2017 World Series of Poker

Event #73: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em MAIN EVENT - World Championship
Day: 1a
Event Info

2017 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
a2
Prize
$8,150,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$67,877,400
Entries
7,221
Level Info
Level
43
Blinds
1,500,000 / 3,000,000
Ante
500,000

"Matusow Blowup?!"

Level 4 : 200/400, 50 ante
Mike Matusow
Mike Matusow

With about 9,000 in the pot already, on a board reading {5-Hearts}{4-Hearts}{2-Hearts}{8-Clubs}, Doug Polk checked from late position. Mike Matusow was in the hijack and bet 3,400. Polk thought for a moment and called.

The river was the {9-Clubs}, and Polk checked. Matusow quickly checked back, and Polk tabled {k-Hearts}{q-Hearts} for a flush. Matusow flashed his hand to Polk and quickly tossed his cards into the muck.

As Polk was raking in the pot, a player at the table behind shouted out, "Matusow blowup?!" The few players who overheard it had a chuckle, and Matusow calmly received his next hand.

Player Chips Progress
Mike Matusow us
Mike Matusow
70,000
25,700
25,700
WSOP 4X Winner
Doug Polk us
Doug Polk
56,000
6,000
6,000
WSOP 3X Winner

Tags: Doug PolkMike Matusow

Polk: "I Need to Start Making More Sets. That's Where the Money Is!"

Level 4 : 200/400, 50 ante
Doug Polk and Mike Matusow
Doug Polk and Mike Matusow

Rob Heath raised to 1,000 from late position, and Doug Polk three-bet to 3,200. The player in the big blind snap-called, and Heath called, as well.

The flop came {q-Spades}{10-Hearts}{2-Spades}, and all three players checked. The turn was the {3-Spades}, and all three players checked to the {7-Clubs} on the river. The big blind checked for a third time, and Heath bet 4,500. Polk called, and the big blind folded.

Heath tabled {10-Spades}{10-Clubs} for a set of tens and immediately asked, "Do you have spades?"

Mike Matusow unleashed a hearty laugh and said, "That was f***ing funny. That made my f***ing day."

Polk replied that he did not have spades and mucked his cards.

"I need to start making more sets," said Polk. "That's where the money is!" he laughed.

Player Chips Progress
Rob Heath
Rob Heath
90,000
90,000
90,000
Doug Polk us
Doug Polk
40,000
-21,000
-21,000
WSOP 3X Winner

Tags: Doug PolkMike MatusowRob Heath

Jacobson Flops Both of His Outs to Double

Level 5 : 250/500, 75 ante
Martin Jacobson
Martin Jacobson

Martin Jacobson got his last 7,050 in from middle position and was called by the player on his immediate left.

Jacobson: {9-Hearts}{9-Spades}
Opponent: {a-Clubs}{a-Diamonds}

The dealer turned over the {3-Clubs} in the window, and it was followed by the {9-Clubs} and the {9-Diamonds}, giving the 2014 Main Event Champ quads.

"Don't worry, you're live," someone joked to the player with aces.

The turn was the {7-Hearts}, so that was no longer true, and the river was the {j-Spades}.

Player Chips Progress
Martin Jacobson se
Martin Jacobson
15,000
6,200
6,200
Main Event Champion
WSOP Main Event Champion
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Martin Jacobson

Morten Mortensen Claims Chip Lead in Final Hand

Level 5 : 250/500, 75 ante
Morten Mortensen
Morten Mortensen

In the final hand of the day, Morten Mortensen dragged a monster pot which gave him the end-of-day chip lead. The pot was already up over 35,000 as the board showed {Q-Diamonds}{5-Hearts}{6-Hearts}{7-Clubs}. Mortensen bet 20,000, and his opponent went in the tank. Eventually, he moved all in for 52,000, and Mortensen called with lightning speed.

Morten Mortensen: {9-Hearts}{8-Hearts}
Opponent: {K-Hearts}{K-Spades}

Mortensen had his opponent drawing dead with the nut straight, making the {9-Clubs} river meaningless. With the pot of more than 100,000 chips, Mortensen ended the day as the chip leader with 276,000.

Player Chips Progress
Morten Mortensen dk
Morten Mortensen
276,000
46,000
46,000
Day 1A Chip Leader

Tags: Morten Mortensen

WSOP Main Event Kicks Off With Biggest Day 1a Since 2013

Level 5 : 250/500, 75 ante
Qui Nguyen
Qui Nguyen

After a long, grueling summer featuring dozens of exciting events and millions of dollars in prize money awarded, the 2017 World Series of Poker Main Event is under way at long last.

