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2013 World Series of Poker

Event #62: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Main Event
Event Info

2013 World Series of Poker

Resultado Final
Vencedor
Mão Vencedora
ak
Prémio
$8,361,570
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Entradas
6,352
Informações sobre o nível
Nível
40
Blinds
600,000 / 1,200,000
Ante
200,000

From 27 Will Come the November Nine... Day 7 Awaits!

Anton Morgenstern
Anton Morgenstern

Welcome to Day 7, the last day of play this summer at the 2013 World Series of Poker. From a starting field of 6,352 players in for 10 grand apiece just 27 remain, and after today just nine of them will leave the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino knowing their 2013 WSOP Main Event tourney journeys will be continuing another exciting step further to November's final table.

Anton Morgenstern of Germany today returns to the biggest stack of 21,955,000, having seized the lead and created space between himself and the rest of the field during yesterday's last two levels. The Frenchman Sylvain Loosli is his nearest challenger currently in second position with 14,125,000.

Chris Lindh and Fabian Ortiz will also come back to eight-figure stacks, as will a couple of two-time WSOP bracelet winners, JC Tran and Carlos Mortensen. Mortensen, of course, is looking to add a second WSOP Main Event title to the one he earned back in 2001.

In theory the leaders stand the greatest chance of surviving today, although looking back to a year ago neither of the top two chip leaders with 27 left — Marc-Andre Ladouceur and Daniel Strelitz — made the final table, finishing 13th and 24th, respectively. As it happened, of the top nine in the counts to start last year's Day 7, only two survived the day (Robert Salaburu and Russell Thomas).

That it is possible to overcome starting a Day 7 short and still survive players need only ask Steve Gee who began last year's final day 22nd of 27, yet still made the final nine. In fact they can ask him today, as Gee is back for his second straight Day 7 (!), this time coming back to begin in 23rd position. Thus might others with below average stacks like Mark Newhouse, Marc McLaughlin, Yevgeniy Timoshenko, Ryan Riess, Rep Porter, and David Benefield take Gee's example from last year to heart.

Play begins at 12 noon Pacific time with the start of Level 30, when players from Argentina, Brazil, Canada, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United States will reconvene to determine who among them will form the 2013 WSOP Main Event's November Nine.

Come back to PokerNews then for comprehensive coverage of today's action. While waiting for play to start, check out Kristy Arnett's recap of yesterday's action and preview of today:

Tags: Anton MorgensternCarlos MortensenChris LindhDanard PetitDaniel StrelitzDavid BenefieldFabian OrtizJC TranMarc McLaughlinMarc-Andre LadouceurMark NewhouseRep PorterRyan RiessSteve GeeSylvain LoosliYevgeniy Timoshenko

Benjamin Pollak Eliminated in 27th Place ($285,408)

Nível 30 : 60,000/120,000, 15,000 ante
Benjamin Pollak - 27th place
Benjamin Pollak - 27th place

Outer Table

Hand #3: From the button, Benjamin Pollak opened to 250,000 and Maxx Coleman moved all in from the big blind for roughly 3.8 million. Pollak deliberated for a few moments before making the call for roughly his 2.9 million in chips.

Pollak: {9-Clubs}{9-Spades}
Coleman: {A-Clubs}{4-Clubs}

With Pollak in great shape to double to roughly 6 million, the {J-Spades}{2-Spades}{3-Clubs} flop gave Coleman a plethora of outs with any ace, five or running clubs to send Pollak to the rail.

The turn of {J-Hearts} saw Pollak needing to fade just seven cards in the deck, but unfortunately for the Frenchman, the river would see the {5-Clubs} spike like a dagger to the heart ending his tournament in 27th place for $285,408 in prizemoney as Coleman climbs to roughly 7 million in chips.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Maxx Coleman us
Maxx Coleman
WSOP 1X Winner
6,980,000 3,150,000
Benjamin Pollak fr
Benjamin Pollak
Eliminado

Tags: Benjamin PollakMaxx Coleman

Interview: Chip Leader Anton Morgenstern

Nível 30 : 60,000/120,000, 15,000 ante
Anton Morgenstern
Anton Morgenstern

Anton Morgenstern came into Day 7 of the WSOP Main Event as the leader with 21,955,000 in chips. Before play kicked off, the German online pro gave us a few moments of his time to discuss his strategy for the day.

Although he mentioned he was nervous, he expressed confidence in his ability to finish the day strong. Here’s what he had to say.

PokerNews: When did you realize that you could make a deep run in this event?

