Event #73: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em MAIN EVENT - World Championship
Day 1c Completed
Event #73: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em MAIN EVENT - World Championship
Day 1c Completed
Only topped by Jamie Gold’s navigation of 8,773 runners in 2006 and Jonathan Duhamel’s dissection of 7,319 entries in 2010, the 2017 World Series of Poker Main Event field has become the third largest ever.
With 795 joining Day 1a, another 2,164 on Day 1b, and a whopping 4,262 today for Day 1c, the grand total of players closed at 7,221. A monstrous prize pool of $67,877,400 has been created and the next World Champion will be awarded $8,150,000. The top 1,084 will reach the money, all taking home at least $15,000. Any player that reaches the final table is once again guaranteed $1,000,000.
Here is how the 2017 Main Event stacks up to previous years:
Day 1a | Day 1b | Day 1c | Day 1d | Total | Prize Pool | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | 1,297 | 1,158 | 1,928 | 2,461 | 6,844 | $64,333,600 |
2009 | 1,116 | 873 | 1,696 | 2,809 | 6,494 | $61,043,600 |
2010 | 1,125 | 1,489 | 2,314 | 2,391 | 7,319 | $68,798,600 |
2011 | 897 | 985 | 2,181 | 2,802 | 6,865 | $64,531,000 |
2012 | 1,066 | 2,114 | 3,418 | - | 6,598 | $62,021,200 |
2013 | 943 | 1,942 | 3,467 | - | 6,352 | $59,708,800 |
2014 | 771 | 2,144 | 3,768 | - | 6,683 | $62,820,200 |
2015 | 741 | 1,716 | 3,963 | - | 6,420 | $60,348,000 |
2016 | 764 | 1,733 | 4,240 | - | 6,737 | $63,327,800 |
2017 | 795 | 2,164 | 4,262 | - | 7,221 | $67,877,400 |
When asked about this year's event, World Series of Poker VP and Tournament Director Jack Effel replied with, "I think that it's amazing on all fronts. The third largest Main Event in history; 7,221 players, huge field, huge prize pool, lots of people getting paid, lots of people making money!"
Effel went on to say, "The Main Event is a special tournament, and I will tell you, whether you're playing with 100 people or 10,000 people, it's the most special tournament on the planet. Of course, $8.15 million is life-changing money and all of that, but winning the Main Event, being one of only 48 people to ever do it, actually it's less because of the duplicates, so knowing you will forever be immortalized as poker's world champion, I think, is a feat in itself.
"This event just has so much energy and it's so much fun. And it requires so much attention, and so much patience, and so much mental and physical endurance, that the person that wins it, I don't even know if they're thinking about the money until way after they've already won it. I can tell you it's a special tournament, it's magical. I don't know why it's magical, the feeling is just magical, every year you feel it, you see everyone here, everyone gets excited about it and I can't wait to see who's gonna win it."
Effel was then asked if he saw this coming. "I can tell you that all the events indicated that we were pacing upwards to do well this year," he said. "There are so many events to choose from, how are you gonna tell what's going to be the most popular this year? We want to give something for everyone to play. The Rio was packed all summer long."
With registration now closed, one player who didn’t help pack the Rio for this year's Main Event was Phil Ivey. That left many fans disappointed, but his absence is understandable as Ivey is due in a U.K. Supreme Court on July 13 to defend his .
Filling the void were many former Main Event champions in attendance today. The 1987-88 back-to-back champ Johnny Chan ended play with more than double his starting stack, sitting with 120,600. 1998 winner Scotty Nguyen wasn't too far behind, finishing play with 108,400.
The 1989 world champion Phil Hellmuth made his traditional late-as-possible entry and bagged 87,400. The youngest ever Main Event winner Joe Cada also made it through. "I wasn’t above 63 and wasn’t below 52. Pretty ideal," Cada told us after play was finished. "I feel excited every time I play. It’s like Christmas." Cada tossed 63,000 into his bag, while 2000 champ Chris Ferguson has 56,100 going into Day 2.
Jason Mann has run deep in this event previously, finishing in 25th place in 2013. When asked about how his Day 1 was this year compared to his Day 1 that year, he said "I had a good day then, too. I bagged over 100k and that was when we started with 30k, so that was a comfortable stack. But it was nothing like today. I made a ton of hands, especially after dinner ... just building." Mann will carry a stack of 236,000 into Day 2.
Another player with good history in this event is Adam Levy, who hasn't been playing poker as much lately but couldn't miss out on the biggest tournament of the year. Levy bagged 220,700 after a slow start to the day. "I took a step back from poker after the World Series last year," he said. "Moved to LA and tried to get a real job. It's been really good for me from a life standpoint. I needed to take a break from poker after living out of a suitcase after Black Friday for a while. For sure, it's definitely good to be back. The Main Event is fucking the best!"
