2013 World Series of Poker

Event #62: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Main Event
Event Info

2013 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Ryan Riess
Winning Hand
ak
Prize
$8,361,570
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Entries
6,352
Level Info
Level
40
Blinds
600,000 / 1,200,000
Ante
200,000

Event #62: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Main Event

Day 3 Started

Mark Kroon Leads Combined Field Into Day 3

Mark Kroon
Mark Kroon

Welcome to Day 3 of the 2013 World Series of Poker Main Event! After three starting flights that remained separate for the first two days of competition, this is the first day that the entire field will be combined. There a total of 6,352 entries, and 1,753 players will return for Day 3.

Mark Kroon leads all remaining players with 507,300 in chips. Kroon finished Day 1C with the most chips, and managed to keep his lead at the end of yesterday’s Day 2C. Kroon got off to a fast start yesterday, and at times he seemed like he was destined to win. In a hand early in the day, after hitting trips on the river to win a pot, Kroon told his opponent, "I had a flush draw, a pair and I am the chip leader. I am supposed to hit that."

Victor Figueroa enters Day 3 second in chips with 460,000, and he’s followed by Nick Schwarmann (413,600) and William Reymond (405,000). No one else has more than 400,000. Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi was near the top of the leaderboard for much of Day 2C. He vaulted into the chip thanks to a massive pot against Robert Deppe. However, he slipped a bit in the last two levels and finished with 394,600.

Plenty of notables still have a shot at Main Event glory this year. Among today’s competitors are Phil Ivey, Daniel Negreanu, Haralabos Voulgaris, Bertrand “Elky” Grospellier, Ashton Griffin, Jean-Robert Ballande, Stephen Chidwick, Jason DeWitt, Sergio Castelluccio, Kenny Tran, Raj Vohra, Ravi Raghavan, Annette Obrestad, Ronnie Bardah and Cliff Josephy

There are also several former Main Event champions still in the field: Johnny Chan, Phil Hellmuth, Dan Harrington, Carlos Mortensen, and the living legend himself, Doyle Brunson. They are joined by defending champion Greg Merson, who has the chance to become the first player to win back-to-back titles since Chan in 1987 and ‘88. Merson enters Day 3 with a healthy stack of 275,600 chips.

Play begins at noon PDT, so stay with us here at PokerNews as we bring you live updates from all the Day 3 action. Also, be sure to check out Sarah Grant's July 11th update below.

Tags: Carlos MortensenDan HarringtonDoyle BrunsonGreg MersonJohnny ChanMark KroonMichael MizrachiNick SchwarmannPhil HellmuthVictor FigueroaWilliam Reymond

Notables from Amazon Purple

Player Chips Progress
Victor Figueroa us
Victor Figueroa
460,600
Sergio Castelluccio it
Sergio Castelluccio
360,500
Kenny Tran us
Kenny Tran
301,300
WSOP 1X Winner
Greg Merson us
Greg Merson
275,600
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 2X Winner
Richard Lyndaker us
Richard Lyndaker
228,500
Benny Chen ca
Benny Chen
213,800
WSOP 1X Winner
Liya Gerasimova ru
Liya Gerasimova
180,600
Ronnie Bardah us
Ronnie Bardah
161,700
WSOP 1X Winner
Phil Galfond us
Phil Galfond
135,000
WSOP 3X Winner
Isaac Haxton us
Isaac Haxton
106,000
106,000
106,000
Jackie Glazier au
Jackie Glazier
101,700
101,700
101,700
WSOP 1X Winner
Olivier Busquet us
Olivier Busquet
100,600
Dan Harrington us
Dan Harrington
81,500
81,500
81,500
WSOP 2X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Philipp Gruissem de
Philipp Gruissem
57,000
57,000
57,000
WSOP 1X Winner
John Cernuto us
John Cernuto
37,700
37,700
37,700
WSOP 3X Winner
Kevin Pollak us
Kevin Pollak
36,100

