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2011 World Series of Poker

Event #38: $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em
Día 2
1234
Información del evento
2011 World Series of Poker
Resultados Finales
Ganador
Mano ganador
qj
Premio
$540,136
Información del evento
Buy-in
$1,500
Bolsa de premios
$2,959,200
Entries
2,192
Información Nivel
Nivel
32
Ciegas
80,000 / 160,000
Ante
20,000
Jugadores vivos 1 / 2,192
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Nivel: 19

Ciegas: 4,000/8,000

Ante: 1,000

Roll Call! (Pt. III)

Jugador Fichas Progreso
Profile photo of Christopher Homan
Christopher Homan
320,000
281,300
281,300
Profile photo of Francis Lynch
Francis Lynch
260,000
203,900
203,900
Profile photo of Ryan Laplante us
Ryan Laplante
255,000
40,000
40,000
$25K Fantasy
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Matthew Lupton
Matthew Lupton
230,000
175,300
175,300
Profile photo of Kwinsee Khoa Tran
Kwinsee Khoa Tran
220,000
35,000
35,000
Profile photo of [Removed:297]
[Removed:297]
200,000
153,500
153,500
Profile photo of Sandeep Pulusani us
Sandeep Pulusani
150,000
18,000
18,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Tay Nguyen us
Tay Nguyen
110,000
71,400
71,400
Profile photo of Renaud Singevin
Renaud Singevin
90,000
66,500
66,500
Profile photo of Andy Phan us
Andy Phan
60,000
14,600
14,600

Roll Call!

With the field now down to less than 54 players, the PokerNews Live Reporting Team are buzzing through the tables to make sure everyone that remains is present and accounted for. Below are all the names and chip counts for tables 364 and 365:

Jugador Fichas Progreso
Profile photo of Jamie Armstrong us
Jamie Armstrong
570,000
105,000
105,000
Profile photo of Gabriel Alarie
Gabriel Alarie
530,000
140,000
140,000
Profile photo of Pim de Goede nl
Pim de Goede
440,000
70,000
70,000
Profile photo of Melanie Weisner us
Melanie Weisner
390,000
285,000
285,000
Profile photo of Arkadiy Tsinis ua
Arkadiy Tsinis
230,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Tad Jurgens
Tad Jurgens
230,000
140,000
140,000
Profile photo of Jeffrey Schnettler
Jeffrey Schnettler
230,000
Profile photo of Robert Cheung ca
Robert Cheung
185,000
4,500
4,500
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Andrew Tai
Andrew Tai
180,000
55,000
55,000
Profile photo of Ryan Snickles us
Ryan Snickles
180,000
149,300
149,300
Profile photo of Jason Tang us
Jason Tang
160,000
Profile photo of Sebastian Ruthenberg de
Sebastian Ruthenberg
155,000
245,000
245,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of
150,000
30,000
30,000
Profile photo of Derrick Yamada us
Derrick Yamada
140,000
96,700
96,700
Profile photo of Joshua Mancuso us
Joshua Mancuso
113,000
87,000
87,000

The Astonishing Adventures of Survivor Man

While the remaining players in the field have been engaging in mental warfare, attacking each other with precise raises and calculated bluffs, Marc Steel has been engaged in an epic battle of his own.

For a period spanning more than four hours, Steel has been grinding a micro-stack of just two or three big blinds. He has accomplished this Herculean feat through a combination of subtle stalling methods, such as asking the dealer pointless procedural questions, along with sheer grit and determination. Steel told PokerNews that his goal has been to reach the next pay jump scheduled at 54th place, and during the last twenty minutes or so, he reached the summit.

This was accomplished over the course of three hands, with the tournament screens showing 58 players remaining and Steele holding just 10,000 chips, good for under two big blinds. In the first hand, half of Steel's stack went into the pot as the big blind, and he nearly received a walk before being raised off by the small blind. In the next hand, he folded his small blind away after the same player raised preflop.

This left Steel with just 2,000 chips on his button, and each successive hand chiseled 500 away in the form of antes. With calls of "Payout!" heard around the Amazon Room, and just a single 500 chip in front of him, Steel watched as the TV screens flashed his magic number: 54 remaining players. He had reached his goal and earned an extra $1,420 for his work.

Steel later told us that "while that kind of money doesn't mean anything to these guys, it means alot to me and my wife," adding "this validates to her why I play the game." With the railbirds and even his opponents celebrating Marc "Survivor Man" Steel's chip-and-a-chair grind, Day 2 of this tournament has provided all the validation Steel will ever need.

Jugador Fichas Progreso
Profile photo of Marc Steel
Marc Steel
500

Tags/etiquetas: Marc Steel

Comer No Good

It appears that the last Australian in the field, Martin Comer, has just been taken out of this tournament by Jamie Armstrong, who now tops the chip counts with 435,000.

Comer committed the last of his chips into the middle pre-flop with {A-Diamonds}{9-Diamonds}, but was unable to improve on the {Q-}{Q-}{2-}{3-}{6-} of Armstrong's pocket jacks. That'll be all she wrote, sports fans.

Jugador Fichas Progreso
Profile photo of Jamie Armstrong us
Jamie Armstrong
465,000
30,000
30,000
Profile photo of Martin Comer au
Martin Comer
Eliminado

Tags/etiquetas: Martin ComerJamie Armstrong.

Michael Doyle's Done & Dusted

All the money was in the middle before the flop between John Snedegar and Michael Doyle; Doyle was at risk with {A-Spades}{3-Clubs} but needed a lot of help against the {5-Spades}{5-Clubs} of John Snedegar.

The flop of {9-Diamonds}{Q-Clubs}{Q-Diamonds} wasn't of any help to Doyle and he had no hope when the {5-Diamonds} appeared on the turn. The river {7-Spades} was just an afterthought.

With that, Doyle bites the dust and Snedegar is now up to 79,000.

Jugador Fichas Progreso
Profile photo of John Snedegar
John Snedegar
79,000
58,700
58,700
Profile photo of Michael Doyle
Michael Doyle
Eliminado

Tags/etiquetas: John SnedegarMichael Doyle

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