WSOP34 $1500 Split Format Hold'em, 873 entrants, Day 3 of 4 The final 8 is set for the FT, but all the British players were knocked out on Day 3. We have 8 different nationalities on the FT Seat 1 - Ivan Radiv (ISR) (829,000) Seat 2 - Isaac Kawa (BEL) (721,000) Seat 3 - Gavin O'Rourke (IRL) (785,000) Seat 4 - Andre Boyer (CAN) (851,000) Seat 5 - Chris Bolek (USA) (849,000) Seat 6 - Jonas Christensen (DEN) (929,000) Seat 7 - Erwann Pecheux (FRA) (831,000) Seat 8 - Andrew Gaw (PHI) (756,000)
Toby Lewis was knocked out in the last 16, David Vamplew & Innes Young in the last 32.
WSOP35 - $3k HORSE, 376 entrants, Day 3 of 3 Three players go forward into an extra day, chip leader Matt Vengrin, second placed Kevin Iacofano and third man Daniel Idima. Of the three, Idema is the only previous bracelet winner, he has two so far.
WSOP36 - $1500 PLO, 978 entrants, Day 2 of 3 Nineteen remain, with Kevin Allen from Romford tucked away in the middle of the pack at present.
Corrie Wunstel is the chip leader, after busting Brandon Cantu on a huge pot on the bubble, with Shaun Abbott in second with just over half Wunstel's chips & Matthew Colvin 3rd
WSOP37 - $10K 6-max NLH, 259 entrants, Day 2 of 3 Doug Polk is the overnight leader and he will return for the final day with 11 opponets standing between him and the bracelet. Kenneth Fishman is second, and a distant third is current player of the year leader Paul Volpe.
No Brits left, Jake Cody was knocked out about 5 off the money
WSOP38 - $3K NLH, 989 entrants, Day 1 of 3 Just 11 shy of a round 1000 players for the $3K, and at the end of day 1, that has been whittled down to just under 300.
Chris DeMaci has been around for years and has a couple of FT WSOP finishes, and he is the chip leader after Day 1 ahead of Brazil's Jorge Breda & another American Nick Munis.
As you would expect with a $3K buy-in, plenty of recognisable pros in contention, including Jesse Sylvia, Maria Ho & Kenny Halleart all inside the Top 30. The past 2 ME winners are also still active, Ryan Riess & Martin Jacobson.
GB players are led by one Sam Razavi (24th) with Guilio Mascolo (showing as from Gabon though, perhaps that's an omen as the last player the WSOP made that mistake with went on to win the bracelet), Jonathan McCann, John Gale, Asa Smith, Luke Marsh, Francis Ford-Brown, Rhys Jones, Howard Smith and several other also progressing.
WSOP39 - $1500 Ten Game Mix, 380 entrants, Day 1 of 3 Only 89 mixers and matchers qualify for Day 2, with Eric Wasserson having the biggest stack of those at the end of Day 1. Veteran Eli Elezra seems to have been having a good series and lies second, with Guy Hareuveni in potentially the bronze medal position.
Only 1 Brit seems to have made it through David Knott, and he will have to navigate a Day 2 field that also includes Ylon Schwartz, Bruno Fitoussi, Dan Kelly, Phil Hellmuth, Brian Hastings, Daniel Negreanu, Matt Glantz, Greg Muller, and with a micro-stack, recent bracelet winner Jason Mercier.
To start today WSOP40 - $1000 Seniors NLH, Day 1 of 3 WSOP41 - $10K Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo Championship, Day 1 of 3
Early entries for the seniors event include past ME winner Robert Varkonyi plus November Niners Dennis Phillips & Darvin Moon. Yep, Darvin Moon is back.
I was about to start setting up for Sunday's post (i.e. Saturday's action in Las Vegas) and found I hadn't posted today.
Sorry for being slack, so here goes:
WSOP34 $1500 Split Format Hold'em, 873 entrants, Day 4 of 4 Seventy-two-year old French-Canadian Andre Boyer collected his second bracelet, ten years after his first, plus a first prize of a little over a quarter of a million dollars. He also previously made the FT of the 1996 ME, finishing 6th.
It was a Francophone heads-up match or "la tête haute" as the runner-up was French player Erwan Pecheux.
The best British performance was by Toby Lewis, who was knocked out in the last 16 of the heads-up portion of the event.
