Andrey Zhigalov raised it up and Matt Woodward three-bet all in for 70,000. He was called by Bradley Smith and Zhigalov. The action was checked around to showdown and Smith tabled two pair with . Woodward held and only had a pair of eights. Zhigalov was a non-factor in the hand and the pot was sent to Smith, eliminating Woodward in fourth place.
Bradley Smith was the bring-in and Andrey Zhigalov completed. After a series of raises between the two players, Smith was all in for 280,000 and the down cards were tabled. Smith held for a pair of sixes while Zhigalov had for a pair of tens.
Both players improved to two pair with no low draw heading to seventh street. Smith flipped over the and he was unable to defeat the bigger two pair of Zhigalov. Smith shook the hands of both of his opponents and headed for the payout desk in third place.
Timothy Frazin completed with a four showing and Andrey Zhigalov three-bet with a deuce. Frazin called and it had the fell that a big pot was brewing. Zhigalov check-called on fourth, and then led out on fifth. Frazin just called, being scared of the clubs on Zhigalov's board.
On sixth, Zhigalov check-called again and the action was the same on seventh. Frazin rolled over for a six-high straight and low. Zhigalov shook his head and threw his cards to the muck, falling to below 1,000,000 chips.
After a sweltering 14 hours in the heat of the Amazon Room, the tournament staff has called it quits on the heads-up match between Andrey Zhigalov and Timothy Frazin. The winner of Event #15: $1,500 H.O.R.S.E. will be decided on Saturday, June 9, when play resumes at 12:00 p.m.
When play ended for the night, it was Zhigalov with a slight chip lead, bagging 3,080,000 to Frazin's 2,510,000. The indecision of what to do at the end of the night pretty much summed up their heads-up match. The two players could not agree on playing one more level or bagging up, therefore tournament staff pulled out the bags for them.
Zhigalov and Frazin battled heads-up for over three hours with each player holding a distinct chip advantage at one point. Frazin started off heads-up play with the lead and continued to grow it throughout the next couple of levels. At one point, Zhigalov was all-in and hit a five-outer on the turn to score a key double up. From then, the Russian went on to roll over Frazin and built his stack up to over 4,000,000. Eventually, Frazin crawled back before the day was ended.
Final Table Results
Place
Player
Country
Prize (USD)
1st
-
-
$202,787
2nd
-
-
$125,336
3rd
Bradley Smith
Canada
$87,769
4th
Matt Woodward
United States
$62,379
5th
Nicholas Derke
United States
$45,006
6th
Sandeep Vasudevan
United States
$32,971
7th
Scott Clements
United States
$24,531
8th
JW Smith
United States
$18,541
The day began with a full three tables of 24 players and it didn't take long for the short stacks to start flying out the door. It was a relatively quick pace, considering the limit format of the tournament. Brian Hastings was looking to capture his fourth WSOP gold bracelet but fell short, bowing out in 15th place for $7,120.
Another poker pro, Ismael Bojang, was in search of his first WSOP title to add to his already substantial resume and was poised to do so after a good start. However, Bojang went card dead after the first couple of levels and would see his tournament end in ninth place, taking home $14,240. That set the stage for the official final table of eight.
Frazin, Bradley Smith, and Matt Woodward were all fighting for the chip lead when the final table began and feasted on the short stacks. The blinds got the best of JW Smith, as he was unable to get anything going all day, but still managed to ladder his way onto the final table. He eventually succumbed to the red-hot Woodward in the game of Razz. Smith made a seven-low but Woodward held a bike to eliminate Smith in eighth place.
That left Scott Clements on the short stack who managed to find a triple up at one point, but it still wasn't enough to help him build up a stack. Clements was the last remaining player to have won a WSOP bracelet but he was unable to add to his collection. In Omaha Hi-Lo, Clements turned two pair but was rivered by the trips of Zhigalov, finishing in seventh place.
The shorter stacks continued to drop off and the big stacks continued to get larger. Next up on the totem pole was Sandeep Vasudevan who ran out a pair of kings against Nicholas Derke's trip jacks in the game of Stud. Just moments after the dinner break, Derke was the next to fall after running into a couple of big hands, including Bradley Smith's full house in Omaha Hi-Lo.
Zhigalov entered four-handed play on the short stack and it seemed inevitable that he would be the next to leave the tournament area. However, after getting all of his chips in the middle with the worst hand heading to the river twice, he managed to spike a key card to earn two double ups.
Meanwhile, Woodward's stack was getting smaller as the blinds kept increasing. After losing a big Razz hand, Woodward was all in on third street in Stud against two players. It would be Smith to score another knockout when he rivered two pair, leaving just three players remaining.
During four-handed play, Frazin built himself a massive chip lead, holding around 3,000,000 chips at one point with each of his opponents still in the six-figure numbers. He continued to hold a large lead in three-handed action but it was Zhigalov who started to turn the tables. He built his stack to nearly 2,000,000 chips before putting Smith to the test for his remaining 280,000 in Stud Hi-Lo. Zhigalov made two pair, tens and deuces, while Smith could only muster sevens and sixes, leaving just two players to fight for the title.
Continue to follow along with the PokerNews live reporting team as we will return tomorrow for live coverage of the heads-up match until a winner is crowned.