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2026 WSOP Day 13: Brewer Leads the $10K Dealer’s Choice as Foxen and Kihara Win Gold

Chris Brewer

Day 13 of the 2026 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was another incredible day at the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas. Two bracelets were won, a pair of $25,000 buy-in events were in-play along side two $10,000 buy-ins, with a $500 Freezeout also running, showing the WSOP has something for everyone, regardless of their bankroll’s size.

Easily the biggest news from Day 13 of the 2026 WSOP was Kristen Foxen becoming a six-time bracelet winner after she took down the star-studded Event #19: $25,000 High Roller No-Limit Hold’em. Foxen also banked $1,773,083, a new career-high for the Canadian.

Event #23: $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship also crowned its worthy champion. Allen Kessler came agonizingly close to winning his first bracelet, but ultimately had to make do with a third-place finish. Naoya Kihara defeated James Cheung heads-up for the title, the bracelet, and $301,970. This is the second bracelet Kihara has won in the space of three days, both in $10,000 buy-in events!

Chris Brewer Leads an All-Star Cast on Day 1 of the $10K Dealer’s Choice Championship

Chris Brewer
Chris Brewer

An all-star cast of 135 players bought into Event #27: $10,000 Dealer’s Choice Championship, with 66 of those starters reaching Day 2. Although the Dealer’s Choice is usually frequented by the best mixed game specialists in the world, it was two big bet specialists who topped the chip counts at the close of play.

Chris Brewer (347,000) and Jesse Lonis (339,500) are better known for their No-Limit Hold’em and Pot-Limit Omaha prowess. However, they showed they know there were around 20 or so poker variants on Day 1. Brewer and Lonis each have two bracelets.

There were bracelet winners and $25K Fantasy Draft picks everywhere you looked in this event, as you would expect from such a prestigious tournament.

Foxen Finally Beats the Best to Win “Dream” WSOP $25K High Roller Title

Bryce Yockey (268,000), Matt Glantz (266,000), Owais Ahmed (230,000), Ben Diebold (216,500), Chad Eveslage (213,000), Marco Johnson (209,500), and Ariel Mantel (194,000) all finished Day 1 in the top 10.

Renan Bruschi (185,500), Nick Guagenti (182,000), Lawrence Brandt (177,000), Frank Kassela (147,500), Todd Brunson (139,500), reigning champion Ryan Hoenig (127,000), John Hennigan (111,000), and Eli Elezra (108,000) are just a small selection of elite-level mixed game players who navigated to Day 2.

Cards are back in the air from 1:00 p.m. local time on June 8, with late registration open until the end of the first level. Keep your browsers locked to PokerNews to follow all of the action from this incredibly stacked tournament.

Event #27: $10,000 Dealer’s Choice Championship Day 1 Top 10 Chip Counts

Rank Player Country Chip Count
1 Chris Brewer United States 347,000
2 Jesse Lonis United States 339,500
3 Bryce Yockey United States 268,000
4 Matt Glantz United States 266,000
5 Matthew Valeo United States 259,500
6 Owais Ahmed United States 230,000
7 Ben Diebold United States 216,500
8 Chad Eveslage United States 213,000
9 Marco Johnson United States 209,500
10 Ariel Mantel Argentina 194,000

Jason Wheeler Progresses From Monster Stack Day 2d

Jason Wheeler
Jason Wheeler

Day 2d of Event #18: $1,500 Monster Stack saw 2,153 players start the day with high hopes, but only 269 progressed to Day 2. Bagging up a top 10 stack at day’s end was Jason Wheeler (2,300,000), who is looking for his second WSOP bracelet.

Wheeler won his one and only bracelet in 2021 when he took down the $800 No-Limit Hold’em Deepstack event. He’s come close to adding another bracelet since finishing sixth in the Tag Team event in 2024 and sixth in the $1,500 NLHE Shootout last summer.

Joining Wheeler on Day 3 from this flight are such players as chip leader She Wong (3,800,000), Lukas Pazma (2,550,000), Faraz Jaka (1,540,000), Martin Zamani (880,000), and Cherish Andrews (650,000).

Day 3 kicks off at 11:00 a.m. local time on June 8 with the 660 survivors from all four Day 2s combining for the first time. Another 10 levels are on the agenda.

Event #18: $1,500 Monster Stack Day 2d Top 10 Chip Counts

Rank Player Country Chip Count Big Blinds
1 She Wong United States 3,800,000 152
2 Harold Rodriguez United States 3,430,000 137
3 Dallas Larson Canada 3,020,000 121
4 John Gonzalez United States 2,900,000 116
5 Lukas Pazma Slovakia 2,550,000 102
6 Sang Sim United States 2,345,000 94
7 Jason Wheeler United States 2,300,000 92
8 Nirath Rean United States 2,200,000 88
9 Stanislav Koleno Slovakia 2,200,000 88
10 Eric Landen United States 2,075,000 83

Anthony Reategui is the Chip Leader After Day 2 of the $1,500 Big O

Anthony Reategui
Anthony Reategui

It has been 21 years since Anthony Reategui became a WSOP champion, but is now within touching distance of more WSOP hardware after bagging up the chip lead on Day 2 of Event #22: $1,500 Big O.

