The 2014 World Series of Poker is well underway at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, but that's not the only place you can get your WSOP fix. From June 1-15, grinders in Nevada will be able to participate in the WSOP.com Online Championship Series.
The 15-event WSOP.com Online Championship Series festival features more than $550,000 in combined guarantees, and the winners of the first 14 events will all receive an entry into the $200,000 guarantee WSOP Online Championship Main Event on Sunday, June 15.
Tonight's event is a $109 No-Limit Hold'em 6-Max Reentry with a $20,000 guaranteed prize pool. The tournament begins about one hour from now, so don’t miss out!
Here's a look at the remaining events on the WSOPOC schedule:
Matt Glantz's tournament is done and dusted but at least he still has time to buy into the Seven-Card Stud Hi-Low 8-or Better if he hurries over to the registration desk.
Doing the polar opposite of Glantz is Roberto Romanello who is sitting pretty with 36,000. Romanello has a World Poker Tour and European Poker Tour title to his name and it would mean the world to him if he could complete his Triple Crown here in this event.
All tables in the red section are now empty and the field has been almost halved in less than six levels of play. At this speed we may get to the final table before the end of day 1. Just kidding.
Besides Rumen Nanev and Grudi Grudev, we also have bracelet winner Simeon Naydenov in today's field but he will have to proceed without his two countryman as they just busted. Nanev three-bet on the button to 1,800 and Tristan Wade as initial raiser on the cutoff moved all in with the superior stack.
Nanev called with the and had a flip versus . The board ran out and Wade is now among the bigger stacks in the remaining field. Almost at the same time, Timo Pfuetzenreuter, who was on the final table of the EPT Vienna this year along with Nanev, busted as well.
Kristijonas Andrulis hasn't really played much live poker lately, he used to be a regular on the European Poker Tour but has been silent the last few months. Out of the blue, there was a big stack in the bronze section and sure enough it was the charismatic Lithuanian. At the very moment, I saw him raise to 650 from early position and a short stack moved all in for 3,425. All other players folded and Andrulis made the call.
Andrulis:
Opponent:
The board ran out and the short stack doubled up. When we asked the Lithuanian how he got all the chips, he joked back "Oh come on, you see how bad I run." Well, he is only the chip leader at the moment.
In the previous update, we labelled Kristijonas Andrulis as our chip leader but that wasn't correct or at least not for long. Sean Jazayeri just clinched another pot with a simple continuation bet and keeps the hot run going.
Aaron Massey was all-in for around 3,700 after a preflop raising war with David "Doc" Sands, who was seated in the small blind.
Sands flipped over and Massey the . The flop was relatively safe for Sands, although it did give Massey a gutshot straight draw. The was as blank as it could be in this hand, as was the on the river. Game over for Massey.
Massey collected his belongings before heading out of the tournament area on a mobility scooter as he is suffering from a hernia and playing through the pain.