2023 Merit Poker Western Series

$2,200 Warmup
Day: 3
Event Info

2023 Merit Poker Western Series

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
a5
Prize
$181,200
Event Info
Buy-in
$2,200
Prize Pool
$962,320
Entries
523
Level Info
Level
36
Blinds
400,000 / 800,000
Ante
800,000
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
102
Players Left
19

"John Doe" Leads By Large Margin After Day 3 of the $2,200 Warm Up

Level 26 : Blinds 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Maxime Chilaud
Maxime Chilaud

Day 3 of the Merit Poker Western Series $2,200 Warm Up started with 102 players out of a total field of 523 and ended with just 19 after ten levels of play.

Leading the way by a large distance at the end of the night was the man who wishes only to be known as John Doe (9,800,000). He started to build his stack in the early parts of the day and would just continue to grow throughout to finish with over 3 million more than second place.

Maxime Chilaud is that player in second place as the Frenchman finished the day with 6,755,000, which is almost 2 million more than third, creating a dymanic where the top two stacks have some considerable distance between each other and also from the rest of the pack.

In third place after Day 3 was Russian player Vladislav Fedoseev who bagged up 4,550,000. Helmut Phung (3,900,000) and Recep Aydemir (3,245,000) would round out the top five counts.

Top 10 Chip Counts

PositionPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1John Doe--9,800,00098
2Maxime ChilaudFrance6,755,00067
3Vladislav FedoseevRussia4,550,00045
4Helmut PhungGermany3,900,00039
5Recep AydemirTurkey3,245,00032
6Eli SaadLebanon2,660,00026
7Andress MerhebLebanon2,600,00026
8Valentin TsoyUzbekistan2,570,00025
9Halil BaybarsTurkey2,130,00021
10Ryan MandaraUnited Kingdom2,010,00020

Behind the top five there are many players who are bunched together in chips, all within only a few chips of one another, which will make for an action-packed day of jostling for position on the final day tomorrow.

The day began with 102 and was steadily wilted down with eliminations until the money bubble where two players would be eliminated on the same hand at different tables to bring the field into the money. From there, the pace would stay consistent until after the final break. The eliminations would slow with Day 4 on the horizon and the play jumps becoming more significant where Nuri Hadioglu would become the last elimination of the night.

The remaining 19 players will hit the felt at 1 p.m. local time and play down to the $181,200 grand prize winner. Play will start at Level 27 with blinds at 50,000/100,000/100,000.

PokerNews will be on hand to cover every aspect of the action on Day 4.

Tags: Helmut PhungJohn DoeMaxime ChilaudNuri HadiogluRecep AydemirVladislav Fedoseev