Kabrhel Takes the Chip Lead into the Final Day of the WSOP International Circuit Main Event
It was a long day here at the King’s Casino in Rozvadov on Day 2 of the €1,650 WSOP International Circuit Main Event as the 292 players that survived the Day 1s came together to play themselves into the money. Another 47 players decided to reenter just before the start of the day, a few online qualifiers didn’t show up but were added to the prize pool bringing the total amount of entries to 796.
After 12 levels of an hour each, Martin Kabrhel takes the chip lead into the final day tomorrow with 2,235,000 in chips out of all 30 players who have bagged and tagged today. He won several big hands of the whole day but in one of the last hands of the day, he took the chip lead by rivering a straight against Konstantinon Misailidis who also made it through to Day with 736,000 in total.
Second in the chip counts is Timur Margolin who bagged 1,981,000. He burst the bubble when Aleksandr Konovalov ran his ace-king into the tens of Margolin in the fourth round of hand-for-hand play. Konovalov hit a king on the flop but the ten on the turn meant the end of his tournament life. The bubble bursting also meant the end of the nicknames in this tournament.
Closing the podium for today is Amar Begovic who has steadily been chipping up throughout the day. Other stacks to take note of are Stanislav Koleno (1,348,000), Paris Stavridis (1,344,000), Ben Zech (1,276,000), Jose Acebes Lopez, and Grzegorz Wyraz (977,000).
There were many well-known players that unfortunately busted before making the money stages of the tournament. These include players like Jeremy Williams, Andreas Hildebrand, Milad Oghabian, Sebastian Langrock, Micky Blasi, Robert Auer, Harald Sammer, Makarios Avramidis, Jaroslaw Sikora, and Robin Hegele.
Players that made the money but not the final day include Eyal Bensimhon who managed to cash 5 out of the 6 tournaments he entered here during this festival. He couldn’t win with king-jack against the ace-jack of Misailidis. Andrei Demidov ran his ace-ten into the queens of Igor Pihela, Pierre Neuville ran king-queen into Omer Yoruk’s ace-queen. Cameron Hunt lost with ace-king against the tens of Jamie Nixon and so on.
The final day will restart tomorrow at 2 pm local time here in the Czech Republic so stay tuned to PokerNews to see who will be crowned as the Main Event Champion tomorrow!
Seat Draw for the final day
Table | Seat | Player | Country | Chip Count | Big Blinds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 | 1 | Alexander Romme | Germany | 226,000 | 9 |
14 | 2 | Jamie Nixon | United Kingdom | 912,000 | 38 |
14 | 3 | Iman Gazorishadiz | Germany | 642,000 | 27 |
14 | 4 | Florian Goss | Germany | 266,000 | 11 |
14 | 6 | Johannes Kissel | Germany | 216,000 | 9 |
14 | 7 | Parminder Singh | United Kingdom | 401,000 | 17 |
14 | 8 | Stanislav Koleno | Slovakia | 1,348,000 | 56 |
15 | 1 | Amar Begovic | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 1,735,000 | 72 |
15 | 2 | Thomas White | United Kingdom | 970,000 | 40 |
15 | 3 | Paris Stavridis | Greece | 1,344,000 | 56 |
15 | 4 | Grzegorz Wyraz | Poland | 977,000 | 41 |
15 | 5 | Dennis Kirsch | Germany | 475,000 | 20 |
15 | 6 | René Zembinsky | Czech Republic | 892,000 | 37 |
15 | 7 | Konstantinos Misailidis | Greece | 736,000 | 31 |
15 | 8 | Lukasz Golczyk | Poland | 196,000 | 8 |
16 | 1 | Martin Mulsow | Germany | 514,000 | 21 |
16 | 2 | Rajeev Dhiri | United Kingdom | 702,000 | 29 |
16 | 3 | Yehuda Cohen | Germany | 492,000 | 21 |
16 | 4 | Jose Acebes Lopez | Spain | 1,239,000 | 52 |
16 | 5 | Peter Ralbovsky | Slovakia | 477,000 | 20 |
16 | 6 | Florian Sarnow | Germany | 189,000 | 8 |
16 | 7 | Martin Kabrhel | Czech Republic | 2,235,000 | 93 |
16 | 8 | Omer Yoruk | Germany | 900,000 | 38 |
17 | 1 | Timur Margolin | Israel | 1,981,000 | 83 |
17 | 2 | Ben Zech | Germany | 1,276,000 | 53 |
17 | 3 | Dawoud Fares | Jordan | 939,000 | 39 |
17 | 5 | Oleksandr Vikhtiuk | Ukraine | 311,000 | 13 |
17 | 6 | Oleh Haisiuk | Ukraine | 441,000 | 18 |
17 | 7 | Sebastián Kos | Czech Republic | 447,000 | 19 |
17 | 8 | [Removed:221] | Germany | 195,000 | 8 |