An Li opened the action for 30,000 and Philip Sternheimer called out of the big blind. The flop came and Sternheimer opened for a pot-sized bet which was enough to set Li all in. Li made the call and the two turned their hands over:
Sternheimer: for two pair, aces and threes
Li: for a pair of aces
The turn was the changing nothing as Sternheimer's kicker was better than Li's. The river was the and Li would be eliminated in 14th place for $12,254.
Tom Schneider opened to 23,000, David Schnettler raised pot, and Schneider made the call. The two went heads up to a flop and Schnettler led out with all in bet for his last 20,000. Schneider called, putting Schnettler at risk.
Schnettler:
Schneider:
The turn brought the , followed by the on the river. Schneider's aces and queens was best and Schnettler hit the rail.
With the board showing , Jared Koppel and J.R. Flournoy would get it all in and Flournoy was at risk holding for a low draw and nut flush draw while Koppel held for a set of threes. The turn was the giving Flournoy a wheel and the river card, the changed nothing and Flournoy doubled up to 375,000 while Koppel was left with 30,000.
Koppel would triple that up the very next hand but a few moments later he would limp in from the small blind, Tyler Patterson would make it 36,000 to go from the big blind and Koppel would call. When the flop came , Koppel moved all in and was quickly called by Patterson who had flopped a Broadway straight with . Koppel had full house outs with his but the turn was the and the river was the and Koppel was eliminated in 12th place for $15,278.
The penultimate day of Event #48: $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Low has come to an end after 10 levels of play. The day started with 157 hopefuls vying for an in-the-money finish, which only 117 of them would get. After 10 levels of play on Day 2, 11 remained with their sights set on World Series of Poker gold.
The chip leader at the end of the night was two-time WSOP bracelet winner Scott Clements. Clements bagged up 699,000 to lead the pack, and would be considered an Omaha expert. Both of his two bracelets came in the game — one in limit Omaha hi-low and one in pot-limit Omaha — and then he has a second-place, seventh-place, and ninth-place finish in limit Omaha hi-low, a third-place finish in pot-limit Omaha hi-low, and a fifth-place finish in pot-limit Omaha.
Three-time WSOP gold bracelet winner Jeff Madsen (654,000) finished in second place overall. One of his three bracelets came in last year's Event #35: $3,000 Pot-Limit Omaha, so he knows a thing or two about four-card poker, and then you've got Dylan Wilkerson (552,000) and Tyler Patterson (425,000) rounding out the top four.
And then, of course, you've got Tom Schneider still in the mix, and he boasts quite a record at the WSOP. With four WSOP gold bracelets and 33 cashes at the Series, Schneider will be as tough as any to remove from this tournament as he chases bracelet number five.
Derek Raymond, the fourth gold bracelet winner remaining, will enter the final day with 419,000 in chips. Raymond won the most coveted piece of jewelry in all of poker back in 2009 when he took down the $2,500 Omaha Hi-Low event to the tune of $229,192.
Here is how the final 11 players stack up going into Day 3:
Table
Seat
Name
Chip Count
446
1
--empty--
--
446
2
--empty--
--
446
3
Tyler Patterson
425,000
446
4
Dylan Wilkerson
552,000
446
5
--empty--
--
446
6
Brian Brubaker
175,000
446
7
--empty--
--
446
8
J.R. Flournoy
400,000
446
9
Gary Kosakowski
249,000
449
1
--empty--
--
449
2
Tom Schneider
315,000
449
3
--empty--
--
449
4
Scott Clements
699,000
449
5
Derek Raymond
419,000
449
6
--empty--
--
449
7
Philip Sternheimer
167,000
449
8
Jeff Madsen
654,000
449
9
Cody Crawford
403,000
Some notables players earning a payday were Phil Ivey (30th), David Chiu (35th), Roberto Romanello (37th), Joe Hachem (43rd), Bryan Campanello (61st), Joe Serock (62nd), Matt Waxman (84th), and Jeff Gross (100th).
Join us for Day 3 on Thursday at 1 P.M. when the final 11 will return to play down to a champion. As always, thank you for following along with PokerNews and stay tuned for the duration of the 45th annual World Series of Poker.