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2013 World Series of Poker

Event #58: $1,111 Little One for One Drop No-Limit Hold'em
Dias: 3
Event Info

2013 World Series of Poker

Resultado Final
Vencedor
Mão Vencedora
kq
Prémio
$663,727
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,000
Entradas
4,756
Informações sobre o nível
Nível
32
Blinds
80,000 / 160,000
Ante
20,000

Tran Leads Final Eight

Nível 29 : 40,000/80,000, 10,000 ante
Nghi Tran
Nghi Tran

Sixty-seven players made the cut to begin Day 3 of Event #58: $1,111 Little One for One Drop, but only a select eight are still in contention after 10 levels of play today. Nghi "Henry" Tran leads the octet with 4,130,000, as his trademark aggressive play, along with some good luck, has propelled him to the top.

Notable online powerhouses Bryn Kenney and Mike Sowers were among the first to fall today, and Allyn Jaffrey Shulman and Day 2 chipleader Joe Wilson weren't far behind. Gordon Huntly was the unfortunate victim of the final table bubble.

Once there, all ins were frequent but short stacks carried the day, including Kevin O'Donnell getting it in with the shortest stack and the worst hand but coming out on top in a three-way pot. Adriano Santa Ana was the only player to fall since final table play began, but others will surely be joining him early on Day 4.

Play resumes at 1 p.m. in the Amazon Room, and while the majority of the players in the room will be jockeying for early positioning in the Main Event, one of the eight players remaining here will be pocketing a gold bracelet and $663,727. Be sure to tune in to find out whom that will be.

Tags: Adriano Santa AnaAllyn Jaffrey ShulmanBryn KenneyGordon HuntlyHenry TranJoe WilsonJoseph WilsonKevin O'Donnell

Adriano Santa Ana Eliminated in 9th Place ($54,960)

Nível 29 : 40,000/80,000, 10,000 ante
Adriano Santa Ana - 9th Place
Adriano Santa Ana - 9th Place

Hand #10: Joseph Morneau raised to 160,000 from the hijack and Roland Israelashvili shoved from the button for about 1.1 million. Adriana Santa Ana called all in for 85,000 from the small blind and Morneau folded.

Israelashvili: {A-Diamonds}{A-Spades}
Santa Ana: {4-Spades}{2-Clubs}

The board ran out {A-Clubs}{Q-Clubs}{4-Hearts}{8-Diamonds}{2-Diamonds}, not enough help for Santa Ana, ending his run in ninth place.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Roland Israelashvili us
Roland Israelashvili
1,450,000 230,000
Adriano Santa Ana br
Adriano Santa Ana
Eliminado

O'Donnell Wins Massive Three-Way Pot

Nível 28 : 30,000/60,000, 10,000 ante
Kevin O'Donnell came from behind to win a big one.
Kevin O'Donnell came from behind to win a big one.

Hand #8: Adriano Santa Ana raised to 150,000 under the gun, and Kevin O'Donnell moved in for 585,000 from his immediate left. Action folded to Nghi Tran in the hijack, who announced a call. Santa Ana then jammed when action folded back to him. Again, Tran called.

Tran: {j-Clubs}{j-Hearts}
Santa Ana: {a-Spades}{a-Hearts}
O'Donnell: {10-Diamonds}{10-Spades}

Santa Ana was in a dominating position, but it was O'Donnell who had to like the flop the most: {9-Spades}{6-Clubs}{7-Spades}, giving him a gutshot. The turn was the {10-Clubs}, and now it was Tran in need of a straight.

"Eight, eight eight," he urged the dealer. "Come on, you can do it."

The dealer placed a {q-Diamonds} down though, and O'Donnell doubled up, while Santa Ana won a small side pot.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Nghi Tran ca
Nghi Tran
3,000,000 -300,000
Kevin O'Donnell us
Kevin O'Donnell
1,850,000 1,050,000
Adriano Santa Ana br
Adriano Santa Ana
700,000 -1,255,000

Tags: Adriano Santa AnaKevin O'DonnellNghi Tran

Gordon Huntly Eliminated in 10th Place ($42,675)

Nível 28 : 30,000/60,000, 10,000 ante
Gordon Huntly - 10th Place
Gordon Huntly - 10th Place

Gordon Huntly opened to 125,000 from early position and Alexander Case three-bet to 300,000 on the button. The blinds folded, Huntly four-bet shoved for about 1.17 million, and Case called.

