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Eelis Parssinen

Just 14 players returned today at the Paris Hotel and Casino in the Event #64: $25,000 High Roller PLO/NLH mix to be crowned the newest champion of the 2026 World Series of Poker. Each one of them had already locked up a piece of the $5,029,000 prize pool that had been generated over the past two days, thanks to 214 entrants in the field, but all eyes rested upon the $1,172,296 top prize and the WSOP gold bracelet.

After nearly 11 full levels of play, a familiar face stood above the rest to win.

It was less than a week ago that Finnish poker pro Eelis Parssinen took home his second WSOP bracelet in Event #47: $25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller, deepening his WSOP legacy and tying him for the most bracelets ever to come out of Finland.

After nearly 12 hours of play today, he broke the tie to become the most decorated Finnish player in the WSOP’s history by winning his third bracelet and another seven-figure score from the summer.

Event #64: $25,000 PLO/NLH Final Table Results

Place Player Country Prize
1 Eelis Parssinen Finland $1,172,296
2 Juha Helppi Finland $781,500
3 Sean Winter United States $540,754
4 Edward Leonard United States $381,950
5 Sergio Martinez Gonzalez Spain $275,509
6 Lou Garza United States $203,041
7 Daniel Negreanu Canada $152,954
8 Dylan Linde United States $117,835

Winner’s Reaction

“The more that I think about it, I probably value this one more than the $25k PLO since I play both games. Here you have to be good enough at both, but I think it’s close,” Parssinen said minutes after the win. “It’s unbelievable. I can’t find words right now. Obviously, I was so lucky to be on the right side of the coolers, to be on the right side of the hands that are supposed to go all in no matter what. It’s crazy to think it’s even possible to run like that.”

Five years ago, Parssinen took home his first WSOP bracelet in what was also the 64th event of the series, the $5,000 PLO/NLH 8 Handed. He took home $545,616 for his finish there and now adds a score more than double that in another tournament of the same format.

“I think this probably suits my game the best, because I think I’m decent in both of these. I’ve been playing a lot of No-Limit tournaments lately. I’ve been practicing quite a lot and putting a lot of effort in. I started back in the day on No-Limit, then I kinda quit it for a few years and focused on PLO. Nowadays, I have found the passion again towards No-Limit.”

Eelis Parssinen

A historic heads-up match occurred today as no tournament in the WSOP’s history has ever seen two Finnish players heads up for a bracelet. Juha Helppi and Parssinen were those players, and each was looking for their third bracelet to become the most decorated player in their home country. After a two and a half hour heads-up match, Parssinen took the title.

“When I started to play poker, [Juha] was probably the biggest name in Finland”

“It’s incredible, I’ve known Juha (Helppi) for 19 years. When I started to play poker, he was probably the biggest name in Finland. He was already an established no-limit crusher, and it’s unbelievable to get to play heads up against him here in front of my wife and best friend. A lot of the guys on the rail were also Juha’s friends.”

Did You Know?
Parssinen now sits as one of three players in the 2026 WSOP who have conquered two events, the others being Naoya Kihara and Calvin Anderson, and now sits in contention for the Player of the Year.

Eelis Parssinen
Three-time WSOP bracelet winner Eelis Parssinen

“I’ve never thought about it. For me, since I don’t play any other games besides PLO and No-Limit, so I’m pretty sure that I won’t show up for those other events just for the player of the year race. But I definitely have to consider going to the Bahamas. I might go there no matter what, but definitely with being in contention for that. If you run like that, I guess it’s possible.”

While celebration may be in order for Parssinen and his rail, his focus is on another upcoming event for the series.

“I don’t think I’m celebrating now, that might come later. Tomorrow is one of my favorite tournaments of the year, the 10k PLO. It’s fun to play that field because it gets lots of recreational and different types of players. The last few years, I have been used to playing against the same guys at different stops like Triton. Definitely looking forward to playing with players from different backgrounds.”

Day 3 Action

The start of the day saw Amit Benyacov (14th-$61,964) and Dylan Weisman (13th-$61,964) fall immediately, with Dominykas Karmazinas (12th-$61,964) and Jordan Glazer (11th-$74,959) eliminated a level later. The final table was set when David Wang fell as he jammed his ace-four into Helppi’s ace-king. Neither player paired their kicker, and Wang collected $74,959 for finishing one outside of the final table, while the remaining nine combined.