WSOP35 - $3k HORSE, 376 entrants, Day 4 of 3 Dan Idema continued the theme of bracelet winners from previous years coming out on top this time around as he collected his third (all 2 years apart, 11/13/15)
The Canadian also took home over $261K for his efforts, beating Kevin Iacofeno and then Matthew Vengrin inside an hour on the extra unscheduled day of play.
WSOP36 - $1500 PLO, 978 entrants, Day 3 of 3 This one is also going to an extra days play with the long days play unable to separate Corrie Wunstel & Kevin Saul.
Kevin Allen was the highest finishing British player, reaching the FT but bowing out in 7th for $24336.
WSOP37 - $10K 6-max NLH, 259 entrants, Day 3 of 3 Hooray! A tournament that finished on time! (Sorry for the two exclamation marks Tikay)
Byron Kaverman wins the 10K 6-max to take his first bracelet at the expense of Doug Polk.
Kaverman took home $657K, Polk $406K, more than he picked up when winning his braclet last year.
Paul Volpe made his third FT of the summer, finishing 6th to extend his lead in the Player of the Year standings.
No Brits cashed, Jake Cody was knocked out about 5 off the money
WSOP38 - $3K NLH, 988 entrants, Day 2 of 3 290-odd players came back for Day 2, and 48 of them stuck around all day to bag up chips at the end of the night.
Another French Canadian is the chip leader, Jean-Pascal Savard, with players from Chinese Taipei (Yun Fan) and Austria (Gerald Karlic) in second and third.
Nestled just outside the Top 10 is Chris Moorman, and with Jonathan McCann and Sam Razavi both still active too, there's sufficient British interest to whet the appetite.
Current payout level is $38 under $10K, John Gale, Asa Smith, Francis Foord-Brown, Rhys Jones & Seb Saffari all bowed up with cashes of between $5129 & $6047.
WSOP39 - $1500 Ten Game Mix, 380 entrants, Day 2 of 3 Less players than variants remain, as we have 9 men going forward to Day 3.
Brian Hastings is having a fantastic series and leads the 9 into the final day, with an interesting set of companions that include Eric Wasserson, Todd Brunson and a couple of Europeans (Tim Reusch, Germany and Alexey Makarov, Russia).
No British players cashed, but Phil Hellmuth did (in 17th place) and apparently he was back to his whiny worst.
WSOP40 - $1000 Seniors NLH, 4193 entrants, Day 1 of 3 Already down to 566 players after day 1 (423 will cash), Dale Eberle is the man at the mpment.
His stack of $160K was good enough to top Day 1, ahead of Oliver Anderson & Daniel Lamb in 2nd & 3rd.
Michael Fisher is top Brit at the moment, with John Gudger (I don't know if he is any relation to Eleanor Gudger who FT'ed the Ladies Event 2 years ago), Derek Miller, Linda Iwaniak, Brian Leddy & Paul Baxter also making Day 2.
Big names playing the seniors and playing well include a couple of 6-time bracelet holders - TJ Cloutier & Ted Forrest
The oldest player in the event was 92 year old Russell Moncrief, who has a bad beat story to tell the folks back home, as he ran pocket Kings in to pocket Aces.
WSOP41 - $10K 7 Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or better Championship, 111 players, Day 1 of 3 The usual star-studded field for these 10K events sees Ryan Miller (runner-up in the $1500 Razz a while ago) leading the 64 players advancing to Day 2.
Max Pescatori (who happened to beat Miller heads-up for that braclet) isn't far behind in 3rd while a well known figure in 9th is the ESPN WSOP co-comemntator Norman Chad.
Two GB names alive, and by now they're both familiar names if you've been reading these updates for the last couple of weeks - Stephen Chidwick & Stuart Rutter.
And just to show he's human, Paul Volpe has made Day 2 but with only 5700 chips, less than 3 big bets at the level they'll be coming back to today
To start today WSOP42 - $1500 Extended Play NLH (4 Day Event)
A few more interesting names from the Seniors Event
I mentioned earlier on there were two 6-time bracelet winners, well there's also a player with 7 bracelets playing Day 2. Men "The Master" Ngyuen.
Both Davidi Kitai's and Dan Sindelar's fathers are still active, as is Hal Lubarsky, the blind player who featured on the ESPN coverage of the ME a few years ago, and recent November Niner Steve Gee.
No further news on the Brits, except to confirm that John Gudger is indeed the father of Eleanor Gudger, who is also in an event today, the Extended Play tournament.
