2019 World Series of Poker Circuit Foxwoods

Main Event
Day: 2
Event Info

2019 World Series of Poker Circuit Foxwoods

Final Results
Winner
Justin Carey
Winning Hand
a8
Prize
$143,293
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,700
Prize Pool
$709,020
Entries
468
Level Info
Level
33
Blinds
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
200,000

Barron Scores a Double Knock-Out

Level 22 : 8,000/16,000, 16,000 ante
Frank Milowicki
Frank Milowicki

Jeremy Barron moved all in for 215,000 from under the gun, Rami Hahitti called on the button for his 140,000 stack and Frank Milowicki pushed his remaining 166,000 into the middle from the big blind, players tabled their hands.

Rami Hahitti: {7-Diamonds}{7-Clubs}
Frank Milowicki: {a-Clubs}{k-Diamonds}
Jeremy Barron: {10-Spades}{10-Diamonds}

The flop came down {10-Clubs}{4-Hearts}{3-Spades} and Barron took a substantial lead with his set of tens. An {a-Diamonds} fell on the turn and he now had his opponents drawing dead to the {j-Hearts} river card.

Hahitti finished in 22nd and Milowicki took 21st as he had more chips of the two.

Player Chips Progress
Jeremy Barron us
Jeremy Barron
535,000
300,000
300,000
Rami Hahitti us
Rami Hahitti
Busted
Frank Milowicki us
Frank Milowicki
Busted

Tags: Frank WilowickiJeremy BarronRami Hahitti

Plotkin First to Eclipse a Million After Knocking Two Out

Level 18 : 3,000/6,000, 6,000 ante
David Plotkin
David Plotkin

The flop showed {10-Clubs}{8-Spades}{2-Spades} and there was around 55,000 in the pot. Action checked to Shane Brandes on the button, he bet 35,000 and David Plotkin check-called.

Mukul Pahuja moved all in for 280,000 total and Brandes quickly called all-in for less. Plotkin slammed in a stack, signifying a call and the three runners turned over their hands.

Shane Brandes: {10-Hearts}{8-Hearts}
Mukul Pahuja: {a-Hearts}{a-Clubs}
David Plotkin: {10-Spades}{9-Spades}

The dealer burned and turned a {6-Diamonds} and Brandes was still ahead with his two pair but would need to dodge to stay alive. To no one's surprise, the {3-Spades} completed the board, giving the red-hot Plotkin a flush and more than enough to take down the pot. Plotkin eliminated both opponents and is the first player to accumulate a seven figure stack.

Player Chips Progress
David Plotkin us
David Plotkin
1,070,000
475,000
475,000
Mukul Pahuja us
Mukul Pahuja
Busted
Shane Brandes us
Shane Brandes
Busted

Tags: David PlotkinMukul PahujaShane Brandes

Day 2 of Foxwoods Main Event Kicks-Off at Noon

Andrew Ostapchenko
Andrew Ostapchenko

Day 2 of the 2019 World Series of Poker Circuit Foxwoods $1,700 Main Event starts at noon. The two starting flights pulled together a total of 468 entries, which was less than last year but still enough to blast by the half a million guarantee that was set. Just 88 found a bag during the two starting flights and those lucky enough to do so will be returning on Day 2, battling it out for another ten levels of play.

Starting the day with the overall chip lead is Andrew Ostapchenko who bagged large in Day 1a and is the clear favorite thus far to make a deep run. Another big name that made the second day is 13-time ring winner Maurice Hawkins, who is having a great month after a couple of deep runs, including a third-place finish in the $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em - Global Casino Championship in Cherokee for $119,555.

Many other familiar faces will be battling it out for a shot at the six-figure top prize and some of which are Vinny Pahuja (336,000), Gregory Nerenberg (291,500), defending champ Gordon Wilcox (218,500), Mukul Pahuja (210,000), Chico Pho (182,000), Brian Altman (172,000), Mitch Garshofsky (170,000), and Matthew Wantman (150,000).

There will be 88 starting Day 2 and of those, just 71 will be grabbing a piece of the prize pool. Starting the day this close to the money might make for some conservative play, but judging by the first two flights the tournament should retain the action-filled play that has been up to this point. A min-cash will be paying $2,481, but all eyes will be on the $143,293 first-place prize that the eventual champion will be taking home, along with a shiny new gold ring.

Play will begin at 12 p.m. local time, blinds will start on level 16 and will be 2,000/4,000 with a 4,000 big blind ante. The plan is to play a total of ten 60-minute levels and there will be a 15-minute break between every two. A 75-minute dinner break will take place at the end of level 21 and all remaining by nights end will bag up for the final day.

The PokerNews live reporting team will be bringing you all of the updates throughout this event, so stay tuned!

Tags: Andrew OstapchenkoBrian AltmanGordon WilcoxGregory NerenbergMatthew WantmanMaurice HawkinsMitch GarshofskyMukul PahujaVinny Pahuja