2014 Borgata Winter Poker Open

$3 Million Guaranteed WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open Championship
Day: 1b
Event Info

2014 Borgata Winter Poker Open

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
q3
Prize
$842,379
Event Info
Buy-in
$3,300
Entries
1,229
Level Info
Level
39
Blinds
300,000 / 600,000
Ante
75,000

Todd Rebello Leads Day 1b of $3 Million Guaranteed WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open Championship

Level 8 : 250/500, 50 ante
Todd Rebello bagged the top stack tonight.
Todd Rebello bagged the top stack tonight.

A total of 807 runners packed the house tonight, and Todd Rebello bagged up the top stack with 229,825. Closely trailing him was Rob Boyko with 209,500. Rebello will come back to Day 2 trailing only Laz Hernandez, who bagged more than 258,000 on Day 1a. As a reward for their chip accumulation, Rebello and Boyko pocketed $5,000 and $3,000, respectively.

Other notable stacks: Mike Linster (160,225), Todd Terry (98,550), Isaac baron (95,975), Eric Baldwin (93,850), Blake Bohn (86,825), Faraz Jaka (82,200), and Jeff Madsen (79,650).

Players swinging and missing today included Vanessa Selbst, Chino Rheem, Ryan Eriquezzo, Jonathan Tamayo, Jon Little, Phil Collins, and Bryn Kenney.

After 422 entrants paid up the $3,500 to register the main event yesterday here at the Borgata Winter Poker Open, and nearly double that amount ponied up the cash today. That brought the total entries to 1,229, creating a first-place prize of $842,379, more than $100,000 better than last year's $730,053 pocketed by Andy Hwang.

Players will return at noon tomorrow to fight for their share of the prize pool, and PokerNews will be on the scene.

Tags: Andy HwangBlake BohnBryn KenneyChino RheemEric BaldwinFaraz JakaIsaac BaronJeff MadsenJonathan LittleJonathan TamayoLaz HernandezMike LinsterPhil CollinsRyan EriquezzoTodd RebelloTodd TerryVanessa Selbst

End of Night Chip Counts, Part One

Level 8 : 250/500, 50 ante
Steve Sarmiento is One of the Big Stacks After Day 1b
Steve Sarmiento is One of the Big Stacks After Day 1b

Here are the chip counts fresh from the bags after eight levels of play on Day 1b.

Player Chips Progress
Matthew Honig us
Matthew Honig
132,000
Anthony Maio us
Anthony Maio
99,100
Steve Sarmiento us
Steve Sarmiento
96,125
Eric Baldwin us
Eric Baldwin
93,850
WSOP 2X Winner
Caufman Talley us
Caufman Talley
93,275
63,275
63,275
Mirsad Kovaci
Mirsad Kovaci
91,000
Kathy Liebert us
Kathy Liebert
88,500
57,500
57,500
WSOP 1X Winner
Fernando Diaz
Fernando Diaz
86,500
Maruti Yarlapati
Maruti Yarlapati
80,000
-65,000
-65,000
Jeff Madsen us
Jeff Madsen
79,650
47,650
47,650
WSOP 4X Winner
Vincent Conte
Vincent Conte
79,500
Eric Rappaport us
Eric Rappaport
64,000
Vinh Ho
Vinh Ho
62,050
Andy Frankenberger us
Andy Frankenberger
56,450
26,450
26,450
WSOP 2X Winner
WPT 1X Winner
Jesse Cohen us
Jesse Cohen
37,500
7,500
7,500
Natale Kuey us
Natale Kuey
32,600
-12,400
-12,400
Laurence Wolf
Laurence Wolf
31,825
Victor Ramdin us
Victor Ramdin
29,100
16,100
16,100
Tony Sinishtaj us
Tony Sinishtaj
25,500
WPT 1X Winner
James Woods us
James Woods
16,200
-45,850
-45,850
Luke Edwards au
Luke Edwards
13,350
-13,150
-13,150

D'Agostino Among Top Stacks

Level 8 : 250/500, 50 ante
John D'Agostino at the 2014 WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open Championship
John D'Agostino at the 2014 WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open Championship

John D'Agostino, in the hijack, bet 6,000 into an opponent in the cutoff on a flop of {a-Diamonds}{6-Hearts}{9-Hearts}. His opponent raised to 16,200. D'Agostino thought for a few moments before sliding out his whole stack of T5000 chips. His opponent folded instantly, and D'Agostino looks to be on track to bag one of the top stacks.

