Event #80: $10,000 8-Game Mixed Championship
Day 2 Completed
Event #80: $10,000 8-Game Mixed Championship
Day 2 Completed
The start of the Main Event was the big attraction throughout the Paris Las Vegas ballroom today, but Brian Rast and Alex Foxen made sure there was still plenty of starpower to go around on Day 2 of Event #80: $10,000 8-Game Mixed Championship at the 2026 World Series of Poker.
Rast and Foxen finished far ahead of the field as 12 players will return tomorrow at 1 p.m. local time to battle for the bracelet. Rast was the only player to bag up more than 2,000,000, ending up with 2,465,000, while Foxen followed behind with 1,955,000.
| Rank | Player | Country | Chip Count | Big Blinds | Big Bets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Brian Rast | United States | 2,465,000 | 123 | 31 |
| 2 | Alex Foxen | United States | 1,955,000 | 98 | 24 |
| 3 | Richard Bai | United States | 1,120,000 | 56 | 14 |
| 4 | Dzmitry Urbanovich | Poland | 1,030,000 | 52 | 13 |
| 5 | Matt Vengrin | United States | 835,000 | 42 | 10 |
| 6 | Taylor Atchison | United States | 810,000 | 41 | 10 |
| 7 | Nicholas Marchington | United Kingdom | 765,000 | 38 | 10 |
| 8 | Bryn Kenney | United States | 745,000 | 37 | 9 |
| 9 | Derek Hanauer | United States | 735,000 | 37 | 9 |
| 10 | Maksim Pisarenko | Russian Federation | 610,000 | 31 | 8 |
| 11 | Ryan Miller | United States | 550,000 | 28 | 7 |
| 12 | David Baker | United States | 345,000 | 17 | 4 |
Foxen, already with one bracelet this summer, was the first player to crack seven figures before he won a massive pot of Seven Card Stud against Richard Bai with a full house. He then made a flush on the river to bust Hiroyuki Noda, and also won another Stud pot by betting out Derek Hanauer on seventh.
Trying to track down the two poker superstars tomorrow is a litany of top mixed-game pros and WSOP bracelet winners. Bai (1,120,000) and Dzmitry Urbanovich (1,030,000) are the other members of the million-chip club, while Matt Vengrin (835,000), $1,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo champion Taylor Atchison (810,000), Nick Marchington (765,000), and poker’s all-time leading money winner Bryn Kenney (745,000) are also top stacks. Further down the leaderboard are Maksim Pisarenko (610,000), Ryan Miller (550,000), and David Baker (345,000).
More than 40 new arrivals on Day 2 brought the total field up to 199 players, generating a prize pool of $1,850,700 by the time late registration closed. Phil Hellmuth was given plenty of time to prepare for his Main Event entrance dressed as Superman when he busted shortly after entering, while Jeremy Ausmus, Joe Hachem, Alex Livingston, Bryce Yockey, and Patrick Leonard also fell short of the money.
Caitlin Comeskey came a few spots short when her pocket queens were cracked by Rast’s flopped set. PPC champion Benny Glaser was then eliminated on the money bubble when Ali Eslami and Hanauer chopped a three-way Stud Hi-Lo pot as the remaining 30 players all locked up a piece of the prize pool.
Paul Volpe (27th), Jerry Wong (24th), start-of-day chip leader Clayton Mozdzen (23rd), Marco Johnson (20th), John Racener (15th), and Todd Brunson (13th) were among those sent to the payout desk.
| Place | Prize |
|---|---|
| 1 | $431,260 |
| 2 | $283,660 |
| 3 | $191,570 |
| 4 | $132,880 |
| 5 | $94,730 |
| 6 | $69,460 |
| 7 | $52,430 |
| 8-9 | $40,780 |
| 10-11 | $32,710 |
| 12 | $27,080 |
The action on Day 3 picks up on Level 21 with No-Limit and Pot-Limit blinds of 10,000/20,000 and limits of 40,000/80,000. Levels will be extended to 90 minutes tomorrow. The remaining 12 players have all locked up at least $27,080, while the champion will take home $431,260 and the WSOP gold bracelet.
The WSOP is entering its closing stages, and for Rast and Foxen, tomorrow presents one of the last chances they’ll get to bolster their Hall of Fame resumes. Stay tuned as PokerNews returns to follow all the action down to the crowning of a new 8-Game champion.
| Table | Seat | Player | Country | Chip Count |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 72 | 1 | Ryan Miller | United States | 550,000 |
| 72 | 2 | Nicholas Marchington | United Kingdom | 765,000 |
| 72 | 3 | Maksim Pisarenko | Russia | 610,000 |
| 72 | 4 | Bryn Kenney | United States | 745,000 |
| 72 | 5 | Alex Foxen | United States | 1,955,000 |
| 72 | 6 | Dzmitry Urbanovich | Poland | 1,030,000 |
| 73 | 1 | Brian Rast | United States | 2,465,000 |
| 73 | 2 | Taylor Atchison | United States | 810,000 |
| 73 | 3 | Derek Hanauer | United States | 735,000 |
| 73 | 4 | Richard Bai | United States | 1,120,000 |
| 73 | 5 | Matt Vengrin | United States | 835,000 |
| 73 | 6 | David Baker | United States | 345,000 |
All hands have been played out, completing Day 2 of the $10k 8-Game Championship.
Twelve players have progressed to the final day. Stay tuned for their chip counts and a recap of the day.
No-Limit Hold'em
Bryn Kenney raised to 35,000 in the cutoff. Richard Bai made it 100,000 to go on the button, and quickly called off when Kenney four-bet jammed for 365,000.
Bryn Kenney: J♠J♥
Richard Bai: 8♥8♦
It looked all over for Kenney after Bai hit a set on the 10♦2♥Q♣8♣ turn, but Kenney retaliated on the J♣ river, making a higher set to secure his late-night double.
Omaha Hi-Lo
Nicholas Marchington raised in the hijack and was called by David Baker on the button and Ryan Miller in the big blind.
Marchington bet on the A♥2♣J♥ flop and Baker folded, while Miller then raised. Marchington called, and the 2♠ fell on the turn.
Miller led out with a bet, and Marchington called. Miller bet again on the Q♣ river, and Marchington folded this time.
A few hands later, Alex Foxen bet from the cutoff on a flop of 4♠4♦10♦ and Marchington raised in the big blind. Foxen called.
The turn was the 5♣ and Marchington bet. Foxen then raised, and Marchington called.
Foxen bet again on the Q♠ river, and Marchington called. Foxen then showed A♥K♥9♠4♥ for trips, and Marchington mucked.
The floor has announced that the 12 remaining players will play three more hands before Day 2 wraps up.
2-7 Triple Draw
Dzmitry Urbanovich raised in the cutoff. Taylor Atchison defended his big blind, drawing two cards before Urbanovich took one. Atchison then check-called a bet by Urbanovich, after which the duo took one card each on the second draw.
They checked it to the final draw, where they both drew one again. Atchison checked again, but Urbanovich fancied a bet. Atchison quickly called to showdown, but he could not beat Urbanovich's 8x7x5x3x2x and mucked his cards.
2-7 Triple Draw
Brian Rast opened the action with a raise under the gun. Taylor Atchison responded with a three-bet from the cutoff, which Rast called before drawing two cards.
Atchison also took two, and he called when Rast led out with a bet. Rast remained pat on the second draw, while Atchison tossed in one card.
Rast then bet, seeing Atchison fold his hand to forfeit the pot.