Huntly: {Q-Diamonds}{Q-Hearts}
Case: {A-Diamonds}{A-Spades}

The {9-Hearts}{8-Clubs}{2-Clubs} flop was no help to Huntly and the {A-Clubs} turn officially locked up the pot for Case. The {5-Spades} river was of no consequence, ending Huntly's tournament in 10th place.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Alexander Case us
Alexander Case
4,490,000 1,390,000
Gordon Huntly gb
Gordon Huntly
Eliminado

Final Table Interview: Justin Zaki

Nível 28 : 30,000/60,000, 10,000 ante
Justin Zaki
Justin Zaki

With just 10 players remaining in Event #58, Justin Zaki probably has the most experience this deep in a live tournament. Zaki has over $800,000 in lifetime earnings and has made final tables at both the WSOP and the World Poker Tour.

The largest cash of his tournament career also happens to be his best run. In 2011, Zaki snagged a third place finish in the WPT Championship Event at the Seminole Hard Rock Showdown, securing $415,680 in cash. Zaki also placed seventh in a $1,500 buy-in event of the 2010 WSOP for over $78,000, and more recently took ninth place in the $3,500 Main Event of the 2012 WPT Jacksonville Fall series to add $24,422 to his roll.

During the most recent break we took the opportunity to talk with Zaki, who was sitting seventh in chips at the time of the interview.

How do you stay on top of your game with so much tough competition in no-limit Hold’em these days?

I’m friends with a lot of the best young players so I talk tons of hands during breaks and after tournaments. I put in so much volume traveling between the circuits that I’ve gained so much experience playing live tournaments. I think I’m getting better and better through each tournament that I know how to handle a lot of situations or have the capability to make good decisions based on past experiences. So that and discussing hands with other players has helped to keep me in check.

Should the WSOP keep the Little One for One Drop and raise the buy in or keep it the same?

I think the buy in was just perfect. $1K events attract all kind of players. For instance, were down to the last players in this event and a majority are amateurs, which is great for the game. If the buy-in were changed to a higher dollar amount then it wouldn’t attract as high of a turnout.

How would you compare the field in this event to other $1,000 or $1,500 events?

Honestly it is pretty similar. There is a solid mix of pros and amateurs with probably more amateurs than pros. Maybe this event didn’t attract as many pros because of bigger events scheduled around the same time, but for the most part it is relatively the same. I will say it is nice to see more amateurs in the final counts compared to pros because it really helps with the image of poker. It shows that it is accessible to all player types.

So against a lighter field, in terms of lack of bigger names, do you up the aggression and try to exploit bad play?

It is tough with this tournament structure. The average stack is around 25-big blinds so it is hard to play optimally because you can play well and still get unlucky. You really want to pick your spots to give yourself the best chance to make it into the final table. Making it to the money is great but you want the bigger fish. I’m not trying to get in any pre-flop all-in situations because I can still chip up without seeing any flops or turns. So picking your spot is key because as they will stack off eventually.

My table right now is unbelievable. If I was ever going to be deep in a WSOP this is the dream table to have. I wish the structure was a little better but I’ll take it.

You have 12 WSOP cashes, 13 including this event, but have yet to clinch a bracelet. What challenges have you faced that have kept you from a winning score?

I’ve been getting deep in a lot of tournaments. In the end you just have to run good and win flips. Unfortunately, it just has to go your way. You can make good folds, good calls, and play smart, but still fall short of a win if the cards don’t go your way. In past tournaments, sure I run deep but then it just doesn’t go my way beyond that. I’ve been pretty positive and eventually it will come. This tournament would be a nice one to win.

Aside from winning a WSOP bracelet, what other poker accomplishments do you still wish to achieve?

I would love to win a WPT title. I got really close two years ago. That is what propelled me. Ever since then I’ve been chasing a WPT title.

Would you rather score a large cash prize, the biggest of your career, or win a title for less money?

If I had the option between winning a $1 million for first or getting second place for $1.5 million I would choose the win and get $500,000 less. It’s about the trophies, right? Isn’t that why we play poker, to win? And I have yet to win. That’s my priority.