WSOP36 - $1500 PLO, 978 entrants, Day 4 of 3 It took a couple of hours of to and fro play before Corrie Wunstel got the better of Kevin Saul to take his first bracelet and the top prize of $267K.
WSOP38 - $3K NLH, 988 entrants, Day 3 of 3 Five players will come back for an extra day (the extra starting chips in most events this year has meant a higher number than normal have had to be extended into an extra day) and one of them will be a very familiar face to those who used to be regular viewers of Channel 861.
Sam Razavi is third in chips behind leader Thiago Nishijima and Jesse Sylvia (2012 ME runner-up but does not appear to have ever won a live tournament)
Chris Moorman was eliminated in 32nd, Jonathan McCann in 41st.
WSOP39 - $1500 Ten Game Mix, 380 entrants, Day 3 of 3 Brian Hastings collected his second bracelet of the series, and 3rd overall by winning the 10-game mixed event, beating Rostislav Tsodikov heads up
WSOP40 - $1000 Seniors NLH, 4193 entrants, Day 2 of 3 65 left with, I'm sorry to say, not a single Union Flag in sight on the chip count list.
When Linda Iwaniak departed in 79th, that was it for the GB players. She picked up $5509, with smaller cashes going to Derek Miller, Brian Leddy & John Gudger
Most of the big names have gone too, leaving Jim Hopperstead as the chip leader ahead of Justin Tseng & Frank Pacocha.
I wouldn't be surprised to see this one being another to go to an unscheduled 4th day.
WSOP41 - $10K 7 Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or better Championship, 111 players, Day 2 of 3 After Ben Yu departed within the last few hands, we are left with 11 of the 111 through from Day 2, and we have a British chip leader.
When I woke up this morning, Stephen Chidwick was one of the short stacks. A couple of double ups and a huge three way pot later he is in pole position to claim what would be his first WSOP bracelet.
The other 10 players include recent bracelet winner Max Pescatori and Daniel Negreanu (having his best run of the series so far)
WSOP42 - $1500 Extended Play NLH, 1914 entrants, Day 1 of 4 543 of the 1914 have made Day 2, with the Top 7 players coming from, in order, Honduras, Switzerland, Belarus, Brazil, USA, Russia & Israel.
With Canada represented in 9th, Sweden in 10th (through Chris Bjorin so shown with the Union Flag by residence) and the UK in 12th (Fraser Bellamy) this one has a truly international feel to it.
Other GB names through - Patrick Leonard, Barny Boatman, Pratik Ghate, Aurelien Guiglini, Darsham Sami, Toby Lewis, Eleanor Gudger (funny how I mentioned her yesterday), Kevin Wheeler, Francisco Rubio, Martins Adeniya, Rhys Jones, and several more too including Tim Davie (IH8PALACE)
To start today WSOP43 - $1000 Super Seniors NLH (3 Day Event) WSOP44 - $50K Poker Players Championship (5 Day Event)
Sam Razavi's FT about to go on the delayed stream, but before that there was an update on the Player of the Year standings presented by ..... Laura Cornelius
He shoves from UTG for 1.67 million with two red sevens. Jesse Sylvia calls from the button with AJ, then Nishijima over-shoves from BB for about 3.5 million more. Sylvia thinks and thinks but eventually folds.
On their backs with Sam going for a triple up Flop 8-7-2 Turn Q River K, Sam gets rivered and is eliminated in 4th for $153K.
Chidwick goes down to Pescatori heads-up. The Italian, looking more like a TV chef than a poker player, wins his second bracelet of the 2015 Series and his 4th overall. Chidwick still one of the best players without a bracelet.
WSOP38 - $3K NLH, 988 entrants, Day 4 of 3 Brazilian Thiago Nishijima is the proud bracelet holder for Event 38 after getting the better of 4 opponents in the extra day's play
Greek player Sotirios Koutoupas (referred to by the table announcer as just "SK" throughout) was the runner-up, with former ME runner-up Jesse Sylvia 3rd and "our" Sam Razavi 4th.
Nishijima is only the third Brazilian player to win a bracelet, following Alexandre Gomes & Andre Akkari.
WSOP40 - $1000 Seniors NLH, 4193 entrants, Day 3 of 3 I was right, this one was another one that failed to finish in it's alloted 3 days.
