May 21 2012, Donnie Peters
After a nice and easy Day 1 at the $25,000 World Poker Tour World Championship on Saturday, the field was back in action on Sunday at noon for Day 2. The total field size grew to 135 players throughout the course of the day and registration will remain open until approximately 1700 PDT (0100 BST) on Day 3. From the 98 Day 1 survivors and 30 late registrants, 95 players advanced. Leading the pack was former WPT champion Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi as he bagged up 428,200 in chips.
Mizrachi proved to be the only player able to finish above the 400,000-chip mark and will be looking to add WPT title number three to his collection. Previously, Mizrachi won the 2005 L.A. Poker Classic for $1,859,909 and the 2006 Borgata Winter Open for $1,173,373. Coming in behind him on the leaderboard was another former WPT champion Rinat Bogdanov with 381,000. Bogdanov won this season’s WPT Venice Grand Prize for “229,800.
Of those players who were eliminated on the day, were Isaac Baron, Hasan Habib, Dan O’Brien, Vanessa Selbst, Ryan D’Angelo and the WPT’s own Tony Dunst. Also falling were WPT Champions Club members Morten Christensen, Tommy Vedes, Matt Giannetti, Andrey Pateychuk, David Benyamine, James Demsey and Daniel Negreanu.
According to the WPT Live Updates Team, Negreanu fell in the last level of the night with the blinds at 600/1,200/200 in a hand that saw three players get all the money in.
It was reported that Negreanu had opened from middle position with a raise before Lance Steinberg reraised behind him. On the button, Guillaume Darcourt made the call before action folded back to Negreanu. Negreanu reraised all-in for 33,400. Steinberg and Darcourt both made the call.
The flop produced the and Steinberg moved all-in for around 80,000. Darcourt quickly made the call with the
for middle set, but was behind the
for top set from Steinberg. Negreanu was well behind, but still alive holding a straight draw with his
. The turn
and river
both failed to give Negreanu the straight he needed and he was eliminated. Steinberg’s set of queens held up, allowing him to scoop the entire pot and double up through Darcourt.
Although some big names hit the rail on the day, plenty of them built nice stacks to take into Day 3. David Steicke, Isaac Haxton and Day 1 chip leader Steve O’Dwyer all finished above 300,000, while John Hennigan, David Chiu, Joe Serock and Nick Schulman bagged up plenty of ammo.
WPT World Championship Day 2 Top 10 Chip Counts
428,200 | ||
2 | Rinat Bogdanov | 381,000 |
3 | Guillaume Darcourt | 356,600 |
4 | David Steicke | 345,500 |
5 | Isaac Haxton | 313,500 |
6 | Anthony Ruberto | 309,100 |
7 | Steve O’Dwyer | 301,900 |
8 | Ubaid Habib | 288,100 |
9 | John Esposito | 284,200 |
10 | Matt Juttelstad | 274,000 |
The remaining players will start back up on Monday at 1200 PDT (2000 BST) for another day on the grind. You can expect another batch of late entrants to jump into the fray as registration will remain open until Level 12. Be sure to stay tuned for the daily recap right here on PokerNews.
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March 15 2012, Eric Ramsey
Thursday was Day 3 of the PokerStars.com European Poker Tour Madrid “5,300 Main Event. From the starting field of 477, the final 112 players returned to the Casino Gran Madrid to play through the bubble and on down to the final 24. That goal was reached right around the bewitching hour of midnight, and João Paulo Simão carries the biggest stack of 1.973 million into Friday’s penultimate day.
It took a couple of hours to reduce the field to within a few eliminations of the bubble, and a slew of notables were among the early casualties. Matthew Frankland was one of the very first to go, and he was soon joined on the rail by Yorane Kerignard, Ondrej Vinklarek, Joep van den Bijgaart, David Benyamine, and Ebony Kenney in the pre-bubble madness.
On the first of the hand-for-hand shuffles, McLean Karr was the one who bit the bullet and took matters into his own hands. He three-bet shoved for about 30 big blinds with pocket fives, but Javier Etayo’s had him crushed. Karr had a sweat on the turn, but the
board meant the end of the road for Karr, and a small celebration for the 72 players who outlasted him.
Once the bubble burst, the pace of the eliminations began to quicken further, and another batch of notables were dispatched. The second wave of knockouts saw Vadim Markushevski, Barny Boatman, James Sudworth, Dermot Blain, Jan Collado, Olivier Busquet, Kenny Hallaert, and Melanie Weisner all sent off.
