May 29 2012, Shari Geller

Day 2 of the 2012 World Series of Poker boasted two firsts – the first bracelet awarded and the first large field, open event at the Rio this summer. Chiab “Chip” Saechao won Event #1: $500 Casino Employees No-Limit Hold’em, and took home $70,859 and a shiny new gold bracelet. Event #2: $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em, got under way at 1200 PDT (2000 BST) with 2,101 players competing for their share of a $2,836,350 prize pool. This event heralded the return of Phil Ivey to the Rio, after having sat out last year’s WSOP. But Ivey was far from the only familiar face at the tables. A veritable “Who’s Who” of the poker world turned out on Memorial Day to take their first shot at a bracelet. After 11 levels, the field had dwindled to 240, still 24 shy of the money.
Event #1: $500 Casino Employees No-Limit Hold’em
The final day of this two-day event began with 46 players. The chip leader was the appropriately nicknamed Chiab “Chip” Saechao, followed closely by James Routos and Matthew Wilmot. All eyes were on WSOP executive director Ty Stewart, the most famous name left in the field. Three hours later, the field was reduced to the final two tables, but sans Stewart. Donald Michael had propelled to the lead, with roughly 17 percent of the chips in play, in part due to his knockout hand against Stewart to reach the top 18.
The two went heads-up to a flop of 

and Stewart led out with a bet of 25,000, about half his stack. Michael came over the top to put Stewart all-in. Stewart was in trouble with 
for middle pair against Michael’s 
for top pair. The board ran out 
and Stewart was out in 19th place ($2,223).
Amy Brady had been the chip leader earlier in the day after busting Joshua Murray and taking down the biggest pot of the day in a blind versus blind contest. They limped to see a flop of 

and, not surprisingly, the raggedy board was just what the blinds needed. Brady bet, Murray raised, Brady reraised and the pot was already up to over 100,000. After the
fell on the turn, Brady shoved and Murry made the call. He had flopped bottom two with 
and Brady had top pair with 
. But a
on the river gave Brady the pot and Murray was out in 25th place ($2,223).
Brady ended her day in 14th place after a failed semi-bluff. With the board reading 

, Patricia Baker led out from the big blind for 35,000. Brady tanked then moved all-in for 117,000 more. Baker, who barely had Brady covered, made the call. Brady showed 
for an open-ended straight draw and Baker had top pair with 
. Brady missed all her outs on the
turn and
river and she took home the consolation prize of $3,379.
Saechao and Routos, two of the three chip leaders going into Day 2, joined Baker as the last three standing. When the dust settled, Saechao was crowned the winner, with Baker the runner up. Saechao had crippled Baker earlier when he won his second of two late-in-the-day coin flips, this one in sick fashion. His pocket tens were behind Baker’s 
on the 

flop, but the turn was the
and, as if to rub it in even further, a
on the river gave Baker trips to Saechao’s boat. Their final hand had Baker coolered as her straight fell to Saechao’s flush.
To read all the exciting action, check out our live reporting blog.
Event #2: $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em
Some of the biggest names in the poker world turned out for the first open event of the 2012 WSOP, plopping down a mere $1,500 to take part in one of the weekly low buy-in events. Phil Ivey, absent from last year’s event, was in attendance along with Daniel Negreanu, Kathy Liebert, Allen Cunningham, Jennifer Harmon, Gavin Smith, and dozens of well-known pros. Main Event winners like Jonathan Duhamel and Phil Hellmuth, November Niners including Chino Rheem and Ylon Schwartz, and TV regulars Jean-Robert Bellande and Maria Ho represented a wide-range of the poker world. Out of this group, only Hellmuth survived to Day 2.
Ho may not have made it to the end of the day, but she had the knockout heard round the Rio when she ended Ivey’s day during Level 5. With blinds at 100/200, Ho raised to 450 from the hijack seat, Ivey repopped for his last 1,600 out of the small blind and Ho called. Ivey was ahead 
to Ho’s 
. The flop seemed safe, coming 
{2hs}, the
on the turn added four more outs and one of those, the
, sent Ivey out the door.
The other Phil, Hellmuth, had a better day. During Level 8 he tweeted that he had hit quad aces, which was overkill considering he had pocket aces against his opponents pocket queens. But in Level 9, he took pocket tens against his opponent’s pocket sevens only to see the board cruelly run out 



. Hellmuth built back up and will go into Day 2 with an above-average chip stack of 44,600.
After 10 levels of play, Sadan Turker is the chip leader with 158,100. Close on his heels are poker pros Eli Elezra, second in chips with 155,900; and Brandon Cantu, fourth with 130,100. Included among those still in the hunt for the first open bracelet of the year are such notables as Layne Flack, Noah Schwartz, John Juanda, Vanessa Selbst, Jason Mercier and Carter Gill.
The top 216 finishers will cash, with payouts ranging from a minimum of $2,893 to the top prize of $517,725.
Be sure to follow all the coverage of Event #2 when it restarts on Tuesday at 1300 PDT (2100 BST).
On Tap
Tomorrow, in Event #2, the first order of business will be getting into the money. The remaining 240 players will return to play down first to the top 216 and then to the final table as we move closer to knowing if the first open bracelet will be taken down by a known pro or an unknown amateur. Two more open events will kick off. First, is Event #3: $3,000 Heads-Up No-Limit Hold’em/Pot-Limit Omaha. The first match will start at 1200 PDT (2000 BST). Entrants will be capped at 512, so register early if you’re interested in playing. Later in the day, at 1700 PDT (0100 BST), Event #4: $1,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Low 8-or-Better, will get under way.
To make sure you don’t miss any of the action, follow our live tournament reporting.
Video of the Day
Kristy Arnett caught up with a scruffy Phil Hellmuth during a break in Event #2. The two discussed dental emergencies, second-place finishes, and no-limit hold’em records.
Follow PokerNews on Twitter and Like us on Facebook for up-to-the-minute news.
Follow Shari Geller on
No comments yet. Be the first to post one!
2011 January 28, Mickey Doft

