Just 34 players are left, presently gathered around six tables. Here are updated counts on all 34, with Ville Mattila still hanging on to the chip lead after moving into first position early today.
Daniel Negreanu has slipped to 34th of 34 at the moment after losing a small pot to Marko Neumann.
The hand saw Neumann open with a raise to 8,000 from the cutoff seat and Negreanu call out of the big blind. Both players checked the flop, then Negreanu led with a bet of 15,000 after the fell on the turn and Neumann called. Both then checked the river, and when Neumann tabled for a small flush, Negreanu mucked.
Down to just about 10 big blinds, Daniel Negreanu opened with a raise to 8,000 from under the gun and got two callers in Peter Charalambous (button) and Jesse Rockowitz (big blind). The flop came , and Rockowitz responded by betting 16,500. Negreanu pushed all in for his last 32,500, and Charalambous folded.
Rockowitz:
Negreanu:
Kings and deuces for Negreanu, but Rockowitz had kings and fours. The turn was the and river the , and Negreanu records his fifth cash of the 2013 WSOP with a 34th-place finish. Meanwhile, Rockowitz nudges up into a virtual tie with Ville Mattila for the chip lead.
Matt Giannetti limped from under the gun, then called a button raise to 18,000 from Sorel Mizzi. The flop came and Giannetti checked. Mizzi bet 35,000, Giannetti raised all in for his last 42,000, and Mizzi called.
Giannetti had and Mizzi , meaning Gianneti's two pair had him momentarily in front. But the came on the turn to give Mizzi a flush, and after the river Giannetti was out in 33rd.
With that one it appears start-of-day chip leader Mizzi has retaken first position with 32 players left.
Jonathan Poche opened for 9,000 from the button and got two callers from the blinds — Freddy Deeb (SB) and Victor Shuchleis (BB). All three checked the flop, but the on the turn would invite more response from the trio.
First Deeb checked, then Shuchleis bet 15,000 and Poche called. The action back on Deeb, he raised all in for 61,000, and Shuchleis responded with a reraise all in himself which was enough to force Poche to the side.
Deeb showed for aces and deuces and a straight draw, while Shuchleis turned over for a set of sixes. The river then brought the and an expression of delight from Deeb as he had survived with a straight.
Shuchleis has apparently been tweeting some of the hands he's been playing, and Deeb told him to be sure to tweet this one, too.
"Tell them you're playing with Freddy Deeb," he said with a grin. "They'll love it!"
Roland Israelshivili opened from the cutoff for 10,000, then a short-stacked Jay Houston pushed all in for 22,000 from the button. The blinds got out and Israelshivili called, turning over . Meanwhile, Houston was hoping his to improve to something better than Israelshivili's hand.
The flop came , and suddenly the two kings in Israelshivili's hand became the least important cards as he'd made a straight with his two kickers. The turn was the and river the , and Houston was out in 32nd.
Peter Charalambous soon followed in 31st, with Manuel Bevand getting knocked out in 30th just a moment later.
As the level came to a close Scott Bohlman was eliminated in 29th place, and Jamie Pickering soon followed him to the rail in 28th.
Pickering's last hand began with Freddy Deeb raising to 10,000 from the cutoff seat, then Joseph Leung reraised to 36,000 from the button. Pickering called all in for his last 28,000 from the big blind, and Deeb called as well.
Deeb and Leung checked the flop. The then fell on the turn and Deeb checked, Leung pushed all in, and Deeb folded.
Leung had for trip kings and Pickering . Pickering was looking for a saving seven, but the river brought the and he was eliminated.
With both Freddy Deeb and Shaun Deeb still among the final 27, ideas of a Deeb-Deeb heads-up match to conclude Event #41 had begun to occur to us. Alas, the Deeb-vs.-Deeb dream is dead, as Freddy has been eliminated at the start of Level 17.
Freddy's final hand saw Gary Bolden opening for 20,000 from the button, then Deeb pushing all in for 62,000 from the small blind and getting called by Bolden. Bolden had while Deeb showed . The board then ran out to give Bolden a straight and end Deeb's run in 27th.
Just one Deeb left — Shaun — but it appears he's now become short-stacked, too. (More to come.)