Chris 'BigHuni' Hunichen outlasted a fierce field of 112 entries to win his first bracelet with an impressive victory in 2024 WSOP Event #47 $100,000 High Roller NLHE. Hunichen banked nearly $2.84 million for the win and denied Jeremy Ausmus a chance at winning a seventh bracelet. The stacked final table also included Viktor Blom, Chance Kornuth, Justin Saliba, and Ike Haxton.

Ship it to BigHuni!! Chris Hunichen dominated the virtual felt for years, but a WSOP bracelet was noticeably missing on his resume. Hunichen was on the short list of best players who never won a bracelet, but you can finally cross his name off that list after he stepped into the winner's circle for the first time at the WSOP.
2024 WSOP Event #47 $100,000 High Roller NLHE attracted 112 runners who generated a juicy prize pool worth $$10,836,000. Only the top 17 places paid out but the top three would lock up a seven-figure payout, with most of the cheddar set aside to the champion. Michael Jozoff bubbled the $100K High Roller final table in ninth place. The list of players who cashed in this $100K High Roller was a who's who including Andrew Lichtenberger, Nick Petrangelo, Justin Bonomo, Johannes Straver, Sergio Aido, Orpen Kisacikoglu, Henrik Hecklen and Giuseppe Iadisernia.
Event #47's treacherous final table included Isaac Haxton, Dan Aharoni, Justin Saliba, Latvia's Aleksejs Ponakovs, Chance Kornuth, Chris Hunichen, Jeremy Ausmus, and Swedish enigma Viktor 'Isildur' Blom. Haxton would be the first player to bow out when he was knocked out in eight place. Saliba attempted to win a bracelet for a third year in a row, but he was sent to the rail in sixth place. Kornuth missed his shot at a fourth bracelet when his run ended in fourth place. Blom had been chasing his first bracelet, but he met his fate in third place.
With two to go, Hunichen and Ausmus were heads up for the bracelet and a difference in over $1 million in prize money. Ausmus attempted to become only the tenth player in history to win seven bracelets and join Johnny World Hennigan in the Seven-Timers Club. He already won his sixth earlier in the series to join that exclusive club, but he's been on a heater the last few summers with two bracelets in 2021, two more in 2022, and one this year.
Alas, Hunichen denied Ausmus #7 and won his first bracelet in the process. Ausmus won $1,892,260 for a runner-up finish. Not too shabby, eh? Hunichen banked $2,838,389 for his WSOP victory much to the delight of a rowdy rail.
Chris 'DeathDonkey' Vitch won his third bracelet with a victory in Event #48 $1,000 PLO (8-Handed). The field was comprised of 2,212 entrants and a prize pool worth $1.94 million. The top 332 places paid out with $262,734 set aside to the winner. Vitch bested a final table that included Thomas Taylor, David Prociak, Joe Firova, Jay Harwood, Ioannis Angelou, Kharlin Sued, and Christopher Frank.
Australian pro James Obst won his second bracelet when he was the last player standing in Event #42 $10,000 Seven Card Stud Championship. He first won a bracelet in 2017 in the $10K Razz Championship. This year's $10KStud Championship attracted 107 entries. The top 17 places paid out of the prize pool which fell short of $1 million. Obst defeated Paul Volpe heads up for the title and $260,658 in cash. Also at the final table were Jason Daly, Mike Lang, Robert Mizrachi, Juha Helppi, Andre Akkari, and Yuri Dzivielevski.
Event #44 $2,000 NLHE attracted 1,561 runners and a prize pool worth $2.77 million. Jared Kingery won his first bracelet and $410,359 when he picked off Spain's Javier Gomez in a heads-up battle. The final table also included two other players from Spain -- Juan Carlos Vecino and Javier Zarco -- for a total of three Spanish players in the top five.
Event #43 $1,500 Mixed PLO 8/Omaha 8/Big O attracted 853 entrants to this fun Omaha-centric tournament. The prize pool was $1.14 million thanks to 853 Omahaholis. Sweden's Magnus Edengren was the last player standing in Event #43, and he took down a first-place prize worth $196,970. Phil Hellmuth busted in fourth place for his deepest run this summer. The Poker Brat is chasing bracelet #18, and cashed in only three events so far in 2024. The final table also included Tim Seidensticker, James Juvancic, Joshua Adcock, Dylan Lambe, and Ying Chu.