Robert Mizrachi Is Double-Dipping for Handsome Horses — and Nobody Else Can Touch It
A $5,638 Limit Hold'em cash and a 113-point ceiling in PLO 8-Handed make Mizrachi the highest-upside active player on any single fantasy roster.

Robert Mizrachi's ceiling in the $1,500 PLO 8-Handed alone is 113 points — and he already banked $5,638 finishing 15th in Event #30, the $1,500 Limit Hold'em 7-Handed, just hours earlier. Handsome Horses, the team managed by Phil S on 25kfantasy.com, is sitting on a fantasy asset no other roster in the contest can match.
Two simultaneous scoring lines from one player. That's the whole story.
Mizrachi has 29 points already locked in PLO with a ceiling of 113 — and the Limit Hold'em cash is pure gravy on top.
The Double-Dip Math
Here's what makes this unusual. Mizrachi's 29 locked points in Event #35, the $1,500 PLO 8-Handed, represent guaranteed floor value — points that are already banked regardless of how the rest of his PLO run shakes out. The ceiling of 113 means a deep finish from here could deliver a massive single-player haul for Handsome Horses.
But the Limit Hold'em cash is what turns a good fantasy night into an extraordinary one. His 15th-place finish in Event #30 added $5,638 in prize money to the team's ledger. In most $25K Fantasy weeks, a single mid-field cash like that is the entire return on a roster slot. Mizrachi generated that as a side dish while his PLO tournament was still running.
The combined position — locked floor points plus an active deep run plus a completed cash in a separate event — is the kind of multi-event overlap that fantasy poker rarely produces. Most players fire one event at a time. Mizrachi happened to be alive in two simultaneously, and he converted in one while still climbing in the other.
What Handsome Horses Can Extract
The 113-point ceiling is the number that should have every other team owner doing mental math. If Mizrachi makes a deep run in PLO 8-Handed from here, Handsome Horses could see a 100+ point swing from a single roster slot — on top of the Limit Hold'em cash already in the bank.
The floor scenario is still strong. Even if the PLO run ends soon, 29 locked points plus a $5,638 cash from a $1,500 buy-in event is a positive-EV night by any fantasy measure. Phil S doesn't need Mizrachi to win the PLO to come out ahead. He just needs him to have done exactly what he's already done.
The ceiling scenario is where it gets interesting for the overall $25K Fantasy standings. A 113-point PLO finish would be one of the largest single-event fantasy scores of the 2026 WSOP so far. Combined with the Limit cash, it would give Handsome Horses a two-event scoring burst from one player that most teams need three or four roster slots to produce.
The Broader Fantasy Read
Mizrachi's double-dip illustrates a structural edge that gets underrated in salary-cap fantasy poker: players who fire multiple events in the same window create correlated upside. You're not just drafting a player — you're drafting a schedule. When that schedule overlaps and both events produce, the math compounds in ways a single-event player simply can't replicate.
Phil S drafted the schedule. Mizrachi is running the schedule. And as of June 10, no other team in the contest has a single player producing simultaneous value across two live WSOP events.
That's a position you can't trade for. You either have it or you don't.
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