David Bach completed with a and saw Scott Bohlman call with a as well as another opponent call with a .
Scott Bohlman: //
David Bach: / (Folded on fifth street)
Opponent: //
On fourth street, Bach bet and got two calls.
On fifth Bach checked while Bohlman bet, getting one caller and Bach folded.
On sixth street Bohlman moved all in and was quickly called. He had a ten-seven versus a jack-nine and needed to fade his opponents nine draw. The seventh street card paired both of them and saw Bohlman rake in the chips in an enthusiastic manner as he received a full double.
At the same table, 16-time bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth was seated right next to Adam Friedman.
Nick Guagenti was seen leaving the tournament area and the hand was recapped by the table.
Robert Campbell completed with a , Guagenti called with a and Stephen Burns raised with a and both players called.
Nick Guagenti: //
Robert Campbell: //
Stephen Burns: / (Folded on fifth street)
On fourth street, Campbell bet and Guagenti raised which Burns called. Campbell then three-bet which Guagenti responded with a four-bet and Burns called again. Campbell five-bet to cap and both players called.
On fifth street Campbell bet again and Guagenti raised all in for his last 400 which folded out Burns and Campbell called.
Guagenti's seven draw missed and he ended with a nine-seven which was no good against Campbell's eight-six and he exited the tournament area.
Action was picked up on the seventh street of a very sizable pot between Phil Hellmuth and Benny Glaser.
Benny Glaser: //
Phil Hellmuth: //
Action was on Glaser who bet and Hellmuth sat up in his chair. "If I lose this one it'll be brutal," he lamented as he pondered his decision. After some time he tossed in the call and Glaser declared "seven-four," while turning over .
"This f****** guy," Hellmuth said angrily looking at his cards "everytime getting it in a mile behind." "A mile behind?" asked Glaser while he raked in the pot "Where?"
Action was picked up on fourth street between Daniel Negreanu, David Funkhouser, and Cary Katz.
Cary Katz: (Folded on fourth street)
Daniel Negreanu: //
David Funkhouser: //
Negreanu bet on fourth street and Cary Katz raised, David Funkhouser re-raised, Negreanu raised again, Katz folded, then Funkhouser capped the pot and Negreanu called.
Fifth street checked through to sixth street that saw Funkhouser bet and Negreanu called.
The same action happened on sixth street and on seventh Funkhouser checked to Negreanu who bet and Funkhouser called. Negreanu turned over for a nine-eight and he scooped a big pot.
After 10 levels of play, 59 players found bags in WSOP Event #79: $10,000 Razz Championship at Bally's and Paris Las Vegas. A total of 125 fired on Day 1 of this event and with registration open until the start of play on Day 2 Wednesday, that number could climb a bit more.
Hanging at the top of the chip counts with 308,000 is bracelet winner William Kakon. Kakon won his bracelet in $1,500 Limit Hold’em in 2015 for $196,055. In this series, Kakon has seen two cashes in Pot-Limit Omaha events and it seems has branched out into more mixed games. He is sitting atop the charts and like Daniel Strelitz just days ago, put himself in position to try to earn his second bracelet.
Another massive stack at the end of the day is Hal Rotholz, who ended the day with 299,000. Rotholz is a regular in the WSOP mixed games, having made two final tables at the WSOP last year. He has yet to win his first bracelet, however, and will try to make his first a Razz one.
Event #79: $10,000 Razz Championship Top 10 Chip Counts
Place
Player
Country
Chips
1
William Kakon
Morocco
308,500
2
Hal Rotholz
United States
299,000
3
Brian Hastings
United States
263,000
4
Kyle Dilschneider
United States
247,000
5
Daniel Negreanu
Canada
240,000
6
Amir Nematinia
United States
228,500
7
Perry Friedman
United States
228,000
8
Adam Friedman
United States
214,000
9
David Bach
United States
210,500
10
Yueqi Zhu
United States
198,500
Others making it through include bracelet winners Daniel Negreanu (240,000), Adam Friedman (214,000), David “ODB” Baker (174,500), Yuri Dzivielevski (144,500), and winner of the $1,500 Razz Daniel Strelitz (66,500).
Defending champion Benny Glaser (21,000) made it through the day on a short stack while sitting at the same table as Phil Hellmuth (12,500), both of whom were involved in some colorful encounters throughout the day. Hellmuth won this event during the 2015 WSOP and has a second Razz bracelet from the 2012 WSOP in the $2,500 Razz event, so these two were bound to clash.
Players who saw their hopes for a second day diminish included Phil Hui, Shaun Deeb, Frank Kassela, Matt Glantz, Carol Fuchs, Maria Ho, and Mike “The Mouth” Matusow. Registration for this tournament remains open until the start of Day 2.
Players will return on July 13th at 2 p.m. to the Paris Purple section. Level 11 will be the first level of the day with a 1,000 ante, 1,000 bring-in, and limits at 4,000-8,000. Levels will last 90 minutes with 15-minute breaks after each level. A 60-minute dinner break will occur after Level 14 ( ~8:30 p.m.) with play ending after Level 17. Stay tuned to PokerNews for all updates regarding the World Series of Poker.