Myles Mullaly Wins WSOP Super Turbo for First Bracelet
- wsop
- myles-mullaly
- super-turbo
- bracelet
- no-limit-holdem
- poker-tournaments
Myles Mullaly captured the WSOP Super Turbo Bounty title and his first bracelet. See the key hands, final table drama, and why it matters.
Myles Mullaly claims his first WSOP bracelet in a high-speed battleground
The 2026 World Series of Poker delivered another reminder that the Super Turbo Bounty format is all about pressure, timing, and survival. The $5,000 no-limit hold’em event drew 1,213 entries, pushing the prize pool to $5,579,800. Although the structure was designed to crown a winner in a single session, the pace of play proved so intense that the event needed an extra day to finish the job.
When the final chips were counted, Myles Mullaly stood alone with his first bracelet and a career-best payday of $593,601. The New York native, now living in Las Vegas, recorded his first live tournament cash in 2023. In just a little over three years, he has already built more than $2.3 million in lifetime earnings, which is a strong signal that his rise has been anything but accidental.
Why this win is a major milestone for Mullaly
Mullaly’s breakthrough is especially notable because four of his five biggest career scores came in 2026. That kind of concentration at the top of a player’s results usually points to a real form spike rather than a one-off heater.
- a fifth-place finish in a $2,500 no-limit hold’em event earlier in the series for $145,365
- two final tables at the PokerGO Cup
- this WSOP Super Turbo Bounty title
For players watching the modern tournament landscape, this is the kind of resume that turns a rising name into a legitimate threat. Mullaly is not just booking cashes; he is converting deep runs into meaningful results against elite fields.
The road to the final table at the WSOP Super Turbo
The event paid the top 182 finishers, and the money bubble gave way to a deep run list filled with recognizable names. Three-time bracelet winners Santhosh Suvarna and Jason Daly both made it far, along with 2012 WSOP Main Event champion Greg Merson, Eric Froelich, Jack Duong, Colin Robinson, two-time bracelet winner Yuliyan Kolev, and Nick Pupillo.
Three-time bracelet winner Naoya Kihara came close to adding another title and finished 10th. He was followed out by bracelet winner Khoi Le Nguyen in 9th place for $48,412, which locked in the official eight-handed final table.
Overnight, Pete Chen held a massive chip lead, carrying more than twice the stack of the next closest player. Mullaly, meanwhile, came back for day 2 sitting fourth in chips. In a super turbo format, that kind of gap matters, but it is never the whole story.
Key hands that shaped the final table
The first two eliminations of the day belonged to Endrit Geci, who sent Christian Harder out in 8th place for $62,699 and Daniel Tafur out in 7th for $82,360. That quickly reduced the field to six and set up the decisive all-in confrontations.
Gansukh Sandagsuren was next to fall, finishing 6th for $109,708 after his A♣Q♠ ran into Najeem Ajez’s K♠K♦. Ajez then added more chips when his A♦K♦ held against Yohwan Lim’s 7♥7♣, sending Lim to the rail in 5th place for $148,164.
The biggest swing came in a three-way all-in. Mullaly’s A♠K♠ held against Ajez’s A♦J♦ and Chen’s K♦Q♦, and Ajez exited in 4th place with $202,835. That hand changed the entire balance of power and gave Mullaly the momentum he needed for the closing stretch.
Endrit Geci bowed out in 3rd after losing a blinds battle with Q♥6♠ against Chen’s K♣J♣. That left Chen with a healthy heads-up lead, but Mullaly chipped back quickly after two early double-ups.
Heads-up: how Mullaly closed out the title
The final hand began with Chen limping the button for 1,200,000 holding A♠8♦. Mullaly raised to 3,600,000 with 9♦9♣, Chen shoved, and Mullaly called. The board rolled out 10♥10♦7♠9♠6♠, giving Mullaly a full house and the bracelet.
Chen earned $395,664 for second place and moved his recorded live tournament winnings to nearly $4.7 million. He had the overnight chip lead and a strong path to the title, but Mullaly’s timely doubles and final-table execution made the difference when it mattered most.
Expert analysis: what this result tells us about modern tournament poker
Mullaly’s win is a textbook example of what it takes to succeed in a super turbo bounty event. In these structures, players are forced into constant high-leverage decisions, and the value of each chip changes rapidly because of both bounty dynamics and ICM pressure.
- preflop discipline matters more than ever
- short-stack push/fold ranges must be studied in depth
- chip leaders can disappear quickly if they overextend
- momentum after a double-up can completely reshape the final table
This is also why modern players spend so much time studying away from the table. Whether you are grinding online at poker rooms, entering live series through poker clubs, or improving your fundamentals at poker school, fast formats reward preparation and decision speed.
The broader takeaway is simple: the game is evolving toward structures that compress variance and amplify mistakes. Players who can adapt in real time, manage ICM accurately, and stay composed under relentless pressure are the ones most likely to turn deep runs into bracelets.
Final takeaway: a breakthrough win with real season-long impact
Myles Mullaly did more than win a trophy. He strengthened his case as one of the more dangerous players on the 2026 circuit and added a major result to an already impressive year. The bracelet, the $593,601 score, and the 1,920 Card Player POY points all matter individually — together, they mark a true breakout moment.
With six final-table finishes already in 2026 and his first title now secured, Mullaly has become a name to watch in every remaining major event. If this form continues, his season could end with far more than one headline win.
FAQ
Who won the 2026 WSOP Super Turbo Bounty event?
Myles Mullaly won the event, earning his first WSOP bracelet and $593,601.
How many entries did the WSOP $5,000 Super Turbo Bounty attract?
The tournament drew 1,213 entries and generated a $5,579,800 prize pool.
Who did Myles Mullaly beat heads-up?
He defeated Pete Chen heads-up. Chen finished second for $395,664.
How did this win affect Mullaly’s 2026 POY race?
The victory earned him 1,920 Card Player POY points, moving him to 22nd in the 2026 standings.