More than half the field fell by the wayside in just eight hours of play today, including Brian Townsend, Roland de Wolfe, Jesper Hougaard, Andy Black and Jennifer Tilly. Among our remaining runners, though, we have such luminaries as Phil Laak, Albert Iversen, Julian Thew and Jamie Gold, so it should be a very interesting Day 2.
At the moment it looks as though Maurice Harmon and Andrew Pantling are vying for the chip lead on around 100,000 apiece. Full chip counts should appear in here courtesy of PaddyPower.com in the morning, shortly before the players get back to the felt. For now though, all the action has moved to the bar where we understand some considerable craic is being enjoyed.
Press and railers alike have been ejected from the tournament area, and the chips are being counted and bagged. Chip counts will hopefully magically appear overnight.
Chris Dowling was down to a mere 1,050 after doubling up Pat Treacy -- Treacy was holding on a board with two more kings on it, and a very unhappy Dowling mucked.
The very next hand there was a raise from Johannes Zacharias under the gun and a call from the next player along; Dowling called all in from the small blind and when Zacharias bet again on the flop, the other caller passed and they were on their backs.
Zacharias:
Dowling:
A blank on the turn but a nine on the river made Dowling a straight, and he was back up to just over 4,000.
In the closing minutes of Day One, a huge pot gave Ronan Harford a 68k+ stack while eliminating Kevin Skitmore and seriously denting the stack of Mick Fletcher.
All the action occurred preflop: It passed to Skitmore who, with a short stack and , moved all in. Neighbour Fletcher called with his . He wasn't happy for long, though, as small blind Harford then moved in too, for just over 22,000.
Fletcher was tortured: "This is so f***ing sick! FFS. I don't think I can pass for what it is. Sick. I need to spike a cowboy. F***ing brutal." Having got it out of his system, he made the call and saw what he knew already: Harford's which spiked a set on the flop to rub it in.
Simon Marks is now sat just on the left of Jani Vilmunen, one of the 45k+ stacks. Marks himself has 54,000, and when Marks called an under the gun raise from Vilmunen to 1,800, sparks could have flown. However, Vilmunen simply checked the flop and folded to Marks' 3,000 bet showing , dismissively.
Phil Laak, up to 56,500 a few minutes ago, has taken a bit of a hit. The player to his immediate right pushed with for 12,750, although the dealer announced it as 21,750 several times for some reason. It's been a long day. Laak eventually called, and it was looking good for his -- until the board came down . Laak still extremely healthy on around 43,000 though.