Event #67: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Main Event World Championship
Day 2cef Completed
Event #67: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Main Event World Championship
Day 2cef Completed
For the past week, the flagship tournament of the 2021 World Series of Poker has witnessed 6,650 players take to the felt in a quest to call themselves poker's champion, and now the Day 3 roster for the WSOP Main Event is finally set.
There were more than 1,800 hopefuls who took to their seats today looking to find a pick slip by day's end, but after another full day of action, only half were able to achieve that goal.
Sitting near the top at the end of the night was Conrad De Armas, who bagged a whopping 744,000, which was good enough to pass Rameez Shahid, who bagged 731,700 in yesterday's Day 2.
Others to bag big were Adam Walton (673,100), nine-time circuit ring winner Daniel Lowery (625,200), Matt Glantz (580,000), and Artan Dedusha (577,100).
With the Amazon and Pavilion rooms flooded with players looking to make a Day 3 birth, the day may have been highlighted by the seven former Main Event champions who sat in the vast field in the quest for another Main Event title.
The 1998 champ Scotty Nguyen came in with the shortest stack of the seven formers and couldn't get anything going as his Main Event ended shortly after returning from dinner break.
The 2019 champ Hossein Ensan had a rollercoaster of a day after almost building up to a 300K stack to have it all come crashing down after failing to complete his nut flush draw against Neel Choksi's top two-pair.
Joe Hachem started with a healthy 78 big blind stack and was able to run that up for most of the day until running his pocket tens into pocket kings late in the night but still bagged to take into Day 3.
The man who started the poker boom, Chris Moneymaker, took his seat with a little over thirty big blinds and slowly accumulated chips until being moved to a featured table. It was there he started gaining traction after he flopped a set of deuces and cracked aces to soar past 300K. He then was on the right side of a cooler after picking aces against Bryan Reyes' pocket kings to climb past the half-milly mark.
Just like Moneymaker, 2016 champion Qui Nguyen saw his name inching up the chip counts after each level. It started with him out-kicking one opponent to the rail early in the day and ended with his dropping another with cowboys late to finish with 479,100.
While the former winners saw a fluctuation of chips throughout the day, both Scott Blumstein (50,800) and Phil Hellmuth (25,400) coasted with roughly the same stack throughout the entirety until the end.
With many notables in the field, not all were fortunate to make a Day 3 birth, some of which included with nine-time bracelet winner Erik Seidel, 2018 runner-up finisher Tony Miles, along with two-time bracelet winners Brandon Adams and Nathan Gable.
Two-time bracelet winner David "ODB" Baker was also eliminated after he was set up holding a pair of ladies.
Another two-time bracelet winner, Shankar Pillai, was also eliminated brutally after his pocket queens were flushed out by four-time WSOP bracelet winner Robert Mizrachi's pocket jacks.
Today's survivors will combine with the 1,400 players that made it through yesterday's Day 2 for Day 3 tomorrow, Thursday, November 11, at 11 am local time.
When the action for Day 3 resumes with blinds starting at 1,200/2,400 with a big ante of 2,400, the prize pool information will be known already, and the money bubble is expected to burst early on Day 4.
Flight | Entries | Advancing to Day 3 |
---|---|---|
Day 2abd | 2,900 | 1,440 |
Day 2cef | 1,810 | 915 |
Totals | 4,710 | 2,355 |
The 6,650 players Main Event players created a $62,011,250 prize pool that will be paid out to the top 1,000 finishers, with a min-cash being worth $15,000.
Everyone that makes the final table will become a poker millionaire, while the eventual winner will walk away with an $8,000,000 first-place prize.