Notables from Brasilia Red

Player Chips Progress
Vivek Rajkumar in
Vivek Rajkumar
287,400
287,400
287,400
Ercan Olgun tr
Ercan Olgun
286,000
286,000
286,000
Vladimir Geshkenbein ru
Vladimir Geshkenbein
265,000
Bertrand Grospellier fr
Bertrand Grospellier
246,600
Ravi Raghavan us
Ravi Raghavan
231,600
Ryan Fair us
Ryan Fair
222,100
Tuan Le us
Tuan Le
205,000
Cliff Josephy us
Cliff Josephy
200,900
WSOP 2X Winner
Annette Obrestad no
Annette Obrestad
196,600
WSOP 1X Winner
Juha Helppi fi
Juha Helppi
180,700
WSOP 1X Winner
Scott Clements us
Scott Clements
171,200
171,200
171,200
WSOP 3X Winner
Johnny Chan us
Johnny Chan
169,600
169,600
169,600
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 10X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Hasan Habib us
Hasan Habib
167,900
WSOP 1X Winner
Allan Le us
Allan Le
163,800
163,800
163,800
WSOP 1X Winner
Phil Collins us
Phil Collins
158,500
158,500
158,500
Greg Mueller ca
Greg Mueller
147,200
WSOP 3X Winner
Brett Richey us
Brett Richey
146,400
146,400
146,400
Salman Behbehani us
Salman Behbehani
137,100
Steve Zolotow us
Steve Zolotow
125,900
WSOP 2X Winner
Ludovic Riehl fr
Ludovic Riehl
87,500
Shane Warne au
Shane Warne
84,200
Kevin Eyster us
Kevin Eyster
83,700
WSOP 1X Winner
Kyle Julius us
Kyle Julius
82,700
82,700
82,700
WSOP 1X Winner
Aaron Jones us
Aaron Jones
77,900
Allen Kessler us
Allen Kessler
73,800
73,800
73,800

Read full

Notables from Amazon Orange and Tan

It appears Phil Ivey's table — originally in Orange — has been moved to become one of the feature tables to start Day 3.

Player Chips Progress
Jason DeWitt us
Jason DeWitt
382,900
WSOP 2X Winner
Peter Kamaras hu
Peter Kamaras
354,400
Felix Kurmayr at
Felix Kurmayr
324,800
Umang Dattani ca
Umang Dattani
314,700
Gregory Morris us
Gregory Morris
300,900
Steve Gee us
Steve Gee
300,600
Troy Sprungl us
Troy Sprungl
283,300
Darrell Ticehurst us
Darrell Ticehurst
259,000
Juan Pena us
Juan Pena
244,500
Tobias Reinkemeier de
Tobias Reinkemeier
226,400
Simon Persson se
Simon Persson
211,000
David Paredes us
David Paredes
203,500
Phil Ivey us
Phil Ivey
198,800
WSOP 10X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Bryce Yockey us
Bryce Yockey
180,900
WSOP 1X Winner
Rob Salaburu us
Rob Salaburu
180,300
180,300
180,300
Jonathan Tamayo us
Jonathan Tamayo
176,000
176,000
176,000
Daniel Makowsky us
Daniel Makowsky
170,900
Martins Adeniya gb
Martins Adeniya
170,000
Joseph McKeehen us
Joseph McKeehen
162,700
WSOP 2X Winner
Jake Cody gb
Jake Cody
160,000
160,000
160,000
Daniel Cates us
Daniel Cates
159,500
Ivan Demidov ru
Ivan Demidov
157,600
PokerStars
Owen Crowe ca
Owen Crowe
155,000
155,000
155,000
James Mackey us
James Mackey
128,500
128,500
128,500
WSOP 1X Winner
Timothy Finne us
Timothy Finne
128,000
128,000
128,000

Read full

Notables from Brasilia Gold

Player Chips Progress
Raj Vohra us
Raj Vohra
322,200
WSOP 1X Winner
Marcel Luske nl
Marcel Luske
226,100
PokerStars
Max Pescatori it
Max Pescatori
199,000
WSOP 4X Winner
Ryan Hughes us
Ryan Hughes
198,100
WSOP 3X Winner
Eric Cloutier ca
Eric Cloutier
196,600
Ben Sulsky us
Ben Sulsky
180,800
180,800
180,800
Freddy Deeb lb
Freddy Deeb
175,100
175,100
175,100
WSOP 2X Winner
Lauren Kling us
Lauren Kling
168,800
Matt Jarvis ca
Matt Jarvis
162,700
Tony Ma us
Tony Ma
159,100
159,100
159,100
WSOP 2X Winner
Sorel Mizzi ca
Sorel Mizzi
143,900
Andrew Lichtenberger us
Andrew Lichtenberger
142,700
WSOP 1X Winner
Randy Ohel us
Randy Ohel
130,400
WSOP 1X Winner
Gjergj Sinishtaj us
Gjergj Sinishtaj
90,700
90,700
90,700
Vitaly Lunkin ru
Vitaly Lunkin
69,700
WSOP 2X Winner
Xuan Liu ca
Xuan Liu
66,700
Kevin O'Donnell us
Kevin O'Donnell
58,900
58,900
58,900
Barry Shulman us
Barry Shulman
50,400
50,400
50,400
WSOP 2X Winner
Kevin Schaffel us
Kevin Schaffel
50,300
Bob Bounahra bz
Bob Bounahra
49,400
49,400
49,400
Matt Stout us
Matt Stout
41,400
41,400
41,400

