November 07 2011, PokerNews Staff

The biggest spectacle in poker, the World Series of Poker November Nine never disappoints, and Sunday’s game was no exception. After a four-month hiatus, the final nine players of the 2011 World Series of Poker Main Event converged on the Penn and Teller Theater in the hopes of making it to Tuesday – to be part of the final three. Pius Heinz, Ben Lamb, and Martin Staszko have kept the dream alive and are still in the hunt for the coveted bracelet.
The first elimination of the day came on the 51st hand of the day. Ben Lamb raised to 1.7 million from under the gun. Action folded to Sam Holden in the small blind and he reraised all-in for 11.125 million. Lamb made the call and turned over 
. Holden’s 
was dominated. The flop fell 

giving Lamb top pair and a flush draw. The
on the turn left Holden drawing dead and sent him to the rail in ninth place, good for $782,115.
Shortly thereafter, Anton Makiievskyi was eliminated in eighth place. On the 59th hand of play, action folded around to Makiievskyi, who was in the small blind. He open-shoved for 10.5 million and was called by Pius Heinz in the big blind. Makiievskyi, holding 
was flipping for his tournament life against Heinz’s nines. The flop came down 

, pairing Makiievskyi’s king and putting him in the lead. The turn changed everything, however, because the
fell and gave Heinz a full house. The river brought the
, officially sealing Makiievskyi’s fate in eighth place. He pocketed just over $1 million for his efforts.
Heinz had a commanding chip lead after he eliminated Makiievskyi and it only continued to grow throughout the day’s action. The third elimination of the day came when Martin Staszko raised to 1.7 million and a short-stacked Bob Bounahra reraised all-in for 4.475 million. Staszko, who tabled 
, was ahead of Bounahra’s 
and stayed that way as the board ran out 



. Bounahra was sent to the rail in seventh place, good for $1,314,097, and his raucous Belizean contingent followed him out of the Penn and Teller Theater.
Phil Collins, who by the 73rd hand of play, had fallen to the second shortest stack at the table, moved all-in from the button for 13.575 million. He was called by Ben Lamb in the big blind holding 
. Collins was way behind with 
. The 

flop kept Lamb in the lead, but Collins had flopped a backdoor flush draw. The
on the turn gave Collins a huge sweat, with a flush draw and an open-ended straight draw. The river kept Collins in the game when the
appeared, doubling his chip stack to over 28 million, and sending his rail into boisterous cheers.
Twenty-four hands later, Eoghan O’Dea was crippled in a huge hand against Lamb. Only about two million in chips separated the two when the chips went in the middle preflop. Lamb was at risk and O’Dea was in the lead with 
against Lamb’s 
. The 

kept O’Dea in the lead, as did the
on the turn. The river dealt the crushing blow – the
– and O’Dea was left with 2.6 million. O’Dea was eliminated two hands later, in sixth place – the same finish his father had in 1983, albeit for a much smaller prize, $43,200. He was all-in preflop with 
against Martin Staszko who turned over pocket eights. The 



board was no help for O’Dea who was eliminated and took home $1,720,831.
On the very next hand, the field was reduced to four. Pius Heinz raised to 2.1 million from under the gun. Action folded to Phil Collins who moved all-in for 18.3 million. Heinz made the call, and Collins’ tournament life was on the line. Heinz held 
and was ahead of Collins’ 
. The 

flop gave Collins an open-ended straight draw, but Heinz was still in the lead and stayed there through the
turn. Heinz turned a set, but Collins picked up more outs. None of Collins’ outs hit when the
fell on the river, eliminating him in fifth place, $2,269,599. Heinz added even more chips to his already monstrous stack.
Play slowed considerably after the dinner break, but only one thing remained constant - Pius Heinz at the top of the leaderboard. However, on hand No. 156, Heinz gave away a few of his chips when he doubled up Martin Staszko. In the hand, Staszko moved all-in over the top of a raise from Heinz, who was under the gun. Heinz made the call and tabled 
, well ahead of Staszko’s 
. With the 

