2024 Merit Poker Western Series

$2,200 Warm Up
Day: 3
Event Info

2024 Merit Poker Western Series

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
aj
Prize
$165,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$2,200
Prize Pool
$830,640
Entries
446
Level Info
Level
33
Blinds
200,000 / 400,000
Ante
400,000
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
81
Players Left
17

Simone Andrian Storms to the Top on Day 3 of the $2,200 Warm Up

Level 24 : Blinds 20,000/50,000, 50,000 ante
Simone Andrian
Simone Andrian

A late flurry of eliminations ensured that Simone Andrian would be the man to beat following Day 3 of the $2,200 Warm Up at the Merit Poker Western Series.

The Italian pro and WSOP bracelet winner ended the event’s penultimate day as chip leader over the remaining 17 players with a massive stack of 8,410,000 as he chases another prestigious title. Andrian already has nearly $1,000,000 in live career earnings, including his bracelet from 2021 and a WPT title in June. Just last month, he made a deep run in the WPT World Championship in Las Vegas, finishing in 29th place for $159,200.

Andrian began the day second in chips but didn’t wait long before he built an even more massive stack. He won with aces against the pocket kings of Day 1 chip leader Peng Yang when, incredibly, they were found to have the exact same 1,340,000 remaining in their stack. He later picked off a massive bluff in a 4,000,000-chip pot against Justus Held.

He saved his best for last, however. Andrian flopped top pair to beat Ramez Haddad’s pocket tens and send him out in 23rd place. He then busted Gang Zhao in 21st with aces against queens, and Xiang Lian in 19th when they both showed ace-king but Andrian rivered a flush.

The 16 opponents who will try to track down Andrian when the final day begins at noon local time are led by Abdullah Alajmi. The start-of-day chip leader adopted an unconventional limping strategy late on Day 3 and used it to bust Held in 26th place, flopping a full house against trip kings. He bagged up 6,010,000 as, together, he and Andrian control nearly a third of the chips in play between them.

Day 3 Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Simone AndrianItaly8,410,000140
2Abdullah AlajmiKuwait6,010,000100
3Adrian StateRomania3,900,00065
4Guoliang WeiChina2,810,00047
5Andrea DatoItaly2,750,00046
6George PanagidesCyprus2,750,00046
7Baurzhan AkimovKazakhstan2,450,00041
8Yuefan GuChina2,230,00037
9Sari HaddadLebanon2,170,00036
10Qusai AlbakeerJordan2,025,00034
11Fahredin MustafovBulgaria1,940,00032
12Azamat TulepbergenovKazakhstan1,930,00032
13Antoine HasbaniLebanon1,320,00022
14Andrei DaniliukRussia1,190,00020
15Ermanno Di NicolaItaly975,00016
16Nina KrasilnikovaRussia925,00015
17John BastaEgypt790,00013

The top five on the leaderboard are rounded out by Adrian State (3,900,000), Guoliang Wei (2,810,000), and veteran Italian pro Andrea Dato (2,750,000). Baurzhan Akimov (2,450,000), Yuefan Gu (2,230,000), Fahredin Mustafov (1,940,000), Antoine Hasbani (1,320,000), Andrei Daniliuk (1,190,000), Ermanno Di Nicola (975,000), and Nina Krasilnikova are also still alive in the hunt for the title.

Andrea Dato
Andrea Dato

Day 3 began with 81 players remaining out of a total field of 446 entries. With only the top 53 guaranteeing themselves a payday, the likes of Vladimir Troyanovskiy, Dzmitry Urbanovich, Dmitry Gromov, and Cheng Zhao busted before the money. Qiang Xu was eliminated right before the start of hand-for-hand play and proved to be the bubble boy as tournament officials determined there were already 53 players remaining.

Andrey Pateychuk (49th), Ara Melkisetian (41st), and Koray Korkmaz (34th) were among those to make their way to the payout desk. Matthew Davenport was eliminated in 27th place after the redraw for the final three tables. Emrah Daban and Eren Eroglu were then knocked out in the same hand against Qusai Albakeer’s kings, Daban taking 25th and Eroglu 24th as the larger stack.

The action on Day 4 picks up on Level 25 with blinds of 30,000-60,000 and a 60,000 big blind ante. Everyone has already locked up $8,450, with a spot at the final table worth at least $16,500. The champion will walk away with $165,000 and the title of Merit Poker champion.

Stay tuned as PokerNews returns tomorrow to bring you all the action as the field plays down to the final table and onward to the crowning of a champion.

Tags: Abdullah AlajmiAdrian StateAndrea DatoAndrei DaniliukAndrey PateychukAntoine HasbaniAra MelkisetianAzamat TulepbergenovBaurzhan AkimovCheng ZhaoDmitry GromovDzmitry UrbanovichEmrah DabanEren ErogluErmanno Di NicolaFahredin MustafovGang ZhaoGeorge PanagidesGuoliang WeiJohn BastaJustus HeldKoray KorkmazMatthew DavenportNina KrasilnikovaPeng YangQiang XuQusai AlbakeerRamez HaddadSari HaddadSimone AndrianVladimir TroyanovskiyXiang LianYuefan Gu