Worth The Wait: WSOP Bracelet No Longer Eludes Blumenthal Upon Stud-8/O-8 Victory

Jacob Wilson
Live Reporter
8 min read
Eddie Blumenthal

The third and final day in Event #45: $2,500 Mixed Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better; Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better has come to a close, and the 587 entries into the event have been whittled down to just one. Eddie Blumenthal came out on top of the star-studded field to take down his maiden World Series of Poker bracelet, outlasting Hall of Famers and Players of the Year alike at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas

Not only did Blumenthal get his first taste of WSOP silverware, but he earned almost a quarter million in the process, taking home the top prize of $248,545; the lion’s share of the $1,306,075 prize pool that had been generated.

It’s his career best score in a mixed game event, as well as his first win in one, leapfrogging his $155,971 won after coming agonizingly close in 2021’s $10,000 H.O.R.S.E event, ending up with a third-place finish. This result takes his career earnings over the three-million mark, and has him knocking on the door of Wisconsin’s top five all-time.

Cheered along by his rail, there was nothing that could’ve stopped him from taking down the competition, as he took the chip lead with five remaining, and traded that badge with third-place finisher Donovan Bates all the way to three-handed play. Once the podium was set, he was nigh on impossible to stop, as he whittled his opponents down to further increase his advantage.

Runner-up Nikolai Fal managed to claw back to even as heads-up began, but it would be over in a matter of minutes as Blumenthal continued to extract max value in both game variants, and increase his chip stack exponentially.

Fal played a great game as well, and the two showed a lot of respect for each other throughout the day, sharing a handshake after the final hand. Something of a stud aficionado, his first bracelet came in the Hi-Lo format in 2024, but he was unable to get his hands on a second, as he heads home with $165,530 for his efforts.

Event #45: $2,500 Mixed Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better; Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Eddie BlumenthalUnited States$248,545
2Nikolai FalRussian Federation$165,530
3Donovan BatesUnited States$114,310
4Soshi YasoshimaJapan$80,340
5Adam WalterUnited States$57,490
6Mark VathanasinUnited States$41,900
7Dekel BalasIsrael$31,100
8Todd IvensUnited States$23,540

Winner's Reaction

Blumenthal has had his fair share of close calls in the past, recalling to PokerNews that this was his tenth final table, but undoubtedly the most memorable. Having come so close in the past, he finally managed to go all the way, as running good and playing even better made for a dream combination to secure the win.

“It feels nice to finally have a whole final come together, and be able to close it out,” remarked Blumenthal, acknowledging that in the past cards haven’t fallen in the right way, and minor mistakes have resulted in changes of fate. “I’ve been right in the spot to get a bracelet a few times before,” he added, as his first triumph comes even sweeter given his closeness in the past.

Eddie Blumenthal
Eddie Blumenthal

Blumenthal also noted that the final table especially felt very different from those that he had played in before, in that there were “a lot of really talented players in Stud-8 and O-8” involved, as well as players without a mixed games background running deep and playing well. It was by no means an easy battle, but he managed to make the most of his table draws across the three days and play to his strengths against each new challenger he faced.

Although he has some incredible scores in Hold’em, and is very comfortable with the format, Blumenthal certainly has prowess in the many other poker formats on offer.

“I definitely prefer mixed games to hold’em, they’re way more fun,” he noted, adding that the two variants involved in the tournament were two of his best, so a half-and-half event with the two of them certainly suited how he played. He managed to stay “locked in” between the switches in-game, and managed to find a great balance in playing each.

Although some players struggle to completely change gear after a game switch, Blumenthal pointed out that following an intense eight hands of Stud, where dead cards are extremely important, Omaha becomes something of a refresher, in that your own cards are the ones that you focus on. He described it as “kind of fun, that back and forth.”

Eddie Blumenthal
Eddie Blumenthal

A further aspect of the game is the limits, which he explained are a completely different animal from No and Pot-Limit variants. Every decision in a limit game could well open the door to elimination, and the jump from small bets to big bets can compound decisions into huge effects.

Blumenthal will by no means slow down, and rightly so, as a summer full of mixed games still lies ahead. Having had a “rough start to the series” and a “pretty bad time” up until now, he noted that “it only takes one” to completely change the outcome of a trip.

A well-earned victory can certainly lead to more, as multiple $10,000 mixed tournaments will have Blumenthal in the field, and there is no reason to believe he can’t turn one victory into to, as he has finally found the winning formula after so many close calls.

There are plenty who think the same, as shown by his incredible rail, who rooted and shouted for him right until the very end. “It’s fun to win with your friends, we win together,” he added. Those who know him knew these close calls would turn into gold, and now those who don’t know it too.

Final Day Action

Jun Weng was the first to fall during the final day of action, his elimination coming very early on in the level as his all-in was called off by Blumenthal in Omaha, who had him pipped for both the high and the low portion of the hand. It took a while for more bustouts to follow, but once they did, they came thick and fast, as Ian Cohen, Danny Chang, and Sean Yu all fell before the two-table redraw took place.