Six-months pregnant and bagging a big stack was Natasha Mercier. Mercier finished the night with 218,000, well above her husband Jason Mercier (28,500) and the rest of their housemates. "I’ve got the biggest stack in our house and we’ll go home and talk about hands for hours. I was thinking about not playing this tournament because I’m six-months pregnant and it’s so long, but when I sat down I had a super friendly table. We were doing side bets and everything. It definitely helped the time pass quicker."
The top stack of the day belongs to Jerome Brion who mustered an impressive 247,900. Tyson Mao (242,800), Michael Pedley (240,900), Rudy Sawa (238,600), and Carl Carodenuto (237,800) round out the top five.
Other notables breaking through in the first stage include Nick Maimone (213,000), Andre Akkari (189,900), Brandon Shack-Harris (160,000), 2017 WSOP Player of the year front-runner John Monnette (123,800), Brian Rast (126,900), and Daniel Negreanu (26,000).
Former two-time November Niner Mark Newhouse won’t have a chance to make his third Main Event final table. Newhouse lost his chips midway through Day 1, joining fellow Day 1c casualties John Juanda, Ron Ware, John Duthie, Johnny Lodden, Dan Heimiller, Bill Klein, John Racener, Ari Engel, and Russell Thomas.
The Main Event moves forward on Tuesday as the survivors from Day 1a and Day 1b return for Day 2ab beginning at 11 a.m. The 3,300 outof 4,262 survivors of Day 1c return to the Rio on Wednesday for Day 2c.
Follow along throughout the day as PokerNews will be on the floor providing live up-to-date coverage.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jerome Brion |
247,900
247,900
|
247,900 |
|
||
Rudolph Sawa |
238,600
238,600
|
238,600 |
Carl Carodenuto |
237,800
237,800
|
237,800 |
Eric Nathan |
228,500
28,500
|
28,500 |
David Mock |
228,500
-3,000
|
-3,000 |
Daniel Barry |
224,500
224,500
|
224,500 |
Jason Mann |
223,600
223,600
|
223,600 |
David Toneman | 221,300 | |
Adam Levy |
220,700
220,700
|
220,700 |
|
||
Natasha Mercier |
218,400
10,400
|
10,400 |
Samir Hage |
217,900
217,900
|
217,900 |
Nikolaos Platis |
217,500
217,500
|
217,500 |
Cosmin Joldis |
216,500
216,500
|
216,500 |
Thi Nguyen |
215,000
215,000
|
215,000 |
Nick Maimone | 213,200 | |
|
||
Shalev Halfa |
212,000
212,000
|
212,000 |
Denis Timofeev |
211,800
-16,200
|
-16,200 |
Jorge Breda |
207,700
207,700
|
207,700 |
Than Huynh |
206,500
206,500
|
206,500 |
Wender Cezaroliveira
|
206,200
206,200
|
206,200 |
Marcin Chmielewski |
205,600
140,600
|
140,600 |
Tournament officials have announced that there will be five more hands before players bag up for the evening. There will also be a massive race-off of the T-25 chips before bagging. Once all the chips are in the bags, we'll report assorted end-of-day chip counts and an extensive recap of today's action. Later tonight, the full counts and Day 2c redraw information will be made available.
A player in early position raised to 1,150, the button called, and Alan Snow called from the small blind.
The flop came and Snow bet 3,000. The preflop raiser folded and the button called.
The turn brought the and both players checked.
The river was the , Snow checked, the button bet, and Snow folded. The button showed for a rivered set of eights and took the pot.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Alan Snow |
192,600
-40,400
|
-40,400 |
"I was chip leader on Day 1C," explained Joe Cada, recounting his triumph back in 2009. "I bagged 187,000, and the next day I bagged exactly 1,000 chips less!
"But that was with only a 30,000 starting stack."
"This guy misread his hand in level two that year, and he even thought that he won the hand when he turned his hand over!"
Cada currently sits just under starting stack, and will really have to go on a run of cards to get close to the chip lead.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Joe Cada |
47,000
-3,000
|
-3,000 |
|
Soichiro Kojiya opened from early position and David "Dragon" Pham three-bet out of the big blind to 4,500. Kojiya four-bet, making it 12,000 and Pham five-bet to 22,000. Kojiya six-bet jammed for 31,800 more and sent Pham into the tank.
"Can I fold kings twice?" Pham muttered as he agonized over the decision. "I can't fold kings twice." Indeed he didn't and slid the calling chips forward.
Kojiya:
Pham:
The board ran out and Kojiya scored a big double up.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Soichiro Kojiya | 65,000 | |
David Pham |
19,000
-49,000
|
-49,000 |
|
Day 1c of the 2017 World Series of Poker Main Event has attracted 4,262 players, the largest in recent history. Together with the 795 that came to the Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino for Day 1a and the 2,164 that played yesterday on Day 1b, that makes for 7,221 total players. With that, the 2017 edition of the Main Event is officially the third biggest Main Event in the history of the WSOP. The event only attracted bigger fields in 2006 (Jamie Gold beat a field of 8,773) and 2010 (Jonathan Duhamel beat a field of 7,319).