In fact the whole 9 man final table will be played out on Day 4, with Travis Baker the leader ahead of Stephen Nussrallah & Day 2 leader Jim Hopperstead.
Lying in 8th place is former November Niner and bracelet winner Steve Gee.
WSOP41 - $10K 7 Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or better Championship, 111 players, Day 3 of 3 So close and yet so far to a third British bracelet this year. Stephen Chidwick got to the heads-up match with Max Pescatori but the Italian got the better of him to collect his 4th bracelet overall and second of this series.
Pescatori wins $292K, Chidwick $180K.
WSOP42 - $1500 Extended Play NLH, 1914 entrants, Day 2 of 4 We're down to 115 who have battled through to Day 3 with experienced Ukrainian Yevgeny Timoshenko the overnight leader.
Five of the 115 are GB players, led by Patrick Leonard in 4th spot with Martins Adeniya, David Lu, Pratik Ghate, Howard Smith & Barny Boatman there too.
Antonio Esfandiari is in good shape (lying 2nd), getting his 6th cash this summer to extend his lead in the all-time money list.
WSOP43 - $1000 Super Seniors NLH, 1533 entrants, Day 1 of 3 The inaugural Super Seniors for those over 64 years old was graced by the presence of Doyle Brunson, making his first WSOP appearance of 2015.
Unfortunately Texas Dolly was one of 1280 players knocked out on Day 1, leaving 253 who will return for Day 2.
Henry Hanningan from Morris, Illinois has the biggest stack ahead of fellow Mid-West player Robert Galinson.
A couple of famous names inside the Top 5, Dennis Waterman & Jesse Jackson, but I don't think it's the ex-Minder actor or the former Presidential candidate though.
Some real big poker names are still playing, Dan Harrington & Barry Shulman, along with a solitary Brit, Eric Dalby.
171 will get paid so the bubble will burst a hour or two into Day 2 play.
WSOP44 - $50K Poker Players Championship, 77 entrants so far, Day 1 of 5 With late reg open until the start of Day 2, we could well see a couple more added to the list (Pescatori? Chidwick?) but 77 would be a disappointing number set against last year's 102.
Only 4 players bust all day, and the first of those to go was Kent's Adam Owen. We do have three Brits in the 73 through though, previous winner Matthew Ashton, Elior Sion and Talal Shakerchi.
Others through, well almost anyone you could name whose been in the big events already - Siever, Danzer, two Mizrachis, Duhamel, Seed, Hastings, Negreanu, Mercier etc. etc. etc. None of the big names rumoured to be making their first appearance of the summer in this event (Ivey, Dwan, Gruissem, Schemion etc.) showed up.
To start today WSOP45 - $1500 NLH, 3 Day Event WSOP46 - $3000 PLO 6 Max, 3 Day Event
Less than 2 weeks to the start of the Main Event...
Why on earth have so few reg'd for the PPC? so weird cos normally this is the one they all want to win, so much prestige with this event but maybe there are just more tempting better value events going on, it did say a lot of Pros had bought into this new extended play event.
You are doing a great job as always FCHD ........... BUT a rather terrible mistake in nationality has been made, Timoshenko is Ukrainian, if he heard you call him Russian he would pull the same face he did when seeing Lewis quads over Robl quads
Posted corrected to show Timoshenko as Ukrainian. He's shown as flying the US flag in the WSOP listings so perhaps next time I'll put him down as American, as he's been there since he was about 8 years old.
Don't know when the update tomorrow will come, I usually put it together about 6:30-8:00 on a Tuesday due to work schedules but I see there is another outage planned tomorrow morning so it may not be up until early evening.
In relation to PPC numbers, all the big buy-in events have been suffering, down on average about 10% on last year for the $10Ks.
One theory being bandied around is that the longer structures of most tournaments this year has meant more players making Day 2s and playing that rather than buying in to the next days event, but I'm not sure if I go with that.
At lower levels, in comparable events, NLH fields are down slightly, non NLH slightly up which more or less evens itself out.
The WSOP will talk about "total" numbers though, and including the Colossus will make any year-on-year comparison meaningless.
The numbers for the Daily Deepstacks at the Rio and for similar sized events up and down the strip are said to be doing very well this year though.
Sam out 4th in a huge hand. He shoves from UTG for 1.67 million with two red sevens. Jesse Sylvia calls from the button with AJ, then Nishijima over-shoves from BB for about 3.5 million more. Sylvia thinks and thinks but eventually folds. On their backs with Sam going for a triple up Flop 8-7-2 Turn Q River K, Sam gets rivered and is eliminated in 4th for $153K. Posted by FCHD
I'm tired so might be missing something reading this, did Nishijima have KK?
