$1,700 Main Event
Day 1b Completed
$1,700 Main Event
Day 1b Completed
It was another busy day inside the Horseshoe Tunica Hotel and Casino for Day 1b of the World Series of Poker Circuit $1,700 Main Event. More than double the entries were recorded from the first starting flight with 341 showing up today. There was no shortage of action at any point and Christopher Miller was the biggest beneficiary on the day.
Miller bagged up a whopping 514,000 chips, good enough for the overall chip lead heading into Day 2. Miller's day got off to a good start when his flopped straight got paid off by two pair. After the dinner break, Miller caught fire with big hand after big hand, including a monster pot with ace-king against his opponent's ace-queen. Miller flopped a pair of kings and when his opponent shoved into him on the turn, it was an easy call for the Alabama native.
Scott Stewart, former WSOP Main Event final tablist, returned for Day 1b after a disappointing finish on Day 1a that saw his above-average stack dissipate in the final level. Stewart took advantage of the long late registration period but wasted no time putting his chips to work.
A couple of early pots saw Stewart more than double his starting stack and he employed a lot of aggression to build his stack throughout the second half of the day. As the night was winding down again, the thought of losing his stack must have crossed his mind after dipping below 100,000 chips. However, Stewart kicked into high gear including a big four-bet against Brian Green to bag up a healthy 305,000 chips.
Some other big stacks moving on to Day 2 include Stephan Nussrallah (387,000), Chad Smith (376,000), Kelvin Douglas (368,000), Johnny Landreth (352,000), Bryant Kelley (347,000), and Adam Todd (331,000). Todd made his way into the chip lead with nearly 400,000 chips just after the dinner break when he coolered everyone's favorite player Chris Moneymaker. Both players made a set but Todd's was the better of the two, scoring a huge double up.
Unfortunately for Moneymaker, he was on the wrong end of another cooler in the last moments of the day when he flopped two pair against a set of eights. Moneymaker was left with just three big blinds after the hand and could not survive to make it through to Day 3. Other notables joining him on the sideline include Vincent Moscati, Brett Apter, Heather Alcorn, Irene Carey, Adam Lamphere, Denise Pratt, and Aaron Gamino.
The action will resume at 12 p.m. local time tomorrow for Day 2 with 79 players returning to their seats. They will be just five eliminations away from cracking the money and locking up at least $2,777 for a min-cash. The current schedule for Day 2 is to play ten 60-minute levels or until the final table is reached.
The PokerNews team will be back to bring you all of the live updates from the money bubble until a champion is crowned on Day 3.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Christopher Miller |
514,000
127,000
|
127,000 |
Stephan Nussrallah |
387,000
387,000
|
387,000 |
Chad Smith |
376,000
63,500
|
63,500 |
Kelvin Douglas |
368,000
368,000
|
368,000 |
Johnny Landreth |
352,000
352,000
|
352,000 |
Bryant Kelley |
347,000
-28,000
|
-28,000 |
Clifford Mathews |
343,000
343,000
|
343,000 |
Adam Todd |
331,000
-79,000
|
-79,000 |
Benjamin Thomas |
327,000
32,000
|
32,000 |
Sean Small |
306,000
306,000
|
306,000 |
Scott Stewart |
305,000
197,000
|
197,000 |
|
||
Jesse Jones | 305,000 | |
Rodney Hobbs |
293,000
293,000
|
293,000 |
Kevin Davis |
288,000
288,000
|
288,000 |
Hyun Lee |
285,000
285,000
|
285,000 |
Walker Miskelly |
269,000
-26,000
|
-26,000 |
Spencer Taylor |
238,000
238,000
|
238,000 |
Michael Moffitt |
236,000
-44,000
|
-44,000 |
Yousef Saleh |
228,000
228,000
|
228,000 |
Michael McKuin |
218,000
218,000
|
218,000 |
Charles Davis
|
216,000
216,000
|
216,000 |
Dale James
|
213,000
213,000
|
213,000 |
Clay Henry | 203,000 | |
Cody Coffman |
192,000
192,000
|
192,000 |
Reyna Binkley
|
191,000
191,000
|
191,000 |
With around 16 minutes still remaining on the clock, the tournament director has paused the action at all of the tables with the field being reduced down to just 16%. Only 55 players remain and they will all bag up their chips to return for Day 2 tomorrow. A full list of chip counts and a recap of the day's action will be posted shortly.
As the night is winding down, Chris Moneymaker was on the wrong end of another cooler. After arriving at the table, Moneymaker was counting out a stack of chips that were pushed toward Clay Henry. Moneymaker flopped two pair but Henry's set of eights earned him a double up and Moneymaker was left with just 12,000 after the hand.
A couple of hands later, Moneymaker shoved all in for 10,000 on the button and was called by the big blind. Moneymaker was slightly ahead with against his opponent's . However, the board ran out and to give his opponent two pair and Moneymaker was eliminated.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Clay Henry | 203,000 | |
Chris Moneymaker | Busted | |
|
The action folded around to Michael Moffitt in the small blind who bumped it up to 21,000. The big blind three-bet shoved for 112,000 and Moffitt confirmed the count before making the call.
Michael Moffitt:
Opponent:
It was a classic flip for a fair-sized pot and the flop of left Moffitt in the lead. The turn was the and the river was the to secure the win for Moffitt with a full house.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Michael Moffitt | 280,000 |
Trace Henderson just got moved to a new table and opened to 9,000 from under the gun before his chips were even out of the rack. The hijack shipped all in for a little under 50,000 and the action folded back to Henderson who quickly called.
Trace Henderson:
Opponent:
Henderson was desperately looking for a king and it came on the flop. That left his opponent drawing to the lone queen left in the deck and he couldn't find it on the turn or the river.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Trace Henderson |
202,000
14,000
|
14,000 |
Level: 16
Blinds: 2,000/4,000
Ante: 4,000
The remaining 73 players are heading on their last 15-minute break of the night. When they return, there will be one more 60-minute level or until the field reaches 55 players before the bagging and tagging process begins.