2009 World Series of Poker Europe

£10,000 WSOPE Main Event
Day: 2
Event Info

2009 World Series of Poker Europe

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
1010
Prize
£801,603
Event Info
Buy-in
£10,000
Prize Pool
£3,340,000
Entries
334
Level Info
Level
30
Blinds
60,000 / 120,000
Ante
15,000

£10,000 WSOPE Main Event

Day 2 Completed

Day 2 Concludes; Day 3 Next in Line

Munn finer
Munn finer
Day 2 is a wrap, dear readers, and it looks as though 92 of our 178 Day 2 starters will be coming back at noon tomorrow for Day 3.

A good few big names couldn't stand the Day 2 heat and got out of the tournament kitchen relatively early -- Howard Lederer, Erik Seidel, Phil Hellmuth, David Williams and Mike Matusow all bowed out long before we'd finished the four levels scheduled for today's play and won't be coming back to the Empire in the morning.

On the other hand, even more big names than that remain in the field. Jason Mercier, John Tabatabai and Ram Vaswani all have fairly hefty stacks, as do Yevgeniy Timoshenko, Devilfish and Liz Lieu.

Leader of the pack by quite a long way, though, is one Ian Munns, on over half a million chips. Still, it's not in the bag yet. Munn's got a bunch of eager young hopefuls on his tail -- Praz Bansi, November Niner James Akenhead, David Docherty and, er, up-and-coming whippersnapper Doyle Brunson are hot on his heels, chip-wise.

We'll be back at the brighter, earlier, possibly sleepier time of noon GMT+1 tomorrow when we'll be back to the regular gruelling WSOPE schedule. Do join us then for all the action, direct from the floor.

In Liu of Things to Come

On the final hand, Eric Liu raised under the gun for 3,000 from a diminishing stack and received not one, not two but three (times a lady) callers, one of whom was Robin Keston on the button. On the {2-Clubs}{7-Clubs}{8-Diamonds} flop, however, Liu took it down no problemo with a continuation bet of 10,500. He had a poor last level or two, but went out on win. We'll have to wait until tomorrow to see if his last minute triumph will signify a return to form.

Saout Back in the Game

Not long after that enormous hand against David Docherty, Saout made a bit of a recovery when Jussi Nevanlinna got the end of his stack in with pocket {9-Clubs} {9-Spades} and Saout made the call with pocket {10-Hearts} {10-Diamonds}.

Board: {8-Spades} {8-Hearts} {7-Diamonds} {4-Diamonds} {J-Hearts}

Saout was back up to 82,000 while the unhappy Nevanlinna hit the rail.

A few hands later Saout raised from the cutoff and small blind Jason Mercier called. Tobias Reinkemeier in the big blind reraised -- and now Saout pushed all in. Swift folds from the blinds ensued, and Saout is now over the 90,000 mark once more.

"Yeah! That's my man!" shouted a member of the French media, in a most unbiased way.

Tags: Antoine SaoutJussi Nevanlinna

Brunson Climbing

Todd Brunson and John Tabatai reached an {A-Clubs}{6-Spades}{3-Diamonds} flop. Brunson bet; Tabatabai called. On the {6-Clubs} turn, Brunson check-raised all in. Tabatabai folded, and Brunson took the pot, meaning he climbs to 45,000.

Master Disaster

There's one lone table sitting on the balcony that leans out across the rest of the room. On a busy Saturday night, it's the one that is awash with spectators. Tonight, despite the presence of Annette Obrestad and Men Nguyen, it's a rather deserted area, yet still delivering its own flavour of entertainment.

On the last hand, I joined to see one player stood up, hovering over the table aimlessly. Cards were on their back - his {K-Clubs}{Q-Spades} was up against Nguyen's {A-Hearts}{K-Spades} - but nothing was happening.

"This is ridiculous," he said, holding his jacket and braced to leave. "We've wasted a whole level today because of this."

It soon emerged that a camera crew had been summoned, but not yet emerged, and the all-in man was being made to wait, becoming more antsy in his pantsy as the seconds ticked. But eventually, the camera arrived, racing up the stairs like the bottom floor was on fire. "Ok, go," came the announcement as the dealer was prodded.

Board = {7-Diamonds}{8-Spades}{6-Clubs}{5-Hearts}... {Q-Hearts}!

Mr all-in retook his seat in relief (I imagine his previous complaints were soon forgotten), whilst Nguyen could but place his head in his hands as the glimmer of the camera lens captured his dismay.

As the 25,000 pot sailed away, Nguyen, who has clearly suffered from frustrating times, was left with a struggling stack of 30-35,000.

Tags: Men Nguyen

Docherty Leads the Feature Table

A round of applause from the front row of largely Scottish railers at the main feature table indicated that David Docherty had won a big pot from November Niner Antoine Saout. The details are hazy, but Docherty is now the feature table chip leader on 225,000, while Saout is reduced to 46,000. "Told you to watch out for him," said one of his very touchingly dedicated railers.

BREAKING NEWS

Mr. Docherty has approached the PokerNews perch and filled us in on those details.

Docherty was holding {J-?} {9-?} and the flop came down {A-?} {9-?} {7-?} with two diamonds on it. He check-called a bet from Saout. The turn came down a {Q-?} and once more, Docherty check-called. The river was the {9-Diamonds} bringing Docherty two pair but also bringing possible straights and flushes in. Docherty bet out 14,000, Saout raised to 52,000, and Docherty called -- and a muck from Saout later, the huge pot and the title of Table Chip Leader were both Docherty's.

Tags: Antoine SaoutDavid Docherty

Demjan Doing Well, Kelopuro Suddenly Doing Not Very Well At All

The flop read {A-Hearts} {5-Clubs} {Q-Hearts} and many red chips (the good ones -- 5,000 apiece) changed hands. We're not sure who did the betting, but Christian Harder (small blind), Sami Kelopuro (UTG) and Sandor Demjan (mid position) all put in two of those good red chips and a small assortment of lower-denomination chips to go with them.

They saw a {Q-Spades} turn and the action checked around to Demjan, who now bet 30,000. Harder folded swiftly, and after a moment's good hard staring at Demjan, Kelopuro laid it down too.

Demjan must have taken a small hit somewhere along the line, as after that hand he rested on 200,000. Kelopuro, meanwhile must have taken a much larger hit -- he's somehow down to just 55,000.

Tags: Christian HarderSami KelopuroSandor Demjan