Negreanu, Cloutier and Doddanavar All Bag Over the Average on Day 1b of Double Stack
With 1,227 players surviving Day 1b of Event #34: $1,000 Double Stack No-Limit, there are some huge stacks in front of big names. While Yasheel Doddanavar is one of the biggest with a stack of 415,000, Doddanavar is joined by many highly-established luminaries of the game in the chipcounts, who, along with the other 1,226 players that also bagged on Day 1b, will be joined by the 1,100 players returning from Day 1a, for a total of 2,327 returning to play on Day 2.
The top 933 players will get paid on Day 2, with a min-cash worth $1,499, but everyone is chasing the top spot, which comes with $687,782 cash and highly-coveted WSOP gold bracelet. Day 1b started with under 1,500 entries, but by the time registration had closed that number had reached 3,201 entries, about 200 more than Day 1a, for a combined total of 6,145 for both starting flights.
As expected, a number of notables took their seats today, with many deciding to take full advantage of late registration. Some, such asDavid Paredes, Men “The Master” Nguyen, Ebony Kenney, Anthony Zinno and gold medal-winning boxer Audley Harrison failed to find a bag by the end of play. But others, including T.J. Cloutier (150,800), Daniel Negreanu (251,200), retired businessman and high-stakes tournament player Bill Klein (63,700), the newest bracelet winner, Thomas Cazayous (125,200), and the reigning champion of this event, Robert Peacock (45,400), will all be returning on Day 2.
Also, worth noting is that in addition to Phil Hellmuth, who bagged on Day 1a, three other Main Event champions, Jamie Gold (54,600), Scotty Nguyen (31,900) and Chris Ferguson (16,300) will also be in the field on Day 2.
Day 2 is set to resume play on Sunday, June 16th at 12 p.m. local time, with blinds at 1,000/2,000 and a big blind ante of 2,000 too. There are 10 levels scheduled to be played, with a 15-minute break after every two levels and a 60-minute dinner break after 6 levels of play at approximately 6:30 p.m. The Pokernews team will be there from when the first card is dealt until the last card hits the felt.