2019 World Series of Poker Circuit Harrah's Cherokee

Main Event
Day: 1a
Event Info

2019 World Series of Poker Circuit Harrah's Cherokee

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
55
Prize
$271,234
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,700
Prize Pool
$1,601,355
Entries
1,057
Level Info
Level
36
Blinds
200,000 / 400,000
Ante
400,000

Albrinck Bags Day 1a Chip Lead in Search of Another Title at WSOPc Cherokee

Level 16 : 2,000/4,000, 4,000 ante
Brad Albrinck
Brad Albrinck

The opening flight of the WSOP Circuit $1,700 Main Event at Harrah's Cherokee Casino Resort closed with 59 of 360 players moving on to Day 2. After more than 13 hours of play, Brad Albrinck amassed the largest stack in the room with 504,000 chips, more than 15x his starting stack.

Albrinck is no stranger to a circuit Main Event at Cherokee as he topped the field in December 2016 for his largest career score of over $275,000. The Ohio native has accumulated over $1.2 million in career tournament earnings with the majority of it coming in WSOP events.

Throughout most of the day, Dennis Powell held the chip lead after a strong start but tailed off late to finish with 249,000 chips. Albrinck was quietly going about his business as one of the late entries and emerged near the top of the leaderboard in the last few levels. To cap things off, Albrinck came from behind against Yoon Cheon when he flopped a pair of kings to send Cheon to the rail.

Some other big stacks moving on to Day 2 include Carlos Loving (446,000), Kobie Wilkerson (441,000), Scott Drobes (425,000), and Scott Sanders (404,000). Loving was also one of those who slowly built up a stack throughout the day and finished strong. Wilkerson, on the other hand, caught lightning in a bottle for about an hour of play in order to gain the majority of his chips.

It was a big turnout for the first of two starting flights, but Day 1b is expected to attract plenty of more players. If there is any hope of breaking last year's record attendance of 1,056 entries, Saturday's flight will need to nearly double that of Day 1a. With satellites continuing to run throughout the night and into the wee hours, the event center is expected to be jam-packed.

Many notables took their shot on Day 1a but it wasn't a successful flight for many, and even a single re-entry couldn't help some. Rex Clinkscales, Warren Sheaves, Martin Kozlov, Paulius Vaitiekunas, and Heather Alcorn all burned through two bullets and will likely return for Day 1b. Some others that failed to move on include Maurice Hawkins, Allen Kessler, Mo Nuwwarah, Jake Bazeley, Ryan Eriquezzo, and Eric Salazar.

Some other notables that were fortunate to make it through the day include Ryan Leng (195,000), Steven Grybas (184,000), Josh Reichard (132,000), Stanley Lee (102,000), Irene Carey (100,000), and DJ Alexander (100,000). Leng, a WSOP bracelet winner, was one of the last entries before registration closed and managed to spin up his 30,000 starting stack to nearly 300K before slipping back down.

The action will resume at 11 a.m. tomorrow for Day 1b, which is the last starting flight for the Main Event. Players will begin with a stack of 30,000 chips and late registration will remain open until the start of Level 13. A single re-entry will be permitted throughout the registration period. There will be a 15-minute break after every three levels and a 60-minute dinner break after the ninth level. Action will complete after a full 16 levels or when 16% of the field remains.

Keep it locked here for all of the updates from the tournament floor from the PokerNews live reporting team throughout the entire Main Event.

Tags: Allen KesslerBrad AlbrinckCarlos LovingDennis PowellDJ AlexanderEric SalazarHeather AlcornIrene CareyJake BazeleyJosh ReichardKobie WilkersonMartin KozlovMaurice HawkinsMo NuwwarahPaulius VaitiekunasRex ClinkscalesRyan EriquezzoRyan LengScott DrobesScott SandersStanley LeeSteven GrybasWarren SheavesYoon Cheon

Alex Duvall Captures WSOP Circuit Gold in Just Second-Ever Poker Tournament

Level 15 : 1,500/3,000, 3,000 ante
Alex Duvall
Alex Duvall

The $1,700 Main Event is just one of a dozen gold ring events taking place at the Harrah’s Cherokee stop. For over a week, players have been competing for WSOP Circuit hardware and big chunks of prize money.

In Event #3: $400 No-Limit Hold’em One-Day, which saw 701 entrants take to the felt and create a $231,330 prize pool.

One of the runners was 22-year-old Alex Duvall of Charlotte, North Carolina, who was playing in just his second-ever poker tournament. Duvall made it all the way to the final table with just 10 big blinds, but he spun it up and defeated popular poker dealer Heather Alcorn in heads-up play to win the title, $43,480 in prize money, and his first gold ring.

“This is my first time playing in the WSOP, other than flight C yesterday,” Duvall explained, “I just play home games in Charlotte.”

He continued: “It feels surreal, like what the f**k just happened. Wow, it’s the most insane feeling I have ever had.”

WSOP Circuit Harrah’s Cherokee Event #3 Final Table Results

PlacePlayerHometownPrize
1Alex DuvallCharlotte, North Carolina$43,480
2Heather AlcornOzark, Missouri$26,866
3Hieu NguyenAtlanta, Georgia$19,813
4Jarrett MullinsYadkinville, North Carolina$14,778
5Lawrence BeachDecatur, Georgia$11,149
6Houman AlaeddiniAtlanta, Georgia$8,510
7Thomas PetersonN/A$6,572
8James PorterLancaster, South Carolina$5,136
9Andrew BrinkleyAtlanta, Georgia$4,062

Tags: Alex Duvall

Powell Busts Another To Stay at the Top

Level 14 : 1,000/2,500, 2,500 ante
Dennis Powell
Dennis Powell

Dennis Powell has been one of the chip leaders throughout most of the day and he continues to add to his stack as the field gets smaller. Recently, Powell had one of his opponents at risk preflop and was in a commanding position.

Dennis Powell: {k-Spades}{k-Clubs}
Opponent: {9-Spades}{9-Hearts}

The flop fell {a-Spades}{7-Clubs}{4-Spades} and Powell's opponent looked across the table to see if he had running spades as an option but Powell held the biggest one. The {10-Spades} on the turn left his opponent drawing to two outs and the {7-Spades} on the river only improved Powell to the nut flush.

Player Chips Progress
Dennis Powell us
Dennis Powell
435,000 195,000
Brad Albrinck us
Brad Albrinck
350,000
Zachary Donovan us
Zachary Donovan
235,000
Steven Grybas us
Steven Grybas
232,000 77,000
Josh Reichard us
Josh Reichard
175,000 3,000
Tyler Phillips us
Tyler Phillips
160,000 33,700
Carlos Loving us
Carlos Loving
148,000 -94,000
Roland Israelashvili us
Roland Israelashvili
123,000 2,000
Irene Carey us
Irene Carey
121,500 -2,500
Adam Cedric fr
Adam Cedric
107,000 65,000
Ken Aldridge us
Ken Aldridge
WSOP 1X Winner
98,000 14,000
DJ Alexander us
DJ Alexander
86,000 -82,000
Ryan Eriquezzo us
Ryan Eriquezzo
WSOP 3X Winner
Busted

Tags: Dennis Powell

Superfluous Quads for Reichard

Level 13 : 1,000/2,000, 2,000 ante
Josh Reichard
Josh Reichard

Action was picked up on the turn as chips from the flop action between Josh Reichard in the big blind and Maurice Hawkins from the cutoff, were being pulled into the pot.

The turn came to make the board read {3-Hearts}{2-Spades}{9-Clubs}{10-Clubs}. Reichard led out with an all in jam which Hawkins called after about ten seconds. Reichard turned over the {3-Spades}{3-Clubs} for a set while Hawkins feebly turned his hand over flashing a {9-} and started to immediately turn his cards back face down as the {3-Diamonds} came on the river to give Reichard an unneeded case trey to take the big pot.

Player Chips Progress
Josh Reichard us
Josh Reichard
172,000 97,500
Maurice Hawkins us
Maurice Hawkins
97,000 -60,000

Tags: Josh ReichardMaurice Hawkins

Kessler Gets Teased with an Ace

Level 11 : 600/1,200, 1,200 ante
Allen Kessler
Allen Kessler

The action folded to Allen Kessler on the button who shipped all in for 6,100 after looking at just one card. The big blind made the call to put Kessler at risk without looking at any of his cards.

Allen Kessler: {a-Hearts}{2-Clubs}
Opponent: {9-Clubs}{7-Clubs}

The flop came {k-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds} and Kessler was drawing to three outs after his opponent flopped a pair. The turn was the {a-Diamonds} to give Kessler the lead with a pair of aces but the {7-Spades} on the river turned things in a hurry as his opponent made trip sevens.

Player Chips Progress
Allen Kessler us
Allen Kessler
Busted

Tags: Allen Kessler

Tyler Phillips Tops 2,766 Entries to Win Event #2: $400 NLH for $123,216

Level 9 : 400/800, 800 ante
Tyler Phillips
Tyler Phillips

The $1,700 Main Event is just one of a dozen gold ring events taking place at the Harrah’s Cherokee stop. For over a week, players have been competing for WSOP Circuit hardware and big chunks of prize money.

