2012 World Series of Poker

Event 59: $1,000 No-Limit Hold'em
Day: 2
Event Info

2012 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
k5
Prize
$654,797
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,000
Prize Pool
$4,158,000
Entries
4,620
Level Info
Level
28
Blinds
30,000 / 60,000
Ante
10,000

Alex Cordero Wins The Day (Again); Jake Cody In Contention

Level 19 : 4,000/8,000, 1,000 ante
Alex Cordero - Your Day 2 chip leader.
Alex Cordero - Your Day 2 chip leader.

Day 2 of Event 59: $1,000 No-Limit Hold'em is history with Alex Cordero as your current chip leader (822,000). Not too far behind are Franklin Johnson (789,000), Dimitri Holdeew (593,000) and Bao Dao with 477,000 in chips.

Today we saw a merging of the surviving players from Day 1a and Day 1b, which brought a total of 726 players together to duke it out. When all was said and done, just 51 would remain to see a Day 3.

Eliminations came swiftly and before we knew it, the money bubble had burst by the middle of the eleventh level. Some notables who were knocked out early, but still managed to cash include Jeff Madsen (456th), Jeffrey Manza (450th), Tony Dunst (424th) and Konstantin Puchkov (381st), who made history by cashing a record-breaking eleventh time in a single series.

Phil Ivey was another player to fall short on Day 2. After working his stack up to nearly 80,000 during level 13, Ivey's stack went on a bit of a roller-coaster ride - both swinging upward and downward as opponents doubled through him and he doubled through opponents. Ivey eventually met his end after pushing all in with {7-Diamonds}{6-Spades} and losing out to Yoav Tenenbaum's {Q-Hearts}{10-Spades}. Ivey's 208th-place finish marked his seventh cash of the series.

Alex Cordero (the overall chip leader of both Day 1's) used his abundance of chips to play many pots and put pressure on his opponents throughout the day. A key hand for Cordero occurred when he rivered the nut straight and got paid off by his lone opponent. Cordero's stack slipped a little toward the end of the night, but managed to come back strong by eliminating a couple of opponents in the last level.

Jake Cody will also be joining the field in Day 3. Cody's stack was anything but consistent throughout the day - both rising and falling as he found himself in big pots late in the day. By the end, Cody bagged up 302,000 and will be looking to make a run for a second gold bracelet.

Our remaining field will resume play tomorrow at 1:00 PM PST and continue until either ten levels have passed or a final table has been decided. Be sure to stick with us here at PokerNews as we provide you with all the action from the felt!

Tags: Alex CorderoJake Cody

Cordero Scoops Massive Pot

Alex Cordero
Alex Cordero

We caught up with the action on a completed board reading {J-Hearts}{6-Spades}{10-Spades}{8-Clubs}{2-Clubs} with over 50,000 in the pot already. Alex Cordero was in the small blind against one other player in early position. Cordero had already moved all in for 111,000 and his opponent fell hard into the tank.

After a few minutes, Cordero's opponent announced, "Call," to put himself at risk. Cordero tabled {Q-Clubs}{9-Clubs} for the nut straight. His opponent stood stunned at what he saw and squeezed his hand into a fist - crushing his cards. When he let go, two crumpled kings lay in front of him for an overpair.

Cordero scooped the enormous pot and is now up to approximately 320,000.

Player Chips Progress
Alex Cordero ca
Alex Cordero
320,000 152,000

Tags: Alex Cordero

Cody Continues to Dominate

Jake Cody
Jake Cody

Jake Cody has chipped up in a big way since returning from dinner.

In a recent hand, the player on the button opened fro 5,000 and Cody flatted from the big blind.

Both players checked the {Q-Clubs}{4-Diamonds}{K-Spades} flop, however, when Cody checked again the {6-Spades} turn, his opponent fired 6,000 into the middle. Cody paused and flung out three orange $5,000 denomination chips for a raise to 15,000 total. Cody's opponent tanked a bit and then announced he was all in for approximately 30,000 on top. Cody snap-called and hands were revealed.

Cody: {K-Hearts}{Q-Diamonds} for top two pair.
Button: {K-Diamonds}{3-Diamonds} for top pair.

Cody had his opponent drawing dead. A meaningless {3-Hearts} was too little too late for Cody's opponent and he was sent to the rail.

Cody is up to 190,000.

Player Chips Progress
Jake Cody gb
Jake Cody
WSOP 1X Winner
190,000 12,000

Tags: Jake Cody

Tenenbaum Takes Out Ivey

Phil Ivey
Phil Ivey

Having lost most of his short stack in a previous hand, Phil Ivey found himself all in and up against two opponents, including Yoav Tenenbaum sitting to his left.

There was about 18,000 in the middle when the flop came {Q-Spades}{J-Clubs}{3-Clubs}. The early position player checked, Tenenbaum quickly bet 11,000, and his opponent called. The turn was the {5-Diamonds}, and when it checked to Tenebaum he immediately announced he was all in, sending his opponent deep into the tank. Finally, after a couple of minutes he folded, and Tenenbaum and Ivey tabled their hands.

Tenenbaum: {Q-Hearts}{10-Spades}
Ivey: {7-Diamonds}{6-Spades}

Tenenbaum leaned over and held out a hand to shake Ivey's, but Ivey wasn't ready to do so quite yet, pointing out he could still survive should a four come on the river. Alas for Ivey, the river brought the {8-Spades}. "Now I'll shake your hand," said Ivey with a grin, and after doing so he departed with yet another WSOP cash.

