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2017 World Series of Poker

Event #73: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em MAIN EVENT - World Championship
Jours 2ab
Event Info

2017 World Series of Poker

Résultats
Gagnant
Main Gagnante
a2
Prix
$8,150,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$67,877,400
Entrants
7,221
Info Niveau
Niveau
43
Blinds
1,500,000 / 3,000,000
Ante
500,000

Scott Lazar Snaps Off Three Streets

Niveau 6 : 300/600, 100 ante

With about 6,000 in the pot already, on a board reading {q-Diamonds}{6-Spades}{4-Spades}, Kristian Weirmyhr led out for 4,500 from the big blind. Scott Lazar was on the button and snap-called.

The turn was the {8-Spades} and Weirmyhr led out for 5,100 this time. Lazar wasted no time and practically beat Weirmyhr into the pot.

The river was the {2-Clubs}. Weirmyhr fired a third shell worth 7,000. Lazar tossed in a few chips to call and Weirmyhr tabled {q-Spades}{6-Clubs} for two pair queens and sixes. Lazar tabled {10-Spades}{7-Spades} for a flush and raked in the pot to chip up early.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Scott Lazar us
Scott Lazar
130,000 31,100
Kristian Wiermyhr no
Kristian Wiermyhr
63,000 -21,200

Tags: Kristian WeirmyhrScott Lazar

Early Pot for Drinan

Niveau 6 : 300/600, 100 ante

Connor Drinan raised to 1,500 from under the gun and received two callers.

The flop came down {K-Spades}{6-Hearts}{3-Hearts} and action checked to a player in middle position who bet 2,400. Only Drinan called to see the {A-Spades} turn, which both players checked. The {A-Hearts} river completed the board and Drinan bet 2,000. His opponent folded, giving Drinan the pot.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Connor Drinan us
Connor Drinan
WSOP 1X Winner
105,000 105,000

Tags: Connor Drinan

Byrraju Drops to Paxinos

Niveau 6 : 300/600, 100 ante
Rahul Byrraju
Rahul Byrraju

From the cutoff, Rahul Byrrajuj opened to 1,200 only to have Mark Radoja three-bet the button to 3,600.

Kenneth Paxinos cold-called in the big blind before Byrrajuj four-bet to 12,000. Radoja released, but Paxinos quickly called as the dealer spread a {A-Spades}{10-Hearts}{J-Clubs} flop.

Paxinos tossed in 10,000 and Byrrajuj called as the {5-Diamonds} landed on the turn.

Immediately Paxinos moved all in for 41,000 and Byrrajuj swiftly released while dropping to 170,000 in chips. Paxinos is now up to roughly 90,000 in chips.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Rahul Byrraju in
Rahul Byrraju
170,000 -16,100
Kenneth Paxinos at
Kenneth Paxinos
90,000 27,500
Mark Radoja ca
Mark Radoja
WSOP 2X Winner
56,000 -11,000

Tags: Kenneth PaxinosMark RadojaRahul Byrrajuj

Grayson Ramage Gets Paid Off

Niveau 6 : 300/600, 100 ante

Matthew Schreiber, who won his first WSOP gold bracelet this year in the $1,500 HORSE event, was heads up with Grayson Ramage.

The board read {5-}{7-}{4-}{9-}{6-} and Ramage bet 16,000 into a pot of 22,000. Schreiber called and Ramage showed two nines, {9-}{9-}, for a set to win the pot.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Grayson Ramage us
Grayson Ramage
186,000 50,000
Matthew Schreiber us
Matthew Schreiber
WSOP 1X Winner
64,000 -30,000

Tags: Grayson RamageMatthew Schreiber

John Tobias Gets an Early KO

Niveau 6 : 300/600, 100 ante

On one of the first hands dealt today at the Rio, John Tobias got all in with {a-}{j-} against an opponent with {q-}{q-}. He hit an ace on the flop and stayed ahead to eliminate his opponent.

"There's still a tournament at the Venetian," Tobias said to his opponent as he headed for the rail.

When John Tobias gave his name, is neighbor at the table said, "that is my given name, Tobias."

Tobias Ziegler is John Tobias's neighbor and started today with over 200,000.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Tobias Ziegler de
Tobias Ziegler
210,000 -5,300
John Tobias us
John Tobias
86,000 -29,900

Tags: John TobiasTobias Ziegler

Jonsson Takes from van Zadelhoff

Niveau 6 : 300/600, 100 ante
Steven van Zadelhoff
Steven van Zadelhoff

Paolo Cusinato kicked things off with an open to 1,500. Boo Jonsson called in the hijack, as did Steven van Zadelhoff in the cutoff, while Richard Seymour came along from the big blind.

The dealer spread a {J-Clubs}{2-Hearts}{6-Hearts} flop and it would be Jonsson taking a stab with a bet of 4,000. Van Zadelhoff was the only caller as the {2-Clubs} rolled off on the turn.

Jonsson bet 7,000, and van Zadelhoff flicked his cards to the muck and dropped to 118,500 as Jonsson moved to 35,500.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Steven van Zadelhoff nl
Steven van Zadelhoff
118,500 -1,500
Boo Jonsson ch
Boo Jonsson
35,500 9,600

Tags: Boo JonssonPaolo CusinatoRichard SeymourSteven van Zadelhoff

Kings for Davidson

Niveau 6 : 300/600, 100 ante

Andrew Rubinberg opened to 1,300 from early position before Marc Davidson three-bet the cutoff to 3,000. Rubinberg called, and checked an {8-Clubs}{J-Diamonds}{Q-Diamonds} flop.

Davidson continued for 5,500 and Rubinberg tossed in chips to call before both players checked the {A-Hearts} on the turn and the {5-Clubs} on the river.

Rubinberg tabled his {10-Hearts}{10-Spades}, but it would be Davidson's {K-Hearts}{K-Spades} that would see him pushed the pot to move to nearly 60,000.

"Lucky I didn't hit my set!" stated Rubinberg as he dropped to 20,000 in chips.

Joueur Jetons Progression
Marc Davidson us
Marc Davidson
58,200 10,100
Andrew Rubinberg us
Andrew Rubinberg
19,800 -8,600

Tags: Marc DavidsonAndrew Rubinberg

Niveau: 6

Blinds: 300/600

Ante: 100

The Three Feature Tables for Day 2a/b

The three feature tables in the Brasilia room at the start of Day 2a/b are as follows:

Main Feature Table

RoomTableSeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
Brasilia7242Jonathan KrelaCanada60,700101
Brasilia7243Phil LaakUnited States78,900132
Brasilia7244Matthew HopkinsUnited States62,700105
Brasilia7245Noah BronsteinUnited States93,900157
Brasilia7246James AkenheadUnited Kingdom36,70061
Brasilia7247Drew DumanskiUnited States81,700136
Brasilia7248Adam MclaughlinUnited States54,70091
Brasilia7249Qui NguyenUnited States96,700161

Secondary Feature Table

RoomTableSeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
Amazon1681Jeffrey ReimerUnited States48,40081
Amazon1682Amit MakhijaUnited States81,800136
Amazon1683Gaelle BaumannFrance87,100145
Amazon1684Frederick LiUnited States40,80068
Amazon1685Steve HwangUnited States52,50088
Amazon1686Feizal SatchuCanada100,000167
Amazon1687Barry GreensteinUnited States146,800245
Amazon1688Huidong GuMacau50,50084
Amazon1689Gregory BenacFrance35,50059

Third Feature Table

RoomTableSeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
Amazon891[Removed:17]Vienna, , NZ38,50064
Amazon892David HengenUnited States24,10040
Amazon893Michael LofgrenUnited States10,40017
Amazon894Tom PetersonUnited States80,600134
Amazon895Lyle BermanUnited States85,400142
Amazon896Brandon AdamsUnited States203,500339
Amazon897Albert DaherBeirut, LB198,500331
Amazon898Larry SmalleyUnited States68,500114
Amazon899Evan KrentzmanUnited States101,000168

Live streaming will be available on the following platforms:
11:30 - 4:30 - PokerGO
4:30 - 8:00 - ESPN
8:00 - 8:30 - PokerGO

Day 2ab Gets Underway at 11 a.m.

