57TH ANNUAL WORLD SERIES OF POKER

News

HOSSEIN ENSAN LEADS AFTER FIRST DAY OF 2019 WSOP MAIN EVENT FINAL TABLE

The final table continues Monday at 6:30 PT.
Jul 14 2019 10:32 PM EST
HOSSEIN ENSAN LEADS AFTER FIRST DAY OF 2019 WSOP MAIN EVENT FINAL TABLE

14 July 2019 (Las Vegas) – The final table of the 2019 World Series of Poker Main Event is officially underway! The first night of the 2019 final table was a relatively short one, but it was fast-paced and action-packed. When the dust settled, Hossein Ensan, who started the day as the chip leader, retained his lead. And Garry Gates, who started the day in second, pulled up on his heels. The two them are well ahead of the three other remaining players

Four players were eliminated Sunday night: Milos Skrbic, Timothy Su, Nick Marchington, and Cai Zhen.

After a day off on Saturday, the nine final tablists returned to the Rio Hotel and Casino Sunday evening for the first of three days of final-table action, and every hand Sunday night was broadcast on ESPN2 (on a 30-minute delay).

Fans looking for action didn’t have to wait long tonight. On just the third hand of the final table, Nick Marchington, who started the day as the short stack, doubled through Zhen Cai to give himself some breathing room. Then three hands later, Milos Skrbic became the first player eliminated from the official final table. Skrbic also started with a fairly short stack, and his ace-jack ran into Garry Gates’s ace-queen. They got the chip in the middle preflop, and Skrbic got no help from the board. He finished in ninth place, earning $1,000,000.

Then on the 11th hand of the day, Timothy Su became the next player to bust. After Marchington's early double-up, Su was left as the short stack at the table. He moved all in with pocket threes, and was called by the chip leader Hossain Ensan. Ensan held pocket jacks, and he flopped a jack. Su got no help, and he finished in eighth place for $1,250,000.

That pace of eliminations was impossible to maintain, but action remained fast as chips moved back and forth. Ensan and Gates, who started the day with the two biggest stacks, continued to set themselves apart from the rest of the field, and Marchington's stack slowly dwindled.

At about 9:00 p.m. - roughly two and half hours after the final table began - Marchington made a stand. He picked a bad time, though. He shoved all in with ace-seven, and Ensan called with pocket kings. The kings held up, and Marchington became the seventh-place finisher, earning $1,525,000. The 21-year old Marchington had the chance to become the youngest Main Event winner ever, but it was not to be.

Before the final table started, the tentative plan was to play down to six players tonight. But since it happened so quickly, the remaining six players continued for about another 90 minutes. At that point, Cai Zhen became the sixth-place finisher ($1,850,000), and the remaining five players bagged up their chips for the night. 

Play will resume Monday at 6:30 p.m. with 28:08 remaining in Level 38 (600,000/1,200,000 blinds with a 1,200,000 big blind ante).

This was, and still is, a remarkably international final table. When it began, six countries were represented: Germany, Canada, Italy, Serbia, the UK, and the US. With five players left, four countries remain (Germany, Canada, Italy, and the US).

Here’s the remaining final table schedule:

Monday, July 15 – 6:30 p.m. PDT start. Live on ESPN starting at 7:00 p.m.
Tuesday, July 16 – 5:30 p.m. PDT start. Live on ESPN starting at 6:00 p.m. Play will continue until the 2019 World Champion of Poker is crowned.

Results so far
Live Updates from the event
Photos from the event 

Here are the chip counts of the remaining players, and final table results so far: 

1 – Hossein Ensan – 207,700,000
2 – Garry Gates – 171,700,000
3 – Kevin Maahs – 66,500,000
4 – Alex Livingston – 45,800,000
5 – Dario Sammartino – 23,100,000

6th place – Zhen Cai - $1,850,000
7th place – Nick Marchington – $1,525,000
8th place – Timothy Su  – $1,250,000
9th place – Milos Skrbic – $1,000,000


© 2026 Bracelet IP Limited. WSOP is a registered trademark used under license by Bracelet IP Limited.
Unauthorized use is prohibited.

If you've ever watched the World Series of Poker and thought that could be me, you're not alone. Since 1970, the WSOP has been the place where that dream lives. Most people know the summer series in Las Vegas, where the $10,000 Main Event turns ordinary players into legends. But the WSOP calendar has grown well beyond that. WSOP Europe and WSOP Paradise now bring bracelet competition to international destinations, and dozens of Circuit events run year-round for players who want serious competition closer to home. Whether you're grinding a Circuit stop or taking your shot at the Main Event, the hardware means something. Winning a gold bracelet or Circuit ring is more than just a trophy. It's a permanent record that you are a champion. For players in Nevada, New Jersey, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, WSOP Online has become something worth paying attention to. It's the only platform in the US where you can win a poker tournament for official WSOP gold bracelets without leaving home! The WSOP also offers deposit limits and self-exclusion tools because the best poker rooms have always known that keeping poker players healthy keeps the game healthy. From your first Circuit event to a final table in Las Vegas, WSOP is still where you go to prove something.