2013 World Series of Poker

Event #62: $10,000 No-Limit Hold'em Main Event
Event Info

2013 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
Ryan Riess
Winning Hand
ak
Prize
$8,361,570
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Entries
6,352
Level Info
Level
40
Blinds
600,000 / 1,200,000
Ante
200,000

Two Pair for Owen

Level 26 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante

Action folded to Maxx Coleman in the small blind, and he raised to 125,000. In the big blind, Dan Owen made the call, and the flop came down {9-Spades}{4-Clubs}{2-Diamonds}. Coleman bet, and Owen called.

The turn was the {8-Hearts}, and both players checked to see the {K-Diamonds} land on the river. Coleman led for 205,000, but Owen fired back at him with a raise to 500,000. Coleman then went into the tank.

After a minute or two of Coleman tanking, Owen said, "It's probably a good sign you didn't snap call me... that's good for me!"

Eventually, Coleman called, but couldn't beat Owen's two pair with the {K-Spades}{2-Clubs} and lost the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Maxx Coleman us
Maxx Coleman
4,950,000
-1,310,000
-1,310,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Dan Owen us
Dan Owen
4,000,000
250,000
250,000

Tags: Maxx ColemanDan Owen

Steve Gee Off to Aggressive Start

Level 26 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante
Steve Gee
Steve Gee

Steve Gee, who finished ninth in the Main Event last year, has won four of the first nine hands at his table today, all without seeing a showdown. He won the first hand of the day with a flop bet. Then he won three consecutive hands preflop, one with a three-bet, one with an initial raise, and one with a four-bet.

He's brought his starting stack of 1,360,000 up to 2,125,000.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Steve Gee us
Steve Gee
2,125,000
765,000
765,000

Tags: Steve GeeSteven Gee

Aces vs. Kings for Six Million Chips on First Hand of the Day

Level 26 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante
Jay Farber (Day 5)
Jay Farber (Day 5)

As Bruno Kawauti was celebrating on an adjacent table, Noah Schwartz had raised to 110,000 in middle position. Jay Farber reached for chips, three-betting to 265,000 on his direct left, and the action folded back to Schwartz, who four-bet to 580,000. Farber tanked for no more than 30 seconds, then double fisted a five-bet of 1.29 million in front of him.

"All in," Schwartz said, splashing forward a handful of lavender T100,000 chips.

Farber snapped it off, tabling {a-Hearts}{a-Spades}, and Schwartz unhappily showed {k-Hearts}{k-Spades}.

"F***!" Schwartz said, getting up from the table and walking towards the rail.

The flop fell {10-Diamonds}{3-Diamonds}{5-Hearts}, and Schwartz was back in his seat by the time the {3-Clubs} turned. He slammed his phone onto the felt in disgust. The dealer burned one last card, then delivered a meaningless {j-Hearts} on the river.

After anteing, Farber's all in was for 3.025 million, and he doubled to 6.17 million. Schwartz plummeted to 565,000.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Jay Farber us
Jay Farber
6,170,000
3,140,000
3,140,000
Profile photo of Noah Schwartz us
Noah Schwartz
565,000
-3,030,000
-3,030,000
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Jay FarberNoah Schwartz

Tyler Cornell Eliminated in 68th Place ($102,102)

Level 26 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante

Tyler Cornell opened for 100,000, then Michiel Brummelhuis reraised to 260,000 from one seat over. It folded back around to Cornell who shoved all in for more than 1 million total, and Brummelhuis was quick with the call.

Cornell: {J-Hearts}{J-Spades}
Brummelhuis: {Q-Clubs}{Q-Diamonds}

Cornell was looking for one of the two remaining jacks to save his tourney life, but the {3-Clubs}{7-Hearts}{9-Diamonds} didn't bring one. Then the {Q-Spades} landed on the turn to give Brummelhuis an unbeatable set, and Cornell stood and shook Brummelhuis's hand as the dealer put out the meaningless {10-Clubs} river card, making Cornell the first elimination of Day 6.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Michiel Brummelhuis nl
Michiel Brummelhuis
4,750,000
1,265,000
1,265,000
Profile photo of Tyler Cornell us
Tyler Cornell
Busted
WSOP 1X Winner

Tags: Michiel BrummelhuisTyler Cornell

Kawauti Doubles

Level 26 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante

On the first hand of the day, Tyler Cornell raised to 100,000 in the cutoff, and Bruno Kawauti moved all in for 425,000 out of the small blind. The action folded back to Cornell, who called.