Player Chips Progress
John D'Agostino us
John D'Agostino
138,000
68,000
68,000

Tags: John D'Agostino

Wish Upon These Falling Stars

Level 8 : 250/500, 50 ante
Vanessa Selbst Will Not Return for Day 2 After Busting Out Late on Day 1b
Vanessa Selbst Will Not Return for Day 2 After Busting Out Late on Day 1b

Twitter is abuzz with the news of a few familiar faces falling short here on Day 1b of the Borgata Winter Poker Open WPT Championship. Here are the postmortems from the players themselves:

Vanessa SelbstAaaand lost a flip. Out in under an hour. At least I'm making sure my hourly at Borgata stays high.

David RheemOut of @WPT Borgata main event officially lol. Wasn't meant to be, gl to the homies still in. #yup

Philip CollinsJust busted out of the @WPT at Borgata, no luck this trip but had fun as usual #ontothenextone

Jonathan LittleI found myself in a big flip vs a maniac with JJ vs AQ. Luckily I would have lost even with AA. Out.

Joey WeissmanAnd I bust the 3rd bullet, u win Borgizma
Player Chips Progress
Jonathan Little us
Jonathan Little
Busted
WPT 2X Winner
Vanessa Selbst us
Vanessa Selbst
Busted
WSOP 3X Winner
Chino Rheem us
Chino Rheem
Busted
WPT 3X Winner
Phil Collins us
Phil Collins
Busted
Joey Weissman us
Joey Weissman
Busted
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Chino RheemJoey WeissmanPhil CollinsVanessa SelbstJonathan Little

No Chips and a Chair

Level 8 : 250/500, 50 ante
Tournament Director Tab Duchateau and Tournament Official Andrew Wong Listen to Robert Merulla's Explanation While D.J. Mackinnon Looks On
Tournament Director Tab Duchateau and Tournament Official Andrew Wong Listen to Robert Merulla's Explanation While D.J. Mackinnon Looks On

The dinner break ended just under an hour ago, and play has been in full swing since then at nearly every table in the room. The players at Table 37, however, didn't play a single hand until nearly 30 minutes had elapsed from the tournament clock, as yet another scandal involving chips broke out here at the Borgata Winter Poker Open.

Here's what we've determined after talking with the players involved and Tab Duchateau, Tournament Director here at Borgata.

D.J. MacKinnon returned from the dinner break and went to take Seat 1, where he had been playing from before break. Maruti Yarlapati — who finished in 13th place at the six-max event here just two days ago — was waiting for him, though, having just been handed a seat card after his table broke that directed him there. Confused? Imagine how MacKinnon felt.

Apparently, MacKinnon had stood up to sweat the result of the last hand before break, leaving his 61,500 stack under the supervision of the dealer — something that isn't out of the norm during poker tournaments. The last hand was contested by Robert Merulla (Seat 2) and Allison Schultz (Seat 4), with Merulla moving all in on the river for 50,000 (effectively 13,000, as he had Schultz covered).

Schultz tanked for a while, which prompted MacKinnon to stick around to see what happened, although he sweated from afar rather than remaining in his seat. After taking her time to make a decision, Schultz called off and put her last 13,000 into the pot, only to find her {a-}{a-} was second-best to Merulla's {2-}{2-} (we weren't around for the showdown, and thus the board cards here remain a mystery, but Schultz took to Twitter to vent about her aces being cracked by deuces).

This is where the issue of MacKinnon's missing stack began, because with his 61,500 stacked in front of the empty chair in Seat 1, Merulla's drag of the pot somehow included those chips as well as those just won from Schultz. Despite Merulla quickly producing a cell phone photograph of his stack taken after the hand — which in Merulla's opinion proved his ownership of the 143,000 now at his disposal — MacKinnon was calmly, but quietly insistent that his chips had been added to his neighbor's pile.

