Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu won his seventh WSOP bracelet by taking down the one they all want to win, the $50,000 Poker Players Championship.

The triumph of one of poker’s biggest icons in one of the most prestigious tournaments in poker will be what the poker public remembers most from Day 31 of the 2024 World Series of Poker, but there were also a staggering 12 WSOP bracelet events in play on Thursday at Horseshoe and Paris casinos in Las Vegas, with a total of six bracelets doled out and three new events on the docket.

Negreanu Records Sensational Seventh Bracelet With PPC Victory

For 10 years, eight months and five days, ‘Kid Poker’ was stuck on six. Daniel Negreanu won his first bracelet back in 1998, then earned three more in the 2000’s and two more in 2013, and most poker fans thought the race to the title of most bracelets earned would be a fight between Phil Hellmuth, Phil Ivey and Daniel Negreanu. But as Hellmuth expanded his 13 bracelets to 17 in that span, and Ivey’s nine turned into 11, Negreanu couldn’t break through, finding five runner-up performances but no bracelet from 2014 until the 2024 Poker Players Championship.

Today, that drought is over.

Negreanu now holds what could arguably be his crowning achievement in the poker world, a victory in Event #58, the $50,000-entry Poker Players Championship for $1,178,703 and his seventh career WSOP bracelet, moving him into a tie with John Hennigan, Men Nguyen and Billy Baxter for seventh all time in career bracelets. He reiterated the importance of this event to him in his interview with PokerNews, stating, “There is one event in the world I want to play more than any and I wanted to win more than any, and it’s this one.”

To earn the most prestigious bracelet in his ever-expanding coffers, he needed to finish the job at a final table of crushers; despite starting in second out of the final five, he was almost a fair distance back of Chris Brewer at the start of the final table. David Benyamine would fail to spin up his micro stack, falling in Razz when Bryce Yockey outdrew his 9-8-5 with a 9-8-3 on seventh street. Dylan Smith wouldn’t make it out of the Razz round either, as he was drawing dead going into seventh against Yockey’s 7-5-4 to bring the stacks nearly even three-handed.

Brewer slowly started to bleed down while Yockey and Negreanu battled for the chip lead. After losing a considerable chunk of his stack in 2-7 Triple Draw, Brewer tried to get sneaky with aces, choose to just call a raise from Yockey after a Negreanu button limp, and all three players saw a Th5s3s flop. Yockey led for 600,000, Brewer raised to 2.3 million, and Negreanu tank-folded QcTc. Yockey jammed for Brewer’s last 325,000 with JsTs and the duo was off to the races. That race turned out to be over before the finish line, however, as the 7s made Yockey’s flush draw and left Brewer dead before the river could fall.

Yockey started heads-up with a 3:2 advantage in chips, one he quickly expanded to 5:2 in Omaha Hi-Lo. Negreanu hung tough, however, retaking the lead at one point before Yockey made a wheel in 2-7 Triple Draw, collecting quite a few bets from Negreanu before he folded on the river. A PLO hand a few hours later turned out to be pivotal hand of the match, as Negreanu jammed his last 5.125 million in with 9d8d4c2c on a 7h6c2h flop, holding a pair, straight draw and backdoor club flush draw. Yockey was waiting with AsAhJsJd and called, and after the Kd turn, looked primed to lock up his third WSOP bracelet. But fate had other plans and plunked the 2s on the river, making Negreanu trip deuces and surging him back into the chip lead.

The orbit of games would go by one more time before another PLO hand ended the tournament. Yockey got his last 6.1 million in on a 7cTc7h flop with 9c6s3s2c, a gutshot and a nine-high flush draw and was looking to improve against Negreanu’s AdQsJc7s. It was Negreanu that improved instead on the Qh turn, rendering Yockey dead to the Qc river, and Negreanu yelled “Yo Adrian, we did it!” to his wife Amanda, referencing his beloved Rocky movies as he finally reached the pinnacle of his WSOP career to date.

