Demosthenes Kiriopoulos and Oshri Lahmani got all of their chips in the middle preflop with Lahmani at risk for 690,000. Kiriopoulos held and was up against the of Lahmani.
The board ran out and Lahmani spiked an ace on the river to score a double up.
Just a couple of hands later, Lahmani got his chips in the middle again but it was Michael Nugent at risk this time for 1,410,000. Lahmani had the best of it with against Nugent's .
The flop came and Lahmani was looking like he would increase his stack again. The on the turn changed nothing but the on the river gave Nugent a set of queens, leaving Lahmani on crumbs.
Over on the right feature table, the chips went in preflop with Toby Lewis as the player at risk out of the small blind for what appeared to be some 1.2 million. Salko Imsirovic looked him up and held the superior pocket pair once the cards were revealed.
Toby Lewis:
Salko Imsirovic:
The flop changed nothing and the turn gave both players an open-ended straight draw. Another blank followed on the river and that ended Lewis' run in the Main Event in the last level on Day 5.
The action folded to John Gonzalez in the small blind who ripped all in for his last 980,000 chips. Glynn Beebe was in the big blind and called to put Gonzalez at risk.
John Gonzalez:
Glynn Beebe:
The rail started cheering for an eight and wishing for Beebe to lose. However, the board ran out and Gonzalez was eliminated.
"Go back to the rail," Beebe said to the Gonzalez fans. Some more words were exchanged between the two parties before Gonzalez headed to the payout desk.
Stephen Chidwick raised to 130,000 and called when George Holmes three-bet to 375,000.
Chidwick checked on the flop of and check-raised to 850,000 when Holmes bet 400,000. Holmes responded by re-raising all-in and Chidwick called off with 790,000.
Stephen Chidwick:
George Holmes:
Chidwick had the lead with a pair of jacks and held to double up as the board ran out .
In what turned out to be one of the biggest pots of the day so far, Ognyan Dimov entered his clash with Koray Aldemir with a stack of more than four million in chips. He was in the hijack while Aldemir got involved out of the small blind and they were on the turn.
Aldemir opted for a check-raise from 525,000 to 1,445,000 and Dimov then moved all-in. As the camera crews rushed to capture the action once Aldemir called, the following cards were revealed.
Ognyan Dimov: for the top set
Koray Aldemir: for a pair, open-ender, and flush draw
The rolled off on the river and Aldemir improved to the flush as he leaped into the top spot near the end of Day 5.
Germany's Koray Aldemir leads 96 players heading into Day 6 of Event #67: $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em Main Event Championship at the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino as part of the 2021 World Series of Poker. Day 5 began with 292 players looking for Main Event glory and wrapped up after ten hours of play, with Aldemir bagging the chip lead with a stack of 14,325,000.
The German high roller, who has over $3 million in WSOP lifetime earning and is after his first bracelet, leads other big stacks Ramon Colillas (12,000,000), Jonathan Dwek (10,125,000) and Zachary Mcdiarmid (9,700,000). All of them are also on the hunt for a first bracelet.
2021 WSOP Main Event Top 10 Counts Day 5
Position
Player
Country
Chip Count
Big Blinds
1
Koray Aldemir
Germany
14,325,000
179
2
Ramon Colillas
Spain
12,000,000
150
3
Jonathan Dwek
Canada
10,125,000
127
4
Zachary Mcdiarmid
United States
9,700,000
121
5
Jesse Lonis
United States
8,995,000
112
6
Roongsak Griffeth
United States
8,925,000
112
7
Andreas Kniep
Germany
8,515,000
106
8
Tonio Röder
Germany
8,000,000
100
9
Alejandro Lococo
Argentina
7,805,000
98
10
Stephen Gerber
United States
7,700,000
96
Argentina's Alejandro Lococo will return ninth in chips on Day 6 with 7,805,000 and finds himself in prime contention to make a splash in this event. Better known under his alias "Papo MC", Lococo is a famous rapper in Argentina with over 800,000 followers on Twitter alone.
The eyes of the LATAM world will be firmly squared on the PokerStars Ambassador, who could follow up in Damian Salas' footsteps for an Argentinian back-to-back victory in this event.
Pasamos al día 6 de el evento principal de la serie mundial de Poker ##. Sus vibras llegan ♥️
— Papo MC (@PapoMcArg)
GGPoker and ClubGG Online Qualifiers
Position
Player
Country
Chip Count
Big Blinds
18
Roman Hrabec
Czech Republic
6,320,000
79
22
Abhinav Iyer
India
5,850,000
73
44
Vasu Amarapu
United States
3,960,000
50
50
Sean Ragozzini
Australia
3,310,000
41
59
Raul Manzanares
Spain
2,945,000
37
60
Shai Arbel
Israel
2,880,000
36
96
Niko Koop
Germany
250,000
3
Day 5 Action
A few of poker’s biggest stars survived the day, including one-time bracelet winner Stephen Chidwick, who ended the day with 3,710,000 in chips after doubling late in the evening with ace-jack against the ace-king of George Holmes. Other big names still in contention include Chance Kornuth (5,920,000), Stephen Song (2,765,000) and Yuri Dzivielevski (2,030,000).
Pennsylvania grinder Nicholas Rigby made quite a stir on social media from the main feature table with his unorthodox playing style, best demonstrated in two separate hands where he got involved in big pots against all-in opponents while holding deuce-three.
If anyone knows this Rigby guy… all drinks are on me for life. Get him in touch with me.
— Ben Lamb (@BenbaLamb)
This Rigby guy is gonna be fun to watch.
— Haralabos Voulgaris (@haralabob)
"Rigby is like Happy Gilmore! Everyone loves Happy Gilmore. Everyone loves Rigby. Rigby! Rigby!" a member of Rigby's rail shouted toward the end of the night. "Give him a sponsorship!"
Rigby's play worked in his favor, and he ended the day with a stack of 5,212,000.
Also of note, two women are among the 96 players remaining in the World Championship: Dragana Lim, who bagged 5,555,000 chips, and Fatima Nanji, who bagged 935,000.
Last, but certainly not least, businessman John Morgan (2,600,000) will have its fair share of people rooting for him tomorrow. Morgan, the former CEO of Winmark, is a passionate poker enthusiast and has dabbled in some of the highest-stakes action on the planet. He competed in two Big One for One Drops with a buy-in of $1M, in which he played one of the craziest hands ever live reported where he made his opponent lay down quads.
A New World Champion Will Emerge
Chris Moneymaker and Qui Nguyen were both looking to defend their Main Event titles but came up short on Day 5. Nguyen, the 2016 Main Event champion, outlasted the 2003 champ but was eliminated when he moved in with ace-queen and couldn't pull ahead of the pocket eights of Jesse Lonis, who ended the day with 8,995,000 chips.
Other notable players who made it to the fifth day of play but weren’t fortunate enough to survive to see Day 6 included Jason Koon, Matt Berkey, Marle Spragg, Conrad Simpson, Ken Aldridge and Joey Weissman.
Day 6 of the WSOP flagship event begins on Sunday, Nov. 14 at noon Pacific Time, kicking off with Level 26 with blinds at 40,000/80,000/80,000.
Stay tuned as the PokerNews live reporting team will be back tomorrow with continued coverage leading up to the crowning of the eventual 2021 Main Event champion.