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2014 World Series of Poker

Event #15: $3,000 Six-Handed No-Limit Hold'em
Dias: 1
Event Info

2014 World Series of Poker

Resultado Final
Vencedor
Mão Vencedora
ak
Prémio
$508,640
Event Info
Buy-in
$3,000
Prize Pool
$2,211,300
Entradas
810
Informações sobre o nível
Nível
32
Blinds
60,000 / 120,000
Ante
15,000

Three More Hands

Nível 10 : 400/800, 100 ante

The tournament staff has just announced the remaining players will play three more hands at each table before bagging and tagging for the night. We're headed out to compile some chip counts, so stay tuned for those as well as a full recap of the Day 1 action.

End-of-Day 1 Chip Counts (Completo)

Nível 10 : 400/800, 100 ante
Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Brandon Cantu us
Brandon Cantu
WSOP 2X Winner
244,700 114,700
Barry Hutter us
Barry Hutter
WSOP 1X Winner
201,100 51,100
Andreas Hoivold no
Andreas Hoivold
195,200
Nick Guagenti us
Nick Guagenti
WSOP 1X Winner
178,100 28,100
Davidi Kitai be
Davidi Kitai
WSOP 3X Winner
Winamax
141,900 -13,100
Byron Kaverman us
Byron Kaverman
WSOP 1X Winner
133,600 33,600
Chris Hunichen us
Chris Hunichen
128,700 83,700
David Chase us
David Chase
122,900 12,900
Benjamin Horgan us
Benjamin Horgan
114,500 24,500
Mark Dube us
Mark Dube
108,400 8,400
Cody Slaubaugh us
Cody Slaubaugh
104,500 29,700
Michael Mizrachi us
Michael Mizrachi
WSOP 5X Winner
100,700 5,700
Adam Bernstein
Adam Bernstein
96,000
Jake Toole us
Jake Toole
95,700
Steve Bartlett
Steve Bartlett
94,000
Tony Gargano us
Tony Gargano
92,900 3,900
Robert Panitch us
Robert Panitch
91,300 41,300
Terrence Chan ca
Terrence Chan
WSOP 1X Winner
82,400 12,400
Ayman Qutami us
Ayman Qutami
82,200
Dinesh Alt ch
Dinesh Alt
79,800
Bill Burford us
Bill Burford
77,500
Gino Levrini us
Gino Levrini
75,600
Hunter Frey us
Hunter Frey
75,200 -9,800
Zachary Korik us
Zachary Korik
74,600
Will Failla us
Will Failla
73,300 13,300

Leia tudo

Brandon Cantu Comes on Strong at End of Night to Lead Day 1

Nível 10 : 400/800, 100 ante
Brandon Cantu
Brandon Cantu

Event #15 of the 2014 World Series of Poker, a $3,000 buy-in six-handed no-limit hold’em tournament, attracted 810 players – three more than last year – and created a prize pool of $2,211,300. That will be distributed to the top 90 finishers with a hefty $508,640 going to the eventual winner.

The man best positioned to make a run at top prize and gold bracelet is Brandon Cantu, who emerged as the chip leader of the advancing 144 players with a stack of 244,700. Others still in contention are Barry Hutter (201,100), Andreas Hoivold (195,200), Nick Guagenti (178,100), and Davidi Kitai (141,900).

Cantu captured the chip lead in the penultimate hand of the night, which turned out to be “one of the greatest” hands he’s ever played. He told PokerNews all about it after conclusion of play.

Of course not everyone was so lucky. Chris Molica was the first player to fall, and it happened on the first hand of the day when a preflop raising war resulted in him getting his 9,000 starting stack in holding {a-}{q-} against Justin Gavri’s {a-}{k-}. The board ran out clean and Molica spent more time walking to the exit than he did in the tournament.

While Molica was the first to go, he certainly wasn’t the last. Among the hundreds to fall on Day 1 were Matt Kirby, who ran queens into the kings of Paul Newey; former November Niner Jason Senti, who was playing his first event of the summer; and 2013 WSOP Main Event champ Ryan Riess, who actually fell in the same hand as 2006 WSOP Player of the Year Jeff Madsen.

It happened in Level 3 (75/150) when Riess opened the action with a raise to 350. Madsen called from the button, Bryn Kenney came along from the big blind, and three players saw a flop of {k-}{9-}{7-} rainbow. Kenney checked, Riess bet 750, and Madsen made the call. Kenney then woke up with a check-raise to 2,100, Reiss three-bet to 4,000, and Madsen moved in for 5,500 total. Kenney then moved all in over the top and Riess called off his remaining chips.

Kenney: {9-}{7-}
Riess: {a-}{a-}
Madsen: {k-}{j-}

Kenney was in the lead with a flopped two pair, and it held as a {4-} blanked on the turn followed by a {10-} on the river.

Others who fell throughout the course of play were Jake Cody, TJ Cloutier, Brock Parker, Erick Lindgren, Antonio Esfandiari, Scott Clements, Scott Seiver, Jeremy Ausmus, Doug “WCGRider” Polk, David “Devilfish” Ulliott, Liv Boeree, and Phil Ivey.

Ivey late registered Event #15 after busting another tournament, and his stay was short. In Level 7 (200/400.50), he got his last ten big blinds in the middle from the small blind and his opponent in the big blind quickly made the call with {j-Diamonds}{j-Spades}. Ivey needed to find some help for his {k-Hearts}{9-Hearts}, but the board ran out {10-Spades}{5-Diamonds}{8-Hearts}{a-Diamonds}{8-Clubs} and Ivey's tournament and massage came to an abrupt halt.

While dozens of notables fell, many were able to navigate the tough field. Among those who punched their ticket to Day 2 were Michael Mizrachi (100,700), Will Failla (73,000), Phil Hellmuth (59,400), Todd Terry (52,000), Andrew Lichtenberger (40,300), Paul Volpe (24,800), and Jonathan Duhamel (22,200).

Day 2 will get underway at 2 p.m. on Friday as the returning players look to play through the money bubble on their way to the final table, or at least as close as they can get in ten more one-hour levels of play. The PokerNews Live Reporting will be bringing you all the action, so be sure to join us then.

Tags: Brandon Cantu

Event #15: $3,000 Six-Handed No-Limit Hold'em

Dia 1 Concluído