Sorry, in fact i made a right mess of that post. Here's another go:
Sam out 4th in a huge hand. He shoves from UTG for 1.67 million with two red sevens. Jesse Sylvia calls from the button with AJ, then Nishijima over-shoves from BB for about 3.5 million more. Sylvia thinks and thinks but eventually folds. On their backs with Sam going for a triple up, it's a race situation with the Brazilian showing AK off.
Flop 9-8-2 Turn Q River K
Note to self - check any hand histories make sense before posting them.
Comments
Not to be two GB bracelets in 1 Day.
Simon Deadman was beaten heads up by Jason Mercier
Earlier post with the round-up of Wednesday's action now updated to cover all the action.
The final 8 is set for the FT, but all the British players were knocked out on Day 3.
We have 8 different nationalities on the FT
Seat 1 - Ivan Radiv (ISR) (829,000)
Seat 2 - Isaac Kawa (BEL) (721,000)
Seat 3 - Gavin O'Rourke (IRL) (785,000)
Seat 4 - Andre Boyer (CAN) (851,000)
Seat 5 - Chris Bolek (USA) (849,000)
Seat 6 - Jonas Christensen (DEN) (929,000)
Seat 7 - Erwann Pecheux (FRA) (831,000)
Seat 8 - Andrew Gaw (PHI) (756,000)
Toby Lewis was knocked out in the last 16, David Vamplew & Innes Young in the last 32.
WSOP35 - $3k HORSE, 376 entrants, Day 3 of 3
Three players go forward into an extra day, chip leader Matt Vengrin, second placed Kevin Iacofano and third man Daniel Idima. Of the three, Idema is the only previous bracelet winner, he has two so far.
WSOP36 - $1500 PLO, 978 entrants, Day 2 of 3
Nineteen remain, with Kevin Allen from Romford tucked away in the middle of the pack at present.
Corrie Wunstel is the chip leader, after busting Brandon Cantu on a huge pot on the bubble, with Shaun Abbott in second with just over half Wunstel's chips & Matthew Colvin 3rd
WSOP37 - $10K 6-max NLH, 259 entrants, Day 2 of 3
Doug Polk is the overnight leader and he will return for the final day with 11 opponets standing between him and the bracelet. Kenneth Fishman is second, and a distant third is current player of the year leader Paul Volpe.
No Brits left, Jake Cody was knocked out about 5 off the money
WSOP38 - $3K NLH, 989 entrants, Day 1 of 3
Just 11 shy of a round 1000 players for the $3K, and at the end of day 1, that has been whittled down to just under 300.
Chris DeMaci has been around for years and has a couple of FT WSOP finishes, and he is the chip leader after Day 1 ahead of Brazil's Jorge Breda & another American Nick Munis.
As you would expect with a $3K buy-in, plenty of recognisable pros in contention, including Jesse Sylvia, Maria Ho & Kenny Halleart all inside the Top 30. The past 2 ME winners are also still active, Ryan Riess & Martin Jacobson.
GB players are led by one Sam Razavi (24th) with Guilio Mascolo (showing as from Gabon though, perhaps that's an omen as the last player the WSOP made that mistake with went on to win the bracelet), Jonathan McCann, John Gale, Asa Smith, Luke Marsh, Francis Ford-Brown, Rhys Jones, Howard Smith and several other also progressing.
WSOP39 - $1500 Ten Game Mix, 380 entrants, Day 1 of 3
Only 89 mixers and matchers qualify for Day 2, with Eric Wasserson having the biggest stack of those at the end of Day 1. Veteran Eli Elezra seems to have been having a good series and lies second, with Guy Hareuveni in potentially the bronze medal position.
Only 1 Brit seems to have made it through David Knott, and he will have to navigate a Day 2 field that also includes Ylon Schwartz, Bruno Fitoussi, Dan Kelly, Phil Hellmuth, Brian Hastings, Daniel Negreanu, Matt Glantz, Greg Muller, and with a micro-stack, recent bracelet winner Jason Mercier.