Day 1a began Saturday at 11 a.m. with players dispersed throughout the Amazon Room and Brasilia Room in the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino. By the time registration closed at the end of the dinner break, 795 players had entered the field. That made it the biggest Day 1a since 2013, when 943 entered the first starting flight.

A trio of former Main Event Champions had divergent paths throughout the day, with two of them surviving.

Defending champ Qui Nguyen sauntered in early in the day, clad in his trusty raccoon hat and sporting a wide smile. He said it was a totally different feel than 2016.

"It was very much different," he said. "Last year, I came here like just a guy. Not like nervous, but not comfortable, you know? This year, I come back and feel very comfortable."

Nguyen spent a good chunk of the early portion of the day on one of the featured tables, where he made some moves that were reminiscent of his fearless play at the WSOP final table last year.

Not all of them worked, such as when he tried a bet/three-bet line with six-five of diamonds against a player who flopped Broadway. He also got himself in a four-bet pot against the aces of Harald Sammer and had to fold post-flop. Ultimately, though, enough of them worked out to get him through to Day 2 with 96,700 chips.

"Actually, like, I have to slow down a bit because the players — they know how I play," he said of his strategy. "So, they try to call me with anything, you know? So, I had to slow down."

Martin Jacobson wowed poker fans everywhere in 2014 with his flawless demonstration of short-stack poker at the Main Event final table. However, Jacobson had a rough go of it on Day 1, finding himself short on chips early, even snapping a photo of his stack when it was barely over 2,000 to post to Twitter.

Grinding one of the shortest stacks in the Amazon Room for hours, he found himself all in and at risk for 7,050 during Level 5 (250/500/75), the last of the night. Jacobson had two outs with pocket nines against an opponent's aces, but it was a short sweat as he flopped quads to double up.

The Swede finished the day with 36,800.

The 2007 Main Event Champ, Jerry Yang, was not so fortunate. Yang got in a three-way all-in just a bit before play ended holding ace-queen against two players with pocket pairs, jacks and nines. Steven Warburton's jacks held up for a triple, and Yang got no help against the nines for the side pot.

Others joining Yang in having the most disappointing day of the year for tournament players included King's Casino owner Leon Tsoukernik, Matt Savage, Blake Bohn, Anthony Spinella, Sorel Mizzi, and Dan Shak.

On the other side of the spectrum, British player Sam Grafton finished among the leaders after a great start to the day that saw him win a huge pot early with a flush on the river against a set. Grafton parlayed that into plenty more pots, amassing 600 big blinds and nearly four starting stacks by dinner time.

"It's been a dream day," Grafton said after bagging. "Everything I tried has gone well for me. When I was bluffing with some outs, I made them on the river. Can't complain; I'm really happy with my stack."

Sam Grafton
Sam Grafton

However, even Grafton's 231,600 chips can't compare to the 276,000 that Morten Mortensen put in the bag. The Danish player with nearly $1.1 million in live cashes had a big stack for at least the last three levels, and he finished as strong as possible by busting another player to end the night and rocket into the top spot.

Mortensen flopped a combo draw with eight-nine of hearts and turned a gutshot straight against a player holding kings. Mortensen's opponent shoved over his turn bet drawing dead, and the Dane snap-called the jam and dragged a pot worth over 100,000.

"I was fortunate enough to be dealt a lot of playable hands and I was able to win most of them," Mortensen said after play concluded. "Other than the last hand of the night, most of the pots I played weren't very big.

"I have two days off, so I will be going to party tomorrow night, and then I can chill until Day 2. I only have five times the starting stack, and there should be around 7,000 runners, so there is still a long way to go."

The 576 players who made it through the day will convene for Day 2a on Tuesday at 11 a.m.

Grafton said he's really looking forward to a relaxing few days with the peace of mind of having piles in the bag while others fight to get to where he's sitting.

"It's going to be a really nice three days for me now by the pool, knowing this stack is in the bag," he said. "I can watch my friends try and fail, knowing that the equity of my stack is just rising as they tumble out of the tournament. So that's going to be a very nice feeling."

The next step for the WSOP Main Event is Day 1b, which begins Sunday at 11 a.m. Streaming coverage will be available on ESPN2 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., and live coverage will be here on PokerNews throughout the duration of the day.

Tags: Morten MortensenQui NguyenSam Grafton