Level: 14
Blinds: 1,000/2,500
Ante: 2,500
Level: 14
Blinds: 1,000/2,500
Ante: 2,500
The board showed ![]()
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![]()
![]()
and there was around 13,000 in the pot. A player moved all in on the river for 12,000 and Andrew Ostapchenko snap-called.
The player tabled ![]()
for a pair of tens and Ostapchenko turned over ![]()
, giving him a flush and the pot, eliminating his opponent.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
451,000
31,000
|
31,000 |
|
|
||
Level: 15
Blinds: 1,500/3,000
Ante: 3,000
Roland Israelashvili moved all in for his last 45,000 and Gregory Neal was the only player to call, the two tabled their hands.
Roland Israelashvili: ![]()
![]()
Greg Neal: ![]()
![]()
The dealer spread out ![]()
![]()
on the flop, shifting the lead to Neal. A
came down on the turn card and Israekashvili was now drawing to just an ace to stay alive.
A
completed the board, failing to hit Israelashvili as he was eliminated by the two pair of Neal.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
346,000
81,000
|
81,000 |
|
|
Busted | |
|
|
||
Action was on the river with a dangerous looking board reading ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
. Mitch Garshofsky made a bet of 30,000 over to his opponent Michael Rossitto who stared down Garshofsky for a bit before ultimately relinquishing his hand into the muck.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
130,000
5,000
|
5,000 |
|
|
122,000
40,000
|
40,000 |
A player moved all in for 30,000 from the cutoff, Mukul Pahuja called on the button and Guang Li moved all in from the big blind. Pahuja folded and the remaining two turned over their cards.
Opponent: ![]()
![]()
Guang Li: ![]()
![]()
The board ran out ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
and Li's cowboys held on for the pot, sending an appointment home
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
355,000
75,000
|
75,000 |
|
|
208,000
88,000
|
88,000 |
Day 1a has reached its conclusion. Full chip counts and recap to follow.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
736,000
285,000
|
285,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
355,000 | |
|
|
332,000
332,000
|
332,000 |
|
|
225,500
50,500
|
50,500 |
|
|
210,000
2,000
|
2,000 |
|
|
198,000
48,000
|
48,000 |
|
|
182,000
77,000
|
77,000 |
|
|
170,000 | |
|
|
169,500
169,500
|
169,500 |
|
|
169,000
143,000
|
143,000 |
|
|
164,000
164,000
|
164,000 |
|
|
163,500
6,500
|
6,500 |
|
|
152,000
152,000
|
152,000 |
|
|
150,000
35,000
|
35,000 |
|
|
||
|
|
148,000
148,000
|
148,000 |
|
|
139,000
86,000
|
86,000 |
|
|
120,500
4,500
|
4,500 |
|
|
114,000
114,000
|
114,000 |
|
|
105,000
105,000
|
105,000 |
|
|
101,500
101,500
|
101,500 |
|
|
101,000
101,000
|
101,000 |
|
|
91,000 | |
|
|
89,500
5,500
|
5,500 |
|
|
84,500
84,500
|
84,500 |
|
|
82,000
40,000
|
40,000 |
Day 1a of the World Series of Poker Circuit $1,700 Main Event at Foxwoods in Connecticut is in the books. The day attracted 161 entries and when the dust settled after fifteen levels of play just 31 remained with chips to bag for the night.
Bagging the lead was Andrew Ostapchenko who survived with an astonishing 736,000. That is more than twenty times the starting stack and more than double the second-largest stack. He was spotted from early in the day collecting chips and gained a considerable amount as play progressed including a hand where he flopped quads in a preflop all-in flip to surge up the counts. Ostapchenko’s great Day 1 was a continuation of his week of success as he took home $97,220 from Parx Casino in Philadelphia earlier this week.
The other big stacks, some distance behind the leader, include Guang Li, (355,000) and Vinny Pahuja (332,000) as the only other two with over 300,000.
Also among the notable players to bag for the night was Mukul Pahuja with 210,000, 13-time ring winner Maurice Hawkins who used a late-night surge to bag a decent amount at 198,000, and Stanley Lee who finished with 163,500.
However it was not a profitable day for the majority of the field, as many players who entered the day did not make it to the end including Allen Kessler, Matt Brady, Nicholas Palma and Joseph Giulino.
Day 1b will begin Saturday, August 24 at noon local time. Flight B will take center stage where many players, returning or new, will converge on Foxwoods for their last chance at making Sunday’s Day 2.
Just as with Flight A, PokerNews will provide all the coverage so make sure to tune in then!