WSOP bracelet winner Justin Liberto has chipped up to about 1.3 million and taken the chip lead, slightly ahead of Victor Ramdin, who is holding steady, second in chips where he started the day.
Mike McGuinness has an incredible eight tournament wins here at Borgata, but all came in non-Open series one-day events.
His brother John McGuinness has only four wins at Borgata, two of which came during Open series events.
Their tournament earnings were comparable, until earlier this series when John took second place in a heads-up deal that ended the $1 Million GTD Deep Stack Kick Off event, garnering him $176,080 and pushing his lifetime earnings past the $500,000 mark.
"There's just no living with him now," said Mike.
Both brothers are still alive in this event with more than just bragging rights on the line. As it stands now, John is short-stacked with about 30 big blinds and Mike is sitting on about 1.4 million and among the chip leaders.
Ryan D'Angelo opened to 60,000 from middle position, Dave Farah called in the hijack, Victor Ramdin called from the cutoff and Aaron Massey moved all in for 430,000 on the button. Action folded to Ramdin and he called, putting Massey at risk.
Aaron Massey:
Victor Ramdin:
The flop rolled out and Ramdin found a jack as he took the lead. A peeled off on the turn, giving Massey some more outs to keep his tournament life alive. The completed the board, cementing the pot for Ramdin and his flopped jack as Massey took an exit in 28th.
Michael McGuinness moved all in for 520,000 from the hijack and Tyler Phillips shoved over the top, everyone else folded and the two tabled their hands.
Mike McGuinness:
Tyler Phillips:
The board ran out and McGuinness failed to connect with anything as Phillips took down the pot with his pair of jacks, eliminating McGuinness from the tournament.
The WPT Borgata Poker Open $3,500 Championship has now seen the third day come to an end and when the dust had settled it was Kevin Albers leading the final 24 with a stack of 4,340,000. Albers was on a steady climb throughout the better part of Day 3 and rocketed to the top during the latter stages of the night.
Sitting in second place is Dave Farah who ended the day with 4,135,000. Farah recorded his biggest career in January of this year, right here in the Borgata, during the WPT Borgata Winter Poker Open $3,500 Championship when he finished runner-up for an immense $485,611 payday.
A few more big stacks to end the night are Victor Ramdin (3,740,000), Uke Dauti (3,305,000), and David Prociak (3,280,000). Prociak hovered just above average until the last hand of the night when he made a huge call with his pocket nines against Scott Baumstein, who four-bet shoved with nine-eight. Prociak catapulted near the top while Baumstein ended the night as the shortest stack.
Another familiar face to find a Day 3 birth is Vanessa Selbst who will be entering the day sixth on the leader board with her 3,090,000 stack. Selbst has almost 12 million in live career earnings, all of which dating from 2017 and before. The Brooklyn, NY native stopped playing professionally in 2017 to pursue a job and overall more stable life. “You have no job security, no health insurance, you’re traveling constantly," she told the Times.
The venue is close to home for Selbst and she found some free time so she took a shot, that shot could end up being the third WPT final table of her career. She has two WPT final table appearances for $917,103 in earnings with her biggest cash coming in the Borgata for $492,569 when she finished runner-up to Anthony Zinno during the 2013 Borgata Poker Open.
There is another notable Borgata WPT title winner in the field and that player is Aaron Mermelstein who will be starting the third day on the shorter side of things with 590,000. Mermelstein is an accomplished pro with his biggest cash coming in 2015 during the WPT Borgata Winter Open $3,500 Championship for an enormous $712,305. Mermelstein may be coming into Day 4 as one of the shorter stacks but has proved before that he can maneuver a short-stack into a deep run. Look for the Philadelphia native to spin up his chip count tomorrow and add another large score to his impressive resume.
A total of 145 started Day 3, all of which were in the money and guaranteed at least a min-cash of $5,797. Many well-known players made the money but failed to reach the fourth day, and a list of those to do so include Mike McGuinness (25th - $18,288), Aaron Massey (28th - $18,288), Jonathan Little (36th - $15,527), Ian O'Hara (37th - $15,527), Asher Conniff (47th - $13,355), Tony Dunst (57th - $10,183), and John McGuinness (63rd - $10,183).
Day 4 will resume on level 24 with the blinds at 15,000/30,000 and a big blind ante of 30,000. The clock will show 59:58 as that is where Day 3 ended and all levels afterward will be 90-minutes in length. The fourth day will play down until just six remains and those six will return to action on Day 5 for a live-streamed WPT final table. The final six will be guaranteed at least $130,672 for their efforts with $616,186 going to the eventual winner, along with a $15,000 seat to the WPT Tournament of Champions.
The PokerNews live reporting team will be bringing you all of the coverage as the tournament unfolds, so stay tuned!