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In the summer of 2025, Michael Mizrachi eliminated any doubt as to his legendary status in the world of tournament poker. He won his fourth career World Series of Poker $50,000 Poker Players Championshipand then went out and won the 2025 WSOP main event.

The eight-time WSOP bracelet winner was instantly inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame, both in actuality and by any reasonable measure. One year later, Mizrachi struck again, winning the $10,000 pot-limit Omaha championship in a dominant performance. Mizrachi claimed his ninth career WSOP bracelet and a $1,350,203 first-place prize. That stands as the sixth-largest result of Mizrachi’s career, and pushes Mizrachi over $30.6 million in total career tournament earnings.

One year to the day from the start of Mizrachi’s impossible back-to-back run at the 2025 WSOP, he’s returned to the winner’s circle.

“Last year, on June 29, I won the PPC,” Mizrachi told WSOP’s Natalie Bode following his win. “And it’s June 29, 2026, and we won something different. I wanted to change it up a little bit

“I just push myself harder and harder. This year I got my health back, I feel much better. Lost 40 pounds since last main event, training twice a day, so I feel good. I’ve never felt any better than this, at 45.”

The Great Game Of Pot-Limit Omaha

With this PLO win, Mizrachi ties Benny Glaser and the late Johnny Moss for sixth-most on the all-time WSOP bracelet-winners list, with his ninth gold bracelet. Glaser had his ninth bracelet win, also in the $50,000 PPC, just three days before Mizrachi’s milestone. In between, Nick Schulman got heads up for his ninth bracelet in the $10,000 limit deuce-to-seven triple draw championship, before ultimately finishing second.

All of these wild results also come on the eve of the 2026 WSOP main event, which kicks off on Thursday, July 2, as Mizrachi enters as defending champion.

The WSOP $10,000 pot-limit Omaha championship, which annually produces one of the biggest fields at that buy-in level each summer, drew 836 entrants. The total prize pool reached $7,774,800 by the close of registration, shared between 126 players who reached the money on day 2 of the tournament.

By the end of the second day, 37 players remained, and Mizrachi held a serious chip lead. There were some heavy hitters among the closest contenders, including defending Card Player Player of the Year Jesse Lonis. Lonis was in third place overnight, but by the time the field reached an unofficial table of nine just after the dinner break on day 3, Lonis was the shortest stack.

By the time 2025 WSOP bracelet winner Aaron Kupin went out in ninth place ($102,599), though, Lonis had made an incredible comeback. Lonis turned a straight to eliminate Kupin, and overtook Mizrachi for the lead.

There were eight players left heading into the final break of the night on day 3. By the time the chip bags came out, only three players remained.

An Unstoppable Mizrachi

Lonis further extended his lead over the field, until he and Mizrachi played a gigantic pot with one pair each. Mizrachi was all in and at risk on a 7329 board with AA83, one pair of aces. He was ahead of Lonis, but the latter’s AJ107 had some outs to come from behind, claim a massive chip lead, and eliminate Mizrachi. The K river kept Mizrachi’s aces best, and he regained the lead, and a significant one at that.

Mizrachi once again utilized pocket aces to maximum effectiveness, at the expense of Toby Joyce. The Irish pro, an online WSOP bracelet winner, couldn’t make much out of AKJ3, while Mizrachi made a full house, tens full of aces, to eliminate Joyce in eighth place ($132,908).

Mizrachi took the rest of Lonis’ chips when Lonis once again failed to turn top pair and a straight draw into anything more on a blank river, as Mizrachi’s two-pair knocked Lonis out in seventh place ($175,233).

In a battle of short stacks, Michael Hahn made two pair, jacks and eights, to eliminate Raj Vohra in sixth place ($235,073). Mizrachi’s lead grew, as a busted flush draw turned into runner-runner two pair to eliminate Ian Matakis in fifth place ($320,763).

On the final hand of day 3, Mizrachi added Martin Zamani to his list of casualties. Mizrachi made two pair, tens and fives, to eliminate a short-stacked Zamani in fourth place ($445,080). Over the course of the final table alone, Mizrachi had eliminated four bracelet winners in Joyce, Lonis, Matakis, and Zamani, on his way to an almost insurmountable lead.

Closing It Out

To start the final day of the $10,000 PLO championship, Mizrachi had 40,225,000 against Hahn’s 4,450,000, and Zarvan Tumboli’s 5,500,000. Tumboli, who hails from India, had several notable results prior to this run. He won World Poker Tour Prime title in Vietnam 2022, and finished in seventh place in a $3,000 six-handed PLO event at the 2025 WSOP. Hahn’s previous career-best result came in 2017, when he won a Heartland Poker Tour title in Indiana.

But nothing, to this point, for either player came remotely close to battling Mizrachi three-handed, with $627,832 locked up and more than double that sum awaiting the champion.

While Tumboli managed a few doubles, Hahn’s run would end in third place ($627,832). Hahn flopped a spade flush draw and a pair, but failed to catch up to Mizrachi’s pocket jacks.

Tumboli got as close as 2:1, but Mizrachi never ceded the lead. On the final hand, the chips got in on a J88 flop. Tumboli’s AA63 was ahad, while Mizrachi’s J1076 needed a jack or a nine to win the tournament. The 4 turn gave Mizrachi four more outs, but the 9 was the card that made Mizrachi’s jack-high straight, and locked down bracelet number nine.

More Wins For ‘The Grinder’

With this win, Mizrachi earned 2,280 Card Player Player of the Year points. With 2,500 POY points for the year thus far, Mizrachi sits in 65th place in the yearlong race presented by CoinPoker. Lonis’ seventh-place finish puts him in eighth place in the Card Player POY standings, as he looks to go back-to-back.

At the $10,000 buy-in level, Mizrachi’s win also earned him a substantial 1,100 PokerGO Tour points. That brings his total to 1,220 PGT points on the season-long leaderboard, in strong position to make back-to-back PGT $1 Million Championship fields.

On the strength of this singular result, Tumboli is in 23rd place on the PGT leaderboard, though he’ll have to record results inside the PGT studio at some point this year in order to qualify. Lonis’ seventh place finish tacked 175 POY points onto his total for the year, bringing him just inside the cut line in 39th place.

Final Table Results
Place Player Payout POY Points PGT Points
1 Michael Mizrachi $1,350,203 2,280 1,100
2 Zurvan Tumboli $900,088 1,900 900
3 Michael Hahn $627,832 1,520 628
4 Martin Zamani $445,080 1,140 445
5 Ian Matakis $320,763 950 321
6 Raj Vohra $235,073 760 235
7 Jesse Lonis $175,233 570 175
8 Toby Joyce $132,908 380 133

Photo credits: WSOP / Tyler Abrams, Dominic Iaquinto





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