In Event #2: $400 No-Limit Hold’em, a tournament that drew 2,766 entries and generated a $912,780 prize pool.

According to the WSOP winner report, 27-year-old Tyler Phillips entered the final table in the middle of the pack but made it all the way to heads-up play, albeit at a 2:1 chip disadvantage. That didn’t discourage him as he hung tough and eventually claimed the title for $123,216 and his first gold ring.

“It feels amazing,” said Phillips, who also competed in the 2019 Global Casino Championship earlier this week. “Every time I come to Cherokee, I feel like I have a chance. Something has just happened recently. Last year, in the 6-max when I got heads up, I had a two-to-one chip advantage and still lost. To come here and have a two-to-one deficit and be able to take it down it feels like everything just went right.”

He added: “I am just going to play as many tournaments as I can this series.”

WSOP Circuit Harrah’s Cherokee Event #2 Final Table Results

PlacePlayerHometownPrize
1Tyler PhillipsCharlotte, North Carolina$123,216
2Dragan LunicDuluth, Georgia$78,464
3Todd MercerN/A$59,063
4Steven MerrittConyers, Georgia$44,862
5Scott MoersdorfKnoxville, Tennessee$34,387
6David JacksonJacksonville, Florida$26,601
7Curtis KingCharleston, West Virginia$20,769
8Michael WhittonRockmart, Georgia$16,368
9Jamison AlfordCharleston, South Carolina$13,022

Tags: Tyler Phillips

Eric Salazar Wins Third WSOP Circuit Gold Ring In Cherokee

Level 5 : 200/300, 300 ante
Eric Salazar
Eric Salazar

The $1,700 Main Event is just one of a dozen gold ring events taking place at the Harrah’s Cherokee stop. For over a week, players have been competing for WSOP Circuit hardware and big chunks of prize money.

In Event #1: $400 No-Limit Hold’em Double Stack, 813 runners took to the felt and created a $268,290 prize pool.

In the end it was Eric Salazar coming out on top to capture a $48,618 first-place prize and his third gold ring.

“I don’t know, it just feels really good,” Salazar told WSOP officials after the win. “I had a bad summer in Vegas, so this definitely helps,” he explained excitedly, and continued “I am extremely excited about the rest of the trip.”

WSOP Circuit Harrah’s Cherokee Event #1 Final Table Results

PlacePlayerHometownPrize
1Eric SalazarGreensboro, North Carolina$48,618
2Khanh NguyenKnoxville, Tennessee$30,058
3Preston McEwenMurfreesboro, Tennessee$22,325
4San BachGreensboro, North Carolina$16,757
5Warren SheavesAsheville, North Carolina$12,711
6John ThorpeWilmington, North Carolina$9,747
7Lovell WilkersonSmyrna, Georgia$7,555
8Henry HurleyHenderson, Nevada$5,920
9Robert ParnellFlorence, Alabama$4,691

Tags: Eric Salazar

Updated Your Stack with MyStack

Level 1 : 100/100, 0 ante
MyStack
MyStack

PokerNews has activated the MyStack App for this event, allowing you to directly adjust your chip counts in our live reporting blog using your iPhone or Android phone.

You can download the app for iPhone or Android now to get started. Then, create a new PokerNews account or update your current one to start updating your status immediately. Your followers can see all the live action that you're involved in.

Click here to download the My Stack app for iPhone, or click here to download the My Stack app for Android.

The WSOP Circuit Harrah's Cherokee Main Event is Upon Us

WSOP-C Harrah's Cherokee
WSOP-C Harrah's Cherokee

It is that time of year once again for the WSOP Circuit Harrah’s Cherokee Event 10: $1700 Main Event. Always one of the most anticipated main events of the circuit calendar, this year is expected to generate another large competitive field and the winner will be the first main event champion of the 2019/2020 WSOP Circuit season.

Last year, Adam Ross of Georgia won a life changing $295,970 after topping a field of 1,056 entries, including the defeat of experienced circuit grinder Ryan Phan heads up. This year’s Cherokee Harrah’s Circuit has already had a lot of action and will be culminated by this main event.

This year the event will feature two starting flights, both starting at 11 a.m. The first one, Flight A is today August 9 and Flight B is tomorrow August 10. The first fifteen levels are 40 minutes long. Each flight will play either 16 levels or until 16% of the field remains, whichever comes first. Fifteen-minute breaks are every three levels (two hours) of play with a 60-minute dinner break after level 9. Registration is open all the way until the start of level 13 and players are allowed one re-entry per flight, which is a total of four max.

PokerNews will provide all the coverage for the entirety of this tournament, as well as for upcoming WSOP Circuit Events in the 2019/2020 Circuit season