I always knew I had the potential to make a deep run from the start. When it got to Day 4, I actually realized, "wow this is going somewhere."

Do you think your online background helped you excel in this tournament?

Absolutely. That is where I learned poker. I put in lots and lots of volume. Played pretty much everything and I think that helped me slowly but surely get better in my game. Online is definitely the way to become a better player because you learn so much faster than you would if you were playing live only.

It also helped me become really comfortable with deepstack poker. When it is 50 or 60 big blinds or more I am really confident.

How will you attack the day as chip leader?

I’ll try to figure out what mental and emotional state everyone is in. I will apply pressure if I can tell they are trying to hold on as long as they can to see if they can last long enough to make it to the final nine. I’ll pick my spots and play aggressive.

Tags: Anton Morgenstern

Jorn Walthaus Eliminated in 26th Place ($285,408)

Nível 30 : 60,000/120,000, 15,000 ante
Jorn Walthaus - 26th Place (left) & Steve Gee
Jorn Walthaus - 26th Place (left) & Steve Gee

Feature Table

Hand #5: The action folded to Jorn Walthaus, who moved all in for 1.66 million on the button. Steve Gee re-shoved for 2.98 million out of the small blind, and Anton Morgenstern surrendered his big blind.

Walthaus: {a-Diamonds}{9-Hearts}
Gee: {a-Clubs}{k-Diamonds}

Walthaus was in bad shape, and things got worse when the flop fell {k-Clubs}{2-Clubs}{4-Diamonds}. It was all over when the {4-Clubs} turned, and Walthaus officially hit the rail when the {10-Spades} completed the board. Gee now sits with 4.865 million chips.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Steve Gee us
Steve Gee
4,865,000 1,705,000
Jorn Walthaus nl
Jorn Walthaus
Eliminado

Tags: Jorn WalthausSteve Gee

PokerNews Podcast Episode #172: Final Episode from the WSOP

Nível 30 : 60,000/120,000, 15,000 ante
This is, the Main Event!
This is, the Main Event!

In the final episode of the PokerNews Podcast at the 2013 World Series of Poker, the crew breaks down the remaining 27 players in the Main Event, and each host picks a dark horse to make the final table.

You can subscribe to the PokerNews Podcast on iTunes here.

Tags: 2013 Main EventPokerNews Podcastwsop

Jason Mann Eliminated in 25th Place ($285,408)

Nível 30 : 60,000/120,000, 15,000 ante
Jason Mann - 25th Place
Jason Mann - 25th Place

Secondary Table

Hand #18: Jason Mann started the hand with the button. Sergio Castelluccio raised to 240,000 from the hijack seat.. Everyone folded, and he won the pot.

Hand #19: Marc McLaughlin had the button. Play folded to the cutoff seat where Jason Mann decided to make it 255,000 to go. All folded, and Mann took the pot.

Hand #20: Bruno Kawauti had the button. For the second hand in a row, Jason Mann opened with a raise to 255,000, this time from the hijack seat. In the big blind, Chris Lindh reraised to 685,000. Mann tanked, then called.

The flop came down {Q-Hearts}{5-Hearts}{5-Spades}, and Lindh was first to act. He took his time, then fired 840,000. Mann raised all in for 3.665 million. Lindh requested a count and thought about it for a little bit. He then called.

Mann showed the {10-Clubs}{10-Diamonds} for two pair, tens and fives. Lindh had him beat with the {Q-Clubs}{9-Spades} for queens and fives.

The turn was the {8-Diamonds}, leaving Mann needing a ten on the river. The {6-Clubs} wasn't what he was looking for, though, and Mann was eliminated.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Chris Lindh us
Chris Lindh
15,865,000 4,225,000
Jason Mann ca
Jason Mann
Eliminado

Tags: Bruno KawautiChris LindhChristopher LindhJason MannMarc McLaughlinSergio Castelluccio

Secondary Table: Lindh-sanity

Nível 30 : 60,000/120,000, 15,000 ante
Chris Lindh
Chris Lindh

Hand #23: Ryan Riess started this hand with the button. Chris Lindh raised from the cutoff seat to 275,000. Carlos Mortensen called from the big blind, and the flop came down {A-Spades}{A-Clubs}{10-Diamonds}. After Mortensen checked, Lindh checked behind.

The {5-Diamonds} was added to the board on fourth street, and Mortensen checked again. Lindh didn't check this time, but instead bet 330,000. Mortensen called.

The river was the {7-Spades}, and Mortensen checked. Lindh bet 615,000, and Mortensen went into the tank. The 2001 World Series of Poker Main Event champion eventually called, and Lindh quickly tabled the {A-Diamonds}{A-Hearts} for quad aces. Mortensen could only muck, and Lindh won the pot.

