2014 World Series of Poker

Event #46: $50,000 Poker Players' Championship
Day: 1
Event Info

2014 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
a10
Prize
$1,517,767
Event Info
Buy-in
$50,000
Prize Pool
$5,568,000
Entries
102
Level Info
Level
26
Blinds
0 / 0
Ante
0

Matt Glantz Leads $50K Poker Players' Championship as Five Players Fall

Level 5
Matt Glantz
Matt Glantz

On Sunday, the 2014 World Series of Poker continued with the start of the $50,000 Poker Players' Championship, which has been one of the most prestigious events on the calendar for the past nine years. Day 1 attracted 85 runners, but registration is open for two hours on Day 2 so that number will surely increase.

The star-studded field played five 100-minute levels of play, and no one did better during that time than Matt Glantz, who has made the final table of this event twice in the past. Glantz bagged up more than any other player with a healthy 324,700.

During that time five players also hit the rail. The first to go was Vanessa Selbst, who fell to Glantz in Level 4 in a hand of no-limit hold’em. It happened when Glantz raised to 1,700 from the hijack and Selbst three-bet from the button to 4,800. The action folded back to Glantz who four-bet to 13,700 and Selbst tanked for a while before making the call.

The flop brought {K-Spades}{8-Spades}{J-Spades} and Glantz bet 11,500, Selbst made the call. On the {10-Spades} turn Glantz checked and Selbst moved all in for about 55,000 chips. Glantz immediately pushed a stack of chips forward and Selbst shook her head in frustration. Selbst showed {Q-Hearts}{Q-Clubs} against Glantz's {A-Clubs}{Q-Spades} and she was drawing dead headed to the river, which was the meaningless {J-Clubs}. No woman has even cashed in the $50,000 Poker Players’ Championship, and Selbst’s exit left Melissa Burr as the last woman standing, so unless another lady enters on Day 2, she is the last hope of making it happen.

From there, 2013 WSOP Europe Main Event runner-up Sergii Baranov, who qualified for the tournament via a satellite, fell to Ismael Bojang in a hand of pot-limit Omaha, and then Dan Shak became the day’s third elimination after falling to Ola "Odd_Oddsen" Amundsgard in the same game.

As for the final two eliminations, one would be Atlantic City cash-game player Michael Glick, who was crippled in a big PLO hand early on and then exited in one of the last hands of the night. The other was Phil “OMGClayAiken” Galfond, who also fell late in a stud hi-low hand to Paul Volpe.

Going back to Amundsgard, he was just one of a handful of online pros that opted to test their skills in the eight-game rotation. Others in the field included Chun Lei “samrostan” Zhou, Alexandre “Alexonmoon” Luneau, and Elior “Crazy Elior” Scion, all of who survived the night.

Others returning to action on Day 2 are two-time winner Michael "The Grinder" Mizrachi; two-time finalists Andy Bloch, Bruno Fitoussi, and David Singer; and the defending champ Matthew Ashton (the first non-American to win the title). They will be joined by the likes of Dylan Linde (303,700), Richard Ashby (300,000), Shaun Deeb (282,600), Ismael Bojang (271,400), David Benyamine (246,300), Joe Hachem (208,500), Phil Hellmuth (116,800), Daniel Negreanu (108,500), and Phil Ivey (68,000).

The field is comprised of the best of the best, and the stacks are deep, so it’s still anyone’s game.

Day 2 is scheduled to kick off at 2 p.m. local time on Monday, and the plan is to play five more levels. Rumor has it that Gus Hansen an Doyle Brunson may make an appearance, so you’ll have to check back then to see if that proves true. In the meantime, check out this interview with the legendary Phil Ivey for this year’s $50,000 Poker Players’ Championship.

Rule Clarification Results in One-Round Penalty for Deeb

Level 5
Shaun Deeb
Shaun Deeb

Pot-Limit Omaha

Shaun Deeb's been very active during the pot-limit Omaha portions of this tournament and just now he got involved in back-to-back hands. First, we saw a {J-Hearts}{J-Diamonds}{4-Diamonds}{2-Hearts} board on which Deeb bet 1,600 and Nick Schulman raised it up to 4,000. Deeb put in another raise, making it 11,000 to go, and that was enough to get Schulman to fold.

On the very next hand, a flop showing {8-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds}{6-Spades} was checked by Tommy Hang and Eli Elezra. Deeb bet 6,500 and Hang folded, but then Elezra committed to seeing the turn with a call. On the turn, the {10-Clubs} hit and Elezra bet 15,000. Deeb thought for few moments, then called. The river completed the board with the {2-Spades} and Elezra bet 32,000.

After Elezra's bet, Deeb went into the tank. Halfway through Deeb's tanking process, he showed just the {10-Spades}{10-Hearts} from his hand after shuffling back through his four cards. He turned the two tens face up on the table, then turned the cards back over. Eventually, Deeb made the call and Elezra announced that he could not beat a set of tens. Deeb showed his complete hand, which also included the {8-Hearts} and {3-Spades}, and took down this pot.

After the hand, the players at the table started talking about whether or not Deeb's action was legal, and some suggested that Deeb was lucky his hand wasn't ruled dead. Elezra, clearly interested in what the actual ruling would've been, called over the tournament director. The tournament director listened to the players explain what had happened and eventually ruled that Deeb would get a one-round penalty. While the hand was already over, and Elezra only seemed to have been interested in what the rule was, Deeb had to step away from the table for six hands.

"I just can't help myself," Deeb said with a big smile, as he walked past the PokerNews desk.

Six hands later, Deeb returned, but not before Tweeting the following.

shaun deebNot happy with myself been such a cash game feel of the tourney showed part of my hand in big PLO pot then got my 1st penalty
Player Chips Progress
Shaun Deeb us
Shaun Deeb
WSOP 6X Winner
270,000 60,000
Eli Elezra il
Eli Elezra
WSOP 5X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
211,000 -39,000
Tommy Hang us
Tommy Hang
82,000 -28,000

Tags: Eli ElezraNick SchulmanShaun DeebTommy Hang

Amundsgard Sends Shak Packing

Level 4
Dan Shak
Dan Shak

Pot-Limit Omaha

We saw Dan Shak packing up his things, which tends to be a sign indicative of elimination. Sure enough, a quick check at the table confirmed that he had been eliminated in the last hand of pot-limit Omaha.

As Dylan Linde explained, Sergey Rybachenko raised under the gun and Ola "Odd_Oddsen" Amundsgard called from the button. Shak then potted from the big blind, Rybachenko called, and Amundsgard repotted. Shak called all in, Rybachenko made the call, and the flop came out {4-}{2-}{2-}. Rybachenko checked and then folded to a bet from Amundsgard.

Amundsgard: {a-}{a-}{10-}{2-}
Shak: {a-}{a-}{q-}{7-}

Both Shak and Amundsgard had aces preflop, but the latter was fortunate enough to flop trips. Neither the turn nor river had a bearing on the hand, and Shak became the third player to fall here in Event #46: $50,000 Poker Players' Championship.

Player Chips Progress
Ola Amundsgard no
Ola Amundsgard
160,000 160,000
Dan Shak us
Dan Shak
Busted

Tags: Dan ShakOla AmundsgardSergey Rybachenko

Boat For Bach in Three-Way Stud Hand

Level 4
Cowboys Full for Bach
Cowboys Full for Bach

Stud

Bach: {x-}{x-} / {K-Clubs}{10-Clubs}{7-Spades}{7-Diamonds} / {x-}
Ausmus: {x-}{x-} / {A-Hearts}{8-Hearts}{6-Diamonds}{8-Spades} / {x-}
Song: {x-}{x-} / {5-Diamonds}{2-Clubs}{3-Clubs}{J-Clubs} / {x-}

Kevin Song completed and David Bach raised. Jeremy Ausmus, in the next seat over, made it three bets to go. Song flatted and Bach four-bet the action. Ausmus capped it and both Song and Bach called.

On fourth street, Ausmus had first action with an ace showing. He fired a bet and Song called. Bach cut out a raise and both Ausmus and Song stuck around. On fifth, Ausmus still had first action and fired out a bet once more. Again, Song called, Bach raised, and both players called. Bach paired sevens on sixth, but Ausmus made eights, keeping him with the first action. This time, though, he checked his action and Song followed suit. Bach bet and both of his opponents called.

Seventh street saw action check around to Bach who put out one final bet. Ausmus called and Song went into the tank for about 45 seconds before also calling. Bach tabled {K-Diamonds}{K-Hearts}{A-Clubs} for kings full of sevens, prompting both of his opponents to muck their hands.

Bach raked in the massive pot and now has roughly 230,000 in chips.

Player Chips Progress
David Bach us
David Bach
WSOP 3X Winner
230,000 57,000
Kevin Song us
Kevin Song
WSOP 1X Winner
114,000 -8,000
Jeremy Ausmus us
Jeremy Ausmus
WSOP 6X Winner
112,000 -88,000

Tags: David BachJeremy AusmusKevin Song

Baranov Becomes the Second Elimination of the Day

Level 4
Sergeii Baranov
Sergeii Baranov

Pot-Limit Omaha

We missed the elimination of 2013 World Series of Poker Europe Main Event runner-up Sergii Baranov, who qualified for this tournament yesterday via a satellite, but Brian Hastings was kind enough to fill us in on the details.

As he told it, Baranov was squaring off against Ismael Bojang on a {j-}{10-}{4-} flop. A raising war broke out between the two, and Baranov ended up getting his stack all in holding {j-}{10-}{9-}{5-} for top two pair. Bojang held {a-}{k-}{q-}{5-} for a wrap and a flush draw.

The turn was a blank, which was good for Baranov, but then the dealer burned and put out an {a-} on the river. Bojang rivered Broadway, and that was enough to send Baranov to the rail (he was the second elimination of the day behind Vanessa Selbst).

Player Chips Progress
Ismael Bojang de
Ismael Bojang
WSOP 1X Winner
210,000 88,400
Sergii Baranov ua
Sergii Baranov
Busted

Tags: Sergii BaranovIsmael Bojang

Get to Know Chun Lei Zhou (AKA "samrostan" & "patpatpanda")

Level 4
Chun Lei Zhou
Chun Lei Zhou

Earlier this year, PokerNews confirmed that Macau high-stakes player Chun Lei Zhou was the man behind the legendary “samrostan” online account, formerly known as “patpatpanda.” It was one of online poker's biggest mysteries, but now that he has stepped out from behind the computer screen, he's been venturing to some live events around the world.

While Zhou wasn't expected to make the trip to the World Series of Poker, he showed up in Vegas a couple weeks back. Now he is in the Event #46: $50,000 Poker Players' Championship field trying his luck against some of the game's best. But how will someone used to playing no-limit hold'em and pot-limit Omaha do in an eight-game mix?

“It’s OK. Before I only played no-limit hold’em games. Sometimes no one played me, so I learned other ring games and I lose a lot of money. I love to play poker,” Zhou previously told PokerNews in regards to learning other games. “My favorite game? I like all games — Omaha, 8-game, mixed games. I don’t want to play no-limit hold’em.”

Zhou, who claims to have played for 40 hours straight one time, may be a lesser-skilled player in the eyes of many, but he has earned the respect of the game’s best, including Phil Ivey who he met while playing the Big Game in Macau.

“I like to play online because it’s fast and you can play more tables,” Zhou says when asked if he prefers playing online or in the Big Game. “Live game is boring, but the live game is easy — lots of bad players.”

As for whether or not Zhou sold action into this tournament, don't count on it. “I always play 100% of myself. I still lose a lot, always lose,” Zhou said previously of his tournament play. “When I lose a tournament, I always have nut-nut, but I always get bad beat (laughs).”

For more on Zhou, check out his full interview with PokerNews by clicking here.

Tags: Chun Lei Zhoupatpatpandasamrostan

Deeb Fires Big on Turn and River

Level 4
Shaun Deeb
Shaun Deeb

Shaun Deeb and Nick Schulman each checked a {7-Diamonds}{3-Diamonds}{a-Diamonds} flop, and Deeb checked again on the {4-Spades} turn. Schulman took the opportunity to bet 2,700, but Deeb came over the top with a big raise to 15,000. Schulman called after some thought, and Deeb fired 23,000 on the {3-Spades} river. Schulman agonized a bit with a palm to his forehead before ultimately calling.

Deeb showed {q-Diamonds}{4-Diamonds} for a flush and won the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Shaun Deeb us
Shaun Deeb
WSOP 6X Winner
247,000 34,000
Nick Schulman us
Nick Schulman
WSOP 4X Winner
77,600 -47,400

Tags: Nick SchulmanShaun Deeb

Vanessa Selbst First One Out

Level 4
Vanessa Selbst
Vanessa Selbst

No-Limit Hold'em

Matt Glantz raised to 1,700 from the hijack and Vanessa Selbst three-bet from the button to 4,800. The action folded back to Glantz who four-bet to 13,700 and Selbst tanked for a while before making the call.

The flop brought {K-Spades}{8-Spades}{J-Spades} and Glantz bet 11,500, Selbst made the call.

On the turn the {10-Spades} hit and Glantz seemed to have lost a little focus with the fourth spade appearing on the turn. Glantz ultimately checked and Selbst moved all in for about 55,000 chips.

Glantz immediately pushed a stack of chips forward and Selbst shook her head in frustration. Selbst showed {Q-Hearts}{Q-Clubs} against Glantz's {A-Clubs}{Q-Spades} and she had no outs left to improve her hand on the river.

The river was the {J-Clubs} and the realization kicked in for Selbst that she was eliminated out of one of the biggest tournaments of the summer. Selbst continuously shook her head as she gathered her belongings and exited the room, as we've lost the first player from this tournament.

Player Chips Progress
Matt Glantz us
Matt Glantz
310,000 110,000
Vanessa Selbst us
Vanessa Selbst
WSOP 3X Winner
Busted

Tags: Matt GlantzVanessa Selbst

Massive Three-Way Pot Shakes Up Table 369

Level 3
Mike Gorodinsky takes a big hit.
Mike Gorodinsky takes a big hit.

Pot-Limit Omaha

It took the better part of three levels, but we've finally had a hand that rocked the chip counts a bit. It happened over at Table 368 in a three-way clash between Mike Gorodinsky, Richard Ashby and Michael Glick. The betting details escaped us, but we do know action exploded on a {10-Hearts}{2-Clubs}{q-Clubs} flop that resulted in Ashby getting his last 100,000 or so in the pot, Gorodinsky a bit more than that, and Glick having both at risk.

Glick: {a-Clubs}{k-Clubs}{a-Spades}{2-Diamonds}
Ashby: {q-Diamonds}{q-Hearts}{10-Diamonds}{7-Spades}
Gorodinsky: {10-Spades}{10-Clubs}{9-Clubs}{5-Spades}

Ashby was out in front with top set, while Gorodinsky had middle set and a flush draw. As for Glick, he had aces with the better flush draw and a straight draw. The {J-Hearts} turn actually have Glick the lead with Broadway, but then the {2-Spades} spiked on the river!

Ashby made queens full of deuces to take down the hefty main pot, while Gorodinsky's full house earned him the paltry side pot. Both Glick and Gorodinsky lost the majority of their chips on the hand, while a smiling Ashby was all smiles.

Player Chips Progress
Richard Ashby gb
Richard Ashby
WSOP 1X Winner
300,000 184,000
Michael Glick us
Michael Glick
70,000 -105,000
Mike Gorodinsky us
Mike Gorodinsky
WSOP 3X Winner
32,000 -103,000

Tags: Michael GlickMike GorodinskyRichard Ashby

Roaring Start for Rast

Level 3
Brian Rast has nearly doubled his stack so far.
Brian Rast has nearly doubled his stack so far.

No-Limit Hold'em

Brian Rast continues to accumulate chips at a furious pace early on.

Philip Sternheimer opened for 1,200 in middle position in a recent pot, and Rast three-bet to 4,000 from the big blind. Sternheimer made the call, and the two took in a {6-Hearts}{j-Spades}{a-Diamonds} flop, on which Rast bet 4,800. Sternheimer called, and Rast kept the barrels coming with 8,500 on the {j-Diamonds} turn. Sternheimer again called, and the {4-Spades} emerged on the river. At this, Rast fired out 27,000. Sternheimer tanked for awhile, asked for a count of the bet, and then decided to look his opponent up.

Rast flipped {q-Clubs}{j-Clubs} for trips, and that was enough to rake in the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Brian Rast us
Brian Rast
WSOP 6X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
261,000 -4,000
Philip Sternheimer gb
Philip Sternheimer
126,000 -46,000

Tags: Brian RastPhilip Sternheimer