2012 World Series of Poker

Event 49: $1,500 Ante-Only No-Limit Hold'em
Day: 1
Event Info

2012 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
77
Prize
$256,691
Event Info
Buy-in
$1,500
Prize Pool
$1,267,650
Entries
939
Level Info
Level
25
Blinds
0 / 0
Ante
30,000

Al Janedi Leads First-Ever Ante Only Event

Level 10
Justin Schwartz is in contention with a big stack
Justin Schwartz is in contention with a big stack

Day 1 of the much talked about Event 49, $1,500 Ante Only No Limit Hold’em, of the World Series of Poker has wrapped up. A solid 939 players took to the felt to play the first ever ante only event in WSOP history. At the end of bagging and tagging just 110 players remain with Sameer Al Janedi leading the field with a healthy 177,000.

Chasing Al Janedi are John Hayes, Just Schwartz and Zach Humphrey. Notables Jon Turner, Mclean Karr, Amanda Baker, Erick Lindgren, Mike McDonald, Mike Leah, Martins Adeniya, Jeff Williams, Melanie Weisner and Mickey Petersen remain in the field.

Plenty of notables gave the event a try but did not advance to Day 2, including: Daniel Negreanu, Bryan Slick (inventor of the variant), Phil Ivey, Phil Hellmuth, Kara Scott, Shane Schleger, Andrew Lichtenberger, David Williams, Neil Channing, Yevgeniy Timoshenko, David “Bakes” Baker, Vanessa Rousso and Eugene Katchalov.

The field approached the money bubble with just 17 minutes left in the evening. Hand-for-hand play lasted just one hand. Morgan Machina was the unfortunate bubble boy after his {A-Hearts} {K-Hearts} was beat by a nine-high flush.

At the start of play many players weren’t exactly sure of the structure. The ante would increase with the levels but the bring in bet would be the smallest denomination chip in play. So in Level 9 there was a 300 ante with a 100 bring in.

The action was fast at the start and each tabled seemed to settle in pattern unique to them. Players that would move from broken tables almost always had a comment concerning about the average opening bet was a little different.

Jeffrey Dobin joined the field as the only player to have won a live ante only event. The WSOPC experimented with the format during the Caesars Palace Circuit stop earlier this year. Dobin took home $25,931 and a WSOPC gold ring after defeating a field of 203 players and will advance to tomorrow with 58,200.

Grant Levy didn’t survive the day but he did have one of the most notable hands on the day. He was all in preflop for 2,500 and had two callers – one that had him covered and one with slightly less. Levy held pocket aces and was looking to hold against pocket tens and pocket fours. The flop sealed the pot for him when it came {A-Diamonds} {A-Hearts} {5-Clubs}. The shorter stack left the table before the river card was dealt and the other could only sit and watch.

Day 2 of the event will start promptly at 1:00 p.m. PST in the Purple Section of the Amazon Room. Join us and follow all the WSOP action live on PokerNews.com.

WSOP TD Jack Effel is Here to Listen

Level 9
Jack Effel has proved he'll listen to players' requests.
Jack Effel has proved he'll listen to players' requests.

The structure sheet for this event called for an 11 level day. Hopes were high that the event would attract 1,500 players or more and would require an extra level of play.

After returning from the dinner break Tournament Supervisor reminded the field that the plan was to stick to the structure sheet despite having under 1,000 players.

As of the time of publishing this post the field is just 27 players shy of the money bubble. No one had expected the tournament to go so fast.

One of poker's bright young stars, and a blogger's favorite is Dan O'Brien. He sent a tweet to WSOP TD Jack Effel asking if the field could just play the ten levels.

Not ten minutes later an announcement was made that the schedule would be changed after Effel called Frezer. Not a single player in the room was unhappy to hear that news.

Tags: Dan O'BrienJack EffelSteve Frezer

She's a Survivor

Level 3
Ruth Hall, living her dream.
Ruth Hall, living her dream.

We found Ruth Hall playing, happily seated at Daniel Negreanu's table. A glare from her wrist caught our eye and it was her Ladies Championship bracelet from the Golden Nugget she won in 2009.

Hall is wearing breast cancer survivor hat and we stopped to talk with her a bit. She is a 12 year survivor of the disease and was "bald as a baby's butt" as she was going through her battle.

"I had to go through four different kinds of chemo and am in remission now," Hall said. "But look at me, I'm living my dream playing here," motioning towards Negreanu.

Hall took 18th in the 2010 WSOP Ladies Championship and plays with the LIPS tour.

"I really like this game because I feel like guys aren't trying to steal my blinds," said Hall.

Tags: Ruth Hall