Negreanu, Hellmuth, and Dwan back for National Heads-Up Championship

Mo Afdhal
Posted on: May 1, 2026 12:33 PDT

The $25,000 National Heads-Up Poker Championship is back. On April 30, the PokerGO Studio in Las Vegas welcomed a group of 64 poker players and celebrities for the kickoff matches in the Round of 64. 

When the National Heads-Up Championship made its triumphant return in 2025, three of the game's biggest names – Daniel Negreanu, Phil Hellmuth, and Tom Dwan – were nowhere to be found in the bracket. 

This time around, all three are in the mix

In the Round of 64, each has drawn a capable opponent. Negreanu takes on 2023 WPT World Championship winner Dan Sepiol while Hellmuth squares off against Josh Arieh

Dwan, meanwhile, has to contend with the unpredictable Randy '3Coin' Sadler

Hellmuth and Dwan have history in this competition. The two locked horns in the 2010 iteration of the event, leading to a classic Hellmuthian blow-up. After his aces were cracked by Dwan's pocket tens, Hellmuth berated his opponent – going as far as to question whether Dwan would still be playing poker in five years. 

If the stars align, we might get a rematch of that infamous showdown

Soverel back to defend title

Sam Soverel rose above the stacked field last year to become the first champion since Mike Matusow won the event back in 2013. Soverel, perhaps inadvertently, spoiled the result of the competition when he posted an image to social media that showed the trophy in the background – before the televised episodes had aired. 

The Floridian faced a tough road to the final round, downing Jonathan Jaffe, Ryan Feldman, Nick Wright, Luiz 'Brazil God' Rizental, and Phil Galfond before defeating Keith Lehr 2-1 in the best of three Finals match. 

Sam Soverel Florida's own Sam Soverel won the 2025 National Heads-Up Championship for $500,000.
Hayley Hochstetler

This year, Soverel faces off against Kasey Lynn Mills in the Round of 64, the first hurdle en route to a title defense. 

While past iterations of the event aired episodically on NBC, Peacock took over as the platform of choice last year – and that's where you can watch all the action when the show hits the airwaves this summer ahead of airing on PokerGO.

Round of 64 matchups

Spades Bracket

  • Liv Boeree vs Jeremy Ausmus
  • Tom Dwan vs Randy '3Coin' Sadler
  • Cary Katz vs Steven Jones
  • Jimmy D vs Kirk Brown
  • Turbo Nguyen vs Shaun Deeb
  • Andrew Pacheco vs Jesse Lonis
  • Erick Lindgren vs Eric Persson
  • Luiz 'Brazil God' Rizental vs Doug Polk

Clubs Bracket

  • Victoria Livschitz vs Chris 'Big Huni' Hunichen
  • Phil Laak vs Chino Rheem
  • Josh Arieh vs Phil Hellmuth
  • Ben Lamb vs Jared Bleznick
  • Andrew Robl vs Keith Lehr
  • Randall Emmett vs Robbi Jade Lew
  • Sam Soverel vs Kasey Lyn Mills
  • Daniel Negreanu vs Dan Sepiol

Diamonds Bracket

  • Nick Schulman vs Sam 'Senor Tilt' Kiki
  • Matthew Wantman vs Kelly Lucas
  • Alan Keating vs Jeff Gross
  • David 'ODB' Baker vs Jason Mercier
  • Marius Gierse vs Vanessa Selbst
  • Alex Foxen vs Erik Seidel
  • Nicholas Rigby vs Dan Shak
  • Brandon Steven vs Justin Gavri

Hearts Bracket

  • Scott Seiver vs Justin Young
  • Jeff Platt vs Sam Laskowitz
  • Igor Kurganov vs Phillip Frankland Lee
  • Kristen Foxen vs Ryan Bartlett
  • Vinny Lingham vs Matt Hanks
  • Jeremy Becker vs Dan 'Jungleman' Cates
  • Gabriel Andrade vs Darin Feinstein
  • Seth Davies vs Sean Winter