Two Tables Left in the $400 Deepstack — Zero Bracelets Among Them
Eighteen players are grinding past midnight at the Horseshoe, and the biggest résumé in the room belongs to a player from Canada with $41K in lifetime cashes.

Eighteen players remain in WSOP Event #401, the $400 Daily Deepstack, past midnight at the Horseshoe — and not a single one of them owns a bracelet, a ring, or a six-figure career earnings line.
This is the purest version of the summer. Two tables. Four countries represented. A buy-in that costs less than a decent dinner on the Strip. And the most decorated player left is Bahman Ataeianfar, a Canadian with exactly one career final table and $41,062 in lifetime tournament earnings.
That's the top of the résumé heap.
The Field at Two Tables
The earlier stages featured Dean Sultan — an Israeli player with $96,579 in career cashes and two final tables — but the field has since trimmed from 23 to 18, and the remaining names skew even more anonymous.
Lior Serfaty of France held 770,000 chips when the field was at 23. James Porter and Yuto Tomita — representing the U.S. and Japan respectively — have no tracked lifetime earnings at all. Thomas Bona of Canada sits on $5,181 career. Dan Olsen of the U.S. checks in at $6,027.
No one here has a Hendon page that would make you blink.
Why This Matters at 1 a.m.
The $400 dailies don't make highlight reels. They don't trend on poker Twitter. But they produce moments — a first-time final table for someone who drove in from Barstow, a career-best cash for a grinder whose entire tournament history fits on a Post-it note.
Somebody at these two tables is about to have the biggest night of their poker life. The current chip counts aren't published, so all we know is that 18 names are still alive and the average stack is getting shorter by the blind level.
The stream is live now from the Horseshoe. No commentary team, no rail birds — just cards and chips past midnight in Las Vegas.
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