Super High Roller Bowl Final Table Set: Kempe Leads, Seidel and Hellmuth Shortest

Rainer Kempe

The 2016 Super High Roller Bowl played down to seven players remaining and into the money at the ARIA Resort & Casino in Las Vegas on Tuesday.

When play resumes at 3 p.m. local time Wednesday, German upstart Rainer Kempe will bring more than a third of the chips in play and a healthy lead in with him, after finding himself on the right end of a set-over-set situation with Dan Smith during eight-handed play.

Smith went on to bubble the money soon after.

Super High Roller Bowl Final Table

SeatPlayerChips
1Phil Hellmuth905,000
2Matt Berkey1,205,000
3Rainer Kempe5,545,000
4Bryn Kenney2,085,000
5Fedor Holz2,190,000
6Erik Seidel1,120,000
7Dan Shak1,650,000

The day began with 16 players and Matt Berkey enjoying a healthy lead. Tom Marchese had handed Berkey the chips with a big bluff on Monday, and he was the first to exit the big stage on Tuesday, losing a 60-40 flip to Jason Mercier.

Fedor Holz then busted Las Vegas high roller regular Dan Perper, and the field combined at the final two tables.

Phil Galfond, was the next to go, again a victim of Mercier, before the fun-loving Bill Perkins ran a dominated ace into Smith.

Phil Laak lost most of his chips to hedge fund manager Dan Shak when Shak cracked his queens, getting it in with an ace-high flush draw and finding an ace on the river. Laak said goodbye soon after, with Shak getting the better of him once again.

Berkey limp-called a Ben Lamb shove and outdrew him to make it ten handed and Smith took over the chip lead when he busted Andrew Robl to leave nine players remaining.

They still played at two tables, drawing every 20 minutes to send a player from the five-handed table over to the short-handed affair, and eventually went hand for hand to avoid the players stalling on the final-table bubble.

Soon after that, Mercier found himself on the wrong end of a classic cooler, running kings into Bryn Kenney's aces to set up the final eight and put the players on the stone money bubble.

Thanks to that hand, Kenney took a slight lead over Smith into the final table, while a very talkative Phil Hellmuth and fellow poker legend Erik Seidel looked like good bets to bubble as the shortest stacks.

All that changed after Smith's set-over-set debacle, with Kenney also losing a sizable pot to Kempe, allowing the German to extend his newfound lead.

In the end, Holz busted Smith on the bubble and it'll be the two Germans sitting on top of five American players when things get going in the finale with everyone guaranteed at least $600,000.

PokerNews will have coverage of the final table from start to finish on Wednesday, so tune in then to see how things end up, and who can capture the 2016 Super High Roller Bowl title and its $5 million first-place prize.

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  • Rainer Kempe leads the 2016 Super High Roller Bowl final table.

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