Kenny Hsiung raised in early position and Michael Lipner three-bet in the cutoff. The action folded back to Hsiung as he put in the four-bet and Lipner called off his stack of 120,000 total.
"I got it," Hsiung said before the cards were tabled.
Michael Lipner:
Kenny Hsiung:
It was a classic flip until the flop came .
"I told you I got it," repeated Hsiung.
The turn and river were no help for Lipner as he left the tournament in 17th place for $5,553.
After ten levels of one-hour blinds, it is Christoph Kwon at the top of the chip counts on Day 2 of Event #13: $1,500 Limit Hold'em with 1,695,000 in chips. Lee Markholt also bagged a great stack after holding onto a massive amount of chips for the majority of the day, bringing a total of 1,405,000 into Day 3.
Kwon's road to victory will not be easy, with four bracelet winners remaining in the field, including 2015 Main Event Champion Joe McKeehen (1,405,000), Steven Wolansky (1,180,000), Kenny Hsiung (835,000), and Yueqi Zhu (785,000).
Event #13: $1,500 Limit Hold'em Top 10 Chip Counts
Place
Player
Country
Chips
1
Christoph Kwon
United States
1,695,000
2
Lee Markholt
United States
1,405,000
3
Nick Pupillo
United States
1,340,000
4
Joe McKeehen
United States
1,195,000
5
Steven Wolansky
United States
1,180,000
6
Pedro Rios
United States
985,000
7
Ben Ross
United States
965,000
8
Kenny Hsiung
United States
835,000
9
Yueqi Zhu
China
785,000
10
Fred Lavassani
United States
710,000
Day 2 began with a total of 160 of the 522 entries, battling to survive until only 79 were remaining to get their share of the $696,000 prize pool. Many notables made Day 2 but couldn't quite make it into the money including, Jesse Lonis, defending champion Yuval Bronshtein and Kevin Erickson.
Once the bubble burst, the play was rapid as many notables were sent to the payout desk, including, Aditya Prasetyo (69th), Benjamin Scholl (68th), Brandon Shack-Harris (46th), and Anthony Zinno (20th).
The final 16 players return to their seats at 2 p.m. on June 8 at Paris Las Vegas; they come back to level 26 with blinds of 40,000-80,000. The players are all guaranteed $5,553 but all eyes are on the $145,856 top prize and a World Series of Poker gold bracelet. The champion will be crowned on June 8th.
Stay tuned to PokerNews and keep up-to-date on this tournament and all the other bracelet-awarding events throughout the 2022 World Series of Poker.