To start today
WSOP40 - $1000 Seniors NLH, Day 1 of 3
WSOP41 - $10K Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo Championship, Day 1 of 3
Sorry for being slack, so here goes:
WSOP34 $1500 Split Format Hold'em, 873 entrants, Day 4 of 4
Seventy-two-year old French-Canadian Andre Boyer collected his second bracelet, ten years after his first, plus a first prize of a little over a quarter of a million dollars. He also previously made the FT of the 1996 ME, finishing 6th.
It was a Francophone heads-up match or "la tête haute" as the runner-up was French player Erwan Pecheux.
The best British performance was by Toby Lewis, who was knocked out in the last 16 of the heads-up portion of the event.
WSOP35 - $3k HORSE, 376 entrants, Day 4 of 3
Dan Idema continued the theme of bracelet winners from previous years coming out on top this time around as he collected his third (all 2 years apart, 11/13/15)
The Canadian also took home over $261K for his efforts, beating Kevin Iacofeno and then Matthew Vengrin inside an hour on the extra unscheduled day of play.
WSOP36 - $1500 PLO, 978 entrants, Day 3 of 3
This one is also going to an extra days play with the long days play unable to separate Corrie Wunstel & Kevin Saul.
Kevin Allen was the highest finishing British player, reaching the FT but bowing out in 7th for $24336.
WSOP37 - $10K 6-max NLH, 259 entrants, Day 3 of 3
Hooray! A tournament that finished on time! (Sorry for the two exclamation marks Tikay)
Byron Kaverman wins the 10K 6-max to take his first bracelet at the expense of Doug Polk.
Kaverman took home $657K, Polk $406K, more than he picked up when winning his braclet last year.
Paul Volpe made his third FT of the summer, finishing 6th to extend his lead in the Player of the Year standings.
No Brits cashed, Jake Cody was knocked out about 5 off the money
WSOP38 - $3K NLH, 988 entrants, Day 2 of 3
290-odd players came back for Day 2, and 48 of them stuck around all day to bag up chips at the end of the night.
Another French Canadian is the chip leader, Jean-Pascal Savard, with players from Chinese Taipei (Yun Fan) and Austria (Gerald Karlic) in second and third.
Nestled just outside the Top 10 is Chris Moorman, and with Jonathan McCann and Sam Razavi both still active too, there's sufficient British interest to whet the appetite.
Current payout level is $38 under $10K, John Gale, Asa Smith, Francis Foord-Brown, Rhys Jones & Seb Saffari all bowed up with cashes of between $5129 & $6047.
WSOP39 - $1500 Ten Game Mix, 380 entrants, Day 2 of 3
Less players than variants remain, as we have 9 men going forward to Day 3.
Brian Hastings is having a fantastic series and leads the 9 into the final day, with an interesting set of companions that include Eric Wasserson, Todd Brunson and a couple of Europeans (Tim Reusch, Germany and Alexey Makarov, Russia).
No British players cashed, but Phil Hellmuth did (in 17th place) and apparently he was back to his whiny worst.
WSOP40 - $1000 Seniors NLH, 4193 entrants, Day 1 of 3
Already down to 566 players after day 1 (423 will cash), Dale Eberle is the man at the mpment.
His stack of $160K was good enough to top Day 1, ahead of Oliver Anderson & Daniel Lamb in 2nd & 3rd.
Michael Fisher is top Brit at the moment, with John Gudger (I don't know if he is any relation to Eleanor Gudger who FT'ed the Ladies Event 2 years ago), Derek Miller, Linda Iwaniak, Brian Leddy & Paul Baxter also making Day 2.
Big names playing the seniors and playing well include a couple of 6-time bracelet holders - TJ Cloutier & Ted Forrest
The oldest player in the event was 92 year old Russell Moncrief, who has a bad beat story to tell the folks back home, as he ran pocket Kings in to pocket Aces.
WSOP41 - $10K 7 Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or better Championship, 111 players, Day 1 of 3
The usual star-studded field for these 10K events sees Ryan Miller (runner-up in the $1500 Razz a while ago) leading the 64 players advancing to Day 2.
Max Pescatori (who happened to beat Miller heads-up for that braclet) isn't far behind in 3rd while a well known figure in 9th is the ESPN WSOP co-comemntator Norman Chad.
Two GB names alive, and by now they're both familiar names if you've been reading these updates for the last couple of weeks - Stephen Chidwick & Stuart Rutter.
