Less than five minutes after coming back from the break, James Worth got his last ten big blinds in from the button, which was called by Lakhov.
Alexander Lakhov:
James Worth:
Worth was the player who needed to hit as they went to the flop and it came . It was a fantastic flop for Lakhov and Worth needed running cards to turn the hand, and the tournament, around.
The sealed the deal and river completed the board. Alexander Lakhov will take 654,000 through to the final table tomorrow when Day 3 resumes at noon.
There have been a bunch of small pots take place over the last ten minutes and Dylan Linde has narrowed Nguyen's lead on him.
The most recent pot began with a call by Linde and a check by Nguyen, taking them to a flop.
After Nguyen checked, Linde bet 16,000 and Nguyen came along.
The turn paired the top card and saw both players check and the dealer put a on the river. Nguyen checked for a third time but folded when Linde bet 22,000 into the pot.
Dylan Linde had pulled into the lead in the last couple of hands and going into a new blind level, meant there were only 33 big blinds in play. It was therefore not surprising to see an all-in and a call soon after the level went up. Linde was the one who shoved and Phong Nguyen made the call.
Dylan Linde
Phong Nguyen
The board came and a pair of tens for Linde was enough to win the hand and the table. Linde will take 668,000 through to Day 3 tomorrow.
After more than ten hours of play, Day 2 of Event #39: $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em Shootout has come to a conclusion with ten players going through to the final table tomorrow at noon local time, Thursday, June 21. They will all be vying for that first-place prize of $236,498 and the much lusted after WSOP gold bracelet. Anthony Reategui takes the narrow chip lead for today with 672,500 in chips.
Reategui is no stranger to the shootout format as he finished in seventh place in the $3,000 No-Limit Hold’em Shootout less than three weeks ago. Reategui actually won his only WSOP bracelet in this event in 2005 for $269,100 and in 2016 he managed to win his first table during the $1,500 Shootout. Reategui was actually the first of the day to conquer his table.
Final Table Seat Draw
Room
Table
Seat
Player
Country
Chip Count
Big Blinds
Amazon
FT
1
Royce Matheson
United States
668,000
111
Amazon
FT
2
Bas de Laat
Netherlands
661,000
110
Amazon
FT
3
Alexander Lakhov
Russia
654,000
109
Amazon
FT
4
Dylan Linde
United States
668,000
111
Amazon
FT
5
Young Phan
United States
670,000
112
Amazon
FT
6
Anthony Reategui
United States
672,500
112
Amazon
FT
7
Preston Lee
United States
656,000
109
Amazon
FT
8
Endrit Geci
United Kingdom
663,500
111
Amazon
FT
9
Corey Dodd
United States
664,500
111
Amazon
FT
10
Jesse Kertland
United States
662,500
110
Second to make it through was Endrit Geci, the Brit bagged 663,500 after beating Richard Alati. Geci got lucky though as he hit the case six he needed on the turn. This is Geci’s first WSOP cash and he will be looking to make it a great one.
Next to go home knowing he made it through to the final table was Bas de Laat. The Dutchman living in Malta took care of Zachary Smiley heads-up when his ace-four beat the pocket queens of Smiley. Jesse Kertland took Raghav Bansal out when he hit his two pair on the turn. This will be Kertland’s second WSOP cash this summer after having finished in 49th place during the Casino Employees Event. Corey Dodd has just earned his biggest live tournament cash ever and will be trying to improve on that result.
Royce Matheson eliminated double bracelet winner Steven Wolansky to advance at his table. He will attempt to make his fourth cash of the summer one to go into the history books. 32-year old poker professional Preston Lee will be almost quadrupling his lifetime WSOP cashes with the $15,180 that he is guaranteed for taking a seat at the final table. Young Phan already had a WSOP Circuit ring but will be looking to add to his jewelry collection by winning the bracelet tomorrow.
Alexander Lakhov’s table was moved to the feature table after the first break and almost ten hours later, he finally managed to come out as the sole survivor. Lakhov also has a WSOP Circuit Ring in his possession and several other big tournament wins. But the missing piece is that bracelet and he will be trying his best to win it.
Last but definitely not least, Dylan Linde finally got the better of his opponent Phong Nguyen. Four and a half hours after Reategui made it through, Linde rivered a ten for the win, having Nguyen covered by about 3 big blinds. Linde will be aiming to get his first bracelet win here in the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino.
This is what they’re playing for:
Place
Prize
1
$236,498
2
$146,146
3
$105,307
4
$76,829
5
$56,763
6
$42,476
7
$32,198
8
$24,728
9
$19,245
10
$15,180
Unfortunately, not everyone was lucky enough to make it through. Last year’s runner-up Thomas Boivin, 888poker ambassador Martin Jacobson, reigning WSOP Main Event Champion Scott Blumstein, Phil Hellmuth, Rep Porter, Philip Tom, Justin Liberto, Vlad Darie, Georgios Sotiropoulos, Tom Hall, Demosthenes Kiriopoulos, Arkadiy Tsinis, Jesse Sylvia, Matthew Waxman, William Kakon, and many others all cashed for $5,227 but no more.
The final table players will return at noon local time to the Amazon room to play down to a winner. Play will continue with a small blind of 3,000, big blind of 6,000 and a running ante of 1,000 and, logically, everyone will start with about the same stack. Levels will last 40-minutes throughout the day with a 15-minute break after every three levels. A 60-minute dinner break is scheduled to take place after the 9th level.
The PokerNews live reporting team will be there when the first card is dealt until the final all-in has been won, so make sure to come back tomorrow to see who will win this shootout!