Level: 11

Blinds: 800/1,600

Ante: 200

Counts from Brasilia Silver

Level 11 : 800/1,600, 200 ante
Player Chips Progress
Nick Schwarmann us
Nick Schwarmann
413,600
Christian Harder us
Christian Harder
304,500
David Benefield us
David Benefield
261,100
Adam Friedman us
Adam Friedman
246,600
WSOP 5X Winner
Amit Makhija us
Amit Makhija
213,800
Theo Jorgensen dk
Theo Jorgensen
187,900
187,900
187,900
Oliver Gill Gaber us
Oliver Gill Gaber
184,000
Bryn Kenney us
Bryn Kenney
166,500
166,500
166,500
WSOP 1X Winner
Thomas Keller us
Thomas Keller
156,600
156,600
156,600
WSOP 1X Winner
Dutch Boyd us
Dutch Boyd
121,700
121,700
121,700
WSOP 3X Winner
Justin Truesdell us
Justin Truesdell
121,200
Andy Frankenberger us
Andy Frankenberger
108,800
WSOP 2X Winner
James Van Alstyne us
James Van Alstyne
97,400
WSOP 1X Winner
Adrienne Rowsome ca
Adrienne Rowsome
75,900
PokerStars
Phil Hellmuth us
Phil Hellmuth
49,200
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 17X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
Jared Hamby us
Jared Hamby
49,200
WSOP 1X Winner
Collin Moshman us
Collin Moshman
45,100
Haralabos Voulgaris ca
Haralabos Voulgaris
37,400
37,400
37,400
John Racener us
John Racener
35,000
35,000
35,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Kenna James us
Kenna James
9,500
9,500
9,500

Chip Leader Mark Kroon: "Running Like a God"

Level 11 : 800/1,600, 200 ante
Mark Kroon
Mark Kroon

Could we have a wire-to-wire champion in the 2013 World Series of Poker Main Event? Mark "Poker Ho" Kroon finished Day 1 as the overall chip leader, and he occupies the top spot in the chip counts again after another impressive performance on Day 2. We caught up with Kroon before the start of play to discuss his poker background and his success so far in this event.

How was Day 1 compared to Day 2 for you?

My Day 1 was really different. My Day 1 tables were really easy. By that I mean they were a lot softer. In Day 2 the players were a lot tougher but I had so many chips that I could overcome the fact that they were better players. In Day 1 there were just so many easier spots where I could pick up chips. Plus I was just running like a God. I flopped a lot of sets and picked up chips every time. At the end of Day 1 I probably jumped up 120,000 to 240,000 in the last couple of hours just because everyone tightened up so much because they wanted to make Day 2, making it easier to pick up chips.

You are really chatty at the table, telling lots of stories with a lot of energy. Do you think that helps or hurts your game?

I think it really helps. The more I get other people to talk to me the more information I can get about them. By talking to other players I can find out their experience level and if it is their first series. As we get closer to the money bubbles the information becomes more important. Someone who has cashed a bunch of times won’t play as tight as the guy who made his first appearance. There was a gentleman I was playing with Thursday who said this was his first tournament. He wanted to make Day 3 so bad. I kept raising him. I hate doing it but there was no way he was going to go broke at the end of Day 2 because he was determined to make it to Day 3. So he pretty much just kept giving me chips in the end because he would raise and I would re-raise knowing he would fold because he wanted to hang on as long as he could. I feel bad about that but if players are going to give me the information then I am going to use it.

You played 10 WSOP events in 2011 and cashed once, and played eight events in 2012 and didn’t cash at all. Have you been trying to improve your game?

I think I really improved my game. I think back in those days I didn’t really take the game as serious as I do now. I didn’t have the passion like I do now. I played more volume, which gave me a lot more confidence, and now I think I am making better choices, better folds, better calls — just things you pick up from playing so much. Now I am more focused.

I also went really deep in the Seniors Event this year. I finished 25th out of 4,400. I was actually chip leader with 40 people left and felt I should have won that tournament. That gave me a lot of confidence going into this event. To tell you the truth, I have so much confidence going into Day 3 that I don’t really see me not running really deep.

Where did “PokerHo” come from?

I thought it was a real catchy name. Having a really strong and aggressive name online is important. I just came up with and it just took off. It was a Godsend because I could use it to where people would just fold to me because of the name. Everyone thought I was this wild and maniac guy. The name really worked out great.

Do you have any superstitious routines for the rest of the series?

I’ve been wearing the same sweater for the last two days but it was so hot today that I don’t think it’s very clean. I probably won’t wear it tomorrow because it’s not comfortable anymore. I’ve also been wearing the same red socks. I’m thinking those are bad to wear again too. You might see me wearing something else tomorrow. Hopefully that won’t change my luck at all.