2010 World Series of Poker

Event #51: $3,000 Triple Chance No-Limit Hold’em
Day: 1
Event Info

2010 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
qj
Prize
$559,371
Event Info
Buy-in
$3,000
Prize Pool
$2,663,400
Entries
965
Level Info
Level
28
Blinds
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
10,000

Event #51: $3,000 Triple Chance No-Limit Hold’em

Day 1 Started

One, Two, Three Strikes You're Out

Welcome to the Pavilion Room at the Rio Convention Center for Event 51 of the 2010 World Series of Poker, $3,000 Triple Chance No-Limit Hold'em. It's hard to believe that we're already starting the 51st of 57 events at this year's World Series.

The "triple chance" format of this tournament means that each player will be given a starting stack of 3,000 chips and two "rebuy lammers". The rebuy lammers are each worth an additional 3,000 chips and can be taken before the start of any hand at any point through the first four levels. At the end of Level 4, all unredeemed rebuy lammers are automatically swapped for tournament chips. Some players will choose to cash in their lammers before the first hand of the tournament; others will hold off and keep the lammers as a safety net in case they should go broke during the first four levels.

Last year 854 players registered for this event. The last player standing was Germany's Jorg Peisert, who pocketed just more than half a million dollars for his three days of poker-playing. Most likely a similar number of players will show up for the event this year, which means two days from now we'll be creating a new half-millionaire.

Play will be underway in about twenty minutes. Keep your browser pointed to PokerNews for exclusive live updates.

Level: 1

Blinds: 25/50

Ante: 0

Let's Do This

We start on time here at the World Series of Poker, with or without players. Today, it's without. The staff has run through the announcements and given the shuffle up and deal command to the dealers and a half-empty room. Most of the tables have only have three or four players seated at them, and some tables are starting with just two playing heads up.

Regardless, the cards are in the air, and Event #51 is a go.

Unfashionably Punctual

The room is slowly starting to fill, but it's definitely nowhere near full. Regardless, we've started making our sweeps to find out who's shown up on time (or at least close thereto). A random sampling includes Jeff Shulman, Andre Akkari, Hevad Khan, Lauren Kling, Bryan Micon, Toto Leonidas, Allen Kessler, Theo Tran and Gavin Griffin. Of course there are many, many more notables than that. Well be filling them into the chip counts page as we go.

Just a reminder that we'll put each player in at the starting stack of 3,000 chips. As individual players burn their rebuy lammers, we'll increase their count to reflect the additional chips in play.

Taking Form

The room has filled out significantly, about halfway through the first level. Most tables are playing 7- or 8-handed at this point. Additional arrivals include (but are not limited to) Dutch Boyd, Sorel Mizzi, Phil Ivey and James Dempsey. It seems that most players are choosing to hold onto their rebuy lammers to start the tournament.

Liebert Burns a Rebuy

When the WSOP did away with rebuy events last year, the format that they devised to replace rebuys was the "triple chance" format. Players who choose not to redeem their rebuy lammers right away can make some plays they might not otherwise make. For example, Kathy Liebert, sitting in the big blind, re-raised to 600 pre-flop after a player opened for 150. That player called, then called Liebert's all-in shove for 2,725 on a flop of {3-Diamonds}{9-Spades}{4-Hearts}. Liebert's {a-Clubs}{k-Diamonds} was drawing against the other player's top pair, {8-Hearts}{9-Hearts}. Liebert didn't get there and thus rebought for 3,000 chips.

Level: 2

Blinds: 50/100

Ante: 0

The Stars are Out Today

We were a bit thin in Team PokerStars Pros to start the day, but then again, we were thin in players generally speaking. Another walk through the field, however, sees that the seats have filled in nicely with Team Pros. Check out this list as the second level gets underway:

USA
Chad Brown
Chris Moneymaker
Dennis Phillips
Tom McEvoy
Hevad Khan
Gavin Griffin
Vanessa Rousso

Netherlands
Fatima de Melo
Ruben Visser

Brazil
Gualter Salles
Andre Akkari
Alexandre Gomes
Maria Mayrinck

Germany
Jan Heitmann
Sandra Naujoks
Florian Langmann

France
Arnaud Mattern
Julien Brecard

Rounding out the field, we have Jude Ainsworth (Ireland), Tony Hachem (Australia), Vadim Markushevski (Russia), Veronica Dabul (Argentina), Pat Pezzin (Canada), and Juan Manuel Pastor (Spain).

Tags: PokerStars

Cunningham Up, Esfandiari Down

Antonio Esfandiari and Allen Cunningham have just joined our field at the start of the level, and we caught the tail end of a pot involving the two of them, both of them apparently in for their full stacks of 9,000 chips.

The board showed {9-Clubs} {8-Spades} {10-Diamonds} {3-Hearts} {6-Diamonds} and there were more than 4,000 chips in the pot already when we walked up. Both men checked, which makes this a pretty unexciting hand to tell you about. In any event, Cunningham showed up {J-Spades} {J-Clubs}, and that was good enough to send Esfandiari's cards to the muck.

Cunningham - 12,100
Esfandiari - 6,550

Tags: Allen CunninghamAntonio Esfandiari