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2014 World Series of Poker

Event #65: $10,000 Main Event
Event Info

2014 World Series of Poker

Resultados Finais
Campeão
Mão Vencedora
1010
Premiação
$10,000,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Entries
6,683
Informações do Nível
Nível
41
Blinds
800,000 / 1,600,000
Ante
200,000

Sabat Knocks Out Bonyadi

Nível 20 : 6,000/12,000, 2,000 ante
Farzad Bonyadi
Farzad Bonyadi

Farzad Bonyadi, winner of three World Series of Poker bracelets and almost $4 million in career earnings, has just been knocked out by Eddy Sabat.

Sabat raised from early position to 25,000 and the action folded to Bonyadi in the big blind. Bonyadi moved all in for 189,000 and Sabat went into the tank for a bit.

"This may be optimistic," Sabat said right before he put in the call.

Sabat: {A-Diamonds}{J-Spades}
Bonyadi: {6-Hearts}{6-Clubs}

The board ran out {A-Clubs}{2-Clubs}{3-Diamonds}{5-Spades}{10-Hearts} and Bonyadi was knocked out.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Eddy Sabat us
Eddy Sabat
1,100,000 55,000
Farzad Bonyadi us
Farzad Bonyadi
WSOP 4X Winner
Eliminado

Tags: Eddy SabatFarzad Bonyadi

Loeser Knocks Out Tedeschi

Nível 20 : 6,000/12,000, 2,000 ante
Manig Loeser
Manig Loeser

In a clash similar to the World Cup quarter finals Germany just knocked out France. A player raised to 27,000 and Manig Loeser, from Germany, three-bet to 70,000. The action folded to Paul Tedeschi and he four-bet to 148,000.

The action then folded back to Loeser who moved all in and Tedeschi called off for a total of 430,000 chips. The stacks were pretty even and Loeser called to put both of their dreams at risk.

Loeser: {Q-Spades}{Q-Clubs}
Tedeschi: {A-Diamonds}{K-Diamonds}

The flop brought {Q-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds}{9-Hearts} to give Loeser a set, but Tedeschi still had outs as he was looking to make a flush. The turn was the {3-Hearts} and the river the {10-Spades} knocking Tedeschi out. Loeser, who started the day with 442,000 chips, now sits on a very comfortable stack.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Manig Loeser de
Manig Loeser
WSOP 2X Winner
985,000 543,000
Paul Tedeschi fr
Paul Tedeschi
Eliminado

Tags: Manig LoeserPaul Tedeschi

Aces For Lee

Nível 20 : 6,000/12,000, 2,000 ante
Darlene Lee
Darlene Lee

Darlene Lee's tournament has been extremely interesting to follow as she's one of the few remaining ladies in the field. On Day 3 Lee lost a huge pot with an ace-high flush against a straight flush, and then she lost aces to ace-king, but still managed to keep a good stack. Just now Lee's aces held up and we saw her climb back up to around the million-chip mark.

After unknown action Lee ended up moving all in while Pierre Canali had put in a big raise to 220,000. At this point Geoffrey Rasmussen was already all in, and when Canali folded the showdown was heads up.

Lee: {A-Hearts}{A-Clubs}
Rasmussen: {2-Hearts}{2-Spades}

The board ran out {9-Spades}{4-Spades}{5-Spades}{7-Diamonds}{4-Hearts} and Lee's ace held up to knock Rasmussen out. Canali was left with little chips and he's going to look to rebuild his stack after taking a big hit.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Darlene Lee ca
Darlene Lee
970,000 330,000
Pierre Canali fr
Pierre Canali
310,000 -277,000
Geoffrey Rasmussen us
Geoffrey Rasmussen
Eliminado

Tags: Darlene LeeGeoffrey RasmussenPierre Canali

Keranen Jumps to the Top

Nível 20 : 6,000/12,000, 2,000 ante
Kyle Keranen
Kyle Keranen
kai swell@PokerNews 3.106million

After heading over to double check Kyle Keranen's chip stack, we saw that it amounted to 3,041,000 - good enough for the chip leader torch to be passed from Matthew Haugen to Keranen.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Kyle Keranen us
Kyle Keranen
3,041,000 741,000

Tags: Kyle KeranenMatthew Haugen

Day 2a/b Chip Leader Eliminated

Nível 20 : 6,000/12,000, 2,000 ante
Tim Stansifer
Tim Stansifer

Back on Day 2a/b, Tim Stansifer led the roughly 700 survivors with a chip stack 481,500. That allowed him to make a deep run in the Main Event, but it just came to an end here on Day 5.

It happened when Stansifer got his short stack of 130,000 or so all in preflop against Michael Palo.

Stansifer: {a-Hearts}{5-Diamonds}
Palo: {a-Diamonds}{9-Spades}

Stansifer had a kicker issue, and while he paired it on the {5-Clubs}{6-Hearts}{9-Clubs} flop, Palo also paired his nine to maintain the lead. Neither the {6-Diamonds} turn nor {8-Clubs} river helped Stansifer, and he took his leave in 289th place for $33,734.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Michael Palo us
Michael Palo
715,000 145,000
Tim Stansifer us
Tim Stansifer
Eliminado

Tags: Michael PaloTim Stansifer

High Hopes for Haugen; Benger, Smith in Contention for Lead on Day 5

Matthew Haugen holds the lead with 291 players left.
Matthew Haugen holds the lead with 291 players left.

Welcome to Day 5 of the planet's most prestigious poker tournament, the Main Event of the 2014 World Series of Poker here at the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino.

The starting field of 6,683 has been whittled down to 291 after 19 long levels of no-limit hold'em, and Florida's Matthew Haugen sits atop the chip counts with a massive stack of 2,808,000, which will be good for 230 big blinds at the start of play. Haugen is no stranger to deep runs in events sporting huge fields, as he navigated through a sea of nearly 8,000 runners to finish 18th in Event #51: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em for a score of $62,726. This time, the stakes are far higher for the Jacksonville native, as he has pole position in the race for a first prize of $10 million.

Despite Haugen holding a chip lead of nearly 500,000 over second-place Zach Jiganti, plenty of thoroughbreds will be breathing down his neck if they can continue to run hot as Day 5 dawns. Canada's Griffin "Flush_Entity" Benger bagged 2,329,000 to end Day 4, good for third place, and Dan Smith (2,229,000), Farid Jattin (2,122,000), and Brian Hastings (2,079,000) also posted stacks north of 2 million. Numerous other dangerous players lurk with stacks, including Martin Jacobson (1,594,000), Andrey Zaichenko (1,484,000), Matt Waxman (1,453,000), and Isaac Baron (1,275,000). Mark Newhouse, meanwhile, will return with 1,301,000 to try to notch an incredible back-to-back November Nine appearance.

The pressure intensifies and the stakes will continue to climb as play begins at Level 20 (6,000/12,000/2,000) and players bluff, value-bet, squeeze, and make tough folds to position themselves for the final two days of play in this year's WSOP. Play is set to begin at noon local time here in Las Vegas, so don't miss a single update as the PokerNews live reporting team catches the beats, bluffs, and big pots that will determine who has a shot at fame and fortune after five more grueling two-hour levels of play here on Day 5.

Tags: Matthew Haugen