Surinder Singh's WSOP Profile Is Blank. He's at the Colossus Final Table.
Zero bracelets, zero rings, no recorded lifetime earnings — and 2,595,000 chips at the biggest-field bracelet event of the summer.

Surinder Singh has 2,595,000 chips at the WSOP Colossus Day 2A final table, and his tournament résumé reads like a blank page — no bracelets, no rings, no recorded lifetime earnings.
That's not a typo. The WSOP's own database has nothing on him. And yet here he sits, nine players from a gold bracelet in Event #34, the $500 Colossus No-Limit Hold'em — one of the summer's signature mass-field events.
A Final Table of Ghosts
Singh isn't an anomaly at this particular table. He's the norm.
Of the five players captured in the final-table chip counts, not one has a bracelet, a ring, or a single WSOP final table on record.
Joel Kop leads all players with 5,890,000 chips. Bracelets: zero. Rings: zero. Lifetime earnings: not recorded. Ivar Walstra, from the Netherlands, sits second with 4,215,000. Same blank résumé. P K X, listed from India, holds 3,930,000 after climbing from 1,520,000 when 83 players remained. Tyrese Patterson rounds out the known stacks at 1,270,000 — a steep drop from the 2,500,000 he held earlier in the night.
The entire top of this leaderboard looks like a first-time visitor badge at a convention.
Why the Colossus Does This
The Colossus exists to produce exactly this kind of final table. At a $500 buy-in, the event pulls thousands of entries from the broadest possible slice of the poker population — recreational players, online grinders making their first Vegas trip, locals who drove in from Henderson. The field is so large and the buy-in so low that the usual concentration of professional talent gets diluted past recognition.
That's by design. The WSOP created the Colossus in 2015 as its populist flagship, a bracelet event where the barrier to entry is a few hundred dollars rather than a few thousand. The result is fields where name recognition at the final table is the exception, not the rule.
Singh fits that mold perfectly. No Hendon Mob page worth mentioning. No Twitter handle on file. No country-flag résumé of international results. Just a chip stack that says he outplayed a massive field to get here.
The Path From 83 to 9
When Day 2A crossed below 100 players, the top stacks were led by Gerhard Ludwig of Austria at 2,790,000. Ludwig isn't among the five players listed at the final table — meaning he either busted or bagged short enough to fall off the leaderboard entirely.
Patterson's stack tells a story too. He held 2,500,000 when the field was at 83 and arrived at the final table with 1,270,000 — nearly half his stack gone in the grind from 83 to 9. Meanwhile, P K X more than doubled up over the same stretch, ballooning from 1,520,000 to 3,930,000.
Julian Altieri of Italy, the only player among the earlier top stacks with any recorded earnings ($8,814 lifetime), also didn't make the final-table snapshot.
What Comes Next
Singh sits third in chips among the five reported stacks. Kop's 5,890,000 gives him a comfortable lead, but at a nine-handed final table with this structure, stack advantages compress fast.
The Colossus bracelet won't go to a household name — not from this group. It'll go to someone whose WSOP page, as of right now, has almost nothing on it.
For Singh, that page is about to get its first real line.
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