Last Monday, the curiosity of the poker world was satisfied with the much-anticipated release of the 2011 World Series of Poker schedule. Fifty-eight events are on tap, running from May 31 to July 19, and Texas hold’em once again dominates the slate. Thirty-five events are purely variations of hold’em, and we’ve broken them down by game so you can decide what to play come summer.
$1,000 No-Limit Hold’em (Lowest Buy-in)
| Event #8 | June 4-8 |
| *Event #20 | June 12-14 |
| *Event #34 | June 19-21 |
| *Event #45 | June 26-28 |
| Event #54 | July 2-6 |
Never played in a WSOP event before? The lowest buy-in event open to the general population conveniently starts over weekends so you don’t have to take off from your weekday job. You may want to save up some sick days, though, just in case you make a deep run and find yourself playing when Monday rolls around!
*(The three-day $1,000s are likely to require an extra day to finish with the new 10-level hard-stop times rule.)
$1,500 No-Limit Hold’em (Low Buy-in)
| Event #18 | June 11-13 |
| Event #28 | June 16-18 |
| Event #32 | June 17-19 |
| Event #38 | June 22-24 |
| Event #43 | June 25-27 |
| Event #48 | June 28-30 |
| Event #56 | July 5-7 |
There is no more frequent event at the WSOP than the $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em. Seven are on the docket this year.
No-Limit Hold’em (Restricted Entry)
| $500 | Event #1 (Casino Employees) | May 31 – June 1 |
| $1,000 | Event #30 (Seniors) | June 17-19 |
| $1,000 | Event #53 (Ladies) | July 1-3 |
As was the case last year, men can play in the Ladies event. However, unless you enjoy the feeling of everybody in the tournament applauding your bust-out, you ought to look elsewhere.
No-Limit Hold’em (The Other NL Full-Ring Events)
| $2,500 | Event #36 | June 21-23 |
| $5,000 | Event #4 | June 2-4 |
| $10,000 | Event #58 (Main Event) | July 7-19 |
The $1,000s and $1,500s too low for you? Not a problem, one of these should get your blood pumping. You’ve heard of the Main Event, right?
No-Limit Hold’em 6-Max
| $1,500 | Event #10 | June 6-8 |
| $2,500 | Event #26 | June 15-17 |
| $5,000 | Event #40 | June 23-15 |
| $10,000 | Event #46 (Championship) | June 27-29 |
Over the last few years, 6-max hold’em has become both more popular and difficult. If you’re a fan of frequent five- and six-betting, look no further.
No-Limit Hold’em Heads-Up
| $25,000 | Event #2 | May 31 – June 3 |
New to the schedule this year, this $25,000 Heads-Up event is the only one of its kind on the docket. Expect a field heavy with top pros and heads-up specialists.
No-Limit Hold’em Triple Chance
| $1,500 | Event #12 | June 7-9 |
| $5,000 | Event #50 | June 29 – July 1 |
Rebuy tournaments were left off the schedule last year, and this is once again the case this year. Still, Triple Chance is as close to rebuy as it gets at the WSOP.
No-Limit Hold’em Shootout
| $1,500 | Event #13 | June 8-10 |
| $5,000 | Event #24 | June 14-16 |
If navigating through a field of hundreds or even thousands sounds too difficult, try taking it one table at a time to capture a bracelet.
Mixed Hold’em (No-Limit Hold’em/Limit Hold’em)
| $2,500 | Event #52 | June 30 – July 2 |
Skilled in both games? Prove your all-around prowess in the only mixed hold’em event of the WSOP.
Limit Hold’em
| $1,500 | Event #6 | June 3-5 |
| $3,000 | Event #14 | June 8-10 |
| $10,000 | Event #27 (Championship) | June 15-17 |
Don’t enjoy playing with those young punks who like to shove all-in every hand? Keep it here.
Limit Hold’em 6-Max
| $2,500 | Event #19 | June 11-13 |
Short-handed and limit means raises and reraises galore. If you’re more of a passive player, try your luck elsewhere.
Limit Hold’em Shootout
| $1,500 | Event #41 | June 24-26 |
If you like to take it one step and one bet at a time, this is the one for you.
Pot-Limit Hold’em
| $10,000 | Event #7 (Championship) | June 3-5 |
| $1,500 | Event #15 | June 9-11 |
Don’t like fixed betting amounts? Don’t like antes? Pot-limit is what you need to play! While many think it’s the same thing as no-limit, it most definitely is not. There are many subtle differences that can give you edge over those who don’t see it.
Like to dabble in the other games? Next week, we’ll take a look at the other 23 events that can earn you a bracelet. PokerNews is thrilled to once again be providing the official live updates from the tournament floor for all 58 bracelet events, and you can see the full 2011 WSOP schedule here.
Follow us on Twitter for up-to-the-minute news, and also become our fan on Facebook.