MacKinnon never accused Merulla of angle-shooting or stealing, attributing the situation to a potential dealer error instead, but the mathematics of the situation added up to show something was amiss. Merulla readily admitted that he began the last hand before break with around 50,000, but disputed his tablemate's assertion that Schultz only held 23,000 to start the hand before going bust. According to Merulla, she shipped a nearly equal stack his way, thus explaining the currently swollen size of his stack.

Nonetheless, a 50,000 stack had somehow transformed into one containing 143,000 — which shouldn't happen after a straight double up even with blinds and antes accounted for. However, if Merulla had added the 23,000 stack Schultz confirmed via Twitter that she lost, he should have started Level 7 with about 75,000 — and if MacKinnon's 61,500 was at some point added to that, his total of 143,000 made much more sense.

Merulla continued to deny any wrongdoing while showing Duchateau his cell phone images to show that he dragged a pot worth 143,000 his way before heading off to break. Despite the protestations of his tablemates — who pointed out that the cell phone shot could just as easily show the product of MacKinnon's stack being added to the pot — Merulla continued to state his case, insisting that his stack was accurate. Duchateau conferred with everybody involved before checking the video evidence, and after explaining the situation to the relevant parties, he ruled that MacKinnon's 61,500 would be removed from Merulla's stack and restored to its proper owner.

In explaining the ruling, Duchateau said that the video surveillance showed MacKinnon standing behind his chair to observe the showdown, and walking away after the cards were tabled. According to Duchateau, during the act of dragging the pot Merulla pulled MacKinnon's stack towards his and the chips became mixed, but the respected tournament director stated that intent was impossible to prove given the visual evidence. This meant Merulla kept his seat and the situation was deemed to be resolved.

Yarlapati, for his part, got out of dodge with his rightfully earned 145,000 — taking a new seat card and resuming his tournament. The other seven players at Table 37 were not so fortunate, though, and they were forced to sacrifice 30 minutes worth of irreplaceable tournament time at a key level in this second starting flight. Nobody was pleased with this fact, but despite their objections (MacKinnon himself was the most vocal in requesting either a frozen clock for the room or an extended clock for his table), Duchateau ruled that the tournament would roll on.

Play resumed at Table 37 with 45:00 or so remaining in Level 7, and the Borgata Winter Poker Open WPT Main Event continued without further incident.

Mackinnon took to Twitter shortly after resuming play to comment on his new predicament for the rest of night, showing that despite almost losing a 157-big blind stack while sitting at the buffet, he can still see the humorous side of a strange situation:

DJ MacKinnonNow I get to awkwardly play with the guy next to me the rest of the night, hopefully he doesn't take my chips for real #
Player Chips Progress
Maruti Yarlapati
Maruti Yarlapati
145,000
145,000
145,000
Anthony Merulla us
Anthony Merulla
76,000
76,000
76,000
D.J. Mackinnon
D.J. Mackinnon
61,500
61,500
61,500
Allison Schultz us
Allison Schultz
Busted

Tags: Allison SchultzD.J. MackinnonMaruti YarlapatiRobert Merulla

Eriquezzo Busts; Rheem, Selbst Low

Level 7 : 200/400, 50 ante
Ryan Eriquezzo on Day 1a of the 2014 WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open Main Event
Ryan Eriquezzo on Day 1a of the 2014 WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open Main Event

Ryan Eriquezzo pushed all in on the end for 12,100. The board read {6-Spades}{7-Clubs}{4-Hearts}{k-Diamonds}{10-Spades}, and Eriquezzo's opponent made the call.

"Good call," Eriquezzo said. He waited for his opponent to show his hand, but the player seemed to be doing the same to him. Finally, Eriquezzo shrugged and threw his {a-Clubs}{5-Hearts} into the middle, showing a missed straight draw, and his opponent turned {7-Diamonds}{6-Hearts} for a flopped two pair.

Meanwhile, it seems Chino Rheem decided to fire a final bullet, and Vanessa Selbst bought in sometime in the final hours of registration. Neither has been able to make any early headway, both falling well below the starting stack.

