Daniel Neilson Leads WSOP Paradise Main Event Final Table
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The penultimate day of the 2023 WSOP Paradise Main Event has come to an end at the luxurious Atlantis Resort in The Bahamas.
The first-ever WSOP Paradise Main Event began with 3,010 entrants which created a $15,050,000 prize pool, and now the field has been whittled down to the final seven. Australia��s Daniel Neilson bagged the chip lead with 37,400,000, good for 62 big blinds when play resumes.
Also returning to the felt is Brazil��s Gabriel Schroeder (28,000,000), Germany��s Stanislav Zegal (28,000,000), Portugal��s Rui Sousa (20,700,000), Czech Republic��s Michael Sklenicka (16,000,000), United States�� Matt Glantz (15,500,000), and United Kingdom��s Montgomery McQuade (4,900,000) for an international final table.
Neilson had a runner-up finish earlier this series when he fell just short of his first bracelet in the 755-entrant Event #6: $3,000 6-Handed, and he will now have, in his own words, a ��redemption opportunity�� to win his maiden bracelet in the most prestigious event of the series.
Schroeder is the only player at the final table who currently has a bracelet, and Glantz will be looking to score another major win for ��TeamLucky�� after he was on the rail for Daniel Weinman��s WSOP Main Event win during the summer.
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The final seven players have all locked up $300,000, but all eyes are on the inaugural WSOP Paradise Main Event bracelet and $2,000,000 first-place prize.
WSOP Paradise Main Event Final Table
Seat | Player | Country | Chip Count | Big Blinds |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Michael Sklenicka | Czech Republic | 16,000,000 | 26 |
2 | Matt Glantz | United States | 15,500,000 | 25 |
3 | Stanislav Zegal | Germany | 28,000,000 | 46 |
4 | Gabriel Schroeder | Brazil | 28,000,000 | 46 |
5 | Montgomery McQuade | United Kingdom | 4,900,000 | 8 |
6 | Rui Sousa | Portugal | 20,700,000 | 34 |
7 | Daniel Neilson | Australia | 37,400,000 | 62 |
Day 3 began with 59 players returning to their seats with hopes to end the day at the final table. Some of the players to make early exits include Christopher Puetz (55th - $39,000), Eliot Hudon (52nd - $39,000), Mustapha Kanit (46th - $47,500), and Rayan Chamas (45th - $47,500), as well as bracelet winners Sam Greenwood (39th - $58,300), David Peters (35th - $58,300), and Barry Hutter (33rd - $58,300).
The remaining 25 players went on a dinner break and when they returned, it didn��t take long to get down to three tables. GGPoker Ambassador Kevin Martin got his chips in with king-jack but ran right into aces and was eliminated in 25th place. Others who were eliminated down the stretch include bracelet winners Moshe Refaelowitz (22nd - $90,000), Timothy Adams (20th - $90,000), Jacopo Achille (18th - $90,000), and Bryce Yockey (17th - $90,000).
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Following the two-table redraw, a flurry of Brazilians hit the rail with Pedro Garagnani (16th - $90,000), Day 2 chip leader Henrique Lessa (15th - $113,150), Wellington Araujo (14th - $113,150), and bracelet winner Vitor Dzivielevski (12th - $113,150). Third-place WSOP Main Event finisher Adam Walton was then stopped short of another Main Event run when he fell in 11th, and high-stakes crusher Mikita Badziakouski just missed out on the unofficial final table when he was eliminated in 10th.
Nine players converged on a single table and France��s Stephane Guelpa was the first to go out in ninth when he ran his ace-jack into the ace-king of Glantz. American Luke Graham then got pocket nines in against king-queen, but a queen on the flop sent him out in eighth. The remaining players played out the level and bagged to return for the final day.
Final Table Payouts
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1st | $2,000,000 | ||
2nd | $1,200,000 | ||
3rd | $900,000 | ||
4th | $685,000 | ||
5th | $510,000 | ||
6th | $400,000 | ||
7th | $300,000 | ||
8th | Luke Graham | United States | $250,000 |
The remaining seven players will return at 2 p.m. local time on Thursday, December 14 to play down to a winner on stream. When action resumes, Level 35 will begin with blinds at 300,000/600,000/600,000 and levels will continue to be 60 minutes.
Stay tuned as PokerNews continues to bring updates from Paradise Island until a WSOP Paradise Main Event champion is crowned.