2010 World Series of Poker

Event #29: $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship
Day: 1
Event Info

2010 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
a7
Prize
$425,969
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$1,607,400
Entries
171
Level Info
Level
30
Blinds
80,000 / 150,000
Ante
0

Monnette Moves Up

We picked up the action on the flop, just as the dealer put out {10-Clubs} {J-Hearts} {A-Spades}. David Benyamine led out with a bet, and Jerrod Ankenman raised. John Monnette made the overcall, and Benyamine ducked out of the way.

That brought them heads up to the {3-Hearts} turn, and Ankenman fired again. Monnette called.

The {Q-Diamonds} filled out the board, and this time Ankenman check-called a bet from Monnette. We wouldn't get to see Ankenman's cards as Monnette tabled the winning {K-Spades} {J-Spades} for the Broadway straight, moving his stack up to 37,800.

Tags: John MonnetteJerrod Ankenman

How Many Runners?

The clock still tells us (or, more to the pot, tells Mike Matusow) that 170 players have unofficially entered our event. Matusow has the 171 in that aforementioned five-way prop bet, and he is sweating this out hard.

"The Mouth" is currently pacing back and forth from table to table, yelling at anyone who is within earshot. "One more!" he keeps saying. "That number ain't right. It's gonna change. We're gonna have one more."

For now, the number is stuck firmly at 170 (good news for David Benyamine), but we'll have the official number, as well as the prize pool information just as soon as it's official.

Tags: Mike Matusow

Nice of You to Join Us

Pull up a chair right next to me, buddy
Pull up a chair right next to me, buddy

A couple of loaded tables of late registrants just formed. Table 288 is now home to Erick Lindgren, Phil Ivey, Mikael Thuritz, Todd Brunson, Vladimir Schmelev, George Lind III and Gabe Kaplan. Next door on Table 289 are Howard Lederer, Matt Glantz, Brett Richey, Phil Galfond, Tom Dwan, Erik Sagstrom, Nick Schulman and Joe Cassidy. Oh and it doesn't stop there. On Table 292, Jason Mercier, Jeff Lisandro, Chris Ferguson, and Daniel Negreanu are all settling into their seats. There is one empty chair, however on that table which is waiting to be filled by Phil Hellmuth (who always loves a late entrance).

"C'mon baby, ONE MORE!" shouted Mike Matusow from across the room. With 170 players seated, the Mouth needs only one more player to hit his bet on 171 total entrants.

Level: 3

Blinds: 200/400

Ante: 0

Hello, Ladies

Thus far, 150 players have bought in to this event and nine of them (6% of the field) are women. That might seem small, but when it comes to women playing tournament poker, it's a pretty good percentage as we usually top out at around 2-3% of any given field.

So which ladies plunked down the $10K buy-in? Jennifer Harman, Liz Lieu, Maria Ho, Vanessa Rousso, J.J. Liu, and Kathy Liebert to name a few. Annie Duke would probably be here too, but she's still alive in the $1,500 Stud 8 event.

PokerNews Hard Rock Game

The Hard Rock is Team PokerNews' home, why not make it yours. And while you're staying there (or if you're in the neighborhood) stop by the poker room Wednesday night and play in the PokerNews half-kill game. The $4/$8 half-kill game starts Wednesday at 8 p.m. We've had some of the DeucesCracked guys stop by as well as Annette Obrestad, so you never know you might sit down across the felt from you. See you there!

Evdakov Wins the Raising War

Shaun Deeb, Vitaly Lunkin, and Nikolay Evdakov each put four bets in before the {J-Clubs}{10-Hearts}{8-Clubs} flop. Deeb and Lunkin checked to Evdakov, who led out. Deeb called, Lunkin raised, Evdakov made it three bets, Deeb folded and Lunkin called. The Russians went heads-up to the turn, which fell the {5-Hearts}. Lunkin check-called a bet from Evdakov, then check-folded when the {6-Diamonds} hit the river.

Evdakov took down the pot, increasing his stack to 36,000. Lunkin is down to 27,000 and Deeb is on 35,000.

Tags: Nikolay EvdakovShaun DeebVitaly Lunkin

Newhizzle Noticing New Faces

Looking around the room, we see a surprising number of unfamiliar faces in our field. A lot of people play limit hold'em, and it's hard to gauge the skill level of the unknowns this early, but the overall appearance of the field is a bit softer than we would have anticipated.

Mark Newhouse is noticing this too. Walking past his table, we overheard him talking with another player. "This is normally the tournament I recognize the most people," Newhouse said, "but I see a lot of new faces. Last year, I knew everybody."

Tags: Mark Newhouse