2022 WSOP Day 16: The Busiest Day Yet For Bracelets as Four Awarded

Poker News

There was a lot of gold dished out on Day 16 of the 2022 World Series of Poker at Bally’s and Paris Las Vegas with no fewer than four players taking down their respective events and capturing a coveted gold bracelet, in addition to a bankroll-boosting some of cash.

Jonathan Cohen was the first of the bracelet-winning quartet to secure his bracelet. Cowen defeated Kyle Dilschneider in Event #26: $10,000 Limit Hold’em Championship after a long, drawn-out heads-up battle. This event was scheduled to crown its champion on Day 15, but the heads-up duo opted to pause the tournament and have some much-needed rest. The rest did Cowen the world of good, and he emerged victoriously after another 4.5 hours of one-on-one action.

The second bracelet of the day went to Michael Simhai, who gets to call himself the Event #27: $1,500 Shootout No-Limit Hold’em champion. Simahi received his first piece of poker gold, $240,480 in prize money, and bragging rights among his peers. The Californian came out on top of a tough final table that housed the likes of Ravi Raghavan and Kevin Song.

Robert Cowen
Robert Cowen and his “Brit Rail”

Robert Cowen reeled in his second WSOP bracelet in as many years when he triumphed in Event #28: $50,000 Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller. The lover of four hole cards won his first bracelet in 2021 in a $3,000 Pot-Limit Omaha event, but this latest victory was extra special, not least because the popular grinder walked away with $1,393,816 in addition to bracelet number two.

Last but not least in the bracelet-winning stakes is Maxx Coleman. The Kansas native outlasted 436 opponents in Event #29: $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em 2-7 Lowball Draw for his long-awaited bracelet victory. Coleman had finished in the money in 57 WSOP events before this victory, and had helped himself to a pair of WSOP Circuit rings. He now has a gold bracelet to keep those rings company.

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Weinman Leads the Final 10 in the $1,000 PLO Event

Daniel Weinman
Daniel Weinman

Only ten players remain in Event #30: $1,000 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed from the 108 players who returned for Day 2 of this tournament. Those ten returning players have locked up $18,396 but one of them will walk away with $255,359 and a WSOP bracelet.

Daniel Weinman (6,420,000) is the man to catch going into Day 3 but the likes of Chino Rheem (4,855,000), WSOP bracelet winner Stephen Song (2,655,000), and German star Oliver Weis (1,610,000) are hunting him down.

Play resumes at noon on June 16 and continues until only one player has all the chip in play.

Event #30: $1,000 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed Final Day’s Chip Counts

Place Player Country Chips Big Blinds
1 Daniel Weinman United States 6,420,000 64
2 Eduardo Bernal Sanchez Colombia 4,940,000 49
3 Chino Rheem United States 4,855,000 48
4 Germandio Andoni United States 4,555,000 45
5 Jamey Hendrickson United States 4,495,000 45
6 Ruslan Dykshteyn United States 3,200,000 32
7 Ferenc Deak Hungary 2,850,000 28
8 Stephen Song United States 2,665,000 26
9 Oliver Weis Germany 1,610,000 16
10 Lautaro Guerra Spain 1,300,000 13

Find out if Weinman wins this $1,000 PLO event

Hasting Leads the $10K Deuce-to-Seven Triple Draw Championship

Brian Hastings
Brian Hastings is on course for bracelet #6

Five-time WSOP bracelet winner Brian Hastings has a legitimate shot at taking home his sixth bracelet because he is the chip lead with ten players remaining in Event #31: $10,000 Limit 2-7 Lowball Triple Draw Championship.

Hastings is one of three players who bagged up a seven-figure stack when Day 2 concluded. Eric Wasserson (1,350,000) and Marco Johnson (1,105,000) being those deep-stacked opponents.

Five others among the final ten have experienced the joy of becoming a WSOP champion at least once. Shaun Deeb (435,000) has triumphed on five occasions, while the legendary Phil Hellmuth is searching for his 17th piece of WSOP hardware.

You don’t want to miss the finale of this stacked event, so return to PokerNews from 2:00 p.m. local time on June 16 and follow all of our exclusive updates as they happen at Bally’s and Paris Las Vegas.

