Winsor Leads the Final 19 in Unibet Open London
After 10 hours of action at "The Vic" Poker Room, the Unibet Open London £990 Main Event record field of 456 entries has been reduced down to just 19.
The prize pool in London was set at £410,400, with the winner set to walk away with £80,200. Ben Winsor will lead the way on Day 3 with a stack worth 2,145,000. Winsor is no stranger to success at the historic Vic Poker Room, and secured his best live cash to date at the venue for £178,600, back in 2015.
Daniel James (1,590,000) and Adrian Haaberg (1,285,000) will be Winsor's nearest challengers when the action resumes.
Due to the popularity of the event, the decision was made for the play to stop after 10 levels rather than continuing on to the scheduled final table of nine.
When the Day 2 action got underway at noon, there were plenty of Unibet ambassadors in the field looking to make their mark, however, David Lappin's participation ended sooner than most.
Lappin, who started the action with a 22 big blind stack, departed after just 30 minutes when he ran ten-nine into pocket fours blind-on-blind and was unable to connect with the board.
Ian Simpson, Monica Vaka and Unibet esports player Vincent "Mista" Timans followed Lappin out the door not long after, with two-time Unibet Open champion Mateusz Moolhuizen, and former Day 2 chip leader Jesse Chambers also departing short of the money places.
Hand-for-hand action began with two places from the money, and the tense proceedings lasted almost an hour.
Jan Vandenbogert's three-bet jam with pocket kings was called by Yiqian Song with pocket queens, and a crowd gathered to see the outcome. With many players hoping for a shock to occur, they got precisely what they wished for when a queen appeared in the window of the flop and propelled Song into the lead. There was to be no miracle for Vandenbogert, and he was confirmed as the unfortunate bubble player.
The likes of Daragh Davey, Unibet esports player Fabien "kiocsgo" Fiey, Daniel Samson, Day 1a chip leader and Unibet ambassador Alexandre Reard, and High Roller third-place finisher Danny Pyke then all found a place in the money before they hit the rail.
Unibet esports player Craig "ONSCREEN" Shannon had been happily building a stack before his luck changed in an instance. "ONSCREEN," as he is known to his Twitch following, progressed to Day 2 after he hit a miracle runner-runner house to survive and was not letting his lifeline go to waste. But a top pair versus flush defeat against Charlotte Van Brabander paved the way for his demise and ultimately hit the rail in 35th place.
When the final three tables of eight were set, Van Brabander then found herself on the end of a cooler, after she ran ace-queen into pocket aces on an ace-high flop. Van Brabander's three-bet all in was snap-called by James, and the Belgian Unibet ambassador collected 23rd place.
That's all for now, but join PokerNews back here for continued coverage from the Main Event from noon on Sunday as a winner is crowned in London.