2012-13 World Series of Poker Circuit Event - Choctaw Durant

Main Event
Day: 1b
Event Info

2012-13 World Series of Poker Circuit Event - Choctaw Durant

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
44
Prize
$312,080
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,675
Prize Pool
$1,710,000
Entries
1,140
Level Info
Level
35
Blinds
70,000 / 140,000
Ante
20,000

Bakhshian Leads Day 1b Survivors; Nguyen and Davis Among Leaders

Level 17 : 1,500/3,000, 500 ante
Hien Nguyen - Among Day 1b Leaders
Hien Nguyen - Among Day 1b Leaders

The World Series of Poker Circuit continued on Saturday with Day 1b of the Choctaw Durant Main Event, and after 17 levels of play, the chip leader was Jonathan Bakhshian, who bagged 460,000 chips.

Drazen Ilich, who finished Day 1a with 650,000 chips, will enter Day 2 as the overall chip leader.

Day 1b attracted 674 entrants, creating the third-largest field (1,140) in the history of the WSOP Circuit. The 2011 and 2012 Hammond Main Events attracted 1,615 entrants and 1,523 entrants respectively.

Only 99 players survived Day 1b, meaning Day 2 will begin with 163. The top 117 players will receive a small piece ($2,804) of the $1,710,000 prize pool, with the winner earning $312,080, the WSOP Circuit gold ring, and a seat in the Southern Comfort 100 Proof National Championship.

While Bakhshian, Jason Hall, Bobby Layne, Hien Nguyen, and Mike Davis made a late charge to the top of the counts, Kunal Patel steadily climbed the counts throughout the day.

Patel, who bagged 236,500 chips, started to climb the leader board after dinner break. He crossed the six-figure threshold when a player decided to bluff into him when he turned a flush. The blinds were 800/1,600/200 and the board was {5-Spades}{3-Hearts}{k-Spades}{2-Spades} when Patel led out for a bet. His opponent moved all in for around 40,000, and Patel called with {j-Spades}{8-Spades}. The player sheepishly tabled {9-Clubs}{9-Hearts}, and a meaningless {6-Spades} completed the board.

Patel later crossed the 200,000-chip threshold when he called a preflop shove in a battle of the blinds. The limits were 1,200/2,400/400 when a player open-shoved for 40,000 from the small blind. Patel tank-called with {a-Spades}{9-Clubs}, which had his opponent’s {a-Diamonds}{8-Clubs} dominated. The board ran out {3-Hearts}{2-Spades}{3-Clubs}{q-Diamonds}{4-Spades}, and Patel eliminated his opponent.

Hundreds of players failed to survive the day, including notables David Clark, Kurt Jewell, Will “Monkey” Souther, Justin “Choctaw” Kruger, Allen Kessler, Tommy Vedes, AP Phahurat, Huy Nguyen, Traci Brown, and Abraham Araya. Nguyen and Brown, who finished first and second respectively in the 2011 WSOP Circuit Choctaw Durant Main Event, both exited after the dinner break. A short-stacked Brown moved all in with {k-Spades}{q-Diamonds} on a flop of {4-Diamonds}{4-Clubs}{3-Clubs} only to be called by Danny Logston who held {a-Clubs}{k-Clubs}. The turn and river came {4-Hearts}, {9-Clubs} respectively, and Brown was eliminated.

Rex Clinkscales, who leads the WSOP Circuit National Leaderboard, eliminated Nguyen. With the blinds at 1,200/2,400/400, Nguyen open-shoved his last 26,000 with {9-Hearts}{8-Hearts}. Clinkscales re-shoved with {a-}{j-}, and flopped an ace. The turn and river both bricked, and Nguyen was eliminated.

During the last level of the evening, the defending champion Araya was eliminated. With the blinds at 1,500/3,000/500, Araya moved all in for his last 52,000 with {6-}{6-}. An opponent looked him up with {a-}{j-}, and the board ran out {a-}{q-}{10-}{10-}{8-}. Araya, who misfired a bullet on Day 1a as well, was eliminated, meaning there will be a new champion at Choctaw.

Day 2 of the Choctaw Durant Main Event will begin on Sunday at 12:00 p.m. CST. Join the PokerNews Live Reporting Team as they bring you all of the action straight from the tournament floor.

Tags: Jason HallJonathan Bakhshian

There Will Be a New Champ in Choctaw

Abraham Araya on Day 1a
Abraham Araya on Day 1a

Abraham Araya gave his best toward a title defense, but his run has come to an end here in the last four hands of the night.

Araya, who previously busted on Day 1a, shoved his last 52,000 with {6-}{6-} and received a call from a player holding {A-}{J-}. Araya got it in good, but he lost the lead when the flop fell {A-}{Q-}{10-}. The {10-} turn and {8-} river sealed Araya's fate, which means there will be a new champion here in Choctaw.

Player Chips Progress
Abraham Araya us
Abraham Araya
Busted

Tags: Abraham Araya