With the numbers now official, the payouts have been confirmed as well. The winner of the 2017 World Series of Poker Main Event takes home $8,150,000. All nine finalists are guaranteed to make $1,000,000, and a total of 1,084 players get in the money. The min-cash is, again, $15,000. A complete breakdown of the payout:
Position | Prize | POY Points |
---|---|---|
1st | $8,150,000 | 433.2 |
2nd | $4,700,000 | 360.6 |
3rd | $3,500,000 | 326.8 |
4th | $2,600,000 | 296.0 |
5th | $2,000,000 | 271.2 |
6th | $1,675,000 | 255.7 |
7th | $1,425,000 | 242.3 |
8th | $1,200,000 | 228.8 |
9th | $1,000,000 | 215.3 |
10th | $825,001 | 201.9 |
11th | $675,000 | 188.9 |
12th-13th | $535,000 | 174.8 |
14th-15th | $450,000 | 165.0 |
16th-18th | $340,000 | 150.3 |
19th-27th | $263,532 | 138.0 |
28th-36th | $214,913 | 129.0 |
37th-45th | $176,399 | 120.7 |
46th-54th | $145,733 | 113.3 |
55th-63rd | $121,188 | 106.5 |
64th-72nd | $101,444 | 100.4 |
73rd-81st | $85,482 | 94.8 |
82nd-90th | $72,514 | 89.8 |
91st-99th | $61,929 | 85.2 |
100th-162nd | $53,247 | 81.0 |
163rd-225th | $46,096 | 77.2 |
226th-288th | $40,181 | 73.7 |
289th-351st | $35,267 | 70.6 |
352nd-414th | $31,170 | 67.8 |
415th-477th | $27,743 | 65.2 |
478th-540th | $24,867 | 62.8 |
541st-603rd | $22,449 | 60.7 |
604th-666th | $20,411 | 58.8 |
667th-765th | $18,693 | 57.1 |
766th-864th | $17,243 | 55.6 |
865th-963rd | $16,024 | 54.3 |
964th-1084th | $15,000 | 53.1 |
Here's a breakdown of the numbers in recent years:
Day 1a | Day 1b | Day 1c | Day 1d | Total | Prize Pool | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | 1,297 | 1,158 | 1,928 | 2,461 | 6,844 | $64,333,600 |
2009 | 1,116 | 873 | 1,696 | 2,809 | 6,494 | $61,043,600 |
2010 | 1,125 | 1,489 | 2,314 | 2,391 | 7,319 | $68,798,600 |
2011 | 897 | 985 | 2,181 | 2,802 | 6,865 | $64,531,000 |
2012 | 1,066 | 2,114 | 3,418 | - | 6,598 | $62,021,200 |
2013 | 943 | 1,942 | 3,467 | - | 6,352 | $59,708,800 |
2014 | 771 | 2,144 | 3,768 | - | 6,683 | $62,820,200 |
2015 | 741 | 1,716 | 3,963 | - | 6,420 | $60,348,000 |
2016 | 764 | 1,733 | 4,240 | - | 6,737 | $63,327,800 |
2017 | 795 | 2,164 | 4,262 | - | 7,221 | $67,877,400 |
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
JJ Liu |
96,000
-8,800
|
-8,800 |
Darryl Fish
|
85,000
43,000
|
43,000 |
Mike Leah |
78,000
37,000
|
37,000 |
|
||
Talal Shakerchi |
76,000
10,000
|
10,000 |
David Sands |
75,000
36,000
|
36,000 |
David Pham |
68,000
24,000
|
24,000 |
|
||
James Alexander |
67,000
1,000
|
1,000 |
Mike Sexton |
43,000
-10,000
|
-10,000 |
|
||
Chris Ferguson |
41,000
-19,000
|
-19,000 |
|
||
Mack Lee |
36,000
-27,000
|
-27,000 |
Marco Johnson |
34,000
-6,000
|
-6,000 |
|
||
Chris Moorman |
32,000
-56,000
|
-56,000 |
Joe Kuether |
15,000
-7,000
|
-7,000 |
Marc-Etienne McLaughlin |
12,000
-39,000
|
-39,000 |
John Juanda | Busted | |
|
Isaac Haxton raised to 1,200 from middle position, the next player to act called, and the cutoff called.
The flop came , and Haxton bet 1,250. The next player to act raised to 3,500, the cutoff folded, and Haxton called.
The turn brought the , and Haxton checked. His opponent bet 6,100, and after some consideration, Haxton folded. His opponent flipped over .
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Isaac Haxton |
40,800
-5,900
|
-5,900 |
|