Eugene Fouksman Eliminated in 11th Place ($42,675)

Nível 28 : 30,000/60,000, 10,000 ante
Eugene Fouksman - 11th Place
Eugene Fouksman - 11th Place

Eugene Fouksman raised to 425,000 on the button and after a short deliberation, Joseph Morneau went all in from the small blind. After Alexander Case folded his big blind, Fouksman called all in for about 510,000 total with {K-Clubs}{J-Hearts}.

Morneau was slightly ahead with {A-Spades}{7-Spades} and scored the elimination when the board ran out {A-Diamonds}{5-Clubs}{3-Hearts}{9-Clubs}{10-Hearts}.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Joseph Morneau us
Joseph Morneau
2,510,000 610,000
Eugene Fouksman us
Eugene Fouksman
Eliminado

Tags: Eugene FouksmanJoseph Morneau

Chad Mcclintock Eliminated in 13th Place ($33,387)

Nível 27 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante
Chad McClintock - 13th Place
Chad McClintock - 13th Place

Adriano Santa Ana raised to 115,000 on the button and Chad Mcclintock three-bet shoved from the big blind for roughly 520,000. Santa Ana called with {A-Clubs}{Q-Spades}, but trailed Mcclintock's {A-Diamonds}{K-Spades}.

The board, though, ran out {Q-Hearts}{4-Clubs}{2-Hearts}{4-Spades}{2-Clubs}, pairing Santa Ana's queen and eliminating Mcclintock in 13th place.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Adriano Santa Ana br
Adriano Santa Ana
2,110,000 615,000
Chad Mcclintock us
Chad Mcclintock
Eliminado

Tags: Chad McclintockAdriano Santa Ana

Gaetano Dimaria Eliminated in 14th Place ($33,387)

Nível 27 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante
Gaetano Dimaria - 14th Place
Gaetano Dimaria - 14th Place

Brian Yoon raised to 100,000 under the gun, and action folded to Gaetano Dimaria in the small blind. He moved all in, only to see Kevin O'Donnell do the same from the big blind. Yoon folded.

Dimaria: {6-Hearts}{6-Diamonds}
O'Donnell: {9-Clubs}{9-Spades}

O'Donnell got up and walked away, unable to watch his tournament life on the line. No sweat for him though, as the board came {k-Hearts}{j-Spades}{3-Diamonds}{a-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds}. Dimaria was left with just a few big blinds.

A few hands later, Justin Zaki raised to 100,000, and Dimaria shoved. Zaki called with {k-Hearts}{q-Diamonds}, and Dimaria turned over {q-Spades}{j-Hearts}, dominated once again.

The {a-Diamonds}{7-Spades}{8-Clubs} flop was no help to anyone, but the {10-Clubs} turn gave Dimaria a straight draw. An {a-Hearts} fell on the river, leaving Zaki's king-queen high best, and Dimaria is done in 14th.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Justin Zaki us
Justin Zaki
1,750,000 350,000
Kevin O'Donnell us
Kevin O'Donnell
1,300,000 500,000
Gaetano Dimaria ca
Gaetano Dimaria
Eliminado

Tags: Brian YoonGaetano DimariaJustin ZakiKevin O'Donnell

Matthew Krier Eliminated in 15th Place ($33,387)

Nível 27 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante
Matthew Krier - 15th Place
Matthew Krier - 15th Place

Matthew Krier opened to 100,000 in the cutoff and Alexander Case three-bet to about 250,000 from the button. Action folded back to Krier who four-bet shoved for just about 1 million. Case called immediately.

Krier: {J-Hearts}{J-Diamonds}
Case: {A-Clubs}{K-Hearts}

The {10-Hearts}{9-Spades}{7-Clubs} flop kept Krier ahead, as did the {2-Diamonds} turn. However, the {K-Diamonds} landed on the river to give Case a winning pair of kings to eliminate Krier in 15th place.

Case, meanwhile, has taken over the chip lead.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Alexander Case us
Alexander Case
3,240,000 1,140,000
Matthew Krier us
Matthew Krier
Eliminado

Tags: Alexander CaseMatthew Krier