Jogue com responsabilidade. O jogo pode causar dependência.

18+

2018 World Series of Poker

Event #56: $10,000 Razz Championship
Dias: 2
Event Info

2018 World Series of Poker

Resultados Finais
Campeão
Mão Vencedora
7x5x4x3x2x
Premiação
$309,220
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Premiação
$1,118,600
Entries
119
Informações do Nível
Nível
32
Limites
150,000 / 300,000
Ante
30,000

End-of-Day Chip Counts

Nível 20 : 10,000/20,000, 2,000 ante

The remaining 13 players have bagged up and will return at 2 p.m. local time on separate tables in the Brasilia room to try and play down to a winner.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Profile photo of Calvin Anderson us
Calvin Anderson
962,000
-8,000
-8,000
WSOP 5X Winner
Profile photo of John Hennigan us
John Hennigan
841,000
1,000
1,000
WSOP 7X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Profile photo of Alex Balandin us
Alex Balandin
833,000
-7,000
-7,000
Profile photo of Julien Martini fr
Julien Martini
712,000
WSOP 4X Winner
Profile photo of Mike Leah ca
Mike Leah
594,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Dzmitry Urbanovich pl
Dzmitry Urbanovich
592,000
32,000
32,000
Profile photo of Jerry Wong us
Jerry Wong
529,000
-1,000
-1,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Frank Kassela us
Frank Kassela
252,000
-28,000
-28,000
WSOP 3X Winner
Profile photo of Allen Kessler us
Allen Kessler
238,000
-12,000
-12,000
Profile photo of Paul Volpe us
Paul Volpe
222,000
67,000
67,000
WSOP 3X Winner
Profile photo of Ismael Bojang de
Ismael Bojang
99,000
-1,000
-1,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Ted Forrest us
Ted Forrest
48,000
27,000
27,000
WSOP 6X Winner
Profile photo of Eric Rodawig us
Eric Rodawig
31,000
WSOP 1X Winner

Calvin Anderson Leads Last 13 in Stacked Line-Up of Event #56: $10,000 Razz Championship

Nível 20 : 10,000/20,000, 2,000 ante
Calvin Anderson
Calvin Anderson

Day 2 of the 2018 World Series of Poker Event #56: $10,000 Razz Championship is in the books and just 13 hopefuls are still in contention for the top prize of $309,220 and the coveted gold bracelet that comes along with it. The registration remained open until the cards got back in the air and seven further entries boosted the field to 119 in total, creating a prize pool of $1,118,600.za

Best-positioned to join the WSOP bracelet winner's circle once more is Calvin Anderson with 962,000 followed by John "World" Hennigan (841,000) and Alex Balandin (833,000). Anderson has one bracelet to his name already while Hennigan won his 5th bracelet earlier this summer. Julien Martini also bagged up a big stack with 712,000 and the Frenchman is making a name for himself at the 2018 WSOP with one victory in Event #4: $1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better and another four cashes to date.

The other survivors for Day 3 include Mike Leah (594,000), Dzmitry Urbanovich (592,000), Jerry Wong (529,000), Frank Kassela (252,000), Allen Kessler (238,000) and Paul Volpe (222,000). The three shortest stacks that will be under immediate pressure upon restart of level 21 with limits of 12,000/24,000 and an ante of 3,000 are Ismael Bojang (99,000), Ted Forrest (48,000) and Eric Rodawig (31,000).

All remaining 13 hopefuls have $17,706 locked up thus far and will return to the feature tables of the Brasilia room on Friday, June 29, 2018, as of 2 p.m. in order to try and play down to a champion. The PokerCentral Twitch stream will run on a security delay of 30 minutes and the PokerNews live reporting team will be there to provide all the action.

Seat Assignments for Day 3

SeatTable 1Chip CountBig BetsTable 2Chip CountBig Bets
1Mike Leah594,00025Ted Forrest48,0002
2John Hennigan841,00035Ismael Bojang99,0004
3Calvin Anderson962,00040Jerry Wong529,00022
4Allen Kessler238,00010Alex Balandin833,00035
5Eric Rodawig31,0001Dzmitry Urbanovich592,00025
6      
7Julien Martini712,00030Frank Kassela252,00011
8Paul Volpe222,0009   

Action of the Day

Among those to bust within the first two levels of the day were Ryan Riess, Event #50: $1,500 Razz champion Jay Kwon, Anthony Zinno and Shaun Deeb. They were followed by Dan Zack, James Woods, Phil Hellmuth, Robert Mizrachi, Chris Klodnicki and Andre Akkari, all who were felted before the money.

Woods lost most of his chips after being forced out of a pot by eventual chip leader Calvin Anderson and failed to get there against the seven-six of Dzmitry Urbanovich. Anderson sent Hellmuth to the rail when he got there with a nine-five on his last card, and Akkari also fell victim to the hot run of Anderson.

On the money bubble, it was 2017 WSOP Player of the Year Chris Ferguson that became the last player to leave empty-handed. Within two hands, Julien Martini took all of Ferguson's remaining chips and that ensured a payday of $15,256 to all remaining 18 players. Daniel Ospina and Scott Seiver became the first two casualties, and defending champion James Obst bowed out in 16th place after having previously escaped from elimination several times.

Cary Katz grinded his short stack for quite some time and ended up in 15th place, while Per Hildebrand bowed out in the final level of the night to make the pay jump and take home $17,706.

Whether or not a winner will be crowned within the 10 levels of one hour each on Day 3 or an extra day will be required remains to be seen, as the field size eclipsed the one from 2017 by 22 entries. Stay tuned and check back tomorrow to find out will end up a step closer to glory in Las Vegas.

Tags: Alex BalandinAllen KesslerAndre AkkariAnthony ZinnoCalvin AndersonCary KatzChris FergusonChris KlodnickiDan ZackDaniel OspinaDzmitry UrbanovichEric RodawigFrank KasselaIsmael BojangJames ObstJames WoodsJay KwonJerry WongJulien MartiniMike LeahPaul VolpePer HildebrandPhil HellmuthRobert MizrachiRyan RiessScott SeiverShaun DeebTed Forrest

Event #56: $10,000 Razz Championship

Dia 2 Terminado