April 11 2011, Donnie Peters

Day 3 of the PokerStars.net North American Poker Tour Mohegan Sun came to a close on Monday as the field was cut down to its final 24 players. Leading the pack into Day 4 is defending champion Vanessa Selbst with 1.406 million in chips.
When play began for the day, 74 players returned to the felt, but only 56 of them got paid. That meant a handful of players would have to hit the rail empty handed. Some of those players who were eliminated short of the money included Kevin Eyster, Ronnie Bardah, Team PokerStars Online’s Andrew Brokos, Todd Terry and Dan O’Brien. The official bubble boy title went to Nick Binger, who ended his tournament in 57th place.
Binger had a rough day filled with a lot of bad luck. First, he had Adam Junglen on the ropes holding 
to Junglen’s 
. The poker gods shined on Junglen though as the board ran out 



to give him a flush and send the rockets of Binger crashing to the ground.
Junglen was then the player who finished off Binger, having to come from behind again to do so. This time, Junglen cracked a pair of queens for Binger. Binger was all in preflop with 
and Junglen held just one overcard with the 
. The board ran out 



to give Junglen an ace on the river and the winning hand.
Binger took it extremely well and left with a smile on his face. “I just keep telling people that bubbling builds character,” he said as he made his way to the rail. In fact, Binger hopped right back on his horse and was seen playing a satellite to the $10,000 Bounty Shootout later in the evening.
Once the money bubble broke, the players started dropping fairly quickly, as expected. The first to go was last year’s runner-up Mike Beasley. He was followed by a group of players that included Jerry Wong, Team PokerStars Pro Greg DeBora, Jeff Papola and Lee Markholt.
Selbst was able to build her stack pretty steadily throughout the day, but it wasn’t until right at the end of the night that she took over the chip lead from Vincent Rubianes.
From under the gun, Olivier Busquet raised to 21,000. Rubianes reraised to 51,000 from the cutoff and then action fell on Selbst on the button. She four-bet to 109,000 and play folded back to Busquet. He folded and then Rubianes made the call. The flop came down 

and Rubianes checked. Selbst bet 129,000 and Rubianes made the call, making this pot awfully big between two of the largest stacks in the room.
The turn card added the
to the board and completed a possible flush draw. Both players checked to see the
put a fourth club on board on the river. Rubianes checked and Selbst bet 294,000. After tanking for a bit, Rubianes made the call, but only to muck his hand when Selbst tabled the 
for a king-high club flush.
Day 4 Table and Seat Draw
| 1 | 1 | Nenad Medic | 350,000 |
| 1 | 2 | Eric Froehlich | 420,000 |
| 1 | 3 | Vincent Rubianes | 1,023,000 |
| 1 | 4 | Taylor von Kriegenbergh | 289,000 |
| 1 | 5 | Aaron Overton | 907,000 |
| 1 | 6 | Olivier Busquet | 356,000 |
| 1 | 7 | Vanessa Selbst | 1,406,000 |
| 1 | 8 | Jean-Philippe Matte | 331,000 |
| 2 | 1 | Corey Hochman | 355,000 |
| 2 | 2 | Thomas Hoglund Jr. | 629,000 |
| 2 | 3 | Joe Tehan | 490,000 |
| 2 | 4 | Sukh Sandhu | 267,000 |
| 2 | 5 | Philippe Plouffe | 293,000 |
| 2 | 6 | David Stefanski | 162,000 |
| 2 | 7 | Adam Geyer | 803,000 |
| 2 | 8 | Ara Melikian | 233,000 |
| 3 | 1 | Dan Shak | 488,000 |
| 3 | 2 | Chris Tryba | 361,000 |
| 3 | 3 | Joseph Gibbons | 179,000 |
| 3 | 4 | Jacobo Fernandez | 813,000 |
| 3 | 5 | Tyler Kenney | 478,000 |
| 3 | 6 | Kyle Loman | 340,000 |
| 3 | 7 | Steve O’Dwyer | 507,000 |
| 3 | 8 | Jonathan Schroer | 231,000 |
Play resumes on Tuesday at 12:00 p.m EDT (1600 GMT) where the final 24 players will return to action and play down to just one final table of eight is left standing. There’s plenty of firepower still left in the field, but it’s Selbst’s tournament now and it doesn’t look like she’s ready to give up her title anytime soon. Be sure to stay tuned to PokerNews for all of the live coverage from the event as only our world class Live Reporting Team can bring it to you!
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April 10 2011, Eric Ramsey

