The 2023 World Series of Poker Main Event in Las Vegas reached a final table with nine players remaining in the hunt for $12.1 million and the coveted special bracelet. Adam Walton from Los Angeles leads the final table with 143.8M in chips. Also still alive are Americans Steven Jones and Dan Weinman, Toby Lewis and Dean Hutchison from the UK, Germany's Jan-Peter Jachtmann, Ukraine's Ruslan Prydryk, Juan Maceiras from Spain, and Daniel Holzner from Italy. The final table resumes on Sunday.

And then there were nine. During a historic summer at the Paris/Horseshoe Casinos on Las Vegas Blvd., the 2023 WSOP Main Event snapped a record that was set back in 2006 when the marquee even attracted 10,043 entrants. It took 17 years, but the field finally set a new mark and topped 10,000 runners. There are nine players remaining in this record-setting field. One of the final nine will become the next big name in poker and an overnight sensation as the 2023 WSOP Main Event Champion. Who will it be?
Three Americans, two Brits, and four Europeans locked up seats at the final table. The quartet of Europeans represent Ukraine, Spain, Italy, and Germany. A non-American won the Main Event in each of the last four years including Germany, Brazil, Austria, and Norway. Could Spain or Germany claim another champion? How about a first from Ukraine or Italy? Or how about the first champion from the UK since 1990 when Mansour Matloubi shipped the Main Event?
Adam Walton is the chip leader and the American bagged up the big stack worth 143,800,000. The LA-based player is the only monster stack above 100M, and he had 53M more than the closest competitor. Walton holds more chips than the bottom four stacks combined.
Steven Jones from Phoenix, Arizona has 90.3M in chips, and he enters the final table second overall.
Dan Weinman from Atlanta, Georgia is the third American at the final table. He has a decent stack wort 81.7M, but he trails Walton by 62M. Weinman is the lone bracelet winner at the final table, and he also won a WSOP Circuit ring and a couple of WPT events. He shipped a bracelet last summer in Las Vegas and has over $3.7 million in career earnings.
Jan-Peter Jachtmann from Germany is fourth overall in chips with 74.6M, and he's just ahead of Juan Macerias from Spain with 68M.
Ukraine's Ruslan Prydryk is sixth overall with 50.7M, but he's 93M off the lead.
The trio of short stacks include Dean Hutchison from Scotland with 41.7M, Dan Holzner from Italy with 31.9M, and British pro Toby Lewis is the short stack with 19M.
Lewis might have the biggest pedigree at the final table, but he has the biggest uphill battle as the short stack. With $8.2 million in live tournament winnings, he's raked #8 all time in England. Lewis won a couple of WSOP Circuit rings, and he final tabled a couple of WSOP events but never won a bracelet.
Online denizens might know Lewis playing under the moniker "810clubs". He was still a kid when he shipped an EPT title at the 2010 EPT Portugal. In 2018, Lewis binked the Aussie Millions at the Crown Casino in Melbourne, Australia. He also final tabled a couple of WPT events.
2023 WSOP Main Event
Buy-in: $10,000
Entrants: 10,043
Remaining: 9
Prize Pool: $93,399,900
Payouts: 1,507
Final Table Chip Counts:
1 Adam Walton (USA) 143,800,000
2 Steven Jones (USA) 90,300,000
3 Daniel Weinman (USA) 81,700,000
4 Jan-Peter Jachtmann (Germany) 74,600,000
5 Juan Maceiras (Spain) 68,000,000
6 Ruslan Prydryk (Ukraine) 50,700,000
7 Dean Hutchison (UK) 41,700,000
8 Daniel Holzner (Italy) 31,900,000
9 Toby Lewis (UK) 19,800,000
Final Table Payouts:
1st Place $12,100,000
2nd Place $6,500,000
3rd Place $4,000,000
4th Place $3,000,000
5th Place $2,400,000
6th Place $1,850,000
7th Place $1,425,000
8th Place $1,125,000
9th Place $900,000