Las Vegas Review-Journal

Main Event winner’s payday: $8M

Tournament registers 6,650 for $62M pool

- By Jim Barnes Contact Jim Barnes at jbarnes@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-3830277. Follow @Jimbarnesl­v on Twitter.

Thousands of players are fighting to be the last one standing in the World Series of Poker Main Event.

Ryan Christophe­rson has the distinctio­n of being the last one to sit down.

Christophe­rson stretched late registrati­on at the Main Event to its limits Wednesday afternoon, winning a $2,060 one-hand satellite with four other players right before the entry deadline on Day 2.

Now he’s playing in his first WSOP Main Event.

“Probably would have been smarter just to buy in and get in at the start, but I like to gamble,” Christophe­rson, of Spokane, Washington, said with a laugh.

The Main Event, the $10,000 buy-in No-limit Hold’em World Championsh­ip, closed registrati­on with 6,650 entries, creating a prize pool of more than $62 million. First place will receive $8 million.

The final table of nine players will each receive at least $1 million. The top 1,000 places will be paid at least $15,000.

The field is down 22 percent from the last live Main Event in 2019, but that field of 8,569 was the second-largest in WSOP history. Hossein Ensan prevailed to win $10 million.

This year’s field is the 10th-largest of all time, but the smallest for a live Main Event since 6,420 in 2015. Every live Main Event since 2006 has had at least 6,300 entries.

Christophe­rson was competing with a few others in the satellite area to get into the Main Event field at the last second. They intended to play a one-hand $1,030 satellite, but couldn’t find enough takers. With time running out, they agreed to double the buy-in and play five-handed for $2,060.

“I didn’t really want to put in the $2,000, but we couldn’t get 10 guys,” Chrisopher­son said. “Those guys really wanted to do it, so I kind of felt like I should.”

The players received their cards, and the dealer laid out a flop, turn and river with a jack as the highest card. The players decided to reveal their hole cards one at a time. Christophe­rson went second and rolled over a jack, and no one could beat it. (His other card, which turned out to be irrelevant, was a king.)

A WSOP official standing by said, “Last man in!” He gave Christophe­rson 10,000 in tournament buy-in chips, then escorted him to the registrati­on area.

The Main Event was finishing the second of two Day 2 sessions Wednesday.

Phil Hellmuth, the all-time leader with 16 WSOP bracelets, had 119,600 chips at the dinner break. (The WSOP awards trophy bracelets for tournament victories.)

Doyle Brunson, tied for second with 10 WSOP bracelets, was eliminated late on Tuesday’s Day 2 session. The 88-year-old was seeking his third Main Event title.

 ?? Enrique Malfavon Pokergo ?? This is the bracelet to be awarded to the World Series of Poker Main Event champion.
Enrique Malfavon Pokergo This is the bracelet to be awarded to the World Series of Poker Main Event champion.

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