On Sunday, the surviving players returned to the felt to continue thinning the field at the PokerStars.net North American Poker Tour Mohegan Sun. A smaller-than-expected 387 players started the event on Saturday, and Chris Tryba had done the most work in the room to set the pace after the first day. There were 229 others still in contention heading into Day 2, though, including a swarm of sharks with familiar names like Victor Ramdin, Matt Glantz, and Jason Mercier.
Another recognizable shark, Vanessa Rousso rode a late-day charge into the top ten of the overnight chip counts, and her Day 2 began much as her Day 1 ended – with her dragging pots. She moved up close to 150,000 early on when her 
rivered Broadway against a player holding 
. A few orbits later, she was cresting 200,000 and very much in charge of her table. Her momentum began to fade as the day progressed, however. She dropped a chunk on a 



board when, after calling a check-raise on the turn, her opponent showed down 
. We never saw Rousso’s cards, a trend that would continue a bit later in a confrontation with Aaron Overton. Rousso raised on a 

flop, and she and Overton checked through the
turn. When Rousso called his half-pot bet on the
river, he turned over 
, and Rousso mucked her hand. Overton got the rest of her chips during the penultimate level of the day when Rousso shoved the river on a 



board. Her nemesis snapped with 
, and once more Rousso’s cards remained a mystery as she gathered her things and shuffled out the door briskly. Overton took over the chip lead with that knockout, and he did not relinquish that top spot for the rest of the day.
Rousso wasn’t the only Team PokerStars Pro to run into some difficulties on Day 2, though. At the start of play, Table 2 included three Pros, among them the a former WSOP Main Event champion, as well as the current WSOP Main Event champion. Jonathan Duhamel was eliminated very early on when his 
fell in a three-way pot that fellow Team Pro Joe Cada won a piece of. Those chips didn’t stay with Cada long, either. He was eliminated just a short while later, follwed out by Canadian Pat Pezzin, American Jason Mercier, and Team Online member George Lind III.
While players continued to fall by the wayside, a few of the Team Pros were finding themselves on very much the better side of the chip exchange. Ramdin and defending champion Vanessa Selbst both habitually enjoy playing more pots than your average player, and both were able to add to their stacks significantly over the course of the six-level day. Ramdin had a mostly steady climb despite his volatile style. He did manage to win one particularly noteworthy pot during the final level when his 
cracked the pocket aces of Steve Happas, drawing the loudest expletive we’ve heard in quite some time. The money got in on a 

flop, and Ramdin found his out card as the
river boosted him up toward his finishing count of 296,100.
Selbst’s chip trend was more of a mixed bag than Ramdin’s, but she came out unscathed, clawing her stack up to an impressive 339,200 by night’s end. In fairness to the player she eliminated, we should disclose that Selbst’s biggest pot came right at the end of the night when she five-bet shoved with the monster that is 
. She ran her rags right into an unfortunate soul with 
, and the 



board is the reason Selbst is still alive and kicking. Greg DeBora (the other Pro from Table 2) and Andrew Brokos round out the field of surviving PokerStars-sponsored players.
A few of the other familiar figures also managed to scarf up big stacks of chips as the field was whittled all the way down to just 74 players. Adam Geyer faded Bill Jennings’ flush draw very early in the day to knock him out and move close to 200,000, and it was good foreshadowing of things to come. Geyer claimed the tournament life of Jim “Mr_BigQueso” Collopy on a coin flip a few hours later, and he moved over 300,000 when his 
took care of Mike Trelski and his 
as well. Geyer five-bet shoved in a pot against Nick Binger late in the day, boosting his stack even further. He lost a big chunk back to Binger who managed a late double-up, but Geyer still has 267,300 chips to return to for Day 3.
In the not-so-flush-with-chips category, however, are about 175 people who failed to survive the rigors of the day. Cliff “JohnnyBax” Josephy, Tyson Marks, David Paredes, and Tony Cousineau were out within the first couple levels, followed to the door by Craig Bergeron, Allie Prescott, Faraz Jaka, John D’Agostino, and former November Niner Eric Buchman. In the final level of the evening, Matthew Waxman dropped as well, while Eric Froehlich and Binger survived their late all-ins to double back into contention.
That leaves 74 players still in the mix, and the bubble is near. The final 56 will get paid, and that means 18 have made Day 3 in vain only to leave empty-handed Monday. Play will recommence at high noon (1600 GMT), and the field will be reduced further down to the final three tables of eight. It’s a pair of Aarons in the lead, but Overton is in front of Mermelstein and the rest of the chase pack by more than 200,000 chips. Olivier Busquet and Taylor von Kriegenbergh round out the top ten.
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