Event #4: $5,000 No-Limit Hold’em
Day 2 Completed
Event #4: $5,000 No-Limit Hold’em
Day 2 Completed
Player | Chips | Table | Seat |
---|---|---|---|
Jesse Yaginuma | 177,000 | 279 | 1 |
Dmitry Gromov | 373,000 | 279 | 2 |
Jonathan Little | 415,000 | 279 | 3 |
Brian Schmidt | 114,000 | 279 | 4 |
Bernard Lee | 122,000 | 279 | 5 |
Farzad Bonyadi | 261,000 | 279 | 6 |
Mikhail Lakhitov | 151,000 | 279 | 7 |
Jonathan Durand | 290,000 | 279 | 8 |
Balazs Botond | 262,000 | 279 | 9 |
Markus Gonsalves | 567,000 | 285 | 1 |
Andrew Rosskamm | 166,000 | 285 | 2 |
Richard Lyndaker | 417,000 | 285 | 3 |
Simon Charette | 464,000 | 285 | 4 |
Osmin Dardon | 127,000 | 285 | 5 |
Jesse Chinni | 265,000 | 285 | 6 |
Steven Levy | 466,000 | 285 | 7 |
Nicholas Blumenthal | 242,000 | 285 | 8 |
JC Tran | 386,000 | 285 | 9 |
Konstantin Bucherl | 301,000 | 291 | 1 |
Cary Katz | 219,000 | 291 | 2 |
Tim West | 157,000 | 291 | 3 |
Frank Rusnak | 154,000 | 291 | 4 |
Gavin Cochrane | 353,000 | 291 | 5 |
Carlos Mortensen | 267,000 | 291 | 6 |
--empty-- | -- | 291 | 7 |
Ricky Fohrenbach | 642,000 | 291 | 8 |
Sean LeFort | 256,000 | 291 | 9 |
Peter Gilmore | 525,000 | 297 | 1 |
Thomas Ross | 293,000 | 297 | 2 |
Maria Ho | 91,000 | 297 | 3 |
Dana Gill | 138,000 | 297 | 4 |
Judd Halenza | 182,000 | 297 | 5 |
Allen Bari | 686,000 | 297 | 6 |
Greg Dyer | 177,000 | 297 | 7 |
Michael Hahn | 493,000 | 297 | 8 |
--empty-- | -- | 297 | 9 |
--empty-- | -- | 298 | 1 |
Marton Czuczor | 226,000 | 298 | 2 |
Kirill Rabtsov | 109,000 | 298 | 3 |
Kyle Bowker | 111,000 | 298 | 4 |
Joseph Kuether | 79,000 | 298 | 5 |
Matt Glantz | 386,000 | 298 | 6 |
Marc-David Delimal | 360,000 | 298 | 7 |
Brian Lemke | 960,000 | 298 | 8 |
Sergey Rybachenko | 614,000 | 298 | 9 |
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Brian Lemke | 960,000 | |
|
||
Allen Bari |
686,000
6,000
|
6,000 |
|
||
Ricky Fohrenbach
|
642,000 | |
Sergey Rybachenko |
614,000
184,000
|
184,000 |
Markus Gonsalves |
567,000
172,000
|
172,000 |
Peter Gilmore |
525,000
175,000
|
175,000 |
Michael Hahn |
493,000
143,000
|
143,000 |
Steven Levy |
466,000
-99,000
|
-99,000 |
Simon Charette |
464,000
-6,000
|
-6,000 |
|
||
Richard Lyndaker |
417,000
207,000
|
207,000 |
Jonathan Little |
415,000
155,000
|
155,000 |
JC Tran |
386,000
-14,000
|
-14,000 |
|
||
Matt Glantz |
386,000
-24,000
|
-24,000 |
|
||
Dmitry Gromov |
373,000
213,000
|
213,000 |
Marc-David Delimal
|
360,000
35,000
|
35,000 |
Gavin Cochrane |
353,000
-47,000
|
-47,000 |
Konstantin Bucherl |
301,000
-14,000
|
-14,000 |
Thomas Ross |
293,000
123,000
|
123,000 |
Jonathan Durand
|
290,000
20,000
|
20,000 |
Carlos Mortensen |
267,000
-113,000
|
-113,000 |
|
||
Jesse Chinni |
265,000
20,000
|
20,000 |
Balazs Botond |
262,000
67,000
|
67,000 |
Farzad Bonyadi |
261,000
11,000
|
11,000 |
|
||
Sean LeFort
|
256,000
-94,000
|
-94,000 |
Nicholas Blumenthal |
242,000
12,000
|
12,000 |
What a day it has been. With the completion of Day 2 in Event #4: $5,000 No-Limit Hold’em here at the 2011 World Series of Poker, another great day of poker is in the history books. At the start of the day, 246 players returned from the starting field of 865. At the end of the day, the field was whittled down to 42 with Brain Lemke leading the way. He holds 960,000 in chips.
