and see until tomorrow to find out how important that elimination really was.

WSOP 2023 Event #23 $50,000 High Roller Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips
1st Alex Foxen Portugal 13,340,000
2nd Jans Arends China 10,300,000
3rd Leon Sturm United States 4,850,000
4th Bill Klein United States 4,675,000
5th Seth Davies Hong Kong 3,940,000

 

Rodrigues Represents Underdog in Badugi Victory

It probably wasn’t intended to be the case but Inter Milan shirt-wearing Portuguese player Michael Rodrigues stuck up for the underdog on Saturday night as he won the 20th event of the 2023 WSOP as he took down the World Series’ first Badugi event for a top prize of $144,678.

As Inter Milan were beaten 1-0 by Manchester City in Istanbul, Rodrigues was coming out on top in Sin City, taking the gold bracelet after Yingui Li from China was defeated in second place. Overnight leader Serhii Popvych finished in third place for $59,879, while the former WSOP event winner Danny Tang slid in fifth for $28,270.

WSOP 2023 Event #20: $1,500 Badugi Results:

Place Player Country Prize
1st Michael Rodrigues Portugal $144,678
2nd Yingui Li China $89,415
3rd Serhii Popovych United States $59,879
4th Matt Vengrin United States $40,996
5th Danny Tang Hong Kong $28,270
6th Owais Ahmed United States $20,557

 

Nahm Gets It Good in PLO Event

Stephen Nahm was the victor in Event #21 as the Canadian won a five-handed battle with four Americans to come out on top and claim one for the maple leaf in Las Vegas. At a top-quality final table, Zachary Peay lost out in fourth place before a three-way all-in produced a double elimination and the winning result.

All-in with what would turn into the high straight, Nahm was the winner when he busted Amir Mirrasouli in third place for $123,060 and Kevin Rand in second place, as the American, who has now reached three WSOP podiums without receiving gold, just missed out on the win again.

WSOP 2023 Event #21 $1,000 Pot Limit Omaha Results:

Place Player Country Chips
1st Stephen Nahm Canada $267,991
2nd Kevin Rand United States $165,616
3rd Amir Mirrasouli United States $123,060
4th Zachary Peay United States $92,231
5th Dan Matsuzuki United States $69,729
6th Ronald Keijzer Netherlands $53,182
7th Gheorghe Butuc Moldova $40,923
8th Jonathan England United States $31,772
9th Thomas Taylor Canada $24,891

 

Idema on Top but Arieh Chasing Fifth Bracelet

Josh Arieh is the short stack but is still well in with a shout of winning his fifth WSOP bracelet tomorrow. That’s because the four-time WSOP winner and the 2021 Player of the Year has 1,060,000 in the Limit Hold’em Championship in Event #22, and with only Daniel Idema (4.4 million) and Nozomu Shimizu (2,385,000) between him and gold, this could yet be Arieh’s time to shine. Either way, it’s a hugely impressive kick-off to the WSOP this year.

Elsewhere at the final table, which was originally scheduled to finish on Saturday night, Joe McKeehen (4th for $107,540) and Nick Schulman (6th for $48,198) both put in strong performances on the day.

WSOP 2023 Event #22 $10,000 Limit Hold’em Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips/Prize
1st Daniel Idema Canada 4,400,000
2nd Nozomu Shimizu Japan 2,385,000
3rd Josh Arieh United States 1,060,000
4th Joe McKeehen United States $107,540
5th Louis Hillman United Kingdom $81,298
6th Nick Pupillo United States $62,255
7th Nick Schulman United States $48,198
8th Kevin Song Argentina $37,967
9th Ronnie Bardah United States $30,248

 

Other Events Wrap Up Busy Days at the Felt

In Event #18, the $300-entry Gladiators of Poker did battle until only 320 of the 8,467 players who pitched up to play were still in seats. That means that overall, just 827 players remain, among them stars of the felt such as Daniel Negreanu, who finished fourth in chips after Day 1a and remains in the upper limits of the overall leaderboard.

On Day 1d, Marcy Jo Phillips was the top scorer, ending the day with 2,965,000, with others such as Robbi Ko (2,865,000) and Casey Tidwell (2,650,000) also making the top five chip stacks.

WSOP 2023 Event #18 $300 Gladiators of Poker Leaderboard:

Rank Player Country Chips
1st Marcy Jo Phillips United States 2,965,000
2nd Robbie Ko United States 2,865,000
3rd Joshua Zerbe United States 2,770,000
4th Casey Tidwell United States 2,650,000
5th Brian Johnson United Kingdom 2,275,000
6th Jeffrey Yanchek United States 2,265,000
7th Bruno Desimoni Brazil 2,250,000
8th Leandro Lorenzi Argentina 2,170,000
9th Matthew Cass United States 2,125,000
10th Renan Bruschi Brazil 2,115,000

 

In Event #24, the $1,500 buy-in Razz event saw William Burke (2,450,000) the top player of just 15 survivors to Day 3 of the event. Burke was the only player to end with over two million chips, with Justin Liberto (1,870,000) and Jeff Lisandro (995,000) both highly experienced players chasing him down and Dzmitry Urbanovich hoping to end his long wait for a WSOP bracelet.

WSOP 2023 Event #24 $1,500 Razz Leaderboard:

Place Player Country Chips
1st William Burke Canada 2,450,000
2nd Justin Liberto United States 1,870,000
3rd Everett Carlton United States 1,755,000
4th Jeff Lisandro Australia 995,000
5th Takashi Ogura Japan 995,000
6th Rafael Concepcion United States 920,000
7th Chris Hundley United States 725,000
8th Marco Johnson United States 695,000
9th Dzmitry Urbanovich Poland 630,000
10th Mickey Doft United States 585,000

 

In the $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo Championship, it is Connor Drinan who leads after a busy Day 1, with 188 entries reduced to just 102 players overnight. Drinan’s stack of 340,000 is some way clear of Damjan Radanov (299,000) and David Williams (293,000) in the podium places, while other big names such as Erik Seidel (162,000), John Hennigan (161,000) and Nacho Barbero (147,000) all ended the day well above average in the top 25 stacks.

WSOP 2023 Event #25 $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo Championship Leaderboard:

Rank Player Country Chips
1st Connor Drinan United States 340,000
2nd Damjan Radanov United States 299,000
3rd David Williams United States 293,000
4th Jason Daly United States 286,000
5th Bryce Yockey United States 270,000
6th Kyle Ray United States 255,000
7th Steve Chathabouasy United States 237,000
8th Zachary Freeman United States 231,000
9th Alan Sternberg United States 225,000
10th Ilkka Heikkila Finland 211,000

 

Ask Josh Arieh what he has to do in order to take down his fifth WSOP bracelet tomorrow and ‘Golfer Josh’ has a pretty simple answer.

Shane Schleger may be the first player to directly reference the movie with which Event #18 has plenty in common.

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