Michael Mizrachi Wins 2026 WSOP $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship

Black and gold poker cover image showing Michael Mizrachi WSOP news with J♥, 10♦, 7♥, 6♠ cards and poker chips

Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi captured the 2026 WSOP $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship at Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas, earning his ninth WSOP bracelet.

The win came with a $1,350,203 first-place prize and added another major result to Mizrachi’s WSOP career. It also followed his standout 2025 series, when he won both the $50,000 Poker Players Championship and the $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em WSOP Main Event.

Mizrachi Turns Massive Chip Lead Into Ninth Bracelet

Mizrachi began the final day with 80% of the chips in play. Only Michael Hahn and India’s Zarvan Tumboli remained, giving Mizrachi a clear path but not a guaranteed title.

Tumboli briefly changed the pace of the match by doubling through Mizrachi after making a flush on the river. Mizrachi responded by taking down smaller pots and steadily putting pressure back on both opponents.

Hahn was the first player eliminated on the final day. During three-handed play, he was pushed into an all-in spot against Mizrachi but could not improve against Mizrachi’s two jacks. Hahn finished third for $627,832.

Mizrachi then entered heads-up play against Tumboli with more than four times his opponent’s stack. Tumboli continued to fight, but the gap was difficult to close. On the final hand, Tumboli started with a pair of aces, but a straight on the river ended his tournament in second place.

Tumboli earned $900,088 as runner-up, while Mizrachi secured his ninth WSOP bracelet and another seven-figure score in Las Vegas.

Final Table Results

Place Player Prize
1st Michael Mizrachi $1,350,203
2nd Zarvan Tumboli $900,088
3rd Michael Hahn $627,832
4th Martin Zamani $445,080
5th Ian Matakis $320,763
6th Raj Vohra $235,073
7th Jesse Lonis $175,233
8th Toby Joyce $132,908

Another Major WSOP Result for The Grinder

Mizrachi’s latest bracelet adds to a WSOP record already filled with major achievements.

His first WSOP bracelet came in 2010, when he won the $50,000 Poker Players Championship. That same year, he also reached the WSOP Main Event final table and finished fifth.

Four of Mizrachi’s nine WSOP bracelets have now come from the $50,000 Poker Players Championship. In 2025, he won that event again before also taking down the WSOP Main Event for $10 million, a run that led to his snap induction into the Poker Hall of Fame.

The 2026 $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship is now the latest title on Mizrachi’s WSOP résumé, extending one of the most decorated careers in modern poker.