Ryan Riess Eliminated by Brandon Adams

Ryan Riess shoved his last 109,000 in from under the gun and Brandon Adams called next to act. Riess: [AhJh] Adams: [AcQs] The dealer spread a [Qc4c4d7c6c] board and Riess was eliminated.

Byron Kaverman Doubles Leaving Ryan Riess Short

The action folded to Byron Kaverman in the cutoff who open-shoved for his last 49,000. The button folded and Ryan Riess was next to act in the small blind and shoved all-in over the top for 84,000 total. The big blind folded and the cards were tabled. Kaverman [7s7h] Riess [Ac8d] The flop

Two World Champs Battle it Out Before Break

In a hand that featured 16 WSOP bracelets and three Main Event victories, Phil Hellmuth won a 46,000 chip pot against Ryan Riess. Riess tried to bet Hellmuth out of the pot on the turn when the board showed [9s2cJs8s] but Hellmuth, holding the nut flush draw and three outs to

Lauren Roberts Pays Off Ryan Riess on the River

With the board reading [7c5s2hQsAd] and action on Ryan Riess he bet 20,000. Lauren Roberts double checked her cards and quickly made the call. Riess tabled 22 for the flopped set and Roberts tossed her cards into the muck with the [As] face up.

A Numbers Game – The WSOP Main Event

A diamond encrusted bracelet and a pile of cash worth $8.8 million, that's what awaits the 2018 WSOP Main Event winner!

The WSOP Main Event is a tournament like no other, and last night it showed once again. A record-breaking 4,571 players turned yesterday into the biggest single day in WSOP history, eclipsing last year's Day 1C mark by 309 entries. In this article we'll look at the numbers of past and present

2013 WSOP Main Event: Where Are They Now?

Full episodes from the 2013 World Series of Poker Main Event debuted on PokerGO last week, giving fans a chance to look back at Ryan Riess' beastly performance for the first time. Over the course of six days of coverage, starting with Day 4, the field dwindles from hundreds, to