giving Staszko trips, he stayed in the lead through the
turn and the
river, doubling to 44 million, and leaving Ben Lamb as the short stack.
Lamb was in need of some help to keep his tournament dreams alive, and he ended up getting some at the expense of Matt Giannetti. On hand No. 174, Giannetti raised to 2.6 million from the button. Lamb reraised all-in from the big blind, and Giannetti called the 26.8 million more. Giannetti and his pocket jacks had Lamb, who tabled 
on the ropes. The flop fell 

giving Lamb a flush draw. The turn,
, brought Lamb’s flush and the river was the meaningless
. Lamb doubled to 55 million, and Giannetti was crippled.
Giannetti doubled on the next hand against Staszko but didn’t hold on to those chips for long. Giannetti and Lamb tangled again, but Lamb held the best of it, and Giannetti couldn’t get his pay back. The chips went in the middle preflop on hand No. 178, with Lamb holding kings and Giannetti tabling 
. The flop sealed Giannetti’s fate when it fell 

, giving Lamb quads. Giannetti fell in fourth place, pocketing $3,012,700.
His elimination set the stage for Tuesday when the final three players, Lamb, Heinz, and Staszko, will play for poker immortality.
2011 WSOP Main Event Final Table Chip Counts
| Pius Heinz | 107,800,000 |
| Ben Lamb | 55,400,000 |
| Martin Staszko | 42,700,000 |
Play gets under way Tuesday at 1730 PST (0130 GMT) and the PokerNews Live Reporting Team will be on hand to provide hand-for-hand coverage until a winner is crowned.
Follow PokerNews on Twitter for up-to-the-minute news.
November 06 2011, Donnie Peters

The 2011 World Poker Tour Amneville has reached the final table after Day 4′s action on Saturday. There are six players remaining and leading the way is start-of-the-day chip leader Scott Baumstein. He’ll take 3.91 million in chips into the final table, good enough for nearly 1.3 million more than his closest competitor.
When the day began, 19 players returned to the felt. Ovidiu Balaj was the first player to exit and he was followed out the door by Nicolas Dervaux. Notables Jean-Philipe Rohr fell in 15th place and Arnaud Mattern in 14th. Both Rohr and Mattern were eliminated on the same hand.
According to the WPT Live Update Team, in Level 20, with the blinds at 5,000/10,000/1,000, Adrien Allain raised to 22,000 from the button. Mattern three-bet to 66,000 from the small blind, and Rohr four-bet jammed for 151,000 from the big blind. Allain called and Mattern also called.
The flop came down 

and Rohr was all-in awaiting his fate. Mattern led with a bet of 80,000 and Allain moved all-in. Mattern snap-called and tabled top set with 
. Allain held 
and Rohr, who was all-in preflop, held 
.
Mattern had gone from worst to first, but quickly fell behind again when the
landed on the turn to give Allain the best hand. The river landed with the
and Allain’s trip aces were the winner. He had the most chips in the hand to eliminate both of his opponents.
Another notable player who everyone had their eyes on was 2010 World Series of Poker November Niner Joseph Cheong. Cheong began the day fourth in chips, but fell in 13th place. His 
failed to get there against Tony Blanchandin’s pocket tens after all of the money went in preflop.
The official final table for WPT Amneville was set after Anders Bisgaard fell in seventh place during Level 24. With the blinds at 12,000/24,000/4,000, Allain made it 50,000 to go and Thibaud Guenegou called from the small blind. Bisgaard reraised all-in from the big blind and Allain quickly called. Guenegou folded and showed that he was laying down pocket nines. Allain held pocket aces again and Bisgaard pocket jacks. The board of 



was no help to Bisgaard and he was eliminated.
Final Table Chip Counts
| 1 | Scott Baumstein | 3,910,000 |
| 2 | Adrien Allain | 2,675,000 |
| 3 | Jordane Ouin | 1,915,000 |
| 4 | Thibaud Guenegou | 1,500,000 |
| 5 | Arnaud Trouer | 1,005,000 |
| 6 | Michel Konieczny | 295,000 |
The final table will commence at 1500 CET (0600 PDT). Each of the final six players has locked up $65,618 and first place is worth $452,816. Be sure to return to PokerNews for the final table recap.
Follow PokerNews on Twitter for up-to-the-minute news.
*Photo courtesy of the World Poker Tour.
Follow Donnie Peters on Twitter – @Donnie_Peters