Player Chips Progress
Yoav Tenenbaum il
Yoav Tenenbaum
96,000 80,025
Phil Ivey us
Phil Ivey
WSOP 10X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Busted

Tags: Phil IveyYoav Tenenbaum

Four Fives Equal Three Knockouts for Russell

Warren Russell
Warren Russell

"Seat open, 432! Seats 3... 4... and 6!"

The six remaining players at Table 432 are currently waiting for players to arrive to fill the suddenly vacated seats around their table, thanks to huge hand won by Warren Russell.

A player holding {A-}{9-} open-shoved and ended up seeing a couple of others push all in behind him, one holding {K-Spades}{K-Hearts} and the other {J-Diamonds}{J-Hearts}. The action on Russell, he looked down to see {5-Spades}{5-Hearts} and decided to play along.

The flop came {A-Spades}{4-Clubs}{2-Spades} and the original raiser had the lead. But the turn was the {5-Clubs} and the river the {5-Diamonds}, giving Russell quad fives and a rare triple-knockout.

Russell looks to be our chip leader after than one, creating a bit of space between himself and the chasing pack.

Player Chips Progress
Warren Russell ca
Warren Russell
134,000 29,500

Tags: Warren Russell

Puchkov Makes It 11

Konstantin Puchkov
Konstantin Puchkov

While he's over challenging for the chip lead in Event 60: $10,000 2-7 Draw Lowball (No-Limit) with 45 remaining, it appears Konstantin Puchkov has broken the all-time WSOP record for most cashes in a single series, as his stack over here in Event 57 remains intact. This makes his 11th cash this summer, breaking Nikolay Evdakov's previous standard of 10 set in 2008.

Puchkov actually hasn't returned since the last break, but had plenty to pay the blinds and antes and make it to the money.

Player Chips Progress
Konstantin Puchkov ru
Konstantin Puchkov
WSOP 1X Winner
17,400 -12,100

Tags: Konstantin Puchkov

Cordero and Cody Clash

Alex Cordero
Alex Cordero

With tables breaking down at a rapid clip, Jake Cody has now been moved to Alex Cordero's table, which means two of the biggest stacks in the room are now sitting right across from one another. Just now came a hand in which it appeared the two might be clashing over a huge pot, though things ended a bit shy of that happening.

The hand began with Cody raising to 1,800 from the hijack seat, then Cordero pushing out stacks of black (100) chips to reraise to 4,600 from the small blind. Cody studied both his own and Cordero's stacks, then called.

The flop came {6-Diamonds}{2-Spades}{3-Spades}, and Cordero again pushed out columns of black chips for a bet of 6,800. Cody paused a beat, and called the bet.

The turn then brought the {10-Diamonds}. This time Cordero was digging into his light blue (500) chips and betting 11,000, and as soon as he did Cody folded.

Player Chips Progress
Alex Cordero ca
Alex Cordero
108,000 7,525
Jake Cody gb
Jake Cody
WSOP 1X Winner
72,000 -5,600

Tags: Alex CorderoJake Cody

726 Return for Day 2

Phil Ivey is eyeing his sixth final table of the summer and first 2012 WSOP bracelet.
Phil Ivey is eyeing his sixth final table of the summer and first 2012 WSOP bracelet.

Welcome back to Day 2 of Event 59: $1,000 No-Limit Hold'em.

The first of the two Day 1s saw 1,740 players join the fray. That group played down until about 15% remained — eight one-hour levels plus 18 minutes of Level 9 — at which point Ronald Lee then bagged the most chips with 79,325. Dominik Nitsche was next highest Wednesday night with 67,800, and Phil Ivey had accumulated 50,000 to find a spot just outside the Day 1a top ten.

Thursday saw an even bigger group assemble for Day 1b, with 2,880 players spread all over the Rio in the Brasilia, Amazon, and Pavilion rooms. Following the Day 1a group's lead, they, too, played eight levels plus part of a ninth, after which 471 of them survived.

At night's end it was Alex Cordero counting out several stacks of chips to discover he'd crossed the 100,000-chip mark, ending the night with 100,475 to become our overall leader heading into today's Day 2. Meanwhile, Jake Cody had nearly reached Lee's Day 1a total to secure third position to start today with 77,600. Owen Crowe is also hovering near the lead pack, too, with 67,000.

Today the remaining 726 come together for Day 2, with the plan being to play 10 one-hour levels. The average chip stack to begin today's play is 19,091. Here's a look at the 10 players who'll begin today with the most chips with which to proceed:

PositionPlayerChips
1Alex Cordero100,475
2Ronald Lee79,325
3Jake Cody77,600
4Warren Russell68,625
5Dominik Nitsche67,800
6Owen Crowe67,000
7David Stefanski65,400
8Ravneet Johal60,050
9Jed Friedman58,675
10Alin Pandilica58,500

As mentioned, Phil Ivey, too, returns to a nice-sized stack, good for 25th position currently. Other notables returning to above average chips include Steve Sung, Konstantin Puchkov, Cherish Andrews, Ben Yu, Leo Margets, Nam Le, Jim Collopy, Deanna Dozier, J.J. Liu, and Sam Grizzle.

Those lasting until the field is trimmed to 468 will guarantee themselves a profit in this one, with a minimum cash equaling $1,860. All are eyeing the $654,797 up top for the winner, however, the lion's share of the event's $4,158,000 prize pool.

Play begins at 1:00 PM local time. Come back here for coverage of Day 2 as we see who makes the money as well as who secures a strong position to make a final table run and a shot at the next World Series of Poker gold bracelet.