Reategui returns to the action as one of only two players with more than 100 big blinds, his 5,900,000 stack equivalent to 118 big blinds. Casey Hayes (5,700,000) is the other big blind centurion.

Twenty-eight players stand between Reategui and his second bracelet. They include Thomas Koral (3,700,000), Scott Abrams (2,600,000), and Bruno Furth (2,300,000), who all return in the top 10. Furth is looking to complete a hat trick of Omaha-related bracelets.

The two Day 1 leaders also progressed, but at different ends of the chip counts. Day 1a leader John Holley (1,500,000) built on his early momentum to finish 13th on the night, while $25K Fantasy Draft pick Nicolas Milgrom (175,000) led on Day 1b but brings up the rear when play resumes.

Day 3, the final day, starts at 1:00 p.m. local time on June 8 and continues until only one player remains. The last player standing will receive $387,110 and this event’s bracelet.

Event #22: $1,500 Big O Day 2 Top 10 Chip Counts

Rank Player Country Chip Count Big Blinds
1 Nicolas Milgrom France 816,000 163
2 Michael Khan Canada 580,000 116
3 Bruno Furth United States 557,000 111
4 Richard Green United States 545,000 109
5 Joseph Ramos United States 533,000 107
6 Anthony Reategui United States 519,000 104
7 Jon Shoreman United Kingdom 465,000 93
8 Sergio Martinez United States 435,000 87
9 Shawn Rice United States 425,000 85
10 Sang Shin United States 424,000 85

Sean Winter Leads the Final Seven in the $25K NLHE 6-Handed Event

Sean Winter
Sean Winter

Only seven players remain in the hunt for a $1,286,285 top prize in Event #24: $25,000 High Roller Six-Handed No-Limit Hold’em after the second of three scheduled days.

All eyes were on 10-time WSOP bracelet winner Erik Seidel as he looked to become only the third player in history to win more than 10 WSOP bracelets. Unfortunately for Seidel and his legion of fans, he fell just short of the final table, busting in ninth place.

Sean Winter (7,950,000) is the man to catch going into the final table, followed by Artur Martirosian (6,545,000) and Pavel Plesuv (5,965,000).

Yosuke Miki (4,605,000) is hoping to make it three bracelets won by Japanese players this summer, while Klemens Roiter (4,530,000) is looking for his second bracelet.

Marius Gierse (3,888,000) and a short-stack Chance Kornuth (835,000) complete the seven superstars at the final table.

The final table action begins at 1:30 p.m. local time. WSOP will stream it with a 2.5-hour delay later in the afternoon, once they get down to six players.

Event #24: $25,000 High Roller Six-Handed No-Limit Hold’em Final Day Counts

Rank Player Country Chip Count Big Blinds
1 Sean Winter United States 7,950,000 99
2 Artur Martirosian Russian Federation 6,545,000 82
3 Pavel Plesuv Moldova, Republic of 5,965,000 75
4 Yosuke Miki Japan 4,605,000 58
5 Klemens Roiter Austria 4,530,000 57
6 Marius Gierse Austria 3,888,000 49
7 Chance Kornuth United States 835,000 10

Huge Crowd Reduced to 162 on Day 1 of the $500 NLHE Freezeout

Josh Reichard
Josh Reichard

Freezeout tournaments are something of a rarity these days, so it was no surprise that 4,100 players decided to enter Event #25: $500 Freezeout No-Limit Hold’em. The 30-minute levels combined with the freezeout format meant only 162 players had chips to bag once 22 levels were done and dusted.

Josh Reichard (1,355,000) was the biggest name who built a big Day 1 stack. The 17-time WSOP Circuit ring winner returns on Day 2 in tenth place, hoping to finally get his hands on a WSOP bracelet.

Martin Kabrhel Torches $25k Buy-in WSOP High Roller in One Hand

Only two of the Day 1 survivors have previously won bracelets. Chris Hunichen (700,000) is one of them. “Big Huni” won the $100,000 No-Limit Hold’em High Roller in 2024 for $2,838,389, a prize that is over $1.1 million of this events’ prize pool! Hunichen sure loves the grind!

Travis Johnson (355,000) is the other bracelet winner. Johnson triumphed in a $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em event back in 2009.

The 162 survivors return to their seats at 11:00 a.m. local time on June 8. The plan is to continue playing until only one players has all of the chips in play.