And just to show he's human, Paul Volpe has made Day 2 but with only 5700 chips, less than 3 big bets at the level they'll be coming back to today
To start today
WSOP42 - $1500 Extended Play NLH (4 Day Event)
I mentioned earlier on there were two 6-time bracelet winners, well there's also a player with 7 bracelets playing Day 2. Men "The Master" Ngyuen.
Both Davidi Kitai's and Dan Sindelar's fathers are still active, as is Hal Lubarsky, the blind player who featured on the ESPN coverage of the ME a few years ago, and recent November Niner Steve Gee.
No further news on the Brits, except to confirm that John Gudger is indeed the father of Eleanor Gudger, who is also in an event today, the Extended Play tournament.
It took a couple of hours of to and fro play before Corrie Wunstel got the better of Kevin Saul to take his first bracelet and the top prize of $267K.
WSOP38 - $3K NLH, 988 entrants, Day 3 of 3
Five players will come back for an extra day (the extra starting chips in most events this year has meant a higher number than normal have had to be extended into an extra day) and one of them will be a very familiar face to those who used to be regular viewers of Channel 861.
Sam Razavi is third in chips behind leader Thiago Nishijima and Jesse Sylvia (2012 ME runner-up but does not appear to have ever won a live tournament)
Chris Moorman was eliminated in 32nd, Jonathan McCann in 41st.
WSOP39 - $1500 Ten Game Mix, 380 entrants, Day 3 of 3
Brian Hastings collected his second bracelet of the series, and 3rd overall by winning the 10-game mixed event, beating Rostislav Tsodikov heads up
WSOP40 - $1000 Seniors NLH, 4193 entrants, Day 2 of 3
65 left with, I'm sorry to say, not a single Union Flag in sight on the chip count list.
When Linda Iwaniak departed in 79th, that was it for the GB players. She picked up $5509, with smaller cashes going to Derek Miller, Brian Leddy & John Gudger
Most of the big names have gone too, leaving Jim Hopperstead as the chip leader ahead of Justin Tseng & Frank Pacocha.
I wouldn't be surprised to see this one being another to go to an unscheduled 4th day.
WSOP41 - $10K 7 Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or better Championship, 111 players, Day 2 of 3
After Ben Yu departed within the last few hands, we are left with 11 of the 111 through from Day 2, and we have a British chip leader.
When I woke up this morning, Stephen Chidwick was one of the short stacks. A couple of double ups and a huge three way pot later he is in pole position to claim what would be his first WSOP bracelet.
The other 10 players include recent bracelet winner Max Pescatori and Daniel Negreanu (having his best run of the series so far)
WSOP42 - $1500 Extended Play NLH, 1914 entrants, Day 1 of 4
543 of the 1914 have made Day 2, with the Top 7 players coming from, in order, Honduras, Switzerland, Belarus, Brazil, USA, Russia & Israel.
With Canada represented in 9th, Sweden in 10th (through Chris Bjorin so shown with the Union Flag by residence) and the UK in 12th (Fraser Bellamy) this one has a truly international feel to it.
Other GB names through - Patrick Leonard, Barny Boatman, Pratik Ghate, Aurelien Guiglini, Darsham Sami, Toby Lewis, Eleanor Gudger (funny how I mentioned her yesterday), Kevin Wheeler, Francisco Rubio, Martins Adeniya, Rhys Jones, and several more too including Tim Davie (IH8PALACE)
To start today
WSOP43 - $1000 Super Seniors NLH (3 Day Event)
WSOP44 - $50K Poker Players Championship (5 Day Event)
Nishijima has had at least 3, maybe 4 pocket paris in the first half hour.
Sylvia has been very agressive, moving all in against the shorter stacks 3 times I think before being called.
Razavi has been very quiet.
Stream is with graphics and hole cards but no commentary.
He shoves from UTG for 1.67 million with two red sevens. Jesse Sylvia calls from the button with AJ, then Nishijima over-shoves from BB for about 3.5 million more. Sylvia thinks and thinks but eventually folds.
On their backs with Sam going for a triple up
Flop 8-7-2
Turn Q
River K, Sam gets rivered and is eliminated in 4th for $153K.
Brazilian Thiago Nishijima is the proud bracelet holder for Event 38 after getting the better of 4 opponents in the extra day's play
Greek player Sotirios Koutoupas (referred to by the table announcer as just "SK" throughout) was the runner-up, with former ME runner-up Jesse Sylvia 3rd and "our" Sam Razavi 4th.
