2013 World Series of Poker

Event #61:$10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha
Day: 3
Event Info

2013 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
101043
Prize
$852,692
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$3,628,400
Entries
386
Level Info
Level
29
Blinds
50,000 / 100,000
Ante
0

Andy Miller Eliminated in 26th Place ($26,124); Nicolaus Faure Eliminated in 25th Place ($26,124)

Level 19 : 5,000/10,000, 0 ante
Nicolas Faure - 25th Place
Nicolas Faure - 25th Place

On one of the first hands after the redraw, Nicolas Faure and Andy Miller were all in and at risk preflop against James Wiese.

Faure: {j-Spades}{9-Spades}{8-Hearts}{8-Diamonds}
Miller: {a-Spades}{a-Clubs}{10-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds}
Wiese: {7-Spades}{6-Diamonds}{5-Diamonds}{5-Spades}

The board rolled out {9-Diamonds}{3-Diamonds}{6-Spades}{9-Clubs}{4-Hearts}, and Wiese eliminated the two players with a seven-high straight. He now sits with over one million chips.

Player Chips Progress
James Wiese us
James Wiese
1,060,000
789,000
789,000
Nicolas Faure fr
Nicolas Faure
Busted
Andy Miller us
Andy Miller
Busted

Tags: Andy MillerJames WieseNicolas Faure

32 Players, One Bracelet: Day 3 Awaits

Alexey Rybin
Alexey Rybin

It was a long Day 2 yesterday in Event #61: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha, and with 32 players still with chips it promises to be another long one today as those remaining battle to determine a winner. The last WSOP gold bracelet to be awarded this summer awaits the champ, with the Event No. 62: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Main Event not finishing up until November.

A dozen different countries are represented among the final 32, with the Russian Alexey Rybin returning to a stack of nearly 1 million to lead all. Mike Watson (Canada), Johannes Strassmann (Germany), Nadar Kakhmazov (Russia), and Nicolas Faure (France) all have lots of chips as well to begin the third day of play.

Daniel Alaei — who won this same event back in 2010 — also currently has an above-average stack, as does Jonathan Duhamel who of course won the WSOP Main Event that same year. There are a host of other familiar names still in the hunt, too, including Alex Kravchenko, Tom Marchese, Nacho Barbero, Yevgeniy Timoshenko, Stephen Chidwick, Tony Cousineau, Jared Bleznick, and Joseph Cheong.

Many have big stacks, but the blinds are getting big as well, which suggests we'll see a fast pace especially early on today. The schedule calls for them to play down to a winner today, although if they can't get to a winner after 11 one-hour levels, they'll stop the tourney, take tomorrow off (allowing players still in to play the last Main Event flight), and return on Tuesday to settle matters.

Play resumes at 2 p.m. local time, so return then for start-to-finish coverage of Event #61. As we await the tourney's restart, here's Lynn Gilmartin to get us caught up with all of the action currently happening at the WSOP: