2012-13 World Series of Poker Circuit Event - Foxwoods

Main event
Day: 2
Event Info

2012-13 World Series of Poker Circuit Event - Foxwoods

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
ak
Prize
$194,178
Event Info
Prize Pool
$924,652
Entries
615
Level Info
Level
32
Blinds
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
10,000

Reason Leads as 16 Advance to Day 3

Level 25 : 8,000/16,000, 2,000 ante
Ben Reason leads the final 16
Ben Reason leads the final 16

The 2012-13 World Series of Poker Circuit Foxwoods Main Event continued on Sunday as the surviving players from two Day 1 starting flights returned to Mashantucket, Connecticut to play through the money bubble at the top 63 on their way toward the final table. After 13 levels of play, just 16 players remained with Ben Reason and his stack of 1.704 million in chips leading the way. Other still in contention include Paul Snead, Pete Campo and Kevin “BeL0WaB0Ve” Saul.

You can read about Reason's meteoric rise simply by scrolling down a bit in the blog. In the meantime, let's recap the day's action starting with Aryeh Cohen, who dominated the action on Saturday on his way to becoming the end-of-day chip leader with 180,000. Unfortunately for him, his luck turned around on Day 2, and he was eliminated within two hours.

It began in Level 15 (1,000/2,000/300) when Cohen got involved in a monster pot with Erek Gaines, who was a top-six stack. Kurt Jewell opened the action with a raise to 4,200, Cohen responded with a three-bet to 12,500 from the hijack, the cutoff called, and then Gaines four-bet to 30,000 from the small blind. Jewell folded, Cohen shipped, and the cutoff got out of the way. Gaines, who had 109,400 total, called off.

Gaines: {Q-Clubs}{Q-Hearts}
Cohen: {10-Spades}{10-Hearts}

Cohen was crestfallen upon seeing the cards and with good reason. According to the PokerNews Odds Calculator, he had just an 18.23% chance of winning the hand. That dropped to 8.38% on the {6-Diamonds}{5-Clubs}{3-Spades} flop, and the {6-Spades} turn knocked it down even further to 4.55%. Cohen needed a ten on the river to eliminate Gaines and take down the monster pot, but it wasn't in the cards as the {K-Spades} peeled off. Gaines vaulted to 240,000 while Cohen was left with approximately 45,000. He was eliminated less than ten minutes later.

Other players who failed to secure a payday were Micah Raskin, Chris Tryba, Aaron Massey, Will “The Thrill” Failla, Greg Raymer, Andy Frankenberger, Ronnie Bardah, John Dibella, Nancy Birnbaum, Victor Ramdin and the aforementioned Jewell.

With 64 players remaining, hand-for-hand play was initiated, though it didn’t take long for the bubble to burst. In the first hand, Bob Ricciuti shipped all in for 90,500 from middle position and Eric Rando, who was the Day 1a chip leader, called from the button.

Action was halted until all other tables finished their hands, and then a crowd surrounded Table 4 to watch the action. "Of course I would be the bubble boy," a disgusted Ricciuti stated upon discovering his {Q-}{Q-} was dominated by the {K-}{K-} of Rando. As has happened to so many men in the past, the ladies proved to be the end of Ricciuti as the board ran out an uninspiring {5-Clubs}{10-Clubs}{5-Diamonds}{J-Diamonds}{7-Spades}.

From there, the in-the-money eliminations began to mount including those of Aditya Prasetyo (58th — $3,051), Tim Reilly (56th — $3,051), Justin Pechie (53rd — $3,329) and Luke Vrabel (44th — $3,606), who was eliminated in Level 21 with the blinds at 4,000/8,000/1,000. It happened when a preflop raising war resulted in Vrabel being all in preflop for 248,000 holding the {J-Diamonds}{J-Hearts}. Unfortunately for him, Lall Bharat held the {Q-Hearts}{Q-Diamonds} and had 3,000 more in chips. Vrabel, known as "Bdbeatslayer" online, was no doubt hoping to deliver a bad beat of his own, but it wasn't in the cards as the board ran out {10-Clubs}{3-Spades}{5-Clubs}{K-Hearts}{K-Clubs}.

The eliminations kept coming over the next four levels as Shawn Suller (37th — $3,606), Fabio D’Agata (32nd — $4,438), John Yale (29th — $5,178), John Pito (27th — $5,918), Z Stein (26ht — $5,918), Buck Ramsay (25th — $5,918), Ylon Schwartz (22nd — $6,935) and Greg Folchetti (19th — $8,229) all his the rail.

Here's a look at how the final 16 stack up:

SeatPlayerCount
1Eric Rando458,000
2Pete Campo442,000
3Mike Massri585,000
4Paul Snead568,000
5Bobby Corcione862,000
6Ethan Foulkes916,000
7Lall Bharat680,000
8Alex Wilson693,000
9Chris Mintchev910,000
   
1Cory Waaland821,000
2--empty--N/A
3Chris Schonbach663,000
4John McNabola1,468,000
5--empty--N/A
6Stephen Dare1,704,000
7Kevin Saul484,000
8Eric Blair298,000
9Ben Reason769,000

The third and final day of the WSOP Circuit Foxwoods Main Event will kick off at noon EST as the final 16 will play down to a winner. Who’ll take home the $194,178 first-place prize and earn a coveted spot in the National Championship? Join us then as we bring you all the latest and greatest poker action from the great state of Connecticut!

