2012-13 World Series of Poker Circuit Event - Harrah's New Orleans

Main Event
Day: 2
Event Info

2012-13 World Series of Poker Circuit Event - Harrah's New Orleans

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
8k
Prize
$228,600
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,675
Prize Pool
$1,143,000
Entries
762
Level Info
Level
36
Blinds
80,000 / 160,000
Ante
20,000

Shahiriar Assareh Eliminated in 12th Place ($17,351)

Level 27 : 12,000/24,000, 4,000 ante

Daniel Weinman, who cashed in this event last year when he finished 70th for $2,797, opened for 48,000 from the hijack and Shahiriar Assareh called from the button. Joe Hebert then called from the big blind and it was three-way action to the {8-Spades}{10-Clubs}{a-Hearts} flop, which all three players checked.

When the {6-Spades} turned, Hebert checked, Weinman bet 65,000 and only Shahiriar Assareh called. The {5-Clubs} completed the board on the river and Weinman promptly dropped in 325,000. Assareh called off his remaining 300,000 but mucked when Weinman revealed the {A-Spades}{5-Diamonds}. Since it was an all-in hand, the floor instructed the dealer to show the mucked hand, which ended up being the {A-Diamonds}{4-Diamonds}.

Player Chips Progress
Daniel Weinman us
Daniel Weinman
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 2X Winner
WPT 2X Winner
2,700,000 250,000
Shahiriar Assareh
Shahiriar Assareh
Busted

Tags: Daniel WeinmanShahiriar Assareh

Big Double for Wunstel in Last Hand of the Night

Level 27 : 12,000/24,000, 4,000 ante

As the clock expired on Level 27 a big hand was brewing at Table 60.

It began with Ben Mintz opening for 50,000 only to have Corrie Wunstel three-bet to 126,000 from the big blind. Not to be outdone, Mintz four-bet to 250,000, Wunstel five-bet to 377,000 and Mintz six-bet shoved. Wunstel called off for 873,000 total and the cards were turned up.

Wunstel: {A-Diamonds}{q-Hearts}
Mintz: {A-Clubs}{J-Clubs}

Wunstel got it in great and was primed to double, but the {5-Spades}{7-Clubs}{5-Clubs} flop gave him pause as Mintz picked up a flush draw. The railbirds leaned in close to catch a glimpse of the last two cards of the night, which came the {2-Spades} and {6-Spades} respectively. Wunstel dodged clubs and was able to double headed into Day 3.

We'll have full chips counts for you in just a moment.

Tags: Corrie WunstelBen Mintz

Official End-of-Day 2 Chip Counts

Level 27 : 12,000/24,000, 4,000 ante
Player Chips Progress
Daniel Weinman us
Daniel Weinman
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 2X Winner
WPT 2X Winner
2,560,000 -140,000
Joseph Hebert us
Joseph Hebert
1,995,000 -205,000
Corrie Wunstel us
Corrie Wunstel
WSOP 1X Winner
1,785,000 912,000
Rogen Chhabra us
Rogen Chhabra
1,675,000
Kasra Khodayarkhani us
Kasra Khodayarkhani
1,350,000 70,000
Dan Schmiech
Dan Schmiech
WSOP 1X Winner
1,290,000 390,000
Pavan Bhatia
Pavan Bhatia
1,105,000 -95,000
Ben Mintz us
Ben Mintz
1,030,000 -860,000
Robert Cheung ca
Robert Cheung
WSOP 1X Winner
945,000 309,000
Luke Graham us
Luke Graham
935,000 489,000
Tripp Kirk us
Tripp Kirk
575,000 280,000

Weinman Leads the Final 11

Level 27 : 12,000/24,000, 4,000 ante
Daniel Weinman
Daniel Weinman

On Monday, the 2012-13 World Series of Poker Circuit Harrah’s New Orleans Main Event continued with Day 2 action. After 11 more levels of play, Daniel Weinman leads the remaining 11 players with 2,560,000 chips. He was the only player to bag more than two million chips, and following him are Joseph Hebert (1,995,000), Corrie Wunstel (1,785,000), and Rogen Chhabra (1,675,000).

Weinman started his ascent of the counts in Level 22, when he and Rogen Chhabra clashed in a million-chip pot. Chhabra folded a set of queens face up on the river of a three-heart board, and Weinman tossed his cards into the muck facedown. The Harrah’s Cherokee runner-up then crossed the two-million chip threshold when he called two streets from Robert Pantich only to lead on the river when the board paired. Pantich unhappily mucked, and again Weinman opted not to show.

The Atlanta native is a very big favorite to make his second Main Event final table of the season, and is looking to best his finish in the First in Flight state.

Day 2 began with 125 players – only 44 players off of the money bubble. A handful of notables exited early, including Joe Kuether, Kevin Saul, Paul Sokoloff, and Joseph McKeehen.

On the bubble, Earl Merritt opted to fold a pair of aces face up to a three-bet. Merritt had opened to four times the big blind from under the gun, and Tripp Kirk moved all in from the blinds. The player open-folded, and Twitter nearly exploded. Kirk parlayed that good fortune into another deep run, and will return on Day 3 with 575,000. Like Weinman, Kirk has already made a final table this season, finishing third at Horseshoe Hammond.

After the money bubble burst, there was a flurry eliminations including Aaron and Ralph Massey, Brian Green, Eli Loewenthal, and Pedro Rios. Rios held flush and straight draws against two overpairs, but was unable to hit either and reported to the rail.

After the dinner break, Rahul Deevara, who started the day as the chip leader, fell at the hands of Wunstel. Deevara got his money in drawing dead as Wunstel turned a full house, and Deevara hit the rail in 27th place, earning $6,961. Wunstel received a huge double up during the last hand of the night.

Daniel Lowery jumped out to a huge lead at the start of Day 2, but ran into pocket aces twice during Level 25. In one hand, Lowery three-bet shoved with ace-nine suited and Brad Johnson, the original raiser, called with aces. They held, and Lowery was left with less than a big blind. He was promptly eliminated by Sandra Wong, who held two aces.

Soon after, Wong exited as well, and so too did Claudia Crawford, Sean Winter, Nick Jivkov, and Abraham Abud.

Once the field was whittled down to 18 players, they redrew to the final two tables. At that point, Parwez Nawabi, Ben Reason, Robert Panitch, Tzu Yen, Brad Johnson, AJ Atiqi, and Shahirira Assareh were eliminated. Pantich moved all in for nearly twice the pot on a king-high board with a wheel draw, only to be called by Joseph Hebert who held a pair of kings. The river was a brick, and Pantich hit the rail in 16th place.

The remaining 11 players will return at 2 p.m. local time on Monday to battle it out for the $228,600 first-place prize, the ring, and a seat into the Southern Comfort 100 Proof World Series of Poker National Championship. Be sure to tune in then for all of your exclusive, live updates straight from the tournament floor.

Tags: Daniel Weinman

Main Event

Day 2 Completed