WSOP 2024 Event #58: $50,000 Poker Players Championship Final Table Results:
Place Player Country Prize
1st Daniel Negreanu Canada $1,178,703
2nd Bryce Yockey USA $768,467
3rd Chris Brewer USA $519,158
4th Dylan Smith USA $363,914
5th David Benyamine France $265,054
6th Jeremy Ausmus USA $200,896
7th Phil Ivey USA $158,719

Spitale Wins Memorable Final Hand and Maiden Bracelet in Milly Maker

A pair of millionaires were made at the final table of Event #54: $1,500 Millionaire Maker No-Limit Hold’em, but Argentina’s Franco Spitale went one step further, earning $1,250,125 and his first WSOP bracelet (that he promised to give to his daughter, Emma) after starting the final day as chip leader and fending off a pair of aggressive foes in three-handed play.

Charles Kersey and Harvey Jackson started the day short and were the first two casualties of the final table, with Paul Saso joining them shortly after. The trio of Spitale, Justin Carey and Stephen Dauphinais were separated by under a single big blind at that point, and it took two more levels for Dauphinais to get whittled down to just over 12 big blinds, which went in with the KsJs over a Spitale limp. Spitale had set the trap with the AsQd, and a benign 5h8dTs7hQs runout left Spitale with a slight lead over Carey leading up to the exciting finale.

In the final hand, Carey limped in on the button for 4 million, and Spitale raised to 14 million. Carey then jammed for 98 million effective, and Spitale called it off with AcTs. With more than two-thirds of the chips in play in the pot, Carey found the Th2d5h flop to send his rail into a frenzy. Spitale needed runner-runner to earn the bracelet at this point, and lo and behold, the Ah hit the turn to breathe new life into the man with a rail screaming “Messi!” Spitale found another ace from space on the Ad river, and he dropped to his knees much like Messi would after celebrating a goal, earning himself a shower of beer and the adoration of one of the more animated rails seen so far at the WSOP, along with more than a million bucks and his first piece of WSOP gold.

WSOP 2024 Event #54: $1,500 Millionaire Maker Final Table Results:
Place Player Country Prize
1st Franco Spitale Argentina $1,250,125
2nd Justin Carey USA $1,001,169
3rd Stephen Dauphinais USA $651,039
4th Paul Saso USA $500,109
5th Harvey Jackson USA $376,469
6th Charles Kersey USA $289,630
7th Jason Hickey USA $224,270
8th Alex Kim USA $174,800
9th Owen Savir USA $137,150

Jazayeri Finally Earns First Bracelet in Super Seniors

Despite holding a WPT championship back in 2012, a WSOP bracelet had eluded Sean Jazayeri during a poker career that’s been in gear since 2009. Event #59: $1,000 Super Seniors No-Limit Hold’em finally saw Jazayeri break back through, notching his first career bracelet along with $368,025, his second biggest career payday to date.

11 players returned for the final day of play, and when the official final table of nine was reached, Yucel Eminoglu had a monster lead over the rest of the field, sitting with almost a third of the chips left in play. Despite most of the remaining players wielding short stacks, it took the better part of two levels for the dam to break, as three players fell in quick succession near the end of Level 33. Eminoglu then busted Felix Barriga in a massive flip before dispatching Gary Fisher as well, and after Naelic Minaya fell in fourth, Eminoglu took care of Paul Runge to command a solid chip lead of more than double Jazayeri’s stack heading into heads-up action.

The talkative and confident Eminoglu found his first major bump in the road shortly into heads-up, doubling Jazayeri up when his QcTh failed to improve against the As4s. Jazayeri then made a flush and picked up a sizable pot off Eminoglu to leave him short. Jazayeri would jam a few hands later with the AhTh and get called by Eminoglu’s As8h. Jazayeri would end up with the stone nuts on a Qh4h3dAd6h runout to eliminate Eminoglu and send the title of most Super Senior and a WSOP gold bracelet to Jazayeri.