Sean Yu
Sean Yu

When three became two, more players followed suit, with Stanislav Ivanov the first casualty. He was set to triple up on sixth, but the deck had other ideas as Justin Liberto pulled trips on seventh to end his bracelet dreams. Tyler Phillips busted shortly after, in an upsetting end to a very swingy day. Shortly after securing a massive triple by boating up on seventh, it was Omaha that would be his downfall, as he couldn’t get a piece of the pie in a four-way pot.

The final lady in the field, Cyndy Violette, was vying for her second bracelet, with her first coming in Stud Hi-Lo back in 2004. She nursed a shorter stack for most of the day, before having her aces cracked by Blumenthal in Omaha Hi-Lo. Both she and Frederic Moss received $11,470 for their efforts, as the latter found himself flopped nearly dead to Donovan Bates’ trips, and was unable to find running cards to survive.

Cyndy Violette
Cyndy Violette

Andrew Yeh was another player in the field looking to double their bracelet tally, as his first, too, had come in a mixed game, that being the 2022 H.O.R.S.E. Unfortunately for Yeh, his two pair on sixth got cracked on the very same street by Dekel Balas, rounding out the field to ten.

Jonathan Nebbout then claimed the title of final table bubbler, as he made a second deep run of the summer following his third place finish in the $1,500 H.O.R.S.E. He turned nut straight in Omaha lost out to a rivered flush, as all the remaining players moved to the only table left.

The unofficial final table’s casualty was yet another player who has had a great summer so far. Justin Liberto, off the back of both a bracelet win and a runner-up finish in Omaha variants, was back doing what he does best: running deep. Unfortunately for him, the official final table was one step too far, as he was the shortest stack of the final nine, and got scooped in stud by tablemates Soshi Yasoshima and Eddie Blumenthal.

The three following eliminations both came in stud, also, with Todd Ivens getting in his short stack on fourth. He finished with a pair and a low, but in a tale as old as time, he couldn't take down any portion of the pot, with two opponents having the best of it on either side. Seventh-place finisher Dekel Balas bricked out on his low draw, and couldn’t get anything going for the high, ending up with no pair and just a queen as his high card, he took home a respectable $31,100.

Mark Vathanasin had nursed a short stack for quite a while, making a $10,000 pay jump from seventh to sixth in the process. He had some ups and downs, but ended up being outdrawn by Blumenthal to confirm the final five.

Dekel Balas
Dekel Balas

Fourth place finisher Adam Walter and fifth place Soshi Yasoshima exited in the Omaha streets, with Walter outkicked by Fal, before the Russian took another life, with Yasoshima’s pair no match for his top two alongside the third nut low.

Three-handed play carried on for quite a while, until chip leader at the start of the Day Donovan Bates was left without any left. He had picked up the extremely unfortunate habit of bricking on seventh, with many a hand going all the way, then heading to his opponent. His two pair was cracked by eventual champion Blumenthal, as he headed home with a podium finish.

Donovan Bates
Donovan Bates

The heads-up battle was poised to be a grueling one, but Blumenthal took matters into his own hands and started grinding away at Nikolai Fal’s stack. With scooped pots coming thick and fast, and folding out his opponent on multiple occasions, it was only a matter of time before the chips could get in preflop.

That’s exactly what happened, and at the first time of asking the two chopped it up, but just one hand later Blumenthal made trips with a low, and was handed a well-earned first bracelet, which could well be the first of many.

That’s a wrap on PokerNews live coverage of this event, as a Mixed Hi-lo hopeful will have to wait another year for a chance at WSOP glory. Stay tuned, as there is so much more poker yet to be played with the series just approaching the halfway mark.

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Jacob Wilson
Live Reporter

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 Champion61 Taylor Atchison Wins First WSOP Gold Bracelet For Wife and Son62 Koji Fujimoto Beats the Legends on His Way to $10k Limit 2-7 Triple Draw Title63 Students Surpass Their Mentors as Drumond and Lessa Win 2026 WSOP Tag Team Title64 Chasing the Dream: Amateur Skye Chen Conquers WSOP Ladies Field65 Michael Mizrachi Crushes PLO Event for Ninth WSOP Bracelet and $1.3 Million66 "Rampage" Stuns Mateos to Win Second Bracelet in WSOP $5K Championship67 Matthew Higgins Outlasts Record Mystery Millions Field to Pick Up Million-Dollar Payday68 Dylan Smith Captures Long-Awaited Maiden Bracelet in Mixed Big Bet69 Shaun Deeb Breaks His Heads-Up Curse to Win WSOP Bracelet #970 Matt Grapenthien Achieves WSOP Glory Once Again After Winning the $10,000 Stud Hi-Lo Championship71 From Cash King to Tournament Titan: Markus Gonsalves Wins Maiden Bracelet in $5k 6-Max72 Daniel Negreanu Wins Eighth WSOP Bracelet and $2,257,71873 Daisuke Ogita Captures Event #72: $1,000 Mini Main Event for Career-Best $1,000,00074 Martin Kabrhel Wins Sixth WSOP Bracelet While Multi-Tabling Three Events75 Patrick Stacey’s Dedication Delivers First WSOP Bracelet in $2,500 Mixed Triple Draw Lowball

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