Best of the 2010s
The 2010s began with Kesha's
"Tik Tok" topping the charts (no relation to the
TikTok app that would debut six years into the decade), the record 2,722-feet high
Burj Khalifa opening in Dubai, and Drew Brees leading the New Orleans Saints to a
comeback Super Bowl victory, and ended with Mariah Carey's
All I Want for Christmas Is You finally reaching number one a quarter century after its first release, the NCAA ended the sham of amateur college athletic sports by allowing players to profit from their
"name, image and likeness", and
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker wrapped up the sci-fi nonet.
The fifth decade of the World Series of Poker began with
Hoai Duc Pham winning Vietnam's first bracelet in the Casino Employees tourney and ended with
Bertrand Grospellier picking up his second bracelet in the WSOP Europe Colossus.
Here's a look at the top players by bracelets, final tables (defined as top 9 paid places for simplicity), cashes, and money won from 2010 to 2019.
Most Bracelets in the 2010s
- 2. Asi Moshe: 4
- 2. Brian Hastings: 4
- 2. Brian Rast: 4
- 2. Dominik Nitsche: 4
- 2. George Danzer: 4
- 2. Jason Mercier: 4
- 2. John Hennigan: 4
- 2. Loren Klein: 4
- 2. Phil Hellmuth: 4
- 2. Shaun Deeb: 4
- 1. Michael Mizrachi: 5
Most Final Tables in the 2010s
- 8. David Baker (ODB): 17
- 8. Ismael Bojang: 17
- 8. Michael Mizrachi: 17
- 8. Scott Clements (WA): 17
- 5. Anthony Zinno: 18
- 5. John Monnette: 18
- 5. Nick Schulman: 18
- 4. Jason Mercier: 19
- 3. Shaun Deeb: 20
- 1. Daniel Negreanu: 24
- 1. Phil Hellmuth: 24
Most Cashes in the 2010s
- 8. David Baker (ODB): 75
- 8. John Racener: 75
- 8. Phil Hellmuth: 75
- 7. Mike Leah: 77
- 5. Ismael Bojang: 79
- 5. Shaun Deeb: 79
- 3. Ben Yu: 82
- 3. Chris Ferguson: 82
- 2. Daniel Negreanu: 88
- 1. Roland Israelashvili: 100
Most Money Won in the 2010s
- 10. Hossein Ensan: $10,299,221
- 9. Joe McKeehen: $10,507,381
- 8. Sam Trickett: $11,448,447
- 7. Fedor Holz: $11,917,249
- 6. Martin Jacobson: $12,078,526
- 5. Justin Bonomo: $13,050,658
- 4. Jonathan Duhamel: $14,647,089
- 3. Daniel Negreanu: $15,183,550
- 2. Dan Colman: $17,413,655
- 1. Antonio Esfandiari: $21,224,858
The million dollar buyin Big One for One Drop dominated the money leader board (6 of 10 spots including the top 3) as
Antonio Esfandiari picked up $18,346,673 for winning in 2012,
Dan Colman $15,306,668 in 2014, and
Justin Bonomo $10,000,000 in 2018 (the 2016 event was not a WSOP bracelet event). Second place finishers also raked it in:
Sam Trickett $10,112,001 in 2012,
Daniel Negreanu $8,288,001 in 2014, and
Fedor Holz $6,000,000 in 2018 to go with another $4,981,775 for winning the $111,111 High Roller for One Drop in 2016. The remaining four spots were the Main Event winners
Hossein Ensan,
Joe McKeehen,
Martin Jacobson, and
Jonathan Duhamel.
Michael Mizrachi won the 2019 $1,500 Seven-Card Stud Hi-Lo to collect his
fifth bracelet to lead the decade (which would have ended in an outrageous ten-way tie otherwise).
Phil Hellmuth and
Daniel Negreanu tied for the most final tables with
24, while Negreanu finished a distant second in the cashes race to
Roland Israelashvili, who became the first player to get to
100 in a decade.
2010 Main Event champ
Jonathan Duhamel had two other bracelets in the decade, both in 2015.
Greg Merson won his first and only other bracelet in the $10,000 No-Limit Hold 'Em 6-Max just two days before the 2012 Main Event began.
Joe McKeehen won a second bracelet two years after his 2015 Main Event win (and another in 2020). None of the other Main Event winners won another bracelet in the decade (Pius Heinz, Ryan Riess, Martin Jacobson, Qui Nguyen, Scott Blumstein, John Cynn, and Hossein Ensan).