This was the fourth consecutive hand Lindh has won, and he now has nearly 20 million in chips.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Chris Lindh us
Chris Lindh
19,545,000 1,385,000
Carlos Mortensen es
Carlos Mortensen
WSOP 2X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
8,575,000 -1,235,000

Tags: Carlos MortensenChris LindhChristopher LindhRyan Riess

Steve Gee Eliminated in 24th Place ($285,408)

Nível 30 : 60,000/120,000, 15,000 ante
Steve Gee - 24th Place
Steve Gee - 24th Place

Feature Table

Hand #44: Steve Gee raised to 250,000 from the small blind, Anton Morgenstern three-bet to 550,000 from the big blind, and Gee four-bet shoved for 2.93 million. Morgenstern called immediately.

Gee: {10-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds}
Morgenstern: {8-Clubs}{8-Hearts}

Gee needed help and found very little from the {8-Spades}{Q-Spades}{2-Diamonds} flop, which gave Morgenstern a set of eights. The {A-Spades} turn left the 2012 Octoniner drawing dead, rendering the {3-Spades} river moot.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Anton Morgenstern de
Anton Morgenstern
29,325,000 2,975,000
Steve Gee us
Steve Gee
Eliminado

Tags: Anton MorgensternSteve Gee

First Break on Day 7: Morgenstern Increases Lead; Steve Gee Eliminated

Nível 30 : 60,000/120,000, 15,000 ante
Anton Morgenstern
Anton Morgenstern

We've reached the first 20-minute break of Day 7 of the 2013 World Series of Poker Main Event. The day began with 27 players hoping to reach poker's most coveted final table, which will take place here in Las Vegas in November. After two hours of action, start-of-day chip leader Anton Morgenstern is still on top, and four players have been eliminated.

The first player out the door was Benjamin Pollack, who had his pocket nines cracked by Maxx Coleman's ace-three when Coleman made a wheel. A short while later, Dutch player Jorn Walthaus moved all in for 1.66 million on the button with ace-nine and 2012 November Niner Steve Gee re-shoved for nearly 3 million with ace-king. Gee flopped a pair of kings, and Walthaus exited in 26th place.

Out in 25th place was Jason Mann, who got his last chips in the middle with pocket tens on a {Q-Hearts}{5-Hearts}{5-Spades} flop against Chris Lindh's queen-nine. The board bricked out, and Mann collected $285,408.

Then it was Gee who made his exit from the ESPN stage. Gee four-bet shoved for about 2.9 million with ten-seven of diamonds and Morgenstern called instantly with pocket eights. Gee was unable to improve, and his hopes of making a second straight WSOP Main Event final table were dashed.

The play has been diverse at the three remaining tables. The outer table saw 55 hands completed during the first level of the day, and the main feature table played 48, while the secondary feature table had only 30.

Lindh, one of the players seated at the secondary table, made up a little ground on Morgenstern when he flopped quad aces against Carlos Mortensen. Mortensen, the only former Main Event champ still in the field, lost more than a million in that pot, but he still sits in the top 10 at the break.

Morgenstern stepped on the gas late in the level, winning several pots and eliminating Gee to climb to nearly 30 million.

We have full chip counts for you below. See you in 20!

Tags: 2013 Main EventAnton MorgensternCarlos MortensenChris LindhJason MannSteve Gee

Clement Tripodi Eliminated in 23rd Place ($285,408)

Nível 31 : 80,000/160,000, 20,000 ante
Clement Tripodi - 23rd Place
Clement Tripodi - 23rd Place

Secondary Table

Hand #31: Alexander Livingston raised to 340,000 from under the gun, Bruno Kawauti called from middle position, then after a lengthy pause Clement Tripodi pushed all in from the hijack seat.

It folded back around to Livingston who asked for a count of Tripodi's stack — 2.3 million — and he folded, but Kawauti called right away.

Tripodi showed {A-Clubs}{Q-Hearts}, while Kawauti had picked up another big pair with {K-Hearts}{K-Diamonds}. The flop came {4-Clubs}{5-Clubs}{10-Hearts}, then the {J-Hearts} on the turn provided Tripodi a couple of additional outs to make a straight. But the river was the {8-Hearts}, and Tripodi is out in 23rd place.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Bruno Kawauti br
Bruno Kawauti
10,230,000 2,995,000
Clement Tripodi fr
Clement Tripodi
Eliminado

Tags: Bruno KawautiClement Tripodi