Here's a look at the final table payouts (click here to see a list of all payouts):
Place | Prize |
---|---|
1 | $8,000,000 |
2 | $4,300,000 |
3 | $3,000,000 |
4 | $2,300,000 |
5 | $1,800,000 |
6 | $1,400,000 |
7 | $1,225,000 |
8 | $1,100,000 |
9 | $1,000,000 |
Play resumes at 11 a.m. on November 11th with fewer than 3,000 players remaining. You won't want to miss a single minute of the action, so stay tuned to PokerNews for continued live updates as the Main Event continues.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Conrad De Armas
|
744,000
142,800
|
142,800 |
|
||
Adam Walton |
673,100
238,100
|
238,100 |
|
||
Keyu Qu |
664,900
466,400
|
466,400 |
Cameron Mitchell |
642,000
641,999
|
641,999 |
Daniel Lowery |
625,600
152,600
|
152,600 |
Jorge Arriola |
594,200
476,300
|
476,300 |
Matt Glantz | 580,000 | |
|
||
Artan Dedusha |
577,100
449,100
|
449,100 |
Aristeidis Moschonas |
555,400
473,600
|
473,600 |
Daniel Soltys |
540,700
381,000
|
381,000 |
Chris Moneymaker |
531,600
9,100
|
9,100 |
|
||
David Gerassi |
524,500
6,500
|
6,500 |
|
||
Ark Onikul |
515,700
249,400
|
249,400 |
Jose Ferro |
491,500
408,800
|
408,800 |
Jaeyoung Choi
|
490,500
490,500
|
490,500 |
Tyler Cornell |
487,000
57,500
|
57,500 |
|
||
Qui Nguyen |
479,100
-900
|
-900 |
|
||
Louis Barlow |
473,400
402,900
|
402,900 |
Glen Keogh
|
465,500
35,500
|
35,500 |
Drew Soik |
451,000
451,000
|
451,000 |
Ryan Delgros |
450,000
226,600
|
226,600 |
Swadeep Mishra |
445,900
133,900
|
133,900 |
Gianluca Speranza |
442,500
314,600
|
314,600 |
Andrew Watson |
440,000
380,400
|
380,400 |
Ignacio Sanchez |
438,000
361,400
|
361,400 |
Phil Hellmuth and Atanas Pavlov saw the river on a board of . Pavlov, from under the gun, bet enough to put Hellmuth all in for his last 25,000.
"Is this for real," Hellmuth said. He went into the tank for about four minutes as PokerGo cameras and a large crowd surrounded the table. Hellmuth eventually slid his cards back to the dealer.
"Show the bluff," tablemate Jacob Thibodeau said, but Pavlov calmly returned his cards face down and gathered the pot.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Atanas Pavlov |
245,000
58,200
|
58,200 |
Phil Hellmuth |
25,000
-47,000
|
-47,000 |
|
(Hand took place during 1,000/2,000 blind levels on the PokerGO stream, which is on a 45-minute delay)
Erick Lindgren raised to 4,000 with and Barry Greenstein called with , along with Dylan Nguyen, who was holding .
The flop came out , giving Greenstein top two and Lindgren top-top. Greenstein led for 7,000 and both players called. The turn was the , giving Nguyen an inferior two pair.
Greenstein again led, this time for 20,000. Nguyen called and Lindgren, with the worst hand, was able to find the tough fold. The river was the . Greenstein bet out 30,000 and Nguyen pondered his move for a minute before deciding on the call, and Greenstein shipped the sizeable pot.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Barry Greenstein |
258,200
33,200
|
33,200 |
|
||
Dylan Nguyen |
161,700
-78,300
|
-78,300 |
Erick Lindgren |
148,100
12,500
|
12,500 |
|
A three-way all-in occurred preflop between Corey Lieblein, another player, and Qui Nguyen who had both of the other players covered.
Corey Lieblein:
Opponent:
Qui Nguyen:
"Ace one-time dealer!" Lieblein pleaded. The flop and turn changed nothing. Lieblein was still pleading for the dealer to put out his needed three-outer, and the dealer put down the indeed to keep Lieblein alive and triple up.
"Yes! Yes!", Lieblein jumped out of his chair and shouted, along with some other words of his choosing.
Lieblein took the main pot, while Nguyen took the side pot which eliminated the other player and still appeared to give Nguyen a slight profit on the hand.
"You owe me dinner," Nguyen joked.
"Anytime," Lieblein happily responded.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Qui Nguyen |
480,000
60,000
|
60,000 |
|
||
Corey Lieblein |
255,400
112,500
|
112,500 |
Players will play three more hands before bagging and tagging for the night.
Shortly before getting moved to today's feature table, 2003 Main Event champ Chris Moneymaker shared his strategy for feature table play and how he adjusts his game to exploit opponents acclimating to the TV cameras, stage lights and added pressure.
A player in middle position opened to 4,000 and was called by the cutoff and Ted Forrest in the big blind.
Forrest led out for 4,000 on the flop and only the cutoff called.
The fell on the turn and Forrest bet again — this time for 6,000. His opponent again called.
Both players checked on the river and Forrest tabled for kings and sixes. It was good, as the cutoff mucked without showing — conceding the pot to Forrest.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Ted Forrest |
270,000
36,000
|
36,000 |
|
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Dave Orvis | Busted | |
Eddie Blumenthal | Busted | |
David Gonzalez | Busted | |
Keith Heine | Busted | |
Chiragkumar Patel
|
Busted |