With the money set at 81 places, anyone with the slightest hint of math in their repertoire can figure out that the money bubble burst today. That means not everyone returning got a piece of the $4,065,500 prize pool. Some of those who were eliminated on the day, but failed to make the money included Randy Lew, Justin Young, Joe Cassidy, Adam Geyer, Sam Stein and Nick Schulman. The worst finish of the day went to Jacqueline Hughes, who found herself as the tournament bubble girl finishing in 82nd place.
Down to her last ante on the button, Hughes posted and was all in. JC Tran limped in and then Seth Berger raised all in from the cutoff seat for 48,000. Action folded back to Tran and he gave it up. First, Berger was pushed the small blind, big blind and Tran's limp before action was held up while the other tables finished. After all the other tables had completed their hands, the cards were turned over to determine Hughes' fate. She held the and Berger the . The flop came down and Berger stayed in front. Hughes chanted for a six, but the on the turn left her drawing dead. She got her wish on the river with the , but it was too late as she was drawing dead. Berger won the pot and eliminated Hughes, sending the remaining 81 players into the money.
We've noted some of the eliminated players, but there's still plenty of firepower left in this field. Returning for Day 3 will be Allen Bari, Matt Glantz, Kyle Bowker, Bernard Lee and Carlos Mortensen. The chip leader Lemke won this event back in 2009 and will be taking the pole position into Day 3.
Lemke had himself a solid day on the felt. One of the largest pots he took down came during an all-in confrontation with Justin Gardenhire. Lemke and Gardenhire got all of the money in preflop after some raising back and forth. Lemke held the and Gardenhire the . The board ran out to give Lemke the win and send his stack across the 500,000-chip mark.
It's also of note that Maria Ho still remains as well. She's fought her way to Day 3 in a field surrounded by men as the only woman left. Ho has eight WSOP cashes on record, making this her ninth. The largest of those came in 2007 when she took 38th place in the WSOP Main Event for $237,865.
Event #4 will continue on Saturday at 2:30 PM PT. Right now, it looks like the plan is to play down until the final table is reached and then call it a day. Of course, that could change depending on how fast things go. Right now, this event has been changed from a three-day event to a four-day event. First place is worth $874,116 and it's anyone's game.
Be sure to stay tuned to PokerNews for all the official live updates from the 2011 WSOP. We're looking forward to another exciting day tomorrow.
Catching the back action of a hand involving Brian Lemke and Jonathan Little, we found Lemke pushing all in following a series of preflop raises as Little made the call.
Lemke:
Little:
The flop gave the 2009 champion of this very event outs, and when the spiked on the turn he was ensured a double unless the case ace fell.
Fortunately for Lemke, the fell on the river to see his 382,000-chip stack double through to over 770,000 as Little slips to 260,000 in chips.
Jonathan Durand opened for 20,000 from middle position and Michael Hahn re-raised to 46,000 from the cutoff. Action folded back to Durand, who four-bet to 90,000 and change. Hahn tanked for a bit, but landed on a fold.
"Nice Bluff," Hahn said.
Durand let out a laugh and flipped two aces face up.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Michael Hahn |
350,000
150,000
|
150,000 |
Jonathan Durand
|
270,000
100,000
|
100,000 |
Andrew Rosskamm opened to 18,00 only to have Marc-David Delimal three-bet to 46,000 from the button.
With the action on Allen Bari in the small blind, he slid in two stacks of chips amounting to a re-raise of 184,000.
Rosskamm quickly passed, and Delimal followed suit as Bari pushed his stack to over 700,000 on one of the final hands of the night.
Konstantin Bucherl opened to 17,000 from middle position and picked up the blinds and antes.
The following hand he tried the same raise, and after everyone folded, he flashed his to pick up another pot to move to 315,000 in chips.
The Tournament Director has just announced that there will be four more hands for the evening.
Our PokerNews field reporter was unable to catch the hand, but Jason Potter has unfortunately been eliminated.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jason Potter | Busted |