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Vanessa Selbst

May 28 marked the second day of the 2026 World Series of Poker (WSOP) at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas, and it gave the poker community an idea of how big and busy this year’s festival will be.

Although we are still waiting to see who wins the first gold bracelet of the summer (that will happen on May 29), there were four events in play at one stage, each taking up plenty of table space. If you thought that today was busy, Day 3 on May 29 sees six in-play events; the WSOP has well and truly arrived, and it is relentless.

Day 2 also saw dozens of poker’s elite players take to the felt and start their quest for 2026 WSOP glory. The likes of John Hennigan, Anthony Zinno, Ryan Riess, Vanessa Selbst, Huck Seed, and Daniel Negreanu were all in action, although not all of those mentioned players enjoyed themselves as much as others.

Tal Avivi Bags Big on Day 1b of the $550 Mini Mystery Millions

Tal Avivi
Tal Avivi

Day 1b of Event #1: $550 Mini Mystery Millions saw another 1,562 entries processed and another 57 players progress to Day 2. Leading the way on Day 1b after the completion of 22 levels was Israel’s Tal Avivi, who ended the night with 2,800,000 chips.

Avivi already has two WSOP Circuit rings to his name; he won both in 2019. Although Avivi doesn’t yet have a bracelet to his name, he came close to winning one last year, finishing fourth in the $1,500 H.O.R.S.E., a result that earned him $64,607.

Several players who already own a coveted WSOP bracelet made it through the second of six scheduled flights and now have a chance of adding to their collection. Valentino Konakchiev (570,000), Ryan Laplante (520,000), Brett Shaffer (505,000), Mike Leah (246,000), and Erick Lindgren (194,000) have a little more work to do than the deep-stacked Avivi, but they are all capable of turning around their fortunes.

Day 1c of this event shuffles up and deals at 10:00 a.m. local time on May 28, and should see another 1,500+ strong field enter the mix.

Event #1: $550 Mini Mystery Millions Day 1b Top 10 Chip Counts

Rank Player Country Chip Count Big Blinds
1 Tal Avivi Israel 2,800,000 92
2 Quang Vu United States 2,000,000 65
3 Qiang Pan United States 1,400,000 48
4 Caroline Schallock Germany 1,300,000 44
5 Dave Stann United States 1,200,000 39
6 Giovanni Zanette South Africa 1,100,000 36
7 Michael Comisso United States 1,100,000 35
8 Brandon Nguyen United Kingdom 960,000 32
9 Robert Buckenmayer United States 940,000 31
10 Steven Correll United States 900,000 30

Chip counts are approximate due to the WSOP+ App rounding chip amounts

Only 24 Remain in the $5,000 8-Handed No-Limit Hold’em; Anatoly Nikitin Leads the Way

Anatoly Nikitin
Anatoly Nikitin

Only 24 players remain in contention for the $502,985 top prize in Event #2: $5,000 8-Handed No-Limit Hold’em, and it is two Russians that top the chip counts. Anatoly Nikitin (3,290,000) holds a commanding lead over the rest of the field, with Nikitin’s fellow countryman Ivan Ruban (2,300,000) currently occupying second place.

While the likes of Nicholas Seward (1,275,000), Justin Saliba (1,265,000), Ren Lin (1,090,000), Renji Mao (745,000), Julien Sitbon (620,000), Colin Robinson (590,000), and Brock Wilson (345,000) all progressed to the penultimate day, superstars Phil Hellmuth, Daniel Negreanu, Shaun Deeb, and Scott Seiver bowed out before the bubble burst.

Day 3 starts at 1:00 p.m. local time on May 28, with the plan to play down to the final five players. Tune into PokerNews‘ live reporting pages and follow all of the action as this event approaches a thrilling finale.

Aces Cracked as Negreanu Misses Out on First 2026 WSOP Cash

Event #2: $5,000 8-Handed No-Limit Hold’em Day 2 Top 10 Chip Counts

Rank Player Country Chip Count Big Blinds
1 Anatoly Nikitin Russia 3,290,000 132
2 Ivan Ruban Russia 2,300,000 92
3 Xiaohu Liu China 1,910,000 76
4 Zexiang Sun United States 1,700,000 68
5 Charles Alex-Barton United States 1,690,000 68
6 Scott Eskenazi United States 1,395,000 56
7 Chenxiang Miao China 1,350,000 54
8 Daniyal Gheba United States 1,330,000 53
9 Peter Mugar United States 1,300,000 52
10 Nicholas Seward United States 1,275,000,000 51

Industry Employees Event Attracts 906 Entrants

Brett Slezak
Brett Slezak

Day 1 of Event #3: $500 Industry Employees No-Limit Hold’em saw the 906 starters reduced to 136, and one of PokerNews‘ own is flying high into Day 2. Brett Slezak (383,000) couldn’t quite finish in the top 10, but he returns to the fray 11th in chips and with a realistic chance of securing the $64,083 top prize and his first gold bracelet.

Slezak’s fellow PokerNews colleague, Tyler Boyer (84,000), also progressed to Day 2. However, it was the end of the road for the likes of Myles Phago, Frank Visser, Daniel Williams, Dan O’Hair, and last year’s finalist, Connor Richards.

