$1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha High-Low - Day 2 - Level 14 Recap
Jun 25, '08
Note: The players are now on a 60-minute dinner break