Darius Samual
Darius Samual conquered the $25,000 Heads-Up Championship for his first-ever WSOP bracelet and $500,000!

The fifth day of action in the 2024 World Series of Poker saw John Hennigan claim his seventh WSOP bracelet in the Dealer’s Choice event, while Darius Samual conquered Artur Martirosian and Faraz Jaka as he took gold for the first time in a career-defining victory. Cards were in the air in four other events as two reached their final days in some style.

Samual’s Risk Provides Huge Reward

Darius Samual’s poker record before the WSOP was quite simple. The UK businessman had cashed for less than $85,000 in a series of small matches in his home country of England, and had enjoyed a few deep runs in the WSOP Europe in Rozvadov. After a stunning few days in this summer’s Vegas World Series, Samual has won over half a million dollars and has his first gold bracelet after the kind of week at the felt poker players dream of.

First, Samual cashed in 45th place in the opening event, the Champions Reunion, scoring just under $10k. That built his poker bankroll to around $50,000. He put half of that amount into the $25,000 Heads-Up Championship – and won it! Taking on the favorite for the event in the semi-final, Samual initially fell behind to the experience Russian poker professional and two-time WSOP bracelet winner. But the British player ground himself back into contention, taking the lead after three streets of value with a top pair of aces and then got it in good with ace-king against the Russian’s ace-ten to prevail.

Waiting for Samual in the final was popular pro and coach Faraz Jaka. He came through a titanic battle against another Russian, Nikolai Mamut, eventually surviving thanks to a superb call when Mamut bluffed big. Jaka had the best of it thereafter, with ace-jack against king-queen taking him through.

The final match saw Samual hit some terrific early cards to move ahead 3:1. Jaka won a pivotal flip for his recovery with ace-king hitting against Samual’s pocket queens, but the British player was undeterred and reestablished a lead. In the final hand, Jaka correctly called off his stack with As6s when Samual had shoved with KdQc. The Brit was a 40% dog, but knew that if he won the hand he had the title and a dramatic flop of AcKcQh saw the British player flop bottom two pair as Jaka paired only his ace. No help for the American on turn or river ended the event and Samual had the gold.

After the event, he told PokerNews that his earlier match on Day 2 with John Smith was his favorite.

“His small ball style was a lot of fun and it lasted a long time. I just play for fun and making some money. I basically put 50% of my bankroll on one tournament. I really wanted to go for it and this payout is like 95% of my poker money now. I took a shot! I think I was the only one who didn’t care about the bracelet, I only cared about the money.”

Darius Samual’s carefree attitude and excellent heads-up play earned him the WSOP bracelet and half a million dollars!

WSOP Event #6: $25,000 Heads-Up NLHE Championship Results:
Place Place Country Prize
1st Darius Samual United Kingdom $500,000
2nd Faraz Jaka United States $300,000
3rd Nikolai Mamut Russia $180,000
4th Artur Martirosian Russia $180,000
5th John Smith United States $86,000
6th Marko Grujic Serbia $86,000
7th Owen Messere United Kingdom $86,000
8th Patrick Kennedy United Kingdom $86,000

Hennigan’s World! Johnny Makes it Seven

“Get ready for the burn.”

John Hennigan was already a poker legend long before sitting down on the final day of the $1,500-entry Dealer’s Choice Event #7 here at the 2024 WSOP. Along with Shaun Deeb, Hennigan was going for his seventh WSOP bracelet and the mixed game specialist made it happen across a special day for him personally and an exciting day for poker fans around the world. ‘Johnny World’ as he is known now has a seventh gold bracelet and it was hard-earned in Las Vegas.

Hennigan wasn’t one of the big stacks when play began but took out two players in one hand during the opening level of play and that set him on the path to victory. Shaun Deeb bubbled the final table before Swedish sensation Viktor Blom took most of Ryan Pedigo’s chips in Triple Draw, Hennigan handing Pedigo his trip to the rail moments later. After overnight leader Clint Wolcyn and Brayden Gazlay departed, Blom himself busted in fourth as Peter Gelencser scored a knockout that helped Hennigan as much as it did himself.

The Hungarian busted soon after in third place, leaving Robert Wells as Hennigan’s only remaining challenger to the title. With a better than 5:1 chip lead, ‘Johnny World’ would not be denied, however, as the American pivoted from largely opting for Stud hands to prioritizing No-Limit 2-7 Single Draw. Hennigan’s pat-nine triumphed over  Wells jack-ten and bracelet number seven was confirmed for the poker legend.

“I had a similar experience at PokerGO where I had a huge chip lead and every hand just played themselves,” he told PokerNews after the heads-up match. “It was very easy. This tournament was similar to that. When you have a monster chip lead, it’s a pretty simple game. I guess I’ll be in the mix for Player of the Year now. Get ready for the burn.”

WSOP Event #7: $1,500 Dealer’s Choice Final Table Results:
Place Place Country Prize
1st John Hennigan United States $138,296
2nd Robert Wells United Kingdom $90,339
3rd Peter Gelencser Hungary $60,343
4th Viktor Blom Sweden $41,237
5th Brayden Gazlay United States $28,845
6th Clint Wolcyn United States $20,665
7th Ryan Pedigo United States $15,182
John Hennigan
It’s Johnny’s World! Hennigan wins WSOP bracelet #7 in Las Vegas.

Bryce Yockey in Charge as $5k PLO Event Reaches Final Day

Just 11 players are left in the hunt for gold in Event #8, the $5,000-entry Pot Limit Omaha event. There are bracelet winners everywhere in the remaining field, with Yockey joined by other former bracelet winners Joao Simao (2,995,000), Naoya Kihara (2,740,000), Brian Rast (2,065,000) and Joao Vieira (870,000) all hoping to add more gold to their collections.