Jerome Neppl (758,000) sits down on Day 2 with a tournament-leading stack and is the only player with more than 100 big blinds. Yutaka Morishima (517,000) and Ronan Woolman (491,000) round off the podium places and are the front-runners going into the final day’s play.

Cards are back in the air from 12:00 p.m. local time on May 28, and play continues until only one player has all of the chips in their stack.

Event #3: $500 Industry Employees Day 1 Top 10 Chip Counts

Rank Player Country Chip Count Big Blinds
1 Jerome Neppl United States 758,000 126
2 Yutaka Morishima United States 517,000 86
3 Ronan Woolman United States 491,000 82
4 Skyler Halama United States 489,000 82
5 Brian Baron United States 487,000 81
6 Larry Serebryany United States 482,000 80
7 Michael Schlittler United States 460,000 77
8 Timothy Dugan United States 457,000 76
9 Bobby Sanchez United States 404,000 67
10 Lennart Hennig Germany 394,000 66

Lawrence Berg Leads From the Front on Day 1 of the $1,500 Omaha Hi-Low

Lawrence Berg
Lawrence Berg

The first mixed game of the 2026 WSOP, Event #4: $1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better 7-Handed, drew in an 828-strong crowd who created a $1,099,170 prize pool. Though the attendance is slightly down from last year, this event will still award its champion $191,362.

Lawrence Berg (373,000), a bracelet winner in 2016, leads the 179 surviving players back into battle on Day 2. Berg has three more big blinds than second-placed Dekel Balas (354,000), but then there’s a little daylight between that pair and William House (294,000) in third place.

Top-tier grinders turned out in force for this event, with many making it through to Day 2.

Huck Seed
Huck Seed progressed to Day 2

Aaron Kupin (262,000), Ryan Bambrick (255,000), and Owais Ahmed (240,000) each crammed a top-10-worthy stack into their overnight chip bags. Renan Bruschi (216,000), off the back of some incredible online poker results of late, navigated to Day 2, as did Esther Taylor (208,000), Vanessa Selbst (122,000), Huck Seed (59,000), and Allen Kessler (25,000).

Only 125 of the 179 returning players will receive a min-cash of at least $3,020. Those returning players will be in their respective seats from 1:00 p.m. local time on May 28. The plan is to complete another 10 levels, which should whittle the field down to the last handful of tables.

Event #4: $1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better Day 1 Top 10 Chip Counts

Rank Player Country Chip Count Big Blinds
1 Lawrence Berg United States 373,000 62
2 Dekel Balas United States 354,000 59
3 William House United States 294,000 49
4 Ingo Klasen Germany 271,000 45
5 Benjamin Gold United States 270,000 44
6 Aaron Kupin United States 262,000 43
7 Ryan Bambrick United States 255,000 40
8 Tony Diehl United States 241,000 40
9 Owais Ahmed United States 240,000 40
10 Rafael Concepcion United States 239,000 40

What to Expect on Day 3 of the 2026 WSOP

WSOP 2026 Bracelet
WSOP 2026 Bracelet

Day 3 of the 2026 WSOP is on May 28, and it looks set to be yet another busy day at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.

The day begins at 10:00 a.m. local time with Day 1c of the $550 Mini Mystery Millions. Through the first two of six scheduled flights, some 3,197 players have entered, with 117 navigating through 22 fast-paced levels to reach Day 2.

Two hours later, we will see the second and final day’s action from Event #3: $500 Industry Employees, where only 136 players remain in the hunt for the first bracelet of the 2026 WSOP and a $64,083 top prize.

Justin Saliba
Justin Saliba has a top 10 stack in the $5K NLHE

Event #2: $5,000 8-Handed No-Limit Hold’em has reached its penultimate day, with Day 3 starting at 1:00 p.m. local time. The plan is to reduce the returning 24 to only five players, regardless of how long that takes.

Also at 1:00 p.m. local time is the second day of Event #4: $1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better where a host of stars are among the 179 returning players who are hunting for the $191,362 top prize. The plan is to play through another 10 levels.

While those in-play events continue, two new bracelet-awarding tournaments enter the mix.

Bruno Furth
Bruno Furth

Event #5: $5,000 Pot-Limit Omaha kicks off at 12:00 p.m. local time. This is only the third time that this event has run, but both previous editions have paid out more than $3 million. Last year, a 757-strong field created a $3,482,200 prize pool. Caleb “Bruno” Furth was the man who came out on top and bagged himself his second bracelet and $620,696.

Dan Heimiller
Dan Heimiller

The other event new to Day 3 starts at 2:00 p.m. local time, Event #6: $1,500 Seven Card Stud. Dan Heimiller is this tournament’s reigning champion. The poker veteran triumphed over 375 opponents in 2025 for his third bracelet and $106,839. Stud may not be as popular as it once was, but the relatively compact field this event produces attracts poker’s biggest names to the WSOP-branded felt.


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Matthew Pitt

Senior Editor

Matthew Pitt hails from Leeds, West Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom, and has worked in the poker industry since 2008, and worked for PokerNews since 2010. In September 2010, he became the editor of PokerNews. Matthew stepped away from live reporting duties in 2015, and now concentrates on his role of Senior Editor for the PokerNews.





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