Event #25: $500 Freezeout No-Limit Hold’em Day 1 Top 10 Chip Counts

Rank Player Country Chip Count Big Blinds
1 Rahulinder Dhillon United States 2,334,500 78
2 Srdan Mihajlovic Serbia 1,785,000 60
3 Lou Brayden United States 1,700,000 57
4 Steven Edmonds[ United States 1,600,000 53
5 Alexander Ho United States 1,580,000 53
6 Bill Bringold United States 1,515,000 51
7 Arthur Demirchyan United States 1,500,000 50
8 Sam Ruha Australia 1,380,000 46
9 Claudiu-Mihai Burlacu United Kingdom 1,360,000 46
10 Josh Reichard United States 1,355,000 45

Xuan Liu Bags Big on Day 1 of the $2,000 NLHE

Xuan Liu
Xuan Liu

Canada’s Xuan Liu (585,000) has done her chances of becoming a WSOP bracelet winner no harm at all by bagging up a top three stack on Day 1 of Event #26: $2,000 No-Limit Hold’em. Some 968 players bought in, with 160 progressing to Day 2, and only Jason Palker (742,000) and Srivinay Irrinki (612,000) bagged and tagged the largest stacks than Liu.

Liu is a popular figure on the live poker circuit. She has more than $3.4 million in live cashes, including an $860,000 haul from a $25,000 buy-in WPT Global Slam event at the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Montenegro in May.

Others to look out for in PokerNews‘ live reporting updates on Day 2 include Zdenek Zizka (415,000), Bernhard Binder (206,000, Adam Hendrix (187,000), Shiina Okamoto (180,000), Aaron Kupin (168,000), and Jonathan Tamayo (151,000).

Day 2 of this event starts at 12:00 p.m. local time, and PokerNews will be on hand to bring you our traditional coverage. See you there!

Event #26: $2,000 No-Limit Hold’em Day 1 Top 10 Chip Counts

Rank Player Country Chip Count Big Blinds
1 Jason Palker United States 742,000 124
2 Srivinay Irrinki United States 612,000 102
3 Xuan Liu Canada 585,000 98
4 Takahiro Kidokoro Japan 541,000 90
5 David McGowan United States 538,000 90
6 Jose Nadal Mexico 514,000 86
7 Yulian Bogdanov Bulgaria 480,000 80
8 Yaniv Peretz Latvia 449,000 75
9 Zdenek Zizka Czech Republic 415,000 70
10 Peter Yang United States 410,000 68

What to Expect on Day 14 of the 2026 WSOP

WSOP Branding 2026

Event #25: $500 Freezeout No-Limit Hold’em is the first in-play event to resume on June 8, doing so at 11:00 a.m. local time. Play will continue until only one player remains, with that player banking $190,066 and a WSOP bracelet.

It is also an 11:00 a.m. local time start for Day 3 of Event #18: $1,500 Monster Stack, where 660 players head to the Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas. PokerNews’ traditional live reporting from this event starts today, so don’t forget to tune in.

Starting at noon is the second day of Event #26: $2,000 No-Limit Hold’em. The plan for Day 2 is to complete another 10 levels, which should mean the final table is within sight once play ends.

Two more events continue from 1:00 p.m. local time. One is the final day of Event #22: $1,500 Big O, and the other is Day 2 of the star-studded Event #27: $10,000 Dealer’s Choice Championship.

Another bracelet will be won on the final day of Event #24: $25,000 High Roller No-Limit Hold’em Six-Handed, which resumes at 1:30 p.m. local time.

Tyler Brown
Tyler Brown

Three new events have their respective Day 1s on June 8. At 10:00 a.m. local time, a big crowd is expected to enter Event #28: $600 Mixed No-Limit Hold’em/Pot-Limit Omaha. At the 2025 WSOP, this event saw 2,775 players buy in and Tyler Brown come out on top. Brown netted $178,126 for his $600 investment.

Jason Koon
Jason Koon

Poker’s elite will gather at 12:00 p.m. local time for Day 1 of Event #29: $50,000 High Roller No-Limit Hold’em. Jason Koon is the reigning champion of this high-stakes event. Koon left 170 opponents in his wake on his way to claiming the $1,968,927 top prize and his second WSOP bracelet.

Jason Duong Winner - Event #33: $1,500 Limit Hold'em
Jason Duong

The final tournament of the day starts at 2:00 p.m. local time. https://www.pokernews.com/tours/wsop/2026-wsop/event-30-limit-holdem/https://www.pokernews.com/tours/wsop/2026-wsop/event-30-limit-holdem/ should see more than 400 min-bet specialists enter. Last year, Jason Duong topped a 491-strong field and scooped his first bracelet and $130,062.

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Matthew Pitt

Matthew Pitt

Senior Editor

Matthew Pitt hails from Leeds, West Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom, and has worked in the poker industry since 2008, and worked for PokerNews since 2010. In September 2010, he became the editor of PokerNews. Matthew stepped away from live reporting duties in 2015, and now concentrates on his role of Senior Editor for the PokerNews.

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