Nino Pansier potted to 420,000 from under the gun and in the small blind, Martin Zamani repotted to 1,440,000 and Pansier called.
The flop rolled out A♦10♣8♥ and Zamani went all-in for 425,000 more to see Pansier call.
Martin Zamani: A♣8♣3♣2♥
Nino Pansier: A♥Q♣4♠2♣
Zamani hit the nut low on the turn 5♥ and the river 7♠ changed nothing to leave Zamani's aces and eights good for the high and his nut low beat Pansier's second nut low.
The players have taken their seats and cards are in the air!
The WSOP has moved the final table to the streamed featured tables area, which means our live reporting will have to be delayed by around 2.5 hours to match the live stream, per the WSOP media guidelines.
From a starting field of 390 players, just five players remain in the hunt to become the latest bracelet winner of the 2026 WSOP. Event #33: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo saw its prize pool grow to $3,627,000 and all of the players have secured themselves a minumum payday of $174,981. Only one of the remaining five will receive a bracelet and the sizable payday of $767,395 at the Paris Casino and Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada, with all of them scheduled to return at 3:15 pm and play.
Day 3 Chip Counts
Rank
Player
Country
Chip Count
Big Blinds
1
Justin Liberto
United States
13,590,000
113
2
Nathan Gamble
United States
3,540,000
30
3
Nino Pansier
Netherlands
3,300,000
28
4
Matthew Beinner
United States
1,770,000
15
5
Martin Zamani
United States
1,195,000
10
Sitting with a commanding chip lead is none other than 2-time WSOP bracelet winner Justin Liberto (13,590,000), with over half of the chips in play. It was just a few days ago this same series when Liberto took home his second bracelet in Event #14: $1,500 Mixed Omaha to collect a pay day worth $265,297. With his massive chip lead here today, Liberto looks to further prove his dominance in Omaha this summer and add another bracelet to his collection. Liberto already has over 1,000 points in the 2026 WSOP player of the year race and a win could better his chances of rising up the ranks in the race.
Nathan Gamble
Behind him in the counts is a player very familiar with PLO8, Nathan Gamble (3,540,000). Hailing originally from Texas, it was nine years ago when Gamble took home his first WSOP bracelet in the $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo, taking home $223,339. Since then, he has added another PLO8 bracelet and collected many cashes and final table results at the WSOP in many different game types. He finishing just outside of the final table of the $1,500 Dealers Choice a few days ago, Gamble looks to take add another bracelet to his already decorated WSOP resume.
Nino Pansier
Nino Pansier (3,300,000) sits in third place on the leaderboard, in the hunt for his first WSOP bracelet. The Dutch poker player has amassed millions of dollars in tournament earnings over the years, with most if not all of his biggest scores coming in PLO. This cash marks his first cash ever in this particular Omaha championship event, with many cashes in the WSOP in regular PLO events. A win here today would be his biggest ever score at the WSOP, and fit in nicely with his many six-figure Omaha trophies from around the world.
Matthew Beinner
The youngest player remaining in the tournament is Matthew Beinner (1,770,000) who is also looking for his first bracelet. At 25 years old, Beinner’s WSOP resume already contains many deep runs and final tables, including a runner up finish in the 2024 iteration of the $1,500 Big O tournament, where he collected $204,601. That same summer he finished in 21st place in the $10,000 PLO8 Championship and he now has another final table in his WSOP resume in the hunt for his first title.
Martin Zamani
Finally there is 2-time WSOP bracelet winner Martin Zamani (1,195,000) who sits with the shortest stack. The Florida poker pro came onto the scene with his first tournament cash in 2014 and has competed in tournaments ever since. Zamani’s two bracelets came online in 2021 and he has cashed for millions of dollars at the WSOP in PLO and NLH events throughout the years. He finished in 23rd place in this event in 2023 and he has already bettered that finish with his current guaranteed payout here today. A win here would be a first for Zamani in a non-NLH event and he sits with a chance to do it.
Day 3 Payouts
Place
Player
Country
Prize
1
$767,395
2
$511,580
3
$351,037
4
$245,467
5
$174,981
17:03 remained on the clock in Level 28 with blinds at 60,000/120,000, with a 120,000 big blind ante. Levels will last one hour each with a 15-minute break occurring at the conclusion of every two levels. Play will continue until the winner is crowned.
Stay tuned to PokerNews for all of the exciting updates on the ground.