Level 38
: Blinds 1,000,000/1,500,000, 1,500,000 ante
Kenneth Baime
Johnny Oshana opened to 3,500,000 on the button, only for small blind Kenneth Baime to put in a three-bet to 14,500,000. Oshana called, and the two saw a flop of 2♥K♠2♣
Baime carried on with a continuation-bet of 6,500,000, which was called by his opponent. He then sized down to 6,000,000 on the 10♠ turn, leaving just 8,500,000 behind. Oshana announced "all in," and Baime snap-called.
Kenneth Baime: K♥K♦
Johnny Oshana: 5♥5♦
Oshana was drawing stone dead, as Baime started counting out his chips to be doubled. The 6♥ river was inconsequential.
Day 3 of Event #88: $300 Gladiators of Poker No-Limit Hold'em at the 2026 World Series of Poker is prepped to get underway with just 12 hopefuls returning to Horseshoe and Paris, Las Vegas to battle it out for victory. This number represents the last players standing from the massive field of 11,185 entries across four Day 1 flights.
With no previous victors left in the field, the eventual champion will be receiving a maiden WSOP bracelet, and it’s Luis Genel who has put himself in pole position to do so, having bagged a huge stack of 61,800,000 following an onslaught of eliminations towards the end of Day 2
His nearest competitor is Johnny Oshana, who comes in slightly behind with 51,600,000, and Ken Baime rounds out the podium. He will be returning with 40,500,000, which, despite being impressive, still leaves him with some catching up to do.
Kenneth Baime
Start of Day 3 Chip Counts
Rank
Player
Country
Chip Count
Big Blinds
1
Luis Genel
United States
61,800,000
41
2
Johnny Oshana
United States
51,600,000
34
3
Kenneth Baime
United States
40,500,000
27
4
Gianluigi Zaniboni
Italy
36,600,000
24
5
Ryan Hull
United States
32,900,000
22
6
David Hirst
Australia
23,400,000
16
7
Vu Tran
United States
22,500,000
15
8
Valentin Farkas
Croatia
15,500,000
10
9
Gary McCoy
Ireland
14,900,000
10
10
Emma Stevenson
United States
14,000,000
9.5
11
Sumit Kumar
United States
11,100,000
7.5
12
Said El Harrak
United States
8,500,000
5.5
The comeback story award goes to Croatia’s Valentin Farkas, who was down to just north of one big blind late last night, but managed to rally back and spin up a stack to come into the final day ninth in chips.
Valentin Farkas
Those left battling have already locked up, at the very least, a very healthy payout of $16,000. That being said, all eyes will be on the mammoth $250,000 prize reserved for the eventual champion, alongside a WSOP gold bracelet. That number stems from the $1,873,520 total prize pool that was accrued during registration.
Remaining Payouts
Place
Player
Country
Prize
1
$250,000
2
$166,000
3
$124,500
4
$94,000
5
$71,350
6
$54,600
7
$42,100
8
$32,700
9
$25,550
10-11
$20,110
12
$16,000
Action will resume at 11 a.m. sharp, and at Level 38, with blinds at 1,000,000/1,500,000, with a big blind ante of 1,500,000. Level duration will remain at 40 minutes throughout, and play will go on until a victor is determined. Stay tuned as PokerNews brings you full live updates during the final day of the Gladiators of Poker.