2018 World Series of Poker
The table of Athanasios Polychronopoulos and Joseph Cheong got moved back from the outer featured table, back into the Amazon Orange section. Cliff Josephy won a nice pot right away.
He raised to 1,200 and saw another player at the table three-bet to 3,600. Josephy called and the two saw an ![]()
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flop appear. Both players checked to see the
turn card and Josephy took the initiative back by betting 2,500. His opponent folded and Josephy took down the pot.
A new outer feature table has been set headlined by 10-time WSOP bracelet winner Phil Ivey.
A short-stacked Mike Watson had defended his big blind against an early position open from David Kaleel. On the ![]()
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flop, Watson check-called 1,500 and left himself with 1,350 behind. The turn was the
and those final chips went in as well.
Mike Watson: ![]()
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David Kaleel: ![]()
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The river was the
and "SirWatts" went to the rail in the last level of the day.
In the last hand before the break the action folded around to the player in the cutoff who raised to 1,200. Vanessa Selbst re-raised to 3,800 from the small blind and Ryan Hohner made it 8,000 from the big blind. Selbst called and they went heads-up to the ![]()
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flop.
Selbst checked to Hohner who bet 5,000 and Selbst check-raised to 16,700. Hohner called and the dealer burned and turned the
. Selbst moved all in for 46,900 and Hohner called.
Selbst turned over ![]()
for just jack high and was drawing dead against the ![]()
of Hohner. The meaningless
completed the board and Selbst was eliminated.
Dietrich Fast was in the middle position, firing 8,000 into a pot of around 5,500 with the board reading ![]()
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. His opponent thought for a moment and then threw in calling chips. Fast turned up ![]()
for a pure bluff and his opponent successfully picked him off with ![]()
.
When it was announced earlier this year that Day 1c of the 2018 World Series of Poker Main Event would take place on the fourth of July, which of course is America’s Independence Day, some speculated the turnout might be stunted. As it turns out, nothing could've been further from the truth.
A massive 4,571 players on 1c made it the largest starting flight in WSOP history, surpassing the 4,262 set on 1c in 2017. That number is well ahead of the entire 2004 WSOP field, and five times as big as the 2003 WSOP Main Event when Chris Moneymaker changed the poker world forever.
Along with 1a’s 925 runners and 2,378 from 1b (also the largest 1b flight in history surpassing 2017’s 2,164) the total field climbed to 7,874 players, which generated a $74,015,600 prize pool and made it the second-largest WSOP Main Event behind the 2006 field (8,773 players).
Detailed numbers only go back until 2008, and up until 2011, the WSOP ran four starting flights. The largest flight between then was the 2009 WSOP’s 2,809 players on Day 1d followed by 2,802 on 1d in 2011. In 2009, registration closed with 2,809 players registered, as there was no space for more entrants. Players like Patrik Antonius and TJ Cloutier were famously locked out of playing the event that year.
We’ll have to wait and see who bags up the most chips later this evening, but for those wondering, last year saw Jerome Brion finished with 247,900 to claim the chip lead among the surviving 3,300 players.
Day 1a saw 659 players bag from the 925 that entered. Last night, 1,794 players survived Day 1b from the 2,378 that signed up.
| Day 1a | Day 1b | Day 1c | Day 1d | Total | Prize Pool | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | 512 | $5,120,000 | ||||
| 2001 | 613 | $5,946,220 | ||||
| 2002 | 631 | $5,931,000 | ||||
| 2003 | 839 | $7,802,700 | ||||
| 2004 | 2,576 | $24,224,400 | ||||
| 2005 | 5,619 | $52,818,610 | ||||
| 2006 | 8,773 | $82,512,162 | ||||
| 2007 | 6,358 | $59,784,954 | ||||
| 2008 | 1,297 | 1,158 | 1,928 | 2,461 | 6,844 | $64,333,600 |
| 2009 | 1,116 | 873 | 1,696 | 2,809 | 6,494 | $61,043,600 |
| 2010 | 1,125 | 1,489 | 2,314 | 2,391 | 7,319 | $68,798,600 |
| 2011 | 897 | 985 | 2,181 | 2,802 | 6,865 | $64,531,000 |
| 2012 | 1,066 | 2,114 | 3,418 | - | 6,598 | $62,021,200 |
| 2013 | 943 | 1,942 | 3,467 | - | 6,352 | $59,708,800 |
| 2014 | 771 | 2,144 | 3,768 | - | 6,683 | $62,820,200 |
| 2015 | 741 | 1,716 | 3,963 | - | 6,420 | $60,348,000 |
| 2016 | 764 | 1,733 | 4,240 | - | 6,737 | $63,327,800 |
| 2017 | 795 | 2,164 | 4,262 | - | 7,221 | $67,877,400 |
| 2018 | 925 | 2,378 | 4,571 | - | 7,874 | $74,015,600 |
Niveau: 5
Blinds: 250/500
Ante: 75