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2014 World Series of Poker

Event #12: $1,500 Pot-Limit Hold'em
Dias: 1
Event Info

2014 World Series of Poker

Resultados Finais
Campeão
Mão Vencedora
j3
Premiação
$169,225
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Entries
557
Informações do Nível
Nível
23
Blinds
12,000 / 24,000
Ante
0

David Martirosyan Wins Massive Pots Late to Claim Day 1 Chip Lead

Nível 10 : 500/1,000, 0 ante
David Martirosyan
David Martirosyan

Day 1 of the $1,500 Pot-Limit Hold’em event is completed and what a fantastic day of poker it was. By the time registration closed there were 557 player who had bought in. Fast forward to the end of the tenth level of play and only 69 of those had chips that they needed to bag up.

One man who has chips aplenty is Russia’s David Martirosyan who had the welcomed problem of figuring out how to cram 119,500 chips into his overnight chip bag.

Martirosyan first came to our attention during the last level of the night when he made a big lay down that ultimately saved his tournament life. Jesse Yaginuma raised to 2,000 from the cutoff, Martirosyan three-bet to 6,000 from the small blind and Yaginuma called.

The flop came down {5-Diamonds}{6-Clubs}{6-Diamonds} and Martirosyan led for 5,000 and Yaginuma called. Martirosyan fired again on the {9-Clubs} turn, making it 11,500 to play. Again, Yaginuma called. The river was the {A-Diamonds} and Martirosyan tapped the table and checked only to see Yaginuma move all-in.

Martirosyan went deep into the tank for several minutes before folding his hand. He would later inform us that he “made a big fold.”

As play was drawing to a close, Martirosyan doubled through Yaginuma when the chips went into the middle of a {7-Hearts}{8-Clubs}{4-Hearts} flop, Martirosyan holding {9-Spades}{9-Diamonds} and Yaginuma {6-Hearts}{6-Clubs}. A {6-Spades} on the turn saw Martirosyan fall way behind but a {10-Clubs} spiked on the river to gift him a straight and the double up was complete.

A couple of hands later he got his stack in with {Q-Spades}{Q-Diamonds} and ran into the {A-Spades}{A-Diamonds} of Shankar Pillai. Again the turn came to Martirosyan’s rescue as he hit the {Q-Hearts} to improve to a set. That hand pushed him to 95,000 and he added an additional 20,000 before play ended for the night.

Martirosyan’s nearest rival ended Day 1 only 1,900 chips behind him. Matt Damadeo was down to 2,550 during the early levels, but quadrupled up in a crazy four-way all-in. Damadeo took full advantage of his new chips and ended with 117,500.

Joining Martirosyan and Damadeo on Day 2 are some of poker’s most talented players. Joseph Cheong (67,200), Jesse Yaginuma (52,500), Darryll Fish (49,500), Phil Collins (39,700), David Peters (31,400), Phil Ivey (31,300), reigning world champion Ryan Riess (27,700), Keven Stammen (20,000) and Marvin Rettenmaier are all still in the hunt for the $169,225 first place prize and the coveted gold bracelet.

Play resumes at 1p.m Las Vegas time and the money bubble should burst during the first level of play because only 69 players are returning and 63 of those get paid.

Lock your browsers to PokerNews.com and return to our Live Reporting pages on Wednesday at 1 p.m. as we continue our coverage of Event #12 of the 2014 World Series of Poker.

Tags: David Martirosyan

Grinder is Out

Nível 7 : 200/400, 0 ante
Michael Mizrachi
Michael Mizrachi

A short-stacked Michael Mizrachi raised to 1,000 from late position and another short player potted to 3,000 and Mizrachi called. The flop was {6-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds}{7-Clubs} and Mizrachi threw his last 600 in the middle and his opponent called.

Mizrachi tabled {k-Hearts}{j-Hearts} versus the {5-Clubs}{5-Spades} of his opponent and he couldn't hit an over, as the board ran out clean. Mizrachi had apparently registered during dinner break and could not run his short stack up.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Michael Mizrachi us
Michael Mizrachi
WSOP 5X Winner
Eliminado

Tags: Michael Mizrachi

Defending Main Event Champ Stacking Chips

Nível 6 : 150/300, 0 ante
Ryan Riess
Ryan Riess

We caught up with Ryan Riess as he was stacking chips that he had just won. He has steadily chipped up since being moved to the blue section and his stack is large.

"I may late rege the deuce to seven if I bust here," he mentioned to this reporter earlier. For the time being, at least, he may not have to worry about that, as he may very well be our chip leader.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Ryan Riess us
Ryan Riess
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 1X Winner
43,000 36,750

Tags: Ryan Riess

Thinking Poker Podcast Episode #81: WSOP Preparation

Nível 6 : 150/300, 0 ante
WSOP
WSOP

On Episode 81 of the Thinking Poker Podcast, Nate and Andrew discuss strategies for the World Series of Poker that will assist you both on and off of the felt. They also break down a hand from Nitcast favorite Gareth Chantler and another from the Sunday Million.

You can subscribe to the entire iBus Media Network on iTunes here, or you can access the RSS feed here. The PokerNews family of podcasts is now available on Stitcher.

Tags: Thinking Poker Podcast

PokerNews Podcast Episode #220: Litigating for Rolls feat. Vanessa Selbst

Nível 4 : 75/150, 0 ante
Vanessa Selbst with her gold bracelet
Vanessa Selbst with her gold bracelet

Vanessa Selbst, winner of Event #2: $25,000 Mixed-Max No-Limit Hold'em and her third World Series of Poker gold bracelet, joins the show to talk about her heads-up matches, the Twitter beef with Jason Mo, and her two small dogs. Rich, Donnie, and Jason then take a look at all of the recent bracelet winners and dissect the idea of a $20 million guarantee tournament.

You can subscribe to the entire iBus Media Network on iTunes here, or you can access the RSS feed here. The PokerNews family of podcasts is now available on Stitcher.

Tags: PokerNews PodcastVanessa Selbst

The Pot's the Limit

Welcome back to the 2014 World Series of Poker. Starting off the second week of action today will be a different variation of hold’em — pot-limit. Perhaps the “red-headed stepchild” to its sexier stepbrother no-limit, pot-limit makes for an interesting dynamic and a need for at least some shift in strategy, especially preflop. Either way, the field is expected to be large based on the $1,500 entry fee.

Last year, this event drew 535 players and, after three days of play, Lev Rofman defeated Allen Cunningham heads up to take home $166,136. In other words, regardless of the variation, it is likely that a small entry fee will lead to a six-figure payday for someone.

Besides Cunningham, other notables to cash in this event last year included Eric Crain (6th), Blake Purvis (17th), Jason Mercier (27th), Adam Geyer (29th), Matt Stout (42nd), and Nick Jivkov (43rd). We will keep an eye out for them today and other notable “bracelet hunters” looking to make a deep run.

If the first week's events are any indication, expect a field exceeding last year’s and expect the summer grinders to show up for this one, as well.

Action will kick off today at 12 noon local time. Join us then as we bring you all the action from Day 1 of the summer's first foray into pot-limit… hold’em, that is.