Player Chips Progress
Chino Rheem us
Chino Rheem
12,600
12,600
12,600
WPT 3X Winner
Vanessa Selbst us
Vanessa Selbst
10,000
10,000
10,000
WSOP 3X Winner
Ryan Eriquezzo us
Ryan Eriquezzo
Busted
WSOP 3X Winner

Tags: Ryan EriquezzoVanessa SelbstChino Rheem

Tamayo Busted

Level 7 : 200/400, 50 ante
Jonathan Tamayo in Event #13 at the Borgata Winter Poker Open
Jonathan Tamayo in Event #13 at the Borgata Winter Poker Open

Jonathan Tamayo shoved for his last 7,750 in a multi-way pot after a flop of {j-Diamonds}{10-Diamonds}{9-Clubs}. A player in middle position called, and Igor Skochilo shoved over for another 40,000 or so on the button. A player in the blinds folded, and the first caller folded as well.

Skochilo: {k-Hearts}{q-Clubs}
Tamayo: {j-Hearts}{10-Hearts}

Skochilo had flopped the nuts, but Tamayo had outs. None of them materialized on the {7-Spades} or {7-Clubs} turn and river, and Tamayo knuckled the table softly and wished the other players good luck.

Player Chips Progress
Igor Skochilo us
Igor Skochilo
73,000
Jonathan Tamayo us
Jonathan Tamayo
Busted

Tags: Jonathan TamayoIgor Skochilo

Kenney Benefits from Dealer Error

Level 6 : 150/300, 50 ante
Bryn Kenney had plenty of reason to smile in a recent hand.
Bryn Kenney had plenty of reason to smile in a recent hand.

We came upon Bryn Kenney and another player getting all of their chips in on a flop of {a-Clubs}{4-Hearts}{4-Spades}. Kenney was in a dominating position with {k-Clubs}{4-Clubs} against {9-Spades}{4-Diamonds}.

The dealer was ordered to wash the deck by a tournament official. According to a player at the table, the dealer had accidentally flipped over the top two cards on the deck, and they were a {10-} and {9-} respectively, meaning Kenney's opponent would have turned a full house for the lead. Unfortunately for him, after the deck was washed, the new turn was a {j-Spades}, followed by a {3-Hearts} river. The player was understandably peeved about the situation, while Kenney added all of his opponent's chips to his stack.

Player Chips Progress
Bryn Kenney us
Bryn Kenney
57,075
27,075
27,075
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Bryn Kenney

Welcome to the Big Show

Level 6 : 150/300, 50 ante
Will Failla Watched His Pal Big Show Caldo Win a Thrilling Hand
Will Failla Watched His Pal Big Show Caldo Win a Thrilling Hand

With the booming voice of Will "The Thrill" Failla providing a boisterous background, we watched as his friend from the East Coast poker scene James "Big Show Caldo" Calderaro moved all in for 23,800.

As the man they call "The Thrill" escorted Michael Borovetz - a third member of this crew accomplished crew of local grinders - over to Mike Sexton's table to show off Borovetz' uncanny impression of Sexton's announcing voice firsthand, Calderaro waited for his opponent to make a crucial decision.

With Borovetz now serenading Sexton with a voice that sounded eerily similar his own, and Failla loudly encouraging the proceedings, Caldarero heard his opponent make the call to put both of their similarly-sized stacks at risk.

"He called me Will, comin' take a look..." said Calderaro as he rolled over {k-Diamonds}{k-Spades} for a set on the turn. "Wit aces 'dis guy called me!"

Failla stopped by to sweat the river, and when it came {j-Hearts} to keep "Big Show Caldo" out in front of his shocked opponent's {a-Clubs}{a-Diamonds}, he offered his pal a clap on the back in congratulation. Calderaro dragged another pot his way on the very next deal, eating his fill before the dinner break even starts.

Player Chips Progress
James Calderaro us
James Calderaro
73,000
WSOP 1X Winner
WPT 1X Winner

Tags: James CalderaroMike SextonWill Failla