After 10 levels of play, Day 2 of Event #78: $1,500 Bounty Pot-Limit Omaha at the 2023 World Series of Poker has closed with 15 players bagging chips to take into Day 3. Everyone remaining will come back eying the $171,741 first-place prize and the WSOP gold bracelet that awaits the eventual champion.
The day began with 140 players returning to Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas looking to bag for the Day 3 finale and collecting along the way as may $500 knockout bounties as possible. Play was quick with many all-ins early on in the action.
A few notables who made Day 2 but could not find a bag for Day 3 included Daniel Negreanu, Amnon Filippi, David "ODB" Baker and Farid Jattin, all of whom went home with a payout but fell short of their ultimate goal.
Satar Al-Sadoun will return to the chip lead with 4,800,000 and will attempt to be the last man standing from the remaining field. There will be no easy route to victory, though, as notables Noah Schwartz (1,100,000), Jeff Madsen (945,000), and Ryan Coon (2,035,000) will all look to navigate their way to the top spot, putting an end to the hopes of anyone who tries to get in their way.
Complete End Of Day 2 Chip Counts
Rank | Player | Country | Chip Count | Big Blind |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Satar Al-Sadoun | United States | 4,800,000 | 96 |
2 | Thomas Skaggs | United States | 3,530,000 | 71 |
3 | David Hu | Netherlands | 3,275,000 | 66 |
4 | Yusuke Tanaka | Japan | 2,780,000 | 56 |
5 | Sergio Martinez | United States | 2,700,000 | 54 |
6 | Paul DeGiulio | United States | 2,460,000 | 49 |
7 | Ryan Coon | United States | 2,035,000 | 41 |
8 | Paul Spitzberg | United States | 1,845,000 | 37 |
9 | Giuseppe Maggisano | Italy | 1,765,000 | 35 |
10 | Noah Schwartz | United States | 1,100,000 | 22 |
11 | Vincent Moscati | United States | 1,100,000 | 22 |
12 | Everett Carlton | United States | 1,000,000 | 20 |
13 | Jeff Madsen | United States | 945,000 | 19 |
14 | Diogo Veiga | Portugal | 630,000 | 13 |
15 | Jonathan Cameron | Canada | 330,000 | 7 |
Day 2 Action
The action rarely slowed down with aggression being the word of the day. There were multiple pre-flop confrontations that saw some players make huge gains while other players crashed and burned, including one hand that sent Daniel Negreanu home early and cut his quest to end a 10-year bracelet drought short.
Little change in the pace of the action is expected going into Day 3. Players will return for the final day of this event tomorrow, July 9th at 2 p.m. local time, when they will play down to a winner. Blinds will resume at 25,000/50,000 with a 50,000 big blind ante. There will be a break every two levels and a dinner break if required.
Keep your homepage locked to PokerNews for the rest of the summer for up-to-date coverage of this and all remaining events at the 2023 World Series of Poker!