Cornell: {5-Clubs}{5-Diamonds}
Kawauti: {10-Hearts}{10-Clubs}

The tens held up as the board came {q-Hearts}{7-Diamonds}{6-Diamonds}{a-Diamonds}{4-Hearts}, and Kawauti doubled to 945,000 chips. Cornell fell to 1.035 million.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Tyler Cornell us
Tyler Cornell
1,035,000
-430,000
-430,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Bruno Kawauti br
Bruno Kawauti
945,000
515,000
515,000

Tags: Bruno KawautiTyler Cornell

Interview: Marc McLaughlin Hopes to Take Bracelet Home to Canada

Level 26 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante
Marc McLaughlin
Marc McLaughlin

Marc McLaughlin is one of five Canadians still standing in the 2013 World Series of Poker Main Event. McLaughlin made it through Day 5 second in chips with 6,695,000, just 300,000 short of chip lead. He's joined in the field by fellow Canadians Jason Mann, who sits in third with 6.58 million, Alexander Livingston (3.63 million), Yann Dion (2.27 million), and Umang Dattani (2.03 million).

If McLaughlin were to win this championship event, he would become the 11th Canadian to win a gold bracelet in Las Vegas this year, setting the record for most bracelets won by a country other than the United States in a single summer.

We caught up with McLaughlin before the start of the day to discuss why Canadians are crushing, as well as his competition remaining in the field, and his Main Event tournament history.

You and Jason Mann are in the top three chip counts. Do you want to see both of you, as Canadians, make it to the final table?

Of course. My friend Yann Dion from Montreal is also doing really well. Hopefully the three of us will make it to the final table. I think this summer we as Canadians are gaining a reputation as being tough competitors so I would like to see us go far.

There have been 10 WSOP bracelet winners from your country this summer. Why do you think the Canadians did so well?

I think we are just really good at this game. I can’t speak for everyone but I’m from Quebec. We may be a small group of players but we are very good at what we do. It’s our profession for a reason, because we are very successful. We put in a high volume of play and talk a lot of hands. We immerse our lives into the game and I think by devoting ourselves to the poker, it has helped us become better players. Playing a lot may have a lot to do with it as well. You can get through a lot more high more quick than if you were just playing live. The more you play, the more you learn, and the better you get.

What do you think of the field now in Day 6 compared to Day 1?

Day 1 had a lot of older, recreational players who were just hoping to get lucky. Today, you see a lot more young players. A lot have an online background or have been playing for many years. That reason makes the field tougher because everyone knows how to play the game really well. You can’t get away with a lot of things because someone will pick up on what you are doing. You have to play smarter and be more focused. Plus, the days are long and it can be very tiring. Many players have been playing all summer and it’s getting tough. But I think the younger players are in better shape mentally and even physically to go far in this tournament.

You finished 30th in the Main Event in 2009, 86th in 2011, and are now on track to do as well or even better this year. Why do you think you are so successful in this tournament?

I have a better stack this year. I think in 2011 I had about 660,000. This year I have a much larger stack with about 6.6 million. So this year I am in much better shape to run deeper. I have a lot of experience playing deep. I’m not that good with a short stack but when I have chips I am in control. When you are deeper you can really take advantage of some spots and put yourself in a position to grow your stack even more.

There are some notable players still remaining. Is there anyone you are not wanting to face in on the final table?

I don’t think I know any of the players. Do you have a list of names? To make things interesting, I would like to see the other four remaining Canadians at the final table. It would give us a better chance to win another bracelet for our country. We look up to Jonathan Duhamel who is also a French Canadian. He won in 2011 so we want to keep that tradition of winning the biggest tournament alive. Go Canada!

Tags: Jason MannMarc McLaughlinWSOP Main EventYann Dion

Reed Takes from Timoshenko

Level 26 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante

Yevgeniy Timoshenko raised to 105,000 from early position, and Matthew Reed called out of the cutoff. Everyone else folded. Timoshenko fired a continuation-bet of 125,000 on the {3-Diamonds}{7-Spades}{5-Clubs} flop, and Reed made the call. An {a-Clubs} fell on the turn, and Timoshenko fired a second bullet of 240,000. Reed called once more, and the two took in a river of {7-Clubs}, both pairing the board and completing a backdoor flush draw. TImoshenko opted to check this time, and it was Reed who did the betting: 425,000. Timoshenko folded quickly.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Matthew Reed us
Matthew Reed
5,940,000
685,000
685,000
Profile photo of Yevgeniy Timoshenko ua
Yevgeniy Timoshenko
3,825,000
-270,000
-270,000

Tags: Matthew ReedYevgeniy Timoshenko

Good Start for Price

Level 26 : 25,000/50,000, 5,000 ante

On the first hand of the day, Oliver Price open-shoved all in for 585,000 from middle position and when it folded around to Aleksejs Ponakovs in the big blind he called immediately.

Price had {Q-Hearts}{J-Clubs}, but needed help versus Ponakovs's {A-Diamonds}{K-Spades}. Help arrived immediately on the {J-Hearts}{9-Spades}{2-Clubs} flop, giving Price jacks, and after the {5-Spades} turn and {3-Clubs} river, Price had doubled up.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Aleksejs Ponakovs lv
Aleksejs Ponakovs
2,880,000
-445,000
-445,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Profile photo of Oliver Price gb
Oliver Price
1,230,000
640,000
640,000

Tags: Aleksejs PonakovsOliver Price

Level: 26

Blinds: 25,000/50,000

Ante: 5,000

Day 6: Rustom Leads the Final 68; Mortensen, Gee, and Glazier in the Hunt

Sami Rustom
Sami Rustom

Good afternoon, and welcome back to the 44th annual World Series of Poker. With 68 players remaining, Day 6 of the WSOP Main Event is set to kickoff at high noon, and the chip leader is Diamond Bar, California's Sami Rustom. Rustom is the only player with over seven million chips (7,005,000), but he is closely followed by Marc McLaughlin (6,695,000), Jason Mann (6,580,000), and Maxx Coleman (6,260,000).

Rustom is a cash game player with only $43,957 in career tournament earnings. He has already more than doubled that figure thus far, but his eyes are certainly on the more than $8.3 million first-place prize and not the 68th-place payout of $102,102.

The only former champion in the field is 2001 Main Event winner Carlos Mortensen. The Matador bagged 2,665,000 chips after Day 5, and is looking to become the first Main Event winner to return to the final table since Dan Harrington (1995 winner), who final tabled back-to-back Main Events in 2003 and 2004. Mortensen is the last Main Event winner to earn a bracelet after taking down the big one, winning a $5,000 limit hold'em event in 2003.

Like Harrington, 2012 Octo-Niner Steve Gee is looking to make a return trip to the final table. Gee, who finished ninth in the 2012 Main Event, enters the day with 1,360,000 chips - half of an average stack - but the 2010 bracelet winner knows what it takes to make a deep run.

Only one female remains in the 2013 Main Event, and it's Australia's own Jackie Glazier. Glazier, who finished runner up in a bracelet event in 2012 and has nearly one million dollars in career tournament earnings, enters the day 12th in chips with just over four million, and is looking to become the second female to make a Main Event final table. In 1995, Barbara Enright became the first and only female to make a Main Event final table, finishing fifth for $114,180.

The cards will be in the air at noon, and the plan is to play five 120-minute levels. Once the production crew and the WSOP staff make an official decision, we will let you know.

Tags: Sami Rustom