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The WSOP on ESPN: Cunningham, Jace & Bellande Exit on Day 6

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PR & Media Manager
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Allen Cunningham

ESPN continued its coverage of the 2011 World Series of Poker on Tuesday night with two new episodes of the Main Event. Last week, Phil Collins dominated at the start of Day 6. With 90 players from the original field of 6,865 still competing for a share of the $64,531,000 prize pool, coverage of Day 6 continued with a few notables still in the field including Allen Cunningham (965,000), Tony Hachem (1,930,000), Ben Lamb (7,240,000), Erick Lindgren (2,765,000) and the aforementioned Collins, who happened to be the chip leader with 8,655,000.

Top Day 6 Chip Counts

PlacePlayerChip Count
1stPhil Collins8,655,000
2ndBen Lamb7,240,000
3rdRyan Lenaghan6,240,000
4thBryan Follian5,875,000
5thBryan Devonshire5,660,000
6thAleksandr Mozhnyakov5,400,000
7thSebastian Ruthenberg4,660,000
8thKyle Johnson4,400,000

Let��s Get It On: The start of the broadcast featured a new feature table lineup and started with the blinds at 20,000/40,000 with a 5,000 ante.

Feature Table Chip Counts

PlacePlayerChip Count
1stBen Lamb7,240,000
2ndJP Kelly4,340,000
3rdKosta Mamaliadis3,560,000
4thErick Lindgren2,765,000
5thMichael Degilio2,105,000
6thBrian Yoon1,860,000
7thFred Berger1,570,000
8thMatt Salsberg1,015,000
9thFrank Calo550,000

In the first hand, action folded to Brian Yoon in the small blind and he raised to 100,000 holding 4?4?. Ben Lamb was in the big blind and called with 10?8?, leading to the J?9?6? flop. Yoon was technically ahead and he continuation bet 110,000, although Lamb had a better chance of winning the hand. Lamb responded with a raise to 305,000, which was enough to take down the pot. The semi-bluff raise had been kind to Lamb throughout the Main Event, and it seemed Day 6 wasn��t going to be any different.

Former Chip Leader Gone: Daryl Jace, who spent a lot of time atop the chip counts before Day 6, was all-in for his last 325,000 with A?5? and called by John Hewitt who was holding A?K?. The K?4?4? flop gave Hewitt a huge lead, but the 6? turn gave Jace some hope. Unfortunately for Jace, the A? river blanked and he was eliminated from the Main Event in 89th place for $76,146.

Cunningham All-In: At an outer table, Allen Cunningham was all-in for 510,000 with 4?4? and up against the A?Q? of Marc-Andre Ladouceur. It was a classic race, but things looked bleak for Cunningham when the flop fell 10?8?J?. In addition to his two overs, Ladouceur had picked up a double gut-shot straight draw. Surprisingly, neither the 6? turn nor 5? river helped Ladouceur, and Cunningham doubled to 1,125,000.

Don��t Mess with Belize: Alexandr Mozhnyakov raised to 85,000 preflop only to have Badih Bounahra move all-in for 960,000. Mozhnyakov thought long and hard before making the call and quickly discovered it was a bad idea:

Showdown
Mozhnyakov: A?7?
Bounahra: A?K?

The board ran out Q?K?Q?8?A? and Bounahra, who hails from Belize, doubled to 2,050,000.

Two Women Remain: Claudia Crawford was eliminated in 85th place ($76,146) after her open-ended straight draw failed to come through. Her elimination left two women in the field: Amanda Musumeci and Erika Moutinho, girlfriend of poker pro David ��Doc�� Sands.

Three-Way All-In: Sebastian Ruthenberg opened for 85,000 with A?K? and was met with a three-bet to 235,000 by Pius Heinz who held Q?Q?. When action reached Jared Vengrin, he looked down at 4?4? and shipped his remaining 1.26 million. Ruthenberg then moved all-in over the top, putting Heinz to a decision for all his chips. The young German tanked for awhile before calling off for 3.11 million.

Shock spread across the table as over 7.5 million was at stake in the hand. Heinz was a 44 percent favorite to win the hand, which increased to 63 percent after the 10?J?6? flop. The 3? turn changed nothing, and neither did the 8? river. Heinz more than doubled on the hand, Ruthenberg lost two-thirds of his stack, and Vengrin was eliminated in 73rd place for $90,343.

Cunningham Eliminated in 69th Place: In the second hour of the broadcast, Allen Cunningham was once again all-in preflop and up against Mar-Andre Ladouceur. Unfortunately for Cunningham, was on the bad end of a cooler.

Showdown
Ladouceur: A?A?
Cunningham: K?K?

With 1,780,000 on the line, the board ran out 9?3?4?J?Q? and the five-time bracelet winner and 2006 final tablist was sent packing in 69th place for $108,412.

Bellande Out the Door: Tri Huynh, who looked down at A?J?, opened for 115,000 and action folded to Jean-Robert Bellande in the small blind. The former Survivor contestant moved all-in for 935,000 with the inferior A?10?, and Huynh quickly called after the big blind got out of the way. The J?A?7? flop was disastrous for Bellande, and the 4? turn left him drawing dead. The meaningless 6? was put out on the river for good measure, but Bellande was busto in 65th place ($108,412). Impressively, Bellande notched back-to-back top-100 finishes in the Main Event.

Last Woman Standing: Amanda Musumeci was all-in preflop for her last 850,000 holding 9?9? and racing against Ryan Lenaghan's A?Q?. Musumeci, one of only two women still remaining in the Main Event, sat back down after the flop came down 5?2?10? and kept her in the lead; however, the Q? on the turn put her at the brink of elimination. The 3? river was no help, and Musumeci became the 62nd-place finisher, good for $130,997.

Meanwhile, Erika Moutinho became the last woman standing in the Main Event. She was seated at the feature table and was joined by her boyfriend, David ��Doc�� Sands. Speaking of which, ESPN aired a segment featuring their relationship, including how she learned poker and the joint business venture the two have undertaken. The two started DGS Management and Consulting, a company that helps organize poker players' lives.

The Doctor is In: At the feature table, action folded to Erick Lindgren in the hijack and he opened for 120,000 with K?J?. David ��Doc�� Sands made the call from the button with A?J? and the two were heads-up to the Q?A?3? flop. Both players ended up checking, leading to the 3? turn. Lindgren took a shot by firing out 150,000, Sands called, and the 6? peeled off on the river. Sands had hit the nuts and was no doubt happy that Lindgren bet 340,000. Sands responded by moving all-in and Lindgren snap-folded.

End of Day 6: Action came to a halt with 57 players remaining. Leading the way was Ryan Lenaghan of New Orleans, Louisiana, who had amassed a stack of 12,865,000. Here��s a look at the top eight chip counts at the end of Day 6:

End of Day 6 Chip Counts

PlacePlayerChip Count
1stRyan Lenaghan12,865,000
2ndBen Lamb9,980,000
3rdMatt Giannetti7,940,000
4thAndrey Pateychuk7,255,000
5thPhil Collins7,240,000
6thHilton Laborda7,160,000
7thNelson Robinson6,420,000
8thTri Huynh6,295,000

Tune in Next Week: Every Tuesday leading up to November, ESPN will air two episodes of the 2011 WSOP Main Event. Be sure to either check your local listings or come back next week for our recap of the action.

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PR & Media Manager for PokerNews, Podcast host & 2013 WSOP Bracelet Winner.

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