WSOP 2024 Event #59: $1,000 Super Seniors No-Limit Hold’em Final Table Results
Place Player Country Prize
1st Sean Jazayeri Argentina $368,025
2nd Yucel Eminoglu Turkey $238,748
3rd Paul Runge USA $178,250
4th Manelic Minaya USA $134,075
5th Gary Fisher United Kingdom $101,606
6th Felix Barriga Chile $77,584
7th Michael Minetti USA $59,693
8th Kevin Song USA $46,281
9th Buck Bucceri USA $36,161

Boi Plays Comeback Kid to Earn $3k NLHE Gold

For most of the tournament, including the final day of action in Event #60: $3,000 No-Limit Hold’em, Paolo Boi of Italy spent his time nursing a short stack. The patience in navigating one of poker’s more anxiety-inducing scenarios paid massive dividends, as he topped the 1,773-entrant field for his first WSOP bracelet and $676,900 in prize money after denying poker pro Noel Rodriguez in heads-up play.

Only 13 players returned for the final day of action, but Chris Klodnicki (12th – $37,580) was one of four players who failed to make the official final table of nine. Vanessa Kade and Noel Rodriguez were the most well-known players to make the final table, but Kade started the final table short and never gained any traction before falling in eighth place. When the field fell down to the final five, a very lengthy five-hour battle began with no eliminations and a plethora of lead changes. Boi at one point held just five big blinds, but battled back and eventually took the chip lead when he caught an all-in bluff from Justin Belforti with the nut flush. That bustout led to two more eliminations in short order, and Boi and Rodriguez began heads-up with Boi enjoying a 6:1 chip lead.

Rodriguez would manage one double before the final hand, where Boi raised to 1.8 million on the button with blinds at 400k/800k, and Rodriguez made the call. Rodriguez check-raised a 2 million chip bet from Boi on a JdJh3c flop to 4.8 million, and Boi stuck around with a call. Rodriguez fired another 5.6 million on the 6s turn, and Boi called again. The Ks completed the board, and Rodriguez jammed for 16.7 million. Boi, who would be down to just over 15 million if he called and lost, mulled it over before calling with TcTd, and it would prove to be the best call of his life, as Rodriguez was bluffing with the Qc9d.

WSOP 2024 Event #60: $3,000 No-Limit Hold’em Final Table Results
Place Player Country Prize
1st Paolo Boi Italy $676,900
2nd Noel Rodriguez USA $451,299
3rd Juan Vecino Spain $326,883
4th Brandon Mitchell USA $239,451
5th Justin Belforti USA $177,416
6th Marc Foggin United Kingdom $132,978
7th Victor Paredes USA $100,840
8th Vanessa Kane Canda $77,378
9th Benjamin Gold USA $60,088

Lowball 2-7 Single Draw Title Goes to Funkhouser

David Funkhouser already had one sweat for a bracelet this summer, finishing in fourth in the $1,500 Double Board Bomb Pot Mix event, but made his second final table count as he picked up a victory in Event #63: $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw for $123,314 and his first WSOP gold bracelet in one of the “purest” forms of poker offered over the summer.

The final six players returned with France’s Michel Leibgorin in command, and after Tzu Peng Wang’s elimination in sixth, the two remaining WSOP bracelet winners fell back-to-back, with Ali Eslami out in fifth and Owais Ahmed, who started the day as a micro stack, able to ladder up to fourth before bowing out. The final three traded chips for a while before Charles Tucker three-bet shoved with 10-6-4-2-X in the small blind, but after opting to draw one, he saw that he could only hit a three to win as Funkhouser held 10-6-5-3-2. A nine provided no relief for Tucker, and he busted in third.

