The PokerGO Tour kicked off its third of four major series this week and the biggest names in poker are lined up at the ARIA in Las Vegas for their shot at the Purple Jacket.
Everyone on tour is still chasing Michael Mizrachi, who jumped to the top spot on the season-long leaderboard with two very big wins at this year's World Series of Poker. The WSOP Main Event champion, however, is feeling the heat from Alex Foxen. Foxen is nipping at The Grinder's heels on the power of 17 cashes and two wins on the 2025 tour, leaving him just one top finish away from taking over the #1 spot.
The tour, which launched in 2021, was created to measure the best high stakes tournament players in events over $10,000 throughout the world. Players compete for one of 40 spots on the leaderboard, each awarding a seat in the season-ending PGT Championship, a $1,000,000 freeroll with $500K up top. Last year's winner, Jeremy Ausmus, parlayed his PGT Player of the Year award into the top prize in the PGT Championship.
The tour continues to showcase the top poker talent from around the high stakes scene, and its All-Time Money List on The Hendon Mob is a reflection of the most successful players over the last five years. The prize pools have been huge and the leaderboard is as volatile as ever. Let's take a look at the top 10.
Can Foxen claim top spot?
1. Seth Davies — $19,694,695 (7,038 PGT points)
Seth Davies leaped into the top spot on the all-time leaderboard with his win in the $250,000 Super High Roller at the 2025 WSOP. That victory was good for more than $4.7 million, and it was his third seven-figure win of 2025. A $4.1 million runner-up finish in the $200K Triton Invitational in Montenegro and a win in the $50K at the same series have made Davies one of the top players in the world over the last 12 months.
2. Alex Foxen — $18,261,963 (9,528 PGT points)
Alex Foxen has 98 cashes and 9 wins on tour, with two seven-figure wins in 2025 and a $3.8 million WSOP bracelet win in the $100K Triton Main Event at WSOP Paradise. He is having one of the best years of anyone in poker with almost $10 million in earnings across all tournaments, including two six-figure wins at Triton in the last week. Foxen could very well take over the top spot on the leaderboard by the end of the year, and he may never give it up.
3. Stephen Chidwick — $16,097,364 (9,796 PGT points)
The United Kingdom's Stephen Chidwick is the all-time leader in PGT points with 93 cashes and 10 wins on tour, but point calculations for field sizes and larger buy-ins puts him in at third on the money list. Chidwick has two seven-figure wins in the last week at Triton Jeju, a $3.4 million win in the Short Deck event and a runner-up finish in the $125K. His resume dates all the way back to 2008, where he scored a win in his first Hendon Mob entry in a $1,000 event at the 2008 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure. Chidwick is one of the most consistent players in the game and could very well retire as its all time money leader, though he still has to catch Foxen and Davies on tour.
4. Jason Koon — $14,945,282 (6,434 PGT points)
Jason Koon has 40 cashes and six wins on the PokerGO Tour, putting him at 10th in points and fourth in earnings. His $14M+ in PGT earnings are just a fraction of his $68M in lifetime earnings, though his all-time score is a relatively modest $3.5 million. Koon had a fifth-place finish at Triton Jeju for $1.2 million, adding to a year that already includes a $1.9 million in in the $50K High Roller at this year's WSOP. Another win at Triton Montenegro for $3.3 million has kept Koon at pace with the top of the leaderboard, even though he isn't necessarily playing the volume he was known for in previous years.
5. Chris Brewer — $14,593,479 (7,167 PGT points)
With 78 cashes and 8 wins, Chris Brewer has remained one of the stars on tour in its five years of existence. A fifth-place finish in this summer's $250K at the WSOP added a million dollars to his total, joining a $1M finish at Triton Jeju in March. The collegiate runner and Oregon alum has been in the game since 2015, when he scored $17K in his first Hendon Mob entry at the Venetian in Las Vegas. What has followed is a model of consistency, with frequent cashes at the PokerGO Studio augmented by his biggest score of all — a $5.2 million win in the $250K at the 2023 WSOP for his first bracelet.
Negreanu leads the rest of the pack
Daniel Negreanu slots in at sixth-place on the all-time money list with just over $14 million, not far behind Brewer. He's a frequent visitor at the PokerGO Studio and with 97 cashes and 11 wins, good for fourth on the all-time points list with 8,652. Following Negreanu is 2024 PGT Player of the Year Ausmus, who has 92 cashes and seven wins on tour.
Isaac Haxton is in eighth, just $200K and change behind Ausmus, on the strength of 37 cashes and seven wins. PokerGO Studio regular Sean Winter is behind him in ninth, followed by 2023 WSOP Main Event champ Daniel Weinman in 10th. Weinman joins the list with most of his earnings coming from that $12M win, but he does have seven total cashes throughout the rest of the tour.
PokerGO Tour all-time money list
| Rank | Player | Earnings | PGT Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Seth Davies | $19,694,695 | 7,038 |
| 2 | Alex Foxen | $18,261,963 | 9,528 |
| 3 | Stephen Chidwick | $16,097,364 | 9,796 |
| 4 | Jason Koon | $14,945,282 | 6,434 |
| 5 | Chris Brewer | $14,593,479 | 7,167 |
| 6 | Daniel Negreanu | $14,081,255 | 8,652 |
| 7 | Jeremy Ausmus | $13,899,291 | 8,453 |
| 8 | Isaac Haxton | $13,632,043 | 5,621 |
| 9 | Sean Winter | $12,537,285 | 8,046 |
| 10 | Daniel Weinman | $12,439,412 | 2,497 |
Data courtesy of The Hendon Mob.