Tags: Ben Reason

Vrabel Busts in 500K Pot

Level 21 : 4,000/8,000, 1,000 ante
Luke "Bdbeatslayer" Vrabel
Luke "Bdbeatslayer" Vrabel

A preflop raising war resulted in Luke Vrabel being all in preflop for 248,000 holding the {J-Diamonds}{J-Hearts}. Unfortunately for him, Lall Bharat held the {Q-Hearts}{Q-Diamonds} and had 3,000 more in chips.

Vrabel, known as "Bdbeatslayer" online, was no doubt hoping to deliver a bad beat of his own, but it wasn't in the cards as the board ran out {10-Clubs}{3-Spades}{5-Clubs}{K-Hearts}{K-Clubs}. Vrabel hastily made his way to the payout desk in 44th place to collect $3,606.

Not long after, Lawrence Greenberg and Christopher Renaudette joined Vrabel on the rail in 43rd and 42nd place respectively.

Player Chips Progress
Lall Bharat
Lall Bharat
500,000 500,000
Christopher Renaudette
Christopher Renaudette
Busted
Luke Vrabel us
Luke Vrabel
Busted
Lawrence Greenberg us
Lawrence Greenberg
WPT 1X Winner
Busted

Tags: Christopher RenaudetteLall BharatLawrence GreenbergLuke Vrabel

Jewell Bucked

Level 18 : 2,000/4,000, 500 ante
Kurt Jewell
Kurt Jewell

"He's going to get a tattoo of a roller coaster on his arm to signify his chip stack," Aaron Massey said of his friend Kurt Jewell earlier in the day. Well, that roller coaster has crashed.

It happened after Jewell picked up {Q-}{Q-} and ran it straight into the {K-}{K-} of Buck Ramsay. A preflop raising war saw all the chips get in, and Ramsay's kings held to give him a double to 315,000 while Jewell fell to 23,000.

Not long after, Ramsay min-raised from the button and then called when Jewell shoved from the big blind. Ramsay tabled the {Q-Diamonds}{4-Clubs} and was out in front of Jewell's {10-Spades}{6-Spades}. The board ran out {8-Spades}{7-Diamonds}{5-Diamonds}{Q-Hearts}{3-Diamonds} and just like that Jewell's day was done.

We've also noticed that John Dibella is missing from the tournament. Since his former seat is now occupied by another player, it's safe to say he has been eliminated from the tournament.

Player Chips Progress
Buck Ramsay ca
Buck Ramsay
350,000 225,000
Kurt Jewell us
Kurt Jewell
Busted
John Dibella us
John Dibella
EPT 1X Winner
Busted

Tags: Kurt JewellBuck RamsayJohn Dibella

Cohen Leading Charge to Start Day 2 at Foxwoods

Welcome to Day 2 of the first ever World Series of Poker Circuit Foxwoods Casino Main Event. The 578 total entries who came out for Saturday's Day 1 exceeded the expectations of many, with 196 players managing to survive one of the two first-day flights. Of that group it was Aryeh Cohen emerging with the most chips of anyone after turning a starting stack of 20,000 into an even 180,000 during yesterday's action.

Cohen had made it up over 100,000 within the first eight of the 12 40-minute levels played yesterday, then not long after that won a huge ace-king versus pocket tens hand to push into the chip lead. The Brooklyn-based player then bolstered his stack even further before play concluded to claim first position heading into today's second day.

The earlier flight saw a larger turnout with 350 players taking a shot during the Day 1a session. From that group just 123 made it through, with Eric Rando ending the afternoon with the biggest stack of 143,100. Erek Gaines had been flirting with the 200,000-chip mark near the end of the flight, but lost a couple of pots during the final level to end in second position among the afternoon players with 133,600.

The evening flight then saw 228 entries, with a number of the Day 1a bustouts among that group. From that latter collection of players 73 survived, four of whom would end the night with bigger stacks than Rando's — Cohen, Igor Borukhov (163,300), Buck Ramsay (158,600), and holder of one WSOP Circuit ring Benjamin Reason (150,300). Like Cohen, the others all similarly scored big knockout hands during the final levels of play to end the night bagging their large stacks.

Other big stacks to start today include Luke Vrabel, David Singer (not the New York-based WSOP bracelet holder, by the way), Bobby Corcione (who took 21st at last summer's WSOP Main Event), and two-time WSOP Circuit ring winner Nancy Birnbaum. And there are a number of other notables with above-average chips still in the field, too, including two-time WSOP bracelet winner Andy Frankenberger, 2004 WSOP Main Event champion Greg Raymer, one-time WSOP bracelet winner Ylon Schwartz, and two-time WSOP Circuit ring winner Allen Kessler.

Late registration remains open up until the first hands are dealt at noon today, meaning we may well see a few more take seats and the total field size sneak back up over 200 players when play resumes. The schedule calls for three more 40-minute levels (through Level 16), then hour-long levels after that.

Meanwhile, come back at noon ET to join our full coverage of Day 2 of the 2012-13 WSOP Circuit Main Event at Foxwoods here at PokerNews.