At least one of those players made good use of the rest of their day. Hallaert went promptly to his computer to late register for the $1 Rebuy Micro Millions event as his alter-ego, “SpaceyFCB.” Five hours later, he was sitting at the final table trying to collect the rest of the 1.6 billion chips in play. He outlasted 44,739 of the 44,740 players, besting everyone but the last man standing. A runner-up finish earned SpaceyFCB $12,562.45 – just a bit more than his middling cash in the EPT Main Event. Not a bad day, all in all.
Back to the Main Event where the Day 3 starters’ list included a quartet of Team PokerStars Pros. Unfortunately for the sponsor site, none of them were able to survive to night’s end. Mexico’s Angel Guillen fell out just a few spots short of the money, and Norway’s Johhny Lodden managed to squeak into a small payday before being relegated to the rail. His pocket threes were ahead of ace-jack until the last card, but the proverbial ace on the river ended his run in 60th place. Henrique Pinho was relieved of his short stack just a few minutes later, and that left only Alex Kravchenko flying the PokerStars banner. He lasted until 35th place before losing his short stack and his tournament life.
For the bulk of the day, Ilan Boujaneh weilded the big stack, and he and Simão were hovering around the million-chip mark hours before anyone else even came close. Boujaneh’s biggest boost came one hand before the dinner break when he played a pot for his tournament life against Simão.
Boujaneh had raised and four-bet preflop, and Simão called another bet on the flop. He raised the
turn, but Boujaneh led right back out on the
river. Simão called him down with two mystery cards, and the
appeared in front of Boujaneh to give him a monster pot and a commanding chip lead.
The two men traded the big stack back and forth for the remainder of play, but Simão got the last laugh in the last hand of the night. His ace-king toppled two players, one with pocket queens and one with pocket sevens. A king on the river locked up the biggest pot of the tournament, and Simão’s count of nearly 2 million gives him a big cushion heading into Day 4. It’ll be his largest cash regardless of where he finishes, though he does have some other results of note. In 2010, he won the WCOOP $215 Heads-Up event playing as “IneedMasari,” and he took down a side event at LAPT Florianopolis the same year. He’s got the chips, but he’ll have to deal with the likes of Michael “Timex” McDonald, Clayton Mozdzen (783,000), Taylor Paur (734,000), Nicolas Levi (526,000), and Tristan Clemencon (395,000) on his way to what he hopes will be a final table appearance.
Eight seasons in and the EPT is still looking for its first double champion. A few players entered the day with glowing aspirations of making that happen. It came mostly unraveled, though. Season 7′s San Remo champion, Rupert Elder cold-four-bet shoved pocket sixes into pocket nines to end his day shy of a cash. Near the end of the night, EPT6 Berlin champion, Kevin MacPhee four-bet ace-queen into two aces, though he did manage to pick up a little spending money on his way out the door. Toby Lewis and Joao Barbosa have won EPTs in Portugal and Poland, respectively, but they too fell short of super deep runs in Madrid.
We’ve still got one former champion left looking for the double dip – Canada’s Michael “Timex” McDonald. He won in Dortmund in 2008, and he’s since made two more EPT final tables. Those efforts have come up short, but he’ll return with a top-five stack of 883,000 on Friday and another crack at the trophy.
Also worth a mention is the presence of Bruno “Kool Shen” Lopes in the remaining field. Kool Shen is one of the most prominent figures in French rap, and he also dabbles a bit in acting, break dancing, and graffiti art. Oh, and poker. You’d be forgiven for underestimating him as just another celebrity-turned-poker-player, but Lopes has been doing some serious work on the felt. He won a “5,000 event in Paris earlier this year, and he’ll likely creep over $400,000 in career earnings with this cash.
Lopes’ progress was impressive throughout Day 3, and he first came onto the radar when a chip-leading stack suddenly appeared in front of him during the early stages of the day. He took a nice pot off McLean Karr with on a board full of undercards, and he won a big flip later in the day with pocket nines against Javier Piazuelo’s
. At the end of the night, Kool Shen was sitting pretty with 1.103 million chips – good enough for third place overall.
End of Day 3 Top 10 Chip Counts
João Paulo Simão | 1,973,000 |
Ilan Boujenah | 1,153,000 |
Bruno Lopes | 1,103,000 |
Jason Duval | 946,000 |
Mike McDonald | 883,000 |
Siyu Sha | 848,000 |
Clayton Mozdzen | 783,000 |
Taylor Paur | 734,000 |
Fraser Macintyre | 717,000 |
Ricardo Ibanez Rodriguez | 635,000 |
Day 4 will begin on Friday at 1200 CET (0400 PST), and play will proceed until the final table is set.
If you missed any of the action from Day 3 in Madrid, head over to the Live Reporting page to catch up. While you’re catching up with things, catch up with us on Twitter, too.
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