Albrinck Bags Day 1a Chip Lead in Search of Another Title at WSOPC Cherokee
The opening flight of the WSOP Circuit $1,700 Main Event at Harrah's Cherokee Casino Resort has drawn to an end with 59 players moving onto Day 2. After more than thirteen hours of play, Brad Albrinck amassed the most towering stack in the room with 504,000 in chips, more than fifteen times his starting stack.
Albrinck is no stranger to the circuit Main Event at Cherokee as he topped the field in December 2016 for his most significant career score of over $275,000. The Ohio native has accumulated over $1.2 million in career tournament earnings with the majority of it coming from WSOP events.
Throughout most of the day, Dennis Powell held the chip lead after a strong start, but he tailed off late to finish with 249,000 chips. Albrinck was quietly going about his business as one of the late entries and emerged near the top of the leaderboard in the last few levels. To cap things off, Albrinck came from behind against Yoon Cheon when he flopped a pair of kings to send Cheon to the rail.
Some other big stacks moving onto Day 2 include Carlos Loving (446,000), Kobie Wilkerson (441,000), Scott Drobes (425,000), and Scott Sanders (404,000). Loving was also one of those who slowly built up a stack throughout the day and finished strong. Wilkerson, on the other hand, caught lightning in a bottle for about an hour of play to gain the majority of his chips.
Albeit a busy opening flight to the Main Event with 360 total entries, Day 1b is expected to attract plenty more players. If there is any hope of breaking last year's record attendance of 1,056 entries, the Day 1b flight will need to double that of Day 1a's nearly. With satellites continuing to run throughout most of today and into the wee hours of the night, the event center is expected to be jam-packed for Day 1b.
Many notables took their shot on Day 1a, but it wasn't a successful flight for many, and even a single re-entry couldn't help some. Rex Clinkscales, Warren Sheaves, Martin Kozlov, Paulius Vaitiekunas, and Heather Alcorn all burned through two bullets and will likely return for Day 1b. Some others that failed to move on include Maurice Hawkins, Allen Kessler, Mo Nuwwarah, Jake Bazeley, WSOP Global Casino Championship winner Ryan Eriquezzo, and Eric Salazar.
Some other notables that were fortunate to make it through the day include Ryan Leng (195,000), Steven Grybas (184,000), Josh Reichard (132,000), Stanley Lee (102,000), Irene Carey (100,000), and DJ Alexander (100,000). Leng was one of the last entries before registration closed and managed to spin up his 30,000 starting stack to nearly 300 chips before slipping back down.
The action will resume at 11 am Aug. 10 for Day 1b which is the last starting flight for the Main Event. Players will begin with a stack of 30,000 chips, and late registration will remain open until the start of level 13. A single re-entry will be permitted throughout the registration period. There will be a 15-minute break after every three levels and a 60-minute dinner break after the ninth level. Action will complete after a full 16 levels or when 16% of the field remains.
Keep it locked here for all of the updates from the tournament floor from the PokerNews live reporting team throughout the entire Main Event. World Series of Poker Circuit Harrah's Cherokee Main Event Live Updates can be found in the PokerNews WSOPC Live Reporting section.