Just a couple of minutes passed into the final table before Yang Wang jammed queen-jack into Parssinen’s ace-queen. He was unable to find any help, and collected $92,887 for his ninth-place finish. It was another couple of levels before another elimination happened, with another following it a hand later. Dylan Linde moved all in with kings in PLO against Edward Leonard’s queens, but quad queens gave Leonard the pot and Linde the boot, seeing him collect $117,835 for his eighth-place finish.

Daniel Negreanu

Seven-time WSOP bracelet winner Daniel Negreanu followed him out the door in seventh place, despite having a memorable start to the final table. After doubling up with a straight flush against Parssinen, he lost a sizable chunk to Sean Winter in the Hold’em round before finding himself all in against Helppi with straight and flush draws in PLO. None came home for Negreanu, and he collected $152,954 for his deep run.

It took over an hour after the dinner break before the next elimination. Defending champion Lou Garza got in his queens against Helppi’s backdoor draws in PLO, but Helppi ran out a straight to see the defending champion depart the tournament in sixth place, good for $203,041.

Parssinen took the chip lead from Helppi at this point after rivering a wheel against his countryman, which would only further grow when he eliminated Sergio Martinez Gonzalez in fifth place. Gonzalez got his last chips in with queen-jack on a jack-high board, with Parssinen calling and winning with ace-eight after turning an ace. $275,509 would be sent into his account. Just a few hands later, Edward Leonard also got his chips in with queen-jack against Parssinen, who held with ace-queen. Despite flopping a flush, the runout came to give Parssinen a boat to eliminate Leonard in fourth place for $381,950.

Sean Winter

Sean Winter held the distinction of being the final player surviving on the 25k Fantasy Draft, and his run ended shortly after, as he got in his final chips with jack-two against Parssinen’s ten-five. A five on the flop ended Winter’s chances of a first bracelet, and he collected $540,754 for his third-place finish.

At no time in the WSOP’s history were two Finnish players ever heads up for a WSOP bracelet, and their match would turn into quite a lengthy affair. Helppi doubled early into the match in the PLO round and pulled into a further lead during the No-Limit Hold’em round that followed. A coin flip for the lead then occurred as Parssinen got in his ace-jack against Helppi’s pocket sevens, and a flush on the turn awarded Parssinen the pot to take back the lead.

Two doubles took place, with Helppi winning them both and pulling back into the lead. The first saw ace-ten hold up against king-queen, and the second saw both players get in their chips in the PLO round, with Helppi holding top pair and Parssinen holding second pair. Each filled up, with Helppi’s full house reigning supreme to narrow the gap and put the score back to even.

All the while during these doubles, the players would continue to exchange pots of many different sizes. The pendulum continued to swing as the night lingered on, with just one level of play left at 1:00 am before the players would bag up.

Juha Helppi

At this point, Parssinen had pulled ahead, and he continued to pull ahead in the No-Limit Hold’em round that followed, eventually putting Helppi down to just 15 big blinds. They got their chips in during the PLO round with Parssinen holding ace-king-jack-five double suited against Helppi’s double-suited jacks. An ace-high board gave the pot to Parssinen, and Helppi finished in second place for a career best live score of $781,500.

That concludes the coverage of Event #64: $25,000 PLO/NLH High Roller. Stay tuned to PokerNews for continued reporting from the 2026 WSOP.