Six bracelet winners from the past are joined by five potential first-time winners, however, with Aditya Sidhu (5,825,000) Farid Jattin (5,510,000), Jason Berilgen (3,640,000) and Zachary Schwartz (3,240,000) all in the top five chipcounts.

It was a day of defeat for many players as stars of the felt such as David Prociak (106th), Phil Ivey (57th) and Scott Eskenazi (43rd) were just three of the players who made the money but not the final day, with $606,654 and the WSOP gold bracelet on the line tomorrow.

WSOP Event #8: $5,000 Pot Limit Omaha Final Day Chipcounts:
Place Place Country Chips
1st Bryce Yockey United States 6,530,000
2nd Aditya Sadhu United States 5,825,000
3rd Farid Jattin Colombia 5,510,000
4th Jason Berilgen United States 3,640,000
5th Zachary Schwartz United States 3,240,000
6th Joao Simao Brazil 2,995,000
7th Naoya Kihara Japan 2,740,000
8th Paul Radcliffe United States 2,265,000
9th Brian Rast United States 2,065,000
10th Gabriel Andrade Ecuador 1,500,000
11th Joao Vieira Portugal 870,000

Guagenti on the Brink of Bracelet Number Two but Helppi Hopeful

The $1,500-entry Limit Hold’em Event #9 event whittled players down a talented final six last night as Nick Guagenti took the chip lead into the final day’s play. Guagenti, who already has one bracelet, will start the last day of this 434-entrant tournament with a strong chip lead of 2.88 million chips to his nearest rival Jospeh Brodsky’s 1,885,000 as the American-led final table begins.

The only other player to have won a WSOP bracelet before is Juha Helppi. The Finnish player – the only non-American in the final – has two WSOP wins in his glorious past and will be looking to win his first bracelet since a 2020 PLO event when he sits down at the felt.

While the Finn is short stack of the six, he still has 1,285,000 chips and very playable stack. Add into the mix that Helppi’s previous live bracelet victory was in the 2019 $10,000 Limit hold’em Championship where he beat a final table featuring Kevin Song and Josh Arieh and no-one can be ruled out.

WSOP Event #9: $1,500 Limit Hold’em Final Day Chipcounts:
Place Place Country Chips
1st Nick Guagenti United States 2,800,000
2nd Joseph Brodsky United States 1,885,000
3rd Qinghai Pan United States 1,845,000
=4th Bradley Carter United States 1,645,000
=4th George Chen United States 1,645,000
6th Juha Helppi Finland 1,285,000

Scott Seiver Tops Omaha Hi-Lo Championship After Day 1

American poker hero Scott Seiver topped the remaining 104 players as a field of 171 battled on Day 1 of the $10,000-entry Omaha Hi-Lo Championship. Some true poker legends survived Day 1, with Phil Hellmuth (85,000) to Seiver’s left for most of the day. Even on breaks, the pair couldn’t be separated as they ran deep in a WSOP Online event too!

The Poker Brat wasn’t the only big name to make Day 2 along with Seiver. Canadian poker legend Daniel Negreanu made it through with 48,500 chips, while others did even better, as Josh Arieh (82,000), Benny Glaser (92,000), Felipe Ramos (107,000), Dylan Weisman (125,000), Erik Seidel (138,000), and Chino Rheem (180,000) won through with increasingly impressive stacks. Others weren’t so lucky, with poker GOAT Phil Ivey, Jennifer Harman and Jeff Madsen all failing to ‘grab a bag’ at the close of play.

WSOP Event #10: $10,000 Omaha Hi-Lo Championship Day 1 Top 10 Chipcounts:
Place Place Country Chips
1st Scott Seiver United States 296,500
2nd Matt Glantz United States 285,000
3rd Steven Loube United States 257,500
4th Chino Rheem United States 248,000
5th Robert Yass United States 243,000
5th Patrick Moulder United States 238,500
7th Ray Henson United States 233,000
8th Jeffery Stepaniuk Canada 209,000
9th Christopher Logue United States 195,000
10th Damjan Radanov United States 188,000

Galiana Takes Overall Lead in Mystery Millions

The third day of action in the $1,000 Mystery Millions saw the biggest Day 1 field yet as 5,290 entries swelled the overall total entrants to 10,809. Of those hopefuls, just 789 have made it through to Day 2 with Day 1c’s chip leader Antonio Galiana (3,230,000) taking the overall lead in the tournament with more chips than Day 1a leader Pete Chen (3,150,000).

Others who survived to dream of taking home a seven-figure sum out of the $4.66m current prize pool included David ‘ODB’ Baker (1,630,000), Eric Wasserson (1,500,000), Lawrence Brandt (1,500,000), Mike Leah (670,000), and the 2007 WSOP world champion Jerry Yang (555,000).

WSOP Event #5: $1,000 Mystery Million Day 1c Top 10 Chipcounts:
Place Place Country Chips
1st Antonio Galiana Spain 3,230,000
2nd Justin Geronsin United States 2,705,000
3rd Femi Fashakin United States 2,600,000
4th Christopher Lewis United States 2,540,000
5th Simon Levy United States 2,470,000
5th David Kim United States 2,370,000
7th Chuanshu Chen China 2,230,000
8th Brandon Huynh United States 2,055,000
9th Champie Douglas United States 1,945,000
10th Calvin Le United States 1,900,000

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!