2011-12 World Series of Poker Circuit Event - Harrah's St. Louis

Main Event
Day: 1
Event Info

2011-12 World Series of Poker Circuit Event - Harrah's St. Louis

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
a2
Prize
$190,961
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$909,375
Entries
625
Level Info
Level
30
Blinds
30,000 / 60,000
Ante
10,000
Players Info - Day 1

Main Event

Day 1 Completed

Kirk Leads the Way Into Day 2

Level 9 : 400/800, 100 ante
Tripp Kirk
Tripp Kirk

The 2011/2012 World Series of Poker Circuit continued on Saturday with Day 1 of the Main Event from Harrah’s St. Louis. The tournament was broken into two starting flights, appropriately titled Day 1a and 1b. The former attracted 367 runners, while the latter, which allowed for reentries, brought in 239 more. The 606-player field surpassed last year’s field of 449 players, though that event was not offered as a reentry.

Last year, WSOP Circuit phenom Kyle Cartwright captured his third gold ring by winning the Main Event, not to mention the $142,290 first-place prize. Coincidentally, Cartwright captured his fourth gold ring on Saturday, though it wasn’t in the Main Event. Instead 22 players returned for Event #10 $1,090 NLHE, which began the day before with 229 players. Cartwright managed to make the final table along with Circuit regulars AP Phahurat and Amanda Musumeci.

What's more, Phahurat , who is actually Cartwright's roommate, finished as the runner up. In the final hand, Phahurat got his shorter stack all in preflop holding {A-Spades}{7-Clubs} and was dominated by the {A-Diamonds}{K-Diamonds} of Cartwright. The board ran out an uninspiring {Q-Clubs}{8-Hearts}{6-Hearts}{K-Spades}{6-Clubs} and it was all over.

Cartwright, who’s four rings puts him just one behind all-time ring winner Mark "Pegasus" Smith, collected his $53,354 prize and immediately entered the Day 1b flight to attempt a title defense. Unfortunately for him, he got all in preflop in a five-bet pot holding {A-}{A-} against {8-}{8-} and was dealt a bad beat to eliminate him from the tournament. The good news is that because Cartwright didn't play Day 1a (he was busy winning his fourth WSOP Circuit gold ring in Event #10), he has the option to rebuy at the start of Day 2. He'll start with just a 20 big-blind stack, but Cartwright told PokerNews that’s his plan.

If you want to add another interesting wrinkle to the Cartwright/Phahurat story, their other roommate, Tripp Kirk, took 12th in Event #10, entered the Main Event, and then went on to bag 113,900, enough to make him the Day 1 chip leader.

While Cartwright and company had to wait until the second flight to play the Main, others took a shot on Day 1a. Some pros that did and managed to survive were Kurt Jewell, Casey Cavanaugh, Dennis Phillips, Scott Clements, La Sengphet, David Clark, Huy Nguyen and “Pegasus.”

Unfortunately not everyone was so lucky on Day 1a. Many players fell and opted to reenter on Day 1b including Ben Smith, Joe Hebda, Seneca Easley, Everrett Carlton, Sam Barnhart and Drazen Ilich.

They were joined by some new players such as Musumeci, Phahurat, Charles “Woody” Moore, Paul Harris, Jennifer Parrish and music superstar and St. Louis native, Nelly. Unfortunately for the Grammy Award winning hip hop artist, he was unable to survive the day and was eliminated in Level 7 after getting all in preflop holding {A-}{4-} offsuit against the {9-}{9-} of Richard Harrington. The board bricked for both players and Harrington sent the recording artist to the rail.

Some players who punched their ticket to Day 2 in the latter flight were the aforementioned reentries, as well as big stacks Thomas Conway, Bill Byrnes, Peter Brooks and Raj Dhanakula.

Notable WSOP Circuit Harrah’s St. Louis Day 1 Chip Counts

PlayerChip Count
Tripp Kirk113,900
Thomas Conway111,000
Bill Byrnes111,000
Peter Brooks99,900
Raj Dhanakula90,800
Mark Johnson77,200
Jason Wagers77,200
Casey Cavanaugh69,100
Kurt Jewell65,000
Paul Harris52,800
Dennis Phillips45,700

Day 2 will commence at Noon CST with approximately 300 players looking to play down to the money and as close to the final table as they can get. Unfortunately we’re not able to tell you much about the prize pool or how many players will be paid, as registration for the tournament is open right up until the start of Day 2.

Be sure to follow the action from the WSOP Circuit Harrah’s St. Louis right here on PokerNews as our Live Reporting Team will be on hand to bring you all the action and eliminations.

