Kyle Montgomery's early position raise was met with a three-bet from Chris Sandrock on the button. Montgomery called to see the flop, and announced all-in for his remaining 575,000 chips. Sandrock called, and both hands were turned over.
Kyle Montgomery:
Chris Sandrock:
Sandrock's pair of kings left Montgomery behind, and the turn and river ended his run in 10th place.
Tommy Le and Anderson Ireland were heads up to the flop, and Le check-called Ireland's bet to see the turn. Ireland sent almost all of his chips into the middle to bet the pot, and Le raised the rest to put Ireland at risk.
Anderson Ireland:
Tommy Le:
Ireland showed a queen-high straight, but was trailing as Le turned over his king-high straight. The river completed the board, ending Ireland's run in 9th place.
As players were leaving the table for a break, Jeremy Ausmus and Arthur Morris were playing one last big pot. Ausmus bet 200,000 on the flop, only to see Morris raise the pot to 575,000. Ausmus the re-raised for all of his chips, and Morris eventually called the bet total of 2,340,000 to put Ausmus at risk.
Jeremy Ausmus:
Arthur Morris:
Ausmus was ahead with a set of sevens, and stayed ahead after the turn and river for a massive double up while leaving Morris short.
In a three-way limped pot to the flop, Jeremy Ausmus checked in the small blind and Ashly Butler jammed for 190,000 in the big blind. Eli Elezra on the button called and Ausmus quickly folded.
Ashly Butler:
Eli Elezra:
Elezra was hoping for a four while Butler didn't want to see any more club. The turn was a blank but the river gave Elezra the superior hand. Butler vaulted out of his seat in disgust, went over to see some friends on the rail before wishing all opponents good luck. He takes home $71,242 for his 8th place finish.
Tommy Le raised to 150,000 and was called only by Arthur Morris on the button. On a flop of , Le bet 225,000 and Morris then jammed for 1,080,000 for Le to snap-call.
Arthur Morris:
Tommy Le:
"I have two pair and an open-ender again," Morris announced before he rolled over the cards. He was ahead against the aces and nut flush draw but the turn counterfeited his two pair. With plenty of outs available, Morris then also bricked the river and departed in 7th place for $93,406.
This has been the highest score on the live poker circuit, which he had previously mentioned with seven players remaining.
Tommy Le and Chris Sandrock had checked the flop before action on the turn. Le bet 300,000, and Sandrock raised the pot to 1,000,000. Le asked for a count of Sandrock's stack before calling, and the river completed the board. Both players checked and Sandrock revealed for two pair, but Le turned over for a better two pair and a pot to swing the chip lead.
The 2021 World Series of Poker is one step closer to crowning the winner of a coveted gold bracelet. Out of a field of 344 total entries, only five players remain in Event #45: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship and they have already locked up a decent portion of the $3,207,800 prize pool.
All contenders have locked up a payday of $168,689 but the eyes will be set on the gold bracelet and top prize of $746,477 that comes along with it. Best positioned to claim his second gold bracelet is California's Tommy Le, who already has seven previous final tables appearances and one unofficial final table finish in WSOP PLO tournaments to his name. Le notched up the final elimination of the night when he sent Eli Elezra to the rail and bagged up 7,240,000 in chips.
Le's sole WSOP win so far came in this very event back in 2017 after he defeated a 428-entry strong field and took home the top prize of $938,732. He finished second to Josh Arieh in Event #39: $1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha (8-Handed) just five days ago and now leads the final five in pursuit of more glory.
Second in chips is Russia's Artem Maksimov, who moved to the United States six years ago. Maksimov will return with a stack of 5,080,000 while casino owner Chris Sandrock is third in chips with 3,200,000. The line-up for the final day also includes Jordan Spurlin and Jeremy Ausmus, the latter of who is seeking his third WSOP gold bracelet.
Seat Assignments Final Day Event #45: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship
Seat
Player
Country
Chip Count
1
Artem Maksimov
Russia
5,080,000
2
Tommy Le
United States
7,240,000
3
Jeremy Ausmus
United States
2,235,000
4
Chris Sandrock
United States
3,200,000
5
Jordan Spurlin
United States
2,885,000
Among those to bust on the penultimate tournament day were the WSOP bracelet winners Mike Matusow, Dylan Linde, Daniel Zack, and Anderson Ireland. Arthur Morris recorded his best score on the live poker circuit and departed in seventh place.
There are 10:29 remaining at blinds of 50,000/100,000 with a big blind ante of 100,000.
The final day is scheduled to recommence at 4:00 p.m. local time on the mothership of the Amazon Room. PokerGO will be streaming the conclusion on a delay of one hour and the PokerNews updates will be published in real-time based on showdowns only.
The Action of the Day
Only 18 contenders returned to their seats at 2:00 p.m. local time and it didn't take long for the field to get whittled down to the final two tables. An early double-up through Arthur Morris propelled Tommy Le among the bigger stacks and he then knocked out Mike Matusow when he rivered the nut flush against the flopped nut straight.
Mike Krasienko ran a suited ace-king combo into the aces of Chris Sandrock and Leonid Yanovski had his aces cracked by Daniel Zack. Shortly after, Dylan Linde lost the remainder of his short stack before Zack's demise ended in 13th place. Start-of-the-day chip leader Jonathan Witz never got anything going and ultimately fell prior to the final table.
The same fate also awaited Michael Heritsch and Kyle Montgomery, who departed in the blink of an eye. Down to the final nine, Le held the lead ahead of Sandrock and was responsible for the first knockout after he sent Anderson Ireland to the rail.
What followed was a roller coaster ride for several finalists as Sandrock was involved in most of the action. Ashly Butler never recovered from an all-in contest with Morris and had to settle for 8th place before Morris' fortune ran out against Le. Jeremy Ausmus escaped from elimination and tripled up before four-time WSOP bracelet winner Eli Elezra missed a straight draw against the bottom set of Le to become the final casualty of the night.
Stay tuned right here on PokerNews for the conclusion of Event #45: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Championship.