186 started the day, 67 left as of now and here are a few more names to disappoint friends, family and backers.
2014 World Series of Poker
Nivel: 16
Ciegas: 1,500/3,000
Ante: 500
They've reached the second break of the day during which they will color up the black T100 chips.
Keeping you in the know about who has no chips.
Rinat Shakirov was all in over an opening raise and Jimmy Fricke made the call in the small blind. The original raiser folded.
Shakirov didn’t have many chips left but he had ![]()
against the ![]()
of Fricke.
The cards ran out ![]()
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and Fricke added another small pike to his stack.
Robert Kuhn didn't waste any time sending another player to the rail. We didn't witness the hand, but Kuhn told us his ![]()
busted another pair of jacks, as he again got it all in preflop for approximately 95,000 and won the race for a second time in just a few minutes.
Another hand was brewing at the table as Jimmy Fricke opened to 5,600 from early position and a player in middle position raised to 13,500. Fricke made the call and checked after a flop of ![]()
![]()
. His opponent also checked and the turn was the
. Fricke led out for 12,000 and his opponent made the call.
The river brought the
and Fricke moved all in. His opponent called, tabling ![]()
. They were not even close to good, though as Fricke turned over ![]()
for quads and an elimination.
As we passed his table Nachman Berlin called out to this reporter, "Hey yo. Remember my name, I'm going to win this."
With his stack at the moment he has some work to do yet, but he certainly is a confident fella that… Ummm.
No, it's gone.
We caught up with Andrew Lichtenberger during a break in last night's Day 1 of the $1k NLHE. He tells us what he plans on playing and what he plans on skipping.
We arrived at the table as two players were departing and Dale Beaudoin was stacking their chips, knocking them both out in the same hand with ![]()
to increase his lead in the tournament.
“I was oh-for-five with ace-king before that hand.” He told this reporter. Make that 1-for-6 and a mound of chips.
Robert Kuhn opened from under the gun. It folded around to the big blind who shoved all in and Kuhn made the call. Kuhn had ![]()
and needed to improve against the ![]()
of his opponent.
The flop was ![]()
![]()
and Kuhn's opponent was at risk and looking for one of two outs or two runners. The board ran out ![]()
though and Kuhn is over the century mark.