If you love poker, be sure to follow us on Twitter and like us on Facebook.

Tags: Tripp Kirk

End of Day 1b Notable Chip Counts

Player Chips Progress
Tripp Kirk us
Tripp Kirk
113,900 38,900
Peter Brooks
Peter Brooks
99,900 21,900
Raj Dhanakula
Raj Dhanakula
90,800
Mark Johnson
Mark Johnson
77,200 13,200
Jason Wagers
Jason Wagers
77,200
Joe Hebda
Joe Hebda
57,600 31,100
Everett Carlton us
Everett Carlton
56,500 23,500
Paul Harris
Paul Harris
52,800
Drazen Ilich us
Drazen Ilich
27,900 8,900
Aaron Massey us
Aaron Massey
24,300 -3,700
Cord Garcia us
Cord Garcia
24,200 -15,800
Sam Barnhart us
Sam Barnhart
21,600 6,600
Luther Lewis
Luther Lewis
20,600 12,600
Amanda Musumeci us
Amanda Musumeci
20,600 600
Seneca Easley us
Seneca Easley
19,300 -3,700
Nadya Magnus us
Nadya Magnus
17,600 7,600

Musumeci Lost Half Her Stack

Level 9 : 400/800, 100 ante
Amanda Musumeci
Amanda Musumeci

Amanda Musumeci just called us over to tell us she lost half her stack after flopping a full house holding pocket jacks against Jason Wagers. Her tweet explains:

"Had stack to 60k. Just lost almost all of it when i flopped j66 holding the jj. Got it in otr vs quads wow for 100k pot 5min before bagging"

Tags: Amanda Musumeci

End of the Night Cometh

Level 9 : 400/800, 100 ante

There is just six minutes remaining here in Level 9, which means players will soon be bagging and tagging. We're going to go get you some notable chip counts, so be sure to stay tuned for those and of course our recap of Day 1 action.

Last to First: Eddie Smurzynski Makes Stunning Final Table Comeback in Event #9

Level 9 : 400/800, 100 ante
Eddie Smurzynski, winner of Event #9.
Eddie Smurzynski, winner of Event #9.

For the last time tonight, here is Nolan Dalla with his official recap of Event #9 from Harrah's St. Louis:

When the final ten players took seats at the final table, the two lowest-stacked players were Eddie Smurzynski and Michael E. Smith. No one could have conceived that these same two players would end up playing for the coveted gold ring and bragging rights as the latest WSOP Circuit champion, some seven hours later.

But that’s exactly what happened.

Smurzynski staged what was undoubtedly the most surprising comeback of any player thus far at this year’s Harrah’s St. Louis series. He began final table play down by more than 5 to 1 versus the chip leader. But Smurzynski never panicked. He played a steady game and gradually built up his stack to the point where he was in contention.

By the time play was three-handed, Smurzynski was still behind in third place. But he had proven his ability to survive disadvantages and when the cards began to turn his way, Smurzynski was in the perfect position to be the beneficiary.

Smurzynski ended up with this first WSOP Circuit title and a gold ring, which is the token of achievement awarded to all winner’s of events on the national tournament series. He was also presented with a nice payout totaling $27,212 in prizes money.

WSOP Circuit Harrah’s St. Louis Ring Event #9 No Limit Hold’em

Buy-inEntrantsPrize Pool
$300+$55425$123,675
PlacePlayerHometownPrize
1Edward SmurzynskiMidlothian, IL$27,212
2Michael SmithMagnolia, MS$16,814
3Stewart YancikBlue Springs, MO$12,286
4Gary CatensSt. Louis, MO$9,122
5Jason RatcliffWright City, MO$6,879
6Ahmad RaghebiSt. Louis, MO$5,265
7Ryan GentryLa Jolla, CA$4,089
8Scot BradyEvansville, IN$3,220
9William CorvaiaKeokuk, IA$2,572

Tags: Eddie Smurzynski

Prop Betting

Level 9 : 400/800, 100 ante

Kurt Jewell and Matthew Lawrence, both of whom advanced to Day 2 in the first flight, recently visited the tournament area and had clearly been celebrating their good fortune. The latter stated he wanted to do some gambling, which was satisfied by a pocketful of change.

You see, "someone" nearby had a pocketful of change, 23 coins to be exact, and the duo decided it'd be fun to bet $100 against one another heads versus tails. That meant a random throw of the coins would determine the outcome. Jewell took heads and Lawrence was content with tails.

The result: 11 tails and 12 heads. Ship the $100 to Jewell.

Tags: Matthew LawrenceKurt Jewell

Level: 9

Blinds: 400/800

Ante: 100