# WSOP Main Event To Be Shrunked To Winner On ESPN Tonight After more than 76 hours of competition, the 2015 World Series of Poker's main event is up to only three players to compete for the most prestigious title in poker and the top prize of $7,683,346. Game resumes Tuesday at 6 p.m. in Las Vegas at the Penn & Teller Theater at the Rio All-Sweet Hotel & Casino, running until the winner is decided. ESPN will be postponing all of Tuesday's last-table action at 9:30 p.m. ET/6:30 p.m. ET. The remaining three players are all worth millions of payday guarantees, with the runner-up worth $4,470,896 and the third-place finisher worth $3,398,298. Of course, on top of the $7.68 million prize money, there is only one world champion to win the first WSOP Gold Bracelet and put it in the history books. Joe McKeon – 128,825,000 – Seat 6 The chipleader remains Joe McKeon, a 24-year-old poker specialist from North Wales, Pennsylvania. He has tournament revenues totaling $3,514,982, including $883,494 in previous WSOP cash. McKeon won two WSOP circuit rings, and his biggest cash before this finals table was $820,863 when he finished second in the WSOP's first monster stack event, another huge field of 7,862 players, in 2014. [파워볼게임](https://outlookindia.com/outlook-spotlight/2024년-파워볼사이트-추천-순위-안전한-파워볼실시간-게임-사이트-top15-news-334143) Joe played 22 games during the 2015 WSOP and earned cash in four games, including the main event. His previous best finish at this event was in 2013, when he finished 489th. McKeon entered the final table as a chip leader with almost 33 percent of chips, and it was himself who dropped 11th, 10th, 9th, 8th, and 7th in a row. He entered Monday's game, where six players had 47 percent of chips. It was a rather uneven day for him, but he used 67% of his 128,825,000 chips in the game, eliminating Max Steinberg from the final hand of the night that would end with a commanding lead heading into the final day of the game. Neil Blumenfield – 40,125,000 – Seat 9 Blumenfield, 61-year-old from San Francisco, California, is looking to become the first 61-year-old winner of the WSOP main event since Noel Furlong in 1999. In fact, at 61 years, 5 months, and 2 days, Blumenfield looks to surpass Furlong's age by two weeks, making him the oldest main event winner since Johnny Moss was 67 in 1974. Blumenfield plays poker as a hobby, and he looks to be the event's first amateur winner since Jerry Yang in 2007. Shortly before entering this year's main event, he was fired from his software job, and he wasn't even sure if he would have to spend $10,000 to enter, given his uncertain job status. He is a UC Berkeley graduate and former high school debate champion. Blumenfield earned $44,395 from two previous cash at the WSOP, winning a total of one tournament and a poker tournament of $130,468.