It didn’t take long for the final hand to develop, one that had nearly all the chips in play involved in it. Funkhouser raised to 400,000 on the button with the big blind at 160,000, and Leibgorin three-bet to 1.11 million. Funkhouser four-bet shoved for 5.21 million effective, and Leibgorin called and drew one. Funkhouser chose to pat his 9-8-7-6-4, and Leibgorin needed to catch a nine, seven, five or four with his 8-6-3-2 draw to leap to a massive lead. Instead, he found paint with a king and had to settle for a runner-up performance, while Funkhouser’s pat nine was good enough for his first taste of WSOP gold.

WSOP 2024 Event #63: $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw Final Table Results
Place Player Country Prize
1st David Funkhouser Argentina $123,314
2nd Michel Leibgorin France $81,412
3rd Charles Tucker USA $54,868
4th Owais Ahmed USA $37,764
5th Ali Eslami USA $26,555
6th Tzu Peng Wang Taiwan $19,087
7th David “ODB” Baker USA $14,030

Moen Makes it Happen, Takes Deepstack Title

Event #64: $600 No-Limit Hold’em Deepstack brought back 238 hopefuls vying for a coveted WSOP gold bracelet, and a twelve-hour grind saw Christopher Moen spin it up from a 10 big blind stack at the start of play to earn his first WSOP gold bracelet, outlasting the likes of Nick Guagenti, Lexy Gavin-Mather, and former WSOP Main Event champ Koray Aldemir in the process.

The final table of nine all sat with fairly short stacks after the lengthy journey to reach it, which is when Moen went to work, having a hand in the elimination of the next six players before Thomas Juess dispatched Cody Chung in third. Moen had a 2:1 chip lead going into the final showdown, but with blinds already huge, it didn’t take long for the stacks to get in, with Kuess choosing to go with his Td9c on a KcTh2s8d board. Unfortunately for him, Moen had him drawing dead with KsTs, rendering the Ac river moot, and Moen parlayed a dominating final table performance into his first WSOP gold bracelet.

WSOP 2024 Event #64: $600 No-Limit Hold’em Deepstack Final Table Results
Place Player Country Prize
1st Christopher Moen USA $289,323
2nd Thomas Kuess Austria $192,809
3rd Cody Chung USA $143,258
4th August Smrek USA $107,289
5th John Ricksen USA $80,996
6th Cal Nailn USA $61,642
7th Daniel Hirose USA $47,295
8th Guilherme de Castro Brazil $36,586
9th Vance Isono USA $28,536

International Flair Atop $10k PLO Championship

By the time registration closed in Event #66: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship (8-Handed), a total of 811 entrants took their shot at earning a piece of PLO immortality. The top six of the final 48 players all hail from outside the US, with Great Britain’s Jonathan Bowers heading to Day 3 with 3,300,000 and the chip lead.

France’s Elie Nakache (2,795,000) and Israel’s Uri Reichenstein (2,630,000) round out the top three, while Sweden’s Niklas “Lena900” Astedt (2,300,000), the Netherlands’ Nino Pansier (2,020,000) and Finland’s Eelis Parssinen (1,965,000) all hold healthy stacks. Jim Collopy (53rd – $27,471), Kahle Burns (60th – $24,646), John Hennigan (67th – $22,569) and Benny Glaser (99th – $20,099) all managed to secure a cash once the bubble was burst by Marcello Del Grosso’s elimination.

WSOP 2024 Event #66: $10,000 PLO Championship Leaderboard
Place Player Country Chips
1st Jonathan Bowers Great Britain 3,300,000
2nd Elie Nakache France 2,795,000
3rd Uri Reichenstein Israel 2,630,000
4th Niklas Astedt Sweden 2,300,000
5th Nino Pansier Netherlands 2,020,000
6th Eelis Parssinen Finland 1,965,000
7th James Carroll USA 1,890,000
8th Sonny Franco France 1,885,000
9th Joshua Adkins USA 1,555,000
10th Amit Ben Yacov Israel 1,500,000