Nishijima is only the third Brazilian player to win a bracelet, following Alexandre Gomes & Andre Akkari.
WSOP40 - $1000 Seniors NLH, 4193 entrants, Day 3 of 3
I was right, this one was another one that failed to finish in it's alloted 3 days.
In fact the whole 9 man final table will be played out on Day 4, with Travis Baker the leader ahead of Stephen Nussrallah & Day 2 leader Jim Hopperstead.
Lying in 8th place is former November Niner and bracelet winner Steve Gee.
WSOP41 - $10K 7 Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or better Championship, 111 players, Day 3 of 3
So close and yet so far to a third British bracelet this year. Stephen Chidwick got to the heads-up match with Max Pescatori but the Italian got the better of him to collect his 4th bracelet overall and second of this series.
Pescatori wins $292K, Chidwick $180K.
WSOP42 - $1500 Extended Play NLH, 1914 entrants, Day 2 of 4
We're down to 115 who have battled through to Day 3 with experienced Ukrainian Yevgeny Timoshenko the overnight leader.
Five of the 115 are GB players, led by Patrick Leonard in 4th spot with Martins Adeniya, David Lu, Pratik Ghate, Howard Smith & Barny Boatman there too.
Antonio Esfandiari is in good shape (lying 2nd), getting his 6th cash this summer to extend his lead in the all-time money list.
WSOP43 - $1000 Super Seniors NLH, 1533 entrants, Day 1 of 3
The inaugural Super Seniors for those over 64 years old was graced by the presence of Doyle Brunson, making his first WSOP appearance of 2015.
Unfortunately Texas Dolly was one of 1280 players knocked out on Day 1, leaving 253 who will return for Day 2.
Henry Hanningan from Morris, Illinois has the biggest stack ahead of fellow Mid-West player Robert Galinson.
A couple of famous names inside the Top 5, Dennis Waterman & Jesse Jackson, but I don't think it's the ex-Minder actor or the former Presidential candidate though.
Some real big poker names are still playing, Dan Harrington & Barry Shulman, along with a solitary Brit, Eric Dalby.
171 will get paid so the bubble will burst a hour or two into Day 2 play.
WSOP44 - $50K Poker Players Championship, 77 entrants so far, Day 1 of 5
With late reg open until the start of Day 2, we could well see a couple more added to the list (Pescatori? Chidwick?) but 77 would be a disappointing number set against last year's 102.
Only 4 players bust all day, and the first of those to go was Kent's Adam Owen. We do have three Brits in the 73 through though, previous winner Matthew Ashton, Elior Sion and Talal Shakerchi.
Others through, well almost anyone you could name whose been in the big events already - Siever, Danzer, two Mizrachis, Duhamel, Seed, Hastings, Negreanu, Mercier etc. etc. etc.
None of the big names rumoured to be making their first appearance of the summer in this event (Ivey, Dwan, Gruissem, Schemion etc.) showed up.
To start today
WSOP45 - $1500 NLH, 3 Day Event
WSOP46 - $3000 PLO 6 Max, 3 Day Event
Less than 2 weeks to the start of the Main Event...
You are doing a great job as always FCHD ........... BUT a rather terrible mistake in nationality has been made, Timoshenko is Ukrainian, if he heard you call him Russian he would pull the same face he did when seeing Lewis quads over Robl quads
Don't know when the update tomorrow will come, I usually put it together about 6:30-8:00 on a Tuesday due to work schedules but I see there is another outage planned tomorrow morning so it may not be up until early evening.
One theory being bandied around is that the longer structures of most tournaments this year has meant more players making Day 2s and playing that rather than buying in to the next days event, but I'm not sure if I go with that.
At lower levels, in comparable events, NLH fields are down slightly, non NLH slightly up which more or less evens itself out.
The WSOP will talk about "total" numbers though, and including the Colossus will make any year-on-year comparison meaningless.
The numbers for the Daily Deepstacks at the Rio and for similar sized events up and down the strip are said to be doing very well this year though.
Sam out 4th in a huge hand. He shoves from UTG for 1.67 million with two red sevens. Jesse Sylvia calls from the button with AJ, then Nishijima over-shoves from BB for about 3.5 million more. Sylvia thinks and thinks but eventually folds. On their backs with Sam going for a triple up, it's a race situation with the Brazilian showing AK off.
Flop 9-8-2
Turn Q
River K
Note to self - check any hand histories make sense before posting them.