Phil Ivey had a shot at capturing his 12th gold bracelet at the 2025 World Series of Poker (WSOP), but the Poker Hall of Famer bowed out of the $25,000 High Roller Pot-Limit Omaha event in sixth place.
Ivey, who earned $394,531 for his deep run, entered his first final table of the summer second in chips in a tournament with 489 entrants.
$25,000 High Roller Pot-Limit Omaha Payouts
Bryn Kenney, who is closing in on $80 million in live tournament cashes, busted in 11th place ($134,007), while 2011 WSOP Player of the Year Ben Lamb finished ninth in what he called his "white whale" tournament.
The remaining players still have a shot at the $2,292,155 first-place prize, to be awarded on Friday.
Poker Legend Comes Up Short?
Ivey, who ended a 10-year bracelet drought last year when he took down the $10,000 2-7 Triple Draw Championship, started the summer off a bit slow. But he's been stepping it up recently, and bracelet number 12 could be on the horizon, which would pull him closer to Phil Hellmuth's 17-bracelet record.
The former Full Tilt Poker pro widely considered the best poker player of all time, at the time of original publishing, held a sizable chip lead in the PLO High Roller. Ivey was sitting on 12,960,000 chips, a commanding advantage over his nearest competitor, Evan Krentzman, who had 9,570,000 chips.
Ivey entered Day 3 near the bottom of the chip counts, finding himself 26th of 28 with a stack of 785,000. He since run his stack up to more than ten times that with ten players remaining.
Ivey gained some of those chips in a pot against Daniel Geeng that saw the Poker Hall of Famer four-betting the flop with jacks full and Geeng calling with trips to be eliminated in 17th place for $87,098, according to PokerNews live updates.
Additional chips were earned with 11 players left as Ivey moved all in on the river in a big heads-up pot against Kentzman, only to secure a fold from the first-time bracelet hopeful.
Things turned for Ivey during six-handed play when he ran into the nut flush of British High Roller Talal Shakerchi and soon after lost a three-bet pot against Dennis Weiss.
Ivey was left short and soon after ran kings into the aces of Michael Duek to go out in sixth place for $394,531.
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