Shimamoto Takes Command in $600 PokerNews Deepstack

From a field of 60 players who started Day 3 of Event #62: $600 PokerNews Deepstack Championship, only five will return for the final day of action, with Branden Shimamoto wielding 56,400,000 for the chip lead, a whopping 94 big blind stack and a healthy lead over Luke Varrasso’s 42,000,000 chip stack. Harrison Ashdown (30,900,000) and Hector Berry (23,800,000) all have plenty of play left in their stacks, while Darryl Fish (5,200,000) has plenty of work to do in order to earn his first career bracelet. Kenny Huynh (9th – $28,064), Ray Henson (12th – $17,533), and Danny Gonzales (35th – $9,229) were a few of the notables who earned a payday before play ended for the day.

WSOP 2024 Event #62: $600 PokerNews Deepstack Championship Day 4 Results:
Place Player Country Chips/Prize
1st Branden Shimamoto USA 56,400,000
2nd Luke Varrasso Canada 42,000,000
3rd Harrison Ashdown USA 30,900,000
4th Hector Berry United Kingdom 23,800,000
5th Darryl Fish USA 5,200,000
6th Sihao Zhang Luxembourg $60,485
7th Jolan Mancini Canada $46,442
8th Thomas Murphy Ireland $35,953
9th Kenny Huynh USA $28,064

Nathan Leads, Jordison Lurks in Seniors High Roller

From a field of 161 returning players in Event #65: $5,000 Seniors High Roller, just ten will return for Day 3 action, with Kevin Nathan in front with 7,300,000 in chips, good for 91 big blinds when action kicks off tomorrow. Bruno Lopes (6,535,000) is the only other stack over five million, while Angela Jordison (1,890,000) has some work to do to earn her first WSOP gold bracelet after her kings ran into the aces of Nathan right before the end of play. Farzad Bonyadi (18th – $22,202), Keith Lehr (32nd – $15,682), and Daniel Fuhs (44th – $13,582) all made deep runs but ultimately fell short of the final table.

WSOP 2024 Event #65: $5,000 Seniors High Roller No-Limit Hold’em Leaderboard
Place Player Country Chips
1st Kevin Nathan USA 7,300,000
2nd Bruno Lopes France 6,535,000
3rd Samuel Wagner USA 4,220,000
4th Arie Kliper Israel 4,125,000
5th Michael Vela USA 4,015,000
6th Mark Checkwicz USA 3,610,000
7th Angela Jordison USA 1,890,000
8th John Thornton USA 1,455,000
9th Richard Lowe USA 1,410,000
10th Judith Bielan USA 980,000

Three More Events Cap Off Mammoth Day

Event #67: $500 Salute to Warriors saw 4,517 players hit the felt, with just 678 of them making it through the day. Bob Bobberts (1,401,000) leads the field at day’s end, with David Gallimore (1,324,000) right on his heels. Jamie Gold (482,000), Will Berry (430,000), and Stanley Lee (228,000) all managed to make it through to Day 2 action.

Phil Ivey headlines the remaining 335 players in Event #68: $2,500 No-Limit Hold’em, as a field of 2,229 saw their numbers reduced considerably by the end of play. Andrew Chang holds the chip lead with 1,020,000, while Ivey’s 719,000 is good for sixth place. Andre Akkari (553,000) and Brian Yoon (512,000) also bagged massive stacks while searching for their next pieces of WSOP gold.

And finally, the twelfth event of the day, Event #69: $1,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better, had a total of 611 players prepare to split some pots. Jon Turner leads the remaining 157 players with a stack of 329,000, narrowly edging Denis Strebkov (327,500) and Christian Roberts (321,500) for the lead. Phil Hellmuth (161,000) is alive for his quest for bracelet number 18, along with David ‘Bakes’ Baker (158,500) and John Holley (148,000).

With thanks to PokerGO for their official WSOP photography. The 2024 World Series of Poker is available to watch exclusively on PokerGO. Subscribe today and watch all the drama play out in Las Vegas!