October 30 2011, Chad Holloway

The World Poker Tour World Poker Finals at Foxwoods, the first $10,000 buy-in of Season X, saw 189 players take their shots at poker glory and a piece of the $1,778,300 prize pool. With nearly $450,000 reserved for first place, the competition was fierce. By the end of Day 3, only 27 players remained, each guaranteed a payday of $19,916.
Leading the way is reigning WPT Player of the Year, Andy Frankenberger, who bagged up 658,500 chips. He is followed by Jack Schanbacher, with 483,500. Other notables sill in the field include Jonathan Little (355,000), Hoyt Corkins (235,000), Matt Glantz (226,500), Bernard Lee (84,000), Allen Kessler (43,500) and Cornel Cimpan (25,000).
Frankenberger began Day 3 as the chip leader and used it to his advantage. In one hand, Frankenberger eliminated Alan Sternber, a fellow WPT Champ. According to the WPT Live Reporting Team, there was a bout 60,000 in the pot with a board reading 


when Sternberg checked under the gun, Frankenberger bet 40,000, and Sternberg moved all-in. Frankenberger made the call and the cards were turned up:
Showdown
Sternberg: 

Frankenberger: 

Sternberg was in need of an ace on the river, but it was not meant to be as the
gave Frankenbeger quad jacks, increasing his stack to 327,500.
Day 3 was characterized by fast action and numerous eliminations. A laundry list of professionals hit the rail throughout the day including Dwyte Pilgrim, Erik Seidel, Chris Tryba, David “Doc” Sands, Justin Zaki, Dana Kellstrom, Jason Mercier, and last year’s champion, Jeff Forrest.
Jason Mercier’s demise came when he raised to 4,000 from early position and received calls from both blinds. When the flop came down 

, Lee Markholt bet 6,000 from the small blind, Andy Rossi raised to 16,000 from the big, and Mercier three-bet to 30,200. Markholt got out of the way, but Rossi made the call, leading to the
turn.
Rossi went ahead and led out for 23,000, Mercier moved all-in for 87,700, and Rossi hit the tank. Eventually he emerged with a call, discovering his 
was ahead of Mercier’s 
. The
river was no help to Mercier and he was eliminated in 39th place; meanwhile, Rossi chipped up to 300,000.
The unfortunate bubble boy, who busted in 28th place right at the end of the day, was Alistair Melville. After being crippled by Matt Stout, Melville was all-in from the big blind, and Dan Colman limped from middle position. Christian Harder called from the button, and Hoyt Corkins came along from the small blind. In order to survive, Melville needed to defeat three opponents. All three active players checked the 

flop, as well as the
turn, but Harder fired out 10,000 on the
river. Corkins quickly folded, and Colman followed suit, tossing 
.
Harder rolled over 
for the nut straight, which beat Melville’s 
. With that, action came to a halt.
The remaining 27 players will return at 1200 EDT (1600 GMT) on Sunday for Day 4 action. Here’s a look at the top 10 stacks entering Day 4:
Top 10 End of Day 3 Chip Counts
| 1 | Andy Frankenberger | 658,800 |
| 2 | Jack Schanbacher | 483,500 |
| 3 | Christian Harder | 378,500 |
| 4 | Larry Greenberg | 360,000 |
| 5 | Jonathan Little | 355,000 |
| 6 | Andy Rossi | 352,000 |
| 7 | Steven Brackesy | 339,000 |
| 8 | Daniel Santoro | 331,000 |
| 9 | Michael Dentale | 250,000 |
| 10 | Peter Politano | 237,000 |
*Photo courtesy of the World Poker Tour.
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October 25 2011, Chad Holloway

