2011-12 World Series of Poker Circuit - Horseshoe Hammond

Main Event
Day: 1b
Event Info

2011-12 World Series of Poker Circuit - Horseshoe Hammond

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
j3
Prize
$393,584
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$2,349,825
Entries
1,615
Level Info
Level
35
Blinds
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
30,000

Main Event

Day 1b Completed

Scarborough Emerges as Day 1b Chip Leader with 324,500

Level 15 : 1,200/2,400, 400 ante
Mike Scarborough
Mike Scarborough

The World Series of Poker Circuit continued on Saturday with Day 1b of the Hammond Main Event. On Friday, the Horseshoe Hammond housed a record 912 entrants for Day 1a, already surpassing the 2010 Main Event’s field of 872 players. That meant the 703 Day-1b entrants was just icing on the cake, making the total field 1,615 and creating a $2,349,825 prize pool, $393,584 of which was reserved for first place. The man who finished Day 1b with the best chance of capturing that prize is Mike Scarborough, who bagged up 324,500.

Scarborough is no stranger to poker and actually made a televised final table at the World Poker Tour 2011 Hollywood Poker Open in Lawrenceburg, Indiana. Not only that, he went on to win the tournament for $273,644 after defeating a final table that included Ali Eslami, Tom Marchese, William Reynolds, and Erik Seidel, with Scarborough defeating the last name on that list in heads-up play.

Unfortunately, not everyone had as good a day as Scarborough. Day 1b was filled with numerous re-entries, but many found their luck hadn’t changed since Day 1a. Some players who played both flights and failed to survive include Allen Kessler, Kathy Liebert, Chris Tryba, Micah Raskin, Kyle Cartwright, Steve Verrett, Tim Vance, and last year’s winner, Kurt Jewell.

One man who did have a good day was former online pro Mark “P0ker H0” Kroon, who was eliminated on Day 1a on just the third hand after his pocket aces were cracked by pocket kings. Re-entering the event proved a wise decision as Kroon ended up finishing with an average stack of 108,000.

Other notables who survived the Day 1b minefield and will return on Sunday include “Captain” Tom Franklin (41,000), Eddie Blumenthal (79,500), Eric Bair (189,500), Jeff Fielder (216,500), Nadya Magnus (91,000), and Jacob Bazley (255,000).

Those players will join Paul Bianchi, who ended Day 1a as the chip leader with a staggering 358,000; as well as, notables from Day 1a like Eric Crain, Dwyte Pilgrim, Chad Brown, Josh Brikis, Mohsin Charania and Kenny Nguyen.

The 158 Day 1b survivors will join the 184 players Day 1a survivors on Sunday at 2 p.m. as the final 342 work their way past the money bubble and toward the final table.

You can follow all the action from Hammond as our Live Reporting Team brings you all the hands, action, and eliminations on the way to crowning the latest WSOP-Circuit Main Event champion.

Tags: Mike Scarborough

Notable End-of-Day Chip Counts

Player Chips Progress
Mike Scarborough us
Mike Scarborough
324,500 84,500
Jacob Bazely
Jacob Bazely
255,000 15,000
Heath Penden
Heath Penden
245,500
James Ruszkiewicz
James Ruszkiewicz
243,500
Jeff Fielder
Jeff Fielder
216,500
Eric Bair
Eric Bair
189,500 19,500
Jaime Maldonado
Jaime Maldonado
185,000
Aaron Steury us
Aaron Steury
WSOP 1X Winner
118,000 -67,000
Mark "P0ker H0" Kroon us
Mark "P0ker H0" Kroon
108,000 -76,200
Oran Haynes
Oran Haynes
91,000 -99,000
Nadya Magnus us
Nadya Magnus
91,000 53,000
Eddie Blumenthal us
Eddie Blumenthal
79,500
Aaron Bieck
Aaron Bieck
60,000 5,000
David Snitkin
David Snitkin
50,000
Tom Franklin us
Tom Franklin
WSOP 1X Winner
41,000 -6,000
John Land us
John Land
30,000 2,000
Matt Kirby us
Matt Kirby
26,000 -64,000

Three More Hands

Level 15 : 1,200/2,400, 400 ante

With ten minutes left in the level each table will play three more hands before bagging and tagging for the evening.

WPT Champ Scarborough Looking to Capture a WSOP Title

Mike Scarborough
Mike Scarborough

Every once in awhile we overlook someone in the field and they don't grab our attention until they have a big stack in front of them. That's exactly what just happened with Mike Scarborough, who is our chip leader with 350,000. As soon as we heard the name, it immediately rung a bell.

You may recall Scarborough from TV when he final tabled the World Poker Tour 2011 Hollywood Poker Open in Lawrenceburg, Indiana. Not only that, he went on to win it for $273,644 after defeating a final table that included Ali Eslami, Tom Marchese, William Reynolds, and Erik Seidel, with Scarborough defeating the last name on that list in heads-up play. Needless to say, we have a contender on our hands.

Player Chips Progress
Mike Scarborough us
Mike Scarborough
350,000

Tags: Mike Scarborough

The Thomassie Squeeze

Level 15 : 1,200/2,400, 400 ante

A middle position player opened for 4,500, the player on the button called and Dylan Thomassie moved all in from the small blind. The original raiser re-checked his cards and folded with a sigh. The player on the button took a few moments longer to fold and Thomassie took the pot.

"If you just three-bet there I could have shoved on you," the original raiser said. "You couldn't call with big slick there."

Thomassie flashed a mischievous grin as he stacked the pot, leaving the others to wonder if he actually had a hand.

Tags: Dylan Thomassie

Level: 15

Blinds: 1,200/2,400

Ante: 400

All is Fair When It Comes to Bair

An older gentleman in the hijack opened for 4,500 and found calls from the button and small blind. Former chip leader Eric Bair was in the big blind and decided to exercise his option with a raise to 15,000, which only the button called.

After the flop came down {9-Hearts}{10-Spades}{J-Clubs}, Bair quickly fired out four orange T5,000 chips and two yellow T1,000 chips for a bet of 22,000. The button, who had about 70,000 back, thought for about ten seconds before relinquishing his hand. With that, Bair is back up to 170K.

Player Chips Progress
Eric Bair
Eric Bair
170,000 55,000

Tags: Eric Bair

Play Slowing Down

Level 14 : 1,000/2,000, 300 ante

With the end of the night drawing close the pace of bustouts has slowed to a crawl. Play has become tighter as players realize they are less than an hour away from bagging and tagging and getting a good night's sleep before Day 2 tomorrow.