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In this Series

1 Jerome Neppl Dominates Event #3: $500 Industry Employees No-Limit Hold’em For Career-Highlight Win2 Daniyal Gheba Awarded First Bracelet in WSOP’s Mothership Arena for $502,9853 “It’s Nice to Get a Win to Start The Summer” Jason Daly Wins Third Bracelet in $1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo4 “This is the Pinnacle” James Cheung Captures First WSOP Bracelet in $1,500 Stud5 Yang Wang Denies Jesse Lonis Heads-Up in Event #5: $5,000 Pot-Limit Omaha6 Chess Master Michael Casella Flips the Board on Poker Legends to Win First Bracelet7 Flying High: Dimitar Danchev Fights Jet Lag to Claim $25,000 Heads-Up Championship Title8 Poker Legend Helps Philip Chun Achieve WSOP Dream and Win $400,0009 Scott Clements Denies Hellmuth and Brunson in $10k Omaha Hi-Lo Championship10 Karapet Galstyan Winds His Way Strategically To Victory for Second WSOP Bracelet11 Unstoppable Hubbard Seals First Bracelet in $1,500 No-Limit 2-7 Lowball Draw12 PhD Student Turns First WSOP Cash Into Bracelet and $346K Score13 All-or-Nothing Attitude Provides Tennessee Business Owner WSOP Gold14 Naseem Salem Beats the Best as He Claims Maiden Bracelet in the GGMillion$15 “‘Well Overdue” Justin Liberto Wins Second WSOP Bracelet After 11-Year Wait16 Viva Las Vargas: American Brings It Home in WSOP U.S. Circuit Championship17 Naoya Kihara Comes Back From Single Chip to End 14-Year WSOP Drought18 Jeff Madsen Gunning for Second WSOP PoY Title After Fifth Bracelet Win19 Normand Wins First WSOP Bracelet Despite Never Playing Game Before20 Foxen Finally Beats the Best to Win “Dream” WSOP $25K High Roller Title21 Naoya Kihara Wins Back-to-Back $10K Championship WSOP Bracelet Events22 This Is the Best Father-Son Story of the 2026 WSOP23 Artur Martirosian Beats Final Table’s ‘Best Opponent’ to Win Fourth WSOP Bracelet24 WSOP Main Event Finalist Braxton Dunaway Survives ‘Roller Coaster’ for Second Bracelet25 “Daddy’s Got Two Now”: Mike Holtz Wins Second WSOP Bracelet in Super Turbo Bounty26 Bryce Yockey Wins Third WSOP Bracelet in $10k Dealer’s Choice27 Missouri Grinder Defeats Star-Studded Field in WSOP $600 Mixed Event28 Quads and Pocket Aces: Dennis Weiss Rides His Luck to Third WSOP Title29 “It’s Like a Dream” Santhosh Suvarna Wins Third WSOP Bracelet in $50,000 High Roller30 Richard Alsup Beats 11,933-Player Monster Stack for Biggest Score of Career31 Omar Zazay Outlasts Jean-Robert Bellande to Win First WSOP Bracelet in $3,000 NLHE32 Knicks in Five? Nick’s Got Eight! Schulman Justifies HoF Induction with Eighth WSOP Bracelet33 First PLO Cash, First WSOP Bracelet: Jason Zipfel Wins $1,500 PLO34 No Experience? No Problem: Dong Chen Conquers Poker Legends in $10K Limit Hold’em35 Sebastian Pauli Finally Gets His Razz Bracelet, 13 Years Later36 Alex Foxen Obliterates the Competition to Win WSOP Bracelet No.4 in Style37 Juan Love as Rodriguez Wins WSOP Seniors High Roller for His ‘Beautiful Son’38 Matthew Moss Captures “First Big Live Tournament Win” in WSOP $800 Deepstack39 Daniel Aharoni Thought He Was Out, Then Won $861,287 in the WSOP Big O40 Justin Smith Rises From the Canvas to Conquer 16,269-Entry COLOSSUS41 Worth The Wait: WSOP Bracelet No Longer Eludes Blumenthal Upon Stud-8/O-8 Victory42 Calvin Anderson Becomes The Most Winning Razz Player in WSOP History43 Marco Johnson Proves He’s More Than a Mixed Game Specialist With WSOP Victory44 PLO Great Parssinen Runs Quads Over Boat to Win WSOP High Roller Title45 Alex Anton Steps Out of the ‘Cave’ to Win First WSOP Bracelet and $678,30046 O Canada! Homan Mohammadi Takes the WSOP $1,000 Seniors Championship North47 Joey Couden Denies Shaun Deeb Bracelet In $3k 9-Game Heads Up Struggle48 A New WSOP Bracelet Was Born This Week, and Zachary Gruneberg Just Won It49 Calvin Anderson Does It Again! Wins Bracelet No. 7 in the $10k H.O.R.S.E.50 History-Maker Michelle Chins the Competition to Win Maiden WSOP Bracelet51 Mhatre Defeats WSOP Main Event Champ to Close Out Wild Final Table52 Joga Bonito on the Felt, Simao Gets His ‘Tetra’ in WSOP $50K PLO53 Poker is About More Than Bracelets For Salute to Warriors Champion Prashanth Nataraj54 After Three Misses, Joseph Liberta Conquers WSOP Milly Maker For $1.25 MIllion55 No Party, Just Dad: Harry Rubin Skips the Rail to Celebrate $390K WSOP Win With Family56 “About F***ing Time”: Josh Reichard Finally Wins First WSOP Gold Bracelet57 Glaser Wins 2026 Poker Players Championship for 9th WSOP Bracelet in 11 Years58 Jewelry Maker Strikes Gold: Ciro Gonzalez Wins 2026 WSOP Event #6559 Every Poker Player’s Dream: 20-Year Veteran Lionel Barracano Secures First WSOP Bracelet60 Eelis Pärssinen Breaks Record as Finland’s Most Decorated WSOP Champion





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