After four long days of poker, the 2011-2012 World Series of Poker Circuit Horseshoe Hammond Main Event has come to an end with Bob Chow claiming the gold ring and $393,584 first-place prize. The 1,615-player field was the largest in WSOP Circuit Main Event history, creating a $2,349,825 prize pool that was a fitting way to conclude a stop that began with Event #1 No-Limit Hold’em, the largest field in WSOP Circuit history with 3,001 players.
The final day of the Main Event saw 20 players return to action with consummate grinder Eric Crain leading the way. The action went quickly with seven players hitting the rail in the first two hours. One of those players, former online star Mark “P0ker H0” Kroon, was testing his skills in the live realm.
Unfortunately, Kroon didn’t make it to the final table. In Kroon’s elimination hand, Edward Pham raised to 85,000 under the gun and was soon met with a three-bet to 265,000 by Kroon in middle position. Action folded back around to Pham who thought a long while before sliding in a call. When the flop came down 

, Pham checked to Kroon who bet 320,000. Pham responded by moving all-in and Kroon snap-called off his last 415,000.
Showdown
Kroon: 

Pham: 

It was a bit of a cooler flop as Kroon had hit top pair with the second nut-flush draw and Pham flopped middle set. “Spade,” Kroon called. The dealer burned and turned the
. It wasn’t the spade Kroon was looking for. In fact, it filled Pham up and made a spade useless. Kroon, who improved to two pair, now needed either a jack or king on the river to survive. With his rail there for support, Kroon waited anxiously as the dealer burned and revealed the
. It was a blank, and suddenly, Kroon’s deep run in the Main Event came to an end in 16th place. Not too shabby for the man who re-entered on Day 1b after busting out on the third hand of Day 1a when his pocket aces were cracked by pocket kings.
Here is a look at the other eliminations leading up to the final table:
Pre-Final Table Payouts
The next to go was Drazen Ilich in seventh place, whose pocket kings were cracked by the 
of Chow. The chips got all-in on a 

flop, and the turn brought the
to fill Chow’s straight. A few hands later, Joe Hebda found himself all-in with 
against the 
of Steury. The board ran out an uneventful 



and Hebda headed to the payout desk in sixth place.
The next elimination was not only thrilling, but it happened in a hand that will likely go down in WSOP Circuit lore. It began when Crain opened for 265,000 and Dave Neff shoved all-in from the small blind. Crain popped his head up and asked the dealer for a count. Before the dealer could finish – which was somewhere in the neighborhood of 2.1 million – Crain announced “call.”
Showdown
Neff: 

Crain: 

The 

flop was not especially exciting, but the turn was a kick in the gut for Crain when it brought the
. The young pro left the table and steam-walked around the stage. He had his hat pulled down low, knowing he needed one of the two remaining fours on the river. The dealer burned -
. Crain exploded again, this time in excitement. He pulled a Tiger Woods-esque fist pump as he earned the improbable river knockout.
Unfortunately, Crain couldn’t maintain his momentum and was eliminated in fourth place after he played 
aggressively and ran into Steury’s 
. He was followed out the door by a short-stacked Erik Roussakis, who got unlucky when his 
got unlucky against Steury’s 
.
The heads-up battle between Chow and Steury began with the latter holding almost a 2-1 lead (21 million to 11 million). Interestingly, Steury had faced off against another Chow this past summer at the WSOP when he won his first gold bracelet. In the $1,500 H.O.R.S.E. event in Vegas, Steurry defeated Michael Chow to capture the gold and a $289,283 prize. Quite the coincidence, indeed.
Unfortunately for Steury, this time his battle with a Chow would go the other way. Bob Chow managed to overcome his chip deficit, eventually seizing the lead for himself. In the final hand, a short-stacked Steury was on the button and moved all-in preflop, which Chow called with his big stack.
Showdown
Steury: 

Chow: 

The board ran out 



, giving Chow two pair and putting a dagger through Steury.
Final Table Payouts
| 1st | Bob Chow | $393,584 |
| 2nd | Aaron Steury | $243,818 |
| 3rd | Erik Roussakis | $183,991 |
| 4th | Eric Crain | $139,815 |
| 5th | Dave Neff | $106,447 |
| 6th | Joe Hebda | $81,774 |
| 7th | Drazen Ilich | $63,680 |
| 8th | Dan V. Harrington | $50,051 |
| 9th | Shawn Quinn | $39,947 |
National Championship Qualifiers
| TBD | Horseshoe Hammond Casino Champion |
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