Noah Schwartz raised to 4,000 and from his direct left it was Sean Winter who three-bet to 13,200. The action folded to Nick Petrangelo in the small blind and he four-bet to 36,000.
This got Schwartz to fold, but Winter made the call, creating heads up action on .
Both players checked, and did so as well on the turn. The river brought the and Petrangelo checked again. Winter bet 50,700 and Petrangelo called right away.
The flop showed when we saw Mustapha Kanit bet 6,000 from the small blind and Bil Perkins raised it up to 18,000. Kanit made the call and on the turn the hit.
Kanit check-folded to a bet of 25,000 and Kanit showed for a straight and an open ended straight flush draw.
From early position, Daniel Dvoress raised to 4,200. Tall Shakerchi reraised to 10,600 from the next seat in middle position, and then action folded to Bill Perkins in the small blind. Perkins called, and Dvoress called.
The flop was , and Perkins checked. Dvoress also checked, and then Shakerchi bet 16,000. Both Perkins and Dvoress folded, and Shakerchi won the pot.
Mustapha Kanit opened with a raise to 4,000 from middle position, Bill Perkins reraised to 10,000 on the button, and Kanit called. The flop was , and Kanit checked. Perkins bet 11,000, and Kanit gave it up.
After Steve O'Dwyer raised to 3,600 from under the gun plus one, Antonio Esfandiari called out of the big blind to see the flop. Both players checked, and the turn was the . Both checked again, and the river was the . Esfandiari bet a small 3,300, and O'Dwyer folded.
Scott Seiver's $100,000 entry in 2012 didn't work despite the player putting in three days of work. After earning the unwanted title of "bubble boy," Seiver was back in the action the following year and looking to reach the money. After Day 1, he trailed only Philipp Gruissem on the leaderboard, and the final number of entries came in at 59.
With a prize pool over $5.724 million, the top eight spots were planned to pay out. First place was over $2 million, and Seiver found his way at the final table once again with the sixth-best stack. Antonio Esfandiari was eliminated as the "bubble boy" to end Day 2, meaning Seiver, and the others, had locked up at least $228,960 in prize money.
The action at the final table came fast and furious. On just the third hand of the day, the prior year's runner-up, Dan Shak, busted in eighth place. He was quickly followed out the door by Vladimir Troyanovskiy in seventh place and Greg Jensen in sixth place during the same level. Gruissem then busted in fifth place for $400,700 a little over an hour later and four players remained. Seiver had busted both Shak and Gruissem.
David "Doc" Sands maintained his chip lead for quite some time before Seiver finally edged him out with four players left. Then, Sands busted Cary Katz in fourth, and it was a neck-and-neck between Seiver and Sands while Nick Schulman, who finished fourth in 2011, brought up the rear. Eventually, Sands took out Schulman and entered heads-up play with the lead.
Sands quickly extended his lead in the match, but Seiver fought back until a big clash in Level 24 with the blinds at 100,000/200,000/30,000 saw Seiver get lucky and double. It was his pocket nines that were all in preflop against the pocket tens of Sands, but Seiver spiked a nine on the flop to take nearly a 6-1 chip lead. Shortly thereafter, Sands was eliminated in second place and earned over $1.25 million.
Team PokerStars Pro Vanessa Selbst opened for 4,200 from the hijack only to have a short-stacked Igor Kurganov three-bet all in for 24,100 from the button. Action folded back to Selbst, who made a quick call.
Kurganov:
Selbst:
Kurganov was in big trouble, and the flop left him drawing dead to either running hearts or queens. The turn kept the former possibility alive, and wouldn't you know it, the river completed it. With that, Kurganov cracked kings to double.
Nick Petrangelo raised under the gun and was met by a three-bet to 11,200 from Noah Schwartz in the cutoff. Action folded back to Petrangelo, who called, and it was heads-up action to the flop. Petrangelo check-called a bet of 12,000, and then both players checked the turn.
When the completed the board on the river, Petrangelo checked for a third time and then tank-called after Schwartz bet 36,000. Schwartz tabled the for a rivered full house, and it was good as Petrangelo mucked.