Event #31: $10,000 Limit 2-7 Lowball Triple Draw Championship Chip Counts

Place Player Country Chips Big Bets
1 Brian Hastings United States 1,365,000 34
2 Eric Wasserson United States 1,350,000 34
3 Marco Johnson United States 1,105,000 28
4 Jordan Siegel United States 725,000 18
5 Andrew Kelsall United States 540,000 14
6 Daniel Zack United States 535,000 13
7 Shaun Deeb United States 435,000 11
8 Phil Hellmuth United States 380,000 10
9 Yuval Bronshtein Israel 280,000 7
10 Ali Eslami United States 170,000 4

Don’t miss any of the action from this star-studded affair

Nakamura Rides Off With the $1,500 H.O.R.S.E. Chip Lead

Tamon Nakamura
Tamon Nakamura

Japan’s Tamon Nakamura leads Event #32: $1,500 H.O.R.S.E after Day 1, a day that saw the 773 entrants reduced to 264 over the course of 15 levels of action. Nakamura, who has cashed three times already at the 2022 WSOP, has done his chances of a fourth cash and his first bracelet no harm at all.

Dozens of top-tier grinders are among the players returning for what should be an action-packed Day 2. German soccer star Max Kruse (224,000) is second in chips, while Dzmitry Urbanovich (189,000), and Eric Rodawig (180,500) bagged up top ten chip stacks.

Others to look out for on Day 2 include defending champion Anthony Zinno (122,000), Phil Ivey (105,000), Frenchman Fabrice Soulier (85,000), Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi (76,000), and Mike “The Mouth” Matusow (45,000).

Cards are back in the air from noon local time on June 16, and PokerNews will bring you all of the updates from this star-studded affair.

Event #32: $1,500 H.O.R.S.E. Top Ten Chip Counts

Place Player Country Chips
1 Tamon Nakamura Japan 311,000
2 Max Kruse Germany 224,000
3 Nathaniel Parenti United States 206,500
4 John Fahmy United States 203,350
5 Natascha Stamm Germany 202,000
6 Robert Kearse Japan 196,500
7 Dzmitry Urbanovich Poland 189,000
8 Eric Rodawig Japan 180,500
9 Shirley Rosario Japan 172,000
10 Daniel Plonsker Japan 171,000

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Ullmann Leads a Host of Stars in the $3,000 6-Handed No-Limit Hold’em Event

Nino Ullmann
Nino Ullmann is the man to catch

Dat 1 of Event #33: $3,000 6-Handed No-Limit Hold’em drew in a substantial crowd of 1,348 players but only 55 of those starters progressed to Day 2. Nino Ullmann of Germany bagged up the chip lead, his 2,565,000 stack putting him narrowly ahead of Rayan Chamas (2,500,000) and Vanessa Kade (2,290,000) at the chip counts’ summit.

Short-handed No-Limit Hold’em tournaments seem to attract poker’s elite talent, and this event was no different. Dylan Linde (1,910,000), and Taylor Paur (1,660,000) bagged up top ten stacks. Keith Lehr (1,510,000), Davidi Kitai (1,470,000), and Dmitry Yurasov (1,420,000) find themselves lurking outside the top ten, while David Pham (695,000) and Barry Hutter (660,000) are still in contention.

Join the PokerNews live reporting team from 2:00 p.m. on June 16 when this tournament resumes.

Event #33: $3,000 6-Handed No-Limit Hold’em Top 10 Chip Counts

Place Player Country Chips Big Blinds
1 Nino Ullmann Germany 2,565,000 85
2 Rayan Chamas Canada 2,500,000 83
3 Vanessa Kade Canada 2,290,000 76
4 Matthew Wantman United States 2,170,000 72
5 Abbas Heidari United States 2,145,000 71
6 Viliyan Petleshkov Bulgaria 2,085,000 69
7 Dylan Linde United States 1,910,000 64
8 Taylor Paur United States 1,660,000 55
9 Joseph Antar Australia 1,650,000 55
10 Alexandre Moreau France 1,540,000 51

Check out the $3K 6-Max NLHE event

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