2026 World Series of Poker

Day: 3
Event Info
2026 World Series of Poker
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
a10
Prize
$1,000,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,000
Prize Pool
$11,052,800
Total Entries
12,560
Level Info
Level
48
Blinds
10,000,000 / 15,000,000
Ante
15,000,000
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
9
Players Left
1
Players Left 1 / 12,560
Filter

Filter

Filter By
Sort By

Yunye Lu Eliminated in 9th Place ($100,000)

Level 45 : Blinds 3,000,000/6,000,000, 6,000,000 ante
Yunye Lu
Yunye Lu

Yunye Lu open shoved from cutoff for 127,000,000. Richard Harris in the small blind called taking them to showdown.

Yunye Lu: 98All in
Richard Harris: KQ

Harris was ahead and stayed ahead on the board that ran JK443. Lu left the table as Harris scooped the pot.

Enzel Doubles Through Ide

Level 45 : Blinds 3,000,000/6,000,000, 6,000,000 ante

Akira Ide shoved for around 48,000,000 from the cutoff for the action to fold to Ohad Enzel in the big blind who called the for 37,500,000 he had in front of him.

Ohad Enzel: QQ All in
Akira Ide: A3

The board ran out 106J6J for Enzel to hold with the pocket queens for the higher two pair than on the board to double up with.

Tags: Akira IdeOhad Enzel

Level: 45

Blinds: 3,000,000/6,000,000

Ante: 6,000,000

Who Will Receive a $1 Million Payday Today?

Amin Mostafavi
Amin Mostafavi

Welcome back to PokerNews' coverage of Event #72: $1,000 Mini Main Event here at the 2026 World Series of Poker (WSOP). At 12:00 p.m. local time, this event's nine finalists will return to the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas to bring this tournament to a thrilling conclusion. Whoever comes out on top will get their hands on their first WSOP bracelet and a cool $1 million top prize.

This event saw 12,560 entrants create an $11,052,800 prize pool, and the bulk of that pot is up for grabs at the final table. Each of the returning nine players is guaranteed to take home at least $100,000 for their efforts, with the champion securing a massive $1 million.

Final Day Seat Draw

SeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Jeffrey EvansUnited States112,000,00022
2Jaime HaletkyUnited States93,500,00019
3Amin MostafaviUnited States162,000,00032
4Akira IdeJapan43,000,0008.5
5Jaehwa SonCanada64,500,00013
6Yunye LuChina44,000,0009
7Ohad EnzelUnited States43,500,0008.5
8Richard HarrisUnited Kingdom101,000,00020
10Daisuke OgitaJapan92,500,00019

None of the nine finalists is particularly deep-stacked at the start of play. Amin Mostafavi (162,000,000) is the chip leader when play resumes. While his nine-figure stack looks huge, it is still only the equivalent of 32 big blinds.

Jeffrey Evans (112,000,000) and Richard Harris (101,000,000) also have more than 100 million chips to play with.

Just outside the top three is where you find Jaime Haletky (93,500,000) and Japan's Daisuke Ogita (92,500,000), with Jaehwa Son (64,500,000) just below them.

Yunye Lu (44,000,000), Ohad Enzel (43,500,000), and Akira Ide (43,000,000) return to the action with sub-10 big blind stacks.

Play resumes on Level 33, with blinds of 200,000/400,000 and a 400,000 big blind ante. There will be 15-minute breaks every four levels, and the decision on whether to take a dinner break will be made during play.

Keep your browsers locked to PokerNews as we bring you all of the action, as it happens, from the $1,000 Mini Main Event final table.

Tags: Akira IdeAmin MostafaviDaisuke OgitaJaehwa SonJaime HaletkyJeffrey EvansOhad EnzelRichard HarrisYunye Lu

Event #72: $1,000 Mini Main Event

Day 3 Started

Prev 123 Next