After three World Series of Poker Main Event starting flights and thousands of players filing into the Rio, Day 2 action get underway today with those who advanced from Day 1A and 1B returning for five more levels of play.

The first flight brought in 795 players with 576 surviving, making it the biggest Day 1a since 2013. That was followed up by an overflow crowd of 2,164 on Day 1b, with 1,643 players bagging at night's end. That made for a total field of 2,959 in the first two flights of play. 2,219 of them return to the Rio for Day 2ab at 11 a.m.

LevelSmall BlindBig BlindAnte
6300600100
20-minute break   
7400800100
20-minute break   
85001,000100
20-minute break   
96001,200200
90-minute break   
108001,600200

The 90-minute dinner break should be around 8 p.m. local time. Play should be done for the day around 11:30 p.m. The money will not be reached today; that happens towards the end of Day 3 usually.

The numbers for the first two flights have been up compared to recent years, as was Monday’s flight 1c. Day 1c brought a massive 4,262 players to the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino, 3,300 of them advanced to Day 2c on Wednesday at noon. That makes for a grand total of 7,221 players, 5,519 who survived Day 1.

All in all, this year’s Main Event is the third-largest in history (only topped in 2006 and 2010) and the prize pool sits at almost $68 million. First place is guaranteed $8,150,000, and the total places paid is 1,084 with a min-cash of $15,000.

Morten Mortensen was the chip leader in the 1a field with 279,000 chips. Mortensen has almost $1.2 million in lifetime tournament winnings including four cashes at the WSOP for $297,481. Others with big stacks include Sam Grafton (231,600), Griffin Abel (226,000), Jonathan Little (210,300), and David Eldridge (207,000).

Defending champ Qui Nguyen advanced with 96,700 chips and 2014 champ Martin Jacobson bagged up 36,800. Other notables still remaining include Barny Boatman (150,000), Alex Foxen (140,000), Faraz Jaka (119,800), Donnacha O'Dea (111,000), Barry Shulman (106,700), Richard Seymour (105,000), Jon Turner (103,900), Mike Matusow (99,000), Matthew Ashton (93,500), and Hoyt Corkins (84,300).

Taking command in the 1b field was Argentina’s Richard Dubini (254,500), who has a bit over $1 million in lifetime tournament winnings including a win in 2014 in the Brazilian Series Of Poker for $126,397. Other big stacks continuing to a second day of action were Alan Schein (229,800), Brandon Meyers (215,700), Tobias Ziegler (215,300), Brandon Adams (205,000), and 2005 WSOP Main Event third-place finisher Tex Barch (200,000).

Other notables remaining from 2b include: Kenny Hallaert (168,700), Jordan Morgan (166,300), Fabrice Soulier (160,300), Hasan Habib (154,100), Barry Greenstein (146,800), Nick Schulman (131,200), Adrian Mateos (129,000), Scott Seiver (123,900), Andy Frankenberger (116,400), Jeff Shulman (112,600), Patrick Mahoney (109,200), Layne Flack (107,000), and Terrence Chan (101,800).

Play is scheduled to reach the final table on Day 7 (Monday, July 17). Days 8-10 will then resume and be played on July 20-22 to reach a winner – all played out live in front of ESPN’s cameras. Tuesday’s action will be on PokerGO from 11:30 through 4:30. The show switches to ESPN from 4:30-8 p.m. and again on PokerGO for the last half hour (8:00-8:30 p/m.). Here is a look at the payouts for the final table:

1st$8,150,000
2nd$4,700,000
3rd$3,500,000
4th$2,600,000
5th$2,000,000
6th$1,675,000
7th$1,425,000
8th$1,200,000
9th$1,000,000

Here's the complete Day 2ab seat draw: