2018 World Series of Poker

Event #20: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em
Day: 1
Event Info

2018 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
aa
Prize
$537,710
Event Info
Buy-in
$5,000
Prize Pool
$2,408,700
Entries
518
Level Info
Level
34
Blinds
120,000 / 240,000
Ante
240,000

Nearly 500 Show Up for Day 1 of $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em; Bonomo, Bicknell and Kuo Near the Top

Level 10 : 500/1,000, 1,000 ante
Dan Colpoys
Dan Colpoys

Nearly 500 players registered for Day 1 of Event #20: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em, filling up the entirety of the Amazon purple section over the course of the day. By the end of the night, only 170 of them remained. Chipleader after the first day of play was Dan Colpoys with 403,000. Colpoys' had an amazing last ten minutes of the day to bag up the chip lead

In a five-bet pot that started rather innocuous with a few limps, Colpoys eventually got it all in against Vojetch Ruzicka. Colpoys was holding aces against Ruzicka's kings and held up to send the former November Niner to the rail with just a few minutes left on the clock. Before the night ended, Colpoys sent another player to the rail with aces against queens and bagged up a substantial chip lead just like that.

Players played a total of ten 60-minute levels on Day 1 and many notables fell along the way. Some of the players who did not make it through to Day 2 included Mike Matusow, Robert Mizrachi, Joseph Cheong, Alex Foxen, Daniel Negreanu, Shaun Deeb, Maria Ho, Christian Harder and Jerry Wong.

Wong was one of the last to fall towards the end of the night and he was eliminated by Kitty Kuo in a big pot. In the hand, Wong three-bet from the big blind and Kuo called from the small blind. Kuo got it all in with an open-ended straight draw and Wong called with an overpair. Kuo rivered her straight to take down the massive pot, making her one of the biggest stacks in the room with 144,100.

Kitty Kuo
Kitty Kuo had a strong showing on Day 1

Along with Kuo, some of the other players returning for Day 2 include the likes of Justin Bonomo and Kristen Bicknell, who both hold a top ten spot after Day 1. Erik Seidel, Scott Blumstein, Kristen Bicknell, Anthony Spinella, Olivier Busquet, Pete Chen, Kenny Hallaert, Seth Davies, Cliff Josephy, Greg Merson, David Pham and Kathy Liebert were among the other notables that advanced.

Liebert and Pham tangled for much of the day after Liebert was moved to Pham's direct left. In one massive pot, Liebert and Pham flipped for nearly 100,000 chips with Pham holding ace-king and Liebert holding queens. Liebert's queens held up and she was able to ride on that stack for the rest of the day to find a bag.

Action will resume at 2 p.m. local time on Saturday, June 9, where players will return to play another ten 60-minute levels with 15-minute breaks every two levels. Blinds will resume at 600/1,200 with an ante of 1,200. Registration will remain open until the start of Day 2, which means players still have some time to join the field. The prize pool and payouts will be announced on Day 2 shortly after late registration has closed. PokerNews will be back with all the action, so be sure to check back in.

Justin Bonomo - 2018 $10,000 Heads-Up No-Limit Hold'em Championship Winner
Fresh off winning his second bracelet, Justin Bonomo had another strong showing on Day 1 of Event #20: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em

Tags: Anthony SpinellaCliff JosephDan ColpoysErik SeidelGreg MersonKenny HallaertKitty KuoMike MatusowPete ChenScott BlumsteinVojtech Ruzicka

Kuo Gets There; Sends Wong to the Rail

Level 10 : 500/1,000, 1,000 ante
Kitty Kuo
Kitty Kuo

A player opened in middle position to 2,500 and another player at the table called. Kitty Kuo called from the small blind before Jerry Wong made it 11,800 from the big blind. Action folded around back to Kuo who took a look at Wong's stack before calling.

The flop was {9-Spades}{7-Hearts}{6-Clubs} and Kuo checked to Wong who bet 13,500. Kuo looked at Wong's stack again, then put forth a stack of orange T5,000 chips, enough to put Wong all in. Wong snap-called.

Kitty Kuo: {9-Clubs}{8-Clubs}
Jerry Wong: {J-Clubs}{J-Spades}

The turn was the {J-Diamonds} which made Wong a massive favorite in the hand with a set, but Kuo got there on the river when the {10-Clubs} came, filling in her straight. Kuo laughed after the hand and stuck her tongue out a couple of times in jest as she raked in the pot. Wong wasn't offended though. He gave Kuo a hug, asked her in the hand was going to be on her twitter, then asked for a photo-op. He headed to the rail while Kuo scooped up another massive pot to put her just under 200,000.

Player Chips Progress
Kitty Kuo tw
Kitty Kuo
190,000 20,000
Jerry Wong us
Jerry Wong
WSOP 1X Winner
Busted

Tags: Jerry WongKitty Kuo

Bonomo on a Superior Level

Level 10 : 500/1,000, 1,000 ante
Justin Bonomo (as seen in the $10k Heads-Up Championship)
Justin Bonomo (as seen in the $10k Heads-Up Championship)

Justin Bonomo has been storming through 2018 like a hurricane. His heater is already comparable to those of Fedor Holz or Dan Colman, and it's debatable whether Bonomo has already exceeded them - and we're still in the first half of the year.

After crushing high rollers elsewhere in town, Bonomo arrived in Rio to play for bracelets. And, of course, he immediately snatched one today when he came out on top in the $10k Heads-Up event.

When you ride a gigantic wave of success, why'd you stop? That seems a rule for Bonomo who recently took his seat in the $5k NLH event. He's already up to 105,000.

The latest player to experience Bonomo's unbeatable aura was Christian Harder. We arrived at the table when a {10-Clubs}{4-Hearts}{Q-Hearts} flop was dealt and Harder fired 6,500 from under the gun. Bonomo called in the hijack and there was at least one player also on the flop. However, Harder and Bonomo remained heads-up to the turn as no other calls were made.

The turn was the {Q-Diamonds} and both players checked. The {4-Diamonds} river then double paired the board and Harder checked again. Bonomo threw in enough chips to cover Harder's remaining 16,000. Harder grabbed his cards, lifted them in the air, looked at them and then threw in his chips.

Bonomo showed {Q-Clubs}{J-Clubs} for a boat and Harder exited the tournament, mucking his cards. The dealer turned them up as it was an all-in situation, and it became clear that Harder was calling with pocket aces.

Player Chips Progress
Justin Bonomo us
Justin Bonomo
WSOP 3X Winner
105,000
Christian Harder us
Christian Harder
Busted

Tags: Justin Bonomo

Hallaert Can't Be Stopped

Level 7 : 300/500, 500 ante
Kenny Hallaert
Kenny Hallaert

Kenny Hallaert opened from middle position and he was called by Pete Chen to his direct left. Action folded around where both blinds called.

The flop was {K-Clubs}{9-Clubs}{6-Spades} and both players checked to Hallaert. Hallaert put out a bet of 2,500 which only Chen called.

The turn was the {Q-Hearts} and Hallaert slowed down with a check. Chen put out a bet of 6,500 and Hallaert called.

Both players decided to check on the {3-Spades} river. Hallaert showed {A-Hearts}{K-Diamonds} for top pair, top kicker and that would earn him the pot when Chen mucked.

With that pot, Hallaert is now over 100,000 chips while Chen slipped to just over 15,000.

Player Chips Progress
Kenny Hallaert be
Kenny Hallaert
109,000 24,000
Pete Chen hk
Pete Chen
15,600 -7,400

Tags: Kenny HallaertPete Chen

Merson Surpasses a Hundo

Level 6 : 200/400, 400 ante
Greg Merson
Greg Merson

Three-way on the {10-Spades}{5-Diamonds}{9-Hearts} flop, Dominik Nitsche was in the big blind calling a 3,700-bet from a player in the small blind. The dealer pulled their bets into the pot but Nitsche reminded him that there was yet another player to act: the 2012 World Champion Greg Merson.

Merson raised to 9,700, the small blind shoved all in for roughly 27,000 and Nitsche quickly escaped. Merson immediately called, having flopped the bottom set with {5-Hearts}{5-Spades}. He was up against {A-Diamonds}{A-Spades} and dodged the bullets on the {Q-Diamonds} and {6-Clubs} runout, eliminating his opponent and stacking a large chunk of chips.

Merson is now sitting on 110,000, guarding one of the healthiest stacks in the room.

Player Chips Progress
Greg Merson us
Greg Merson
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 2X Winner
110,000 57,500

Tags: Greg MersonDominik Nitsche

Seidel Takes a Big Pot off Foxen Just Before Break

Level 5 : 100/300, 300 ante
Alex Foxen
Alex Foxen

Just before the break, Erik Seidel and Alex Foxen were involved in a big pot that lasted five minutes into the break.

There was already 23,000 in the middle with the board showing {9-Spades}{8-Hearts}{2-Hearts}{9-Diamonds}{4-Hearts} and action was on Seidel who checked over to Foxen. Foxen was on the button and he put out a bet of 16,800, leaving himself with about 13,000 behind. Seidel dropped into the tank and thought for several minutes before eventually deciding to call.

Foxen turned up his {10-Spades}{6-Spades} for a missed gutshot straight draw, and Seidel quickly showed his {J-Clubs}{J-Diamonds} and stacked up the big pot, putting him over 70,000 before heading off to break.

Player Chips Progress
Erik Seidel us
Erik Seidel
WSOP 10X Winner
Poker Hall of Famer
74,000 74,000
Alex Foxen us
Alex Foxen
WSOP 1X Winner
13,000 13,000

Tags: Alex FoxenErik Seidel

Vieira Suffers Nasty Bad Beat

Level 1 : 50/100, 0 ante
Joao Vieira (as seen in a previous event)
Joao Vieira (as seen in a previous event)

Joao Vieira was in a three-way pot on the flop of {2-Spades}{6-Hearts}{9-Hearts}. A player fired 700 from an early position and received a call from an opponent in a middle position. Vieira then raised to 2,550 in the cutoff.

The initial aggressor kept pushing and four-bet to what was believed to be announced as 7,800. The middle player folded but Vieira paused for a bit and then shoved. He was called instantly to learn some great news as his {9-Diamonds}{9-Spades} was miles ahead against the {2-Clubs}{2-Diamonds}.

The turn card, however, was the {2-Hearts}, giving Vieira's opponent quads and Vieira wasn't able to pick up a nine on the river. He had to ship 18,625 the opposite way and dropped to 10,000 instead of pumping his stack early into the tournament.

Player Chips Progress
Joao Vieira pt
Joao Vieira
WSOP 3X Winner
10,000 10,000

Tags: Joao Vieira

Welcome to Event #20: $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em

Scott Seiver won his bracelet in the $5k NLH event back in 2008
Scott Seiver won his bracelet in the $5k NLH event back in 2008

It's time to raise eyebrows for anyone who has embraced the most popular discipline in poker, the phenomenon of No-Limit Hold'em as one of the toughest no-limit events of the summer gets underway today at the 2018 World Series of Poker.

With a $5,000 price tag, the Event #20 belongs to the upper scale of tournament buy-ins. That naturally attracts the vast majority of prolific tournament grinders who are eager to outlast a largely competitive field and take home the gold wristwear along with a juicy top-prize.

While the so-called "vanilla" $5k NLH event has been regularly featured on the WSOP schedule since 2003, this year is a breakout year for the new concept that has overwhelmed poker arenas all over the globe: the big blind ante. Players should, therefore, be able to squeeze in more hands per level, getting an even more comfortable radius of action with their 25,000 chips they'll obtain in return for their registration slips.

That being said, it's hard not to expect some great battles of the talents from all corners of the world. A look at the past editions reveals some iconic names among the previous champions with the likes of Johnny Chan, TJ Cloutier and Scott Seiver all on that list.

Last year belonged to Argentinian player Andres Korn who defeated a field of 623 to claim his first bracelet together with $618,285. Korn prevailed in a heads-up match against Pete Chen, one of the hardest-grinding players in the world.

Now it's time to begin the quest for the new champion with Day 1 of the four-day event starting Friday, June 8 at 3 p.m. local time. A total of 10 levels are slated for play on the first day and all of them will last 60 minutes.

PokerNews live reporting team will be on their feet to provide live updates from the first riffle all the way until baggings. Make sure to come back to see who'll make it through and who will be forced to try their luck elsewhere.

Previous $5k NLH event winners:

YearEntriesWinnerCountryPrize
1999110Eli BalasUnited States$220,000
2003127Johnny ChanUnited States$224,400
2004254Thomas KellerUnited States$382,020
2005466TJ CloutierUnited States$657,100
2006622Jeff CabanillasUnited States$818,546
2007640James MackeyUnited States$730,740
2008731Scott SeiverUnited States$755,891
2009655Brian LemkeUnited States$692,658
2010792Jason DeWittUnited States$818,959
2011865Allen BariUnited States$874,116
20121,001Pete VilandosUnited States$952,694
2013784Matt PerrinsUnited Kingdom$792,275
2014696David MiscikowskiUnited States$719,707
2015422Michael WangUnited States$466,120
2016863Yue DuChina$800,586
2017623Andres KornArgentina$618,285

Tags: Andres KornJohnny ChanPete ChenScott SeiverTJ Cloutier