Jason Seitz checked a ![]()
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flop from the small blind, and Bill Pollard bet 2,200 from the cutoff. Seitz called.
The
fell on the turn, and Seitz checked again. Pollard bet 5,500, and Seitz tanked for a few moments before folding.
Jason Seitz checked a ![]()
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flop from the small blind, and Bill Pollard bet 2,200 from the cutoff. Seitz called.
The
fell on the turn, and Seitz checked again. Pollard bet 5,500, and Seitz tanked for a few moments before folding.
With the complete ![]()
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board already on the felt, a player jammed his last 36,800 into a pot of 22,000 from middle position, and action was on Bryce "The Scarf" McVay.
McVay tanked for a few minutes, confirming the amount, before committing calling chips.
"Nice call," said the middle-position player, flipping over his ![]()
for a busted combo draw. McVay showed ![]()
for a pair of tens and earned the hefty pot and the knockout.
Level: 6
Blinds: 200/400
Ante: 400
Eddie Ochana took down his second consecutive hand, this time bringing the stack up to 61,000 after collecting a small heads-up pot.
Ochana opened to 800 on the button, and got a call in the big blind.
The flop came ![]()
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, and the big blind check-folded to a 1,000 bet from Ochana.
12-time WSOP Circuit Ring winner Josh Reichard, who just finished in 15th place in Event #11: $1,125 No Limit Hold'em, checked a ![]()
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board from under-the-gun, and Christian Kennedy bet 3,000 into a pot of 11,000 from middle position. The cutoff called, and Reichard check-raised to 9,200. Kennedy folded, and the cutoff tanked for a minute.
"I'm gonna let you have it," the cutoff told Reichard, before tossing his cards to the muck.
Three players each put 4,000 in the pot preflop in a three-bet pot.
The small blind checked the ![]()
![]()
flop, Eddie Ochana bet 5,500, an early-position player folded, and the small blind called.
Both remaining players checked the
turn.
The small blind checked the
turn, Ochana bet 10,700, and the small blind folded.
Kevin Stroud checked a ![]()
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board from the big blind, and the hijack bet 6,500. Stroud called, then checked in the dark.
Before the
river could fall on the felt, the hijack jammed for his last 11,500. Stroud thought for a few moments, then called.
"You win," the hijack told Stroud before tabling ![]()
. Stroud said, "You gave me a signal," as he showed his ![]()
for a flush.
"Signal? Good call," the hijack said, rapping the table before departing.
"Wow! You are scary, man!" Yoon Kim told Stroud soon after.
While PokerNews is here offering live updates from the High Roller and Main Event, we’d be remiss if we didn’t tell you about the full schedule of side events that have been playing out over the past week at the World Series of Poker Circuit Horseshoe Hammond.
In Event #2: $250 NLH Double Stack, 541 runners created a $108,200 prize pool that was paid out to the top 82 players. Among those to cash but fall short of the official final table were Eric Mardsen (10th- $1,584), Isidro Sandoval (12th - $1,584), Dimitre Dimitrov (17th - $1,067), Guillermo Vargas (19th - $893), Robert Richmond (22nd - $759) and Josh Reichard (40th - $417).
In the end, it was Illinois native Lena Zhao who collected every chip in play to win her first gold ring along with a $21,031 payday.
This two-day tournament was a true grind, with play continuing for a little over 10 hours and Zhao didn't let the length wear her down.
Zhao came into the final day with the chip lead but went to the final table as one of the shortest stacks with only 820,00, but after a long grind at the final table couple, she got the hands she had been waiting for to seal the deal.
“I work a full-time job so I don’t get to play as much as I want to,” Zhao continued, “I only get to play the events that come through here so it feels so good to win my first ring.”
Zhao has a pretty rough work schedule but intends to continue the Circuit stop at Hammond and earn some points towards the 2020 Global Casino Championship.
| Place | Player | Hometown | Prize |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lena Zhao | Chicago, IL | $21,031 |
| 2 | Patrick Novak | Chicago, IL | $13,005 |
| 3 | Andres Garcia | Skokie, IL | $9,565 |
| 4 | Ryan Marin | Elgin, IL | $7,122 |
| 5 | John Allen | Romeoville, IL | $5,370 |
| 6 | Raynanza Duke | Louisville, KY | $4,099 |
| 7 | Melissa Bartelme | Muskego, WI | $3,170 |
| 8 | Scott Weitzenfeld | Arlington Heights, IL | $2,483 |
| 9 | Frank Cerminara | Kenosha, WI | $1,970 |
Kevin Stroud opened to 900 under the gun, Yoon Kim called in early position, and David Lindquist called in the cutoff.
Stroud checked the ![]()
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flop, Kim bet 1,700, Lindquist folded, and Stroud called.
Stroud check-called a 4,000 bet from Kim on the
turn, and both players checked the
river,
Yoon showed down ![]()
, with his two pair good against Stroud's ![]()
.
Ron Slucker raised to 1,000 from the cutoff, then called a three-bet shove from the small blind for around 8,000.
Opponent: ![]()
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Ron Slucker: ![]()
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Slucker pulled ahead immediately on the ![]()
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flop, but the small blind picked up a gutshot on the
turn. The
river kept Slucker in front, and he eliminated his opponent.