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2016 World Championship of Online Poker

$102,000 Super High Roller
Day: 1
Event Info

2016 World Championship of Online Poker

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
k4
Prize
$1,172,461
Event Info
Buy-in
$100,000
Prize Pool
$2,800,000
Entries
28
Level Info
Level
21
Blinds
2,400 / 4,800
Ante
720

Six Remain in the WCOOP $102,000 Super High Roller, Salman "salfshb" Behbehani Leads

Level 17 : 1,200/2,400, 360 ante

An event people had been looking forward to for weeks started today. Not just the highest of high rollers got excited when the WCOOP $102,000 Super High Roller had been announced, railbirds from all over the world too eagerly awaited the day it all started.

Thousands and thousands of fans gathered for the biggest ever buy-in online poker tournament in the game's relatively short history. The $102,000-buy-in WCOOP Super High Roller was met with unprecedented excitement.

After 17 levels of action, just 6 of 28 registrants remain. Only 3 will get in the money, so the action will be tense as play continues Monday, September 12 at 12:30 (18:30 Central European Time) with the following line-up:

SeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Mikita "fish2013" BadziakouskiBelarus130,17543
2Salman "salfshb" BehbehaniUnited States175,35958
3Fedor "CrownUpGuy" HolzGermany163,38254
4"bencb789"Sweden117,68139
5Igor "lechuckpoker" KurganovRussia85,05828
6Isaac "philivey2694" HaxtonUnited States168,34556

Mikael "ChaoRen160" Thuritz was the first to sign up for the event. To some, it was like he was saying he was ready to take on anyone. Talal "raidalot" Shakerchi joined him in the lobby early on before Isaac "philivey2694" Haxton, Doug "WCG|Rider" Polk and "OtB_RedBaron" joined too. The event got underway with just those five registered, but besides a lot of fans, you could bet a lot of prospects were scoping out the play as well.

The first two to join the action while the first jabs had already been traded were high rollers Christoph "26071985" Vogelsang and Ben "Sauce123" Sulsky. Shakerchi lost a bit early on while Vogelsang was the first to really break loose of the 30,000-starting stack by winning a pot with aces.

Timofey "Trueteller" Kuznetsov joined the action after the first break, followed by the entrance of Jason Mercier. His participation was expected but more so welcomed, as he had announced to live stream the event with hole cards on a 15-minute delay. With Jason Somerville by his side - for commentary, not strategic purposes - the PokerStars Team Pro started his grind. Polk, who had a little bit of a brawl with Mercier a couple months ago, had a stream of his own going at the same time.

Belgian high stakes regular "OtB_RedBaron" was the first to go. He got check-raised on the final card by Vogelsang and called with a rivered flush. Vogelsang had what he represented, the nut flush, and "OtB_RedBaron" clicked the 'register' button a second time, buying back in for another $102,000.

Timofey "Trueteller" Kuznetsov was the second player to go. He got it in with a flush draw against the better ace-high of Thuritz, and after the river blanked for him, Kuznetsov too had to buy back in.

Mikita "fish2013" Badziakouski, last year's third-place finisher in the WCOOP Super High Roller, entered the event and clashed instantly with Jason Mercier. The two got it in before the flop with Badziakouski holding aces against Mercier's kings. The classic cooler remained just that, no coming from behind for Mercier as he was knocked down to just 7,000 chips. He lost those not much later as he failed to improve enough with an open-ended against the top pair of former teammate Haxton.

As Shakerchi busted with ace-king to Thuritz's tens and reentered, the railbirds anticipated a flood of new players with the late registration almost closing. Not before long, they got what they asked for. A slate of new players entered the event just about simultaneously. Justin "ZeeJustin" Bonomo, Salman "salfshb" Behbehani, Mustapha "lasagnaaammm" Kanit, Igor "lechuckpoker" Kurganov, Fedor "CrownUpGuy" Holz, Jason "jakoon1985" Koon, Ben "Ben86" Tollerene, Timothy "Tim0thee" Adams, Bryn Kenney, "bencb789", Nick "caecilius" Petrangelo, Brian "tsarrast" Rast, and Daniel "Oxota" Dvoress had waited long enough and got in right before the late-reg closed.

As Kuznetsov and Mercier entered a second time, the registration closed, bringing the total amount of entries up to 28. The prize pool of $2.8 million would be divided over the top 3, with $1.4 million for the champ.

Doug "WCG|Rider" Polk became the first to bust without the option to buy back in. He got it in with top pair against the flush and straight draw of Kanit. The four on the river gave Kanit a straight and Polk hit the rail.

The elite of the elite had gathered; PokerStars was their battle stage as the railbirds could almost not contain their excitement. They took to twitter, the YouTube comment section, and Twitch chat to discuss the "donk moves" and "brilliant plays" of the best of the best in the world.

They saw players the likes of Bonomo (eights into kings), Petrangelo (failed bluff with missed flush draw into flopped straight) and Koon (flush draw against two pair) bust, while others gained lots of chips. Tollerene doubled with quads, Haxton saw his aces hold up against Rast and Kurganov busted Mercier's second bullet with jacks against the Team Pro's ace-ten.

Ben "Ben86" Tollerene, last year's WCOOP $51,000 Super High Roller champion, busted to Igor "lechuckpoker" Kurganov. The two got it in on jack-eight-four. Tollerene had kings but was trailing as Kurganiv had two pair holding eight-four. The eight on the turn diminished Tollerene's outs, the river seven was a blank.

Players busted left and right, and before you knew it, play was hand for hand. Not because there was money about to be awarded, but because there was a final table to play for. The players took to the chat box to complain about the procedure, but there was no changing it.

ChaoRen160: this is just too annoying

CrownUpGuy: is this hand for hand serious

The situation didn't take too long as Mikael "ChaoRen160" Thuritz, who had been tilted by it the most, busted in 9th place. His ace-jack failed to improve against the ace-queen of anonymous Swedish player "bencb789".

With two tables merged to one, the official final table was set. No group photo but a screenshot from the live reporting blog is what they got.

"OtB_RedBaron" had been the first to bust the event (and buy back in), and also became the first to bust the final table. He got it in good with queens against jacks but "bencb789" made a flush to see the sole Belgian in the field heading to the exit for the second time. "bencb789", who had just doubled Holz minutes before, was back in action.

Bryn Kenney would become the last Day 1 casualty. His short stack push with tens was met by a repush of Mikita "fish2013" Badziakouski. Badziakouski had aces and found no hiccups on the flop, turn or river.

The 6 remaining players are set to return at 12:30 Eastern U.S. Time (18:30 Central European Time) for level 18 (1,500/3,000 with a 450-ante). 3 of them will go home, or rather stay home probably, empty-handed. The other 3 battle it out for the following three prizes:

PlacePrizePlacePrizePlacePrize
1$1,400,0002$840,0003$560,000

PokerNews will continue live coverage of the WCOOP $102,000 Super High Roller in the live reporting section. So check back in just under 15 hours for Day 2 of the biggest buy-in event in online poker's history.

Player Chips Progress
salfshb us
salfshb
175,359
-4,320
-4,320
philivey2694 us
philivey2694
168,345
2,520
2,520
CrownUpGuy de
CrownUpGuy
163,382
-3,443
-3,443
fish2013 by
fish2013
130,175
11,760
11,760
bencb789 se
bencb789
117,681
-6,120
-6,120
lechuckpoker gb
lechuckpoker
85,058
-720
-720

Tags: Ben SulskyBen Tollerenebencb789Brian RastBryn KenneyChristoph VogelsangDaniel DvoressDoug PolkFedor HolzIgor KurganovIsaac HaxtonJason KoonJason MercierJustin BonomoMikael ThuritzMustapha KanitNick PetrangeloNikita BodyakovskiyOtB_RedBaronSalman BehbehaniTalal ShakerchiTimofey KuznetsovTimothy Adams