Level: 16
Blinds: 2,000/4,000
Ante: 500
Level: 16
Blinds: 2,000/4,000
Ante: 500
Jeremy West raised to 10,000 from early position and Gary Tsui raised to 32,000 from right behind. Jason Lee was next and he shoved all in for 121,500. Doug Holland quickly pushed his big stack all in and West found a fold with just about 10 big blinds behind, later claiming pocket queens.
Tsui got out of the way and Lee tabled and was racing against the of Holland. The flop of put Holland ahead and the turn kept him there. The river exalted Lee and the huge pot was his.
West was patting himself on the back for the tight fold, but busted on the very next hand.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jason Lee |
290,000
154,500
|
154,500 |
Gary Tsui |
226,000
-22,500
|
-22,500 |
Doug Holland |
122,000
-161,500
|
-161,500 |
Jeremy West | Busted |
Connor Burchwell raised to 7,000 from under the gun and Daniel Swartz called from the cutoff. The flop came and Burchwell check-raised to 22,000 after a bet of 8,000 from Swartz. Swartz quickly mucked and Burchwell gathered the pot.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Daniel Swartz |
362,000
12,000
|
12,000 |
Connor Burchwell |
178,000
5,000
|
5,000 |
Level: 15`
Blinds: 1,500/3,000
Ante: 500
Welcome to Day 2 of the HPO Columbus Main Event. With 152 entries on Saturday and 142 entries on Sunday, the Columbus regional stop for Season 3 generated a whopping prize pool of $294,000, nearly thrice the guarantee.
Daniel Swartz comes into Day 2 as the chip leader, having accumulated a massive stack of 350,000 on Saturday’s Day 1a. Swartz will have some tough competition as tour regular Doug Holland took the Day 1b chip lead late in level 14 when his pocket aces held in a big pot against pocket queens. Holland is stacked at 283,500 and is followed closely by another tour regular, Ken Moore (266,500).
Other notables that advanced to Day 2 with big stacks are Ross Gottlieb (240,000), Danny Warchol (204,000) and Iverson Cotton Snuffer (183,500). Tour grinders Nick Pupillo and Nick Guagenti bagged a more modest 123,000 and 119,000 respectively, but the favorable structure should allow for plenty of play for them.
A total of 46 runners advanced and a good bunch will go home empty-handed, with payments going to the top 27. The top prize is $70,560 in cash + a seat in June’s HPO $2,500 Championship Main Event at the M Resort in Las Vegas.
The chase for the title starts at 12:15 p.m. local time, so stay tuned as we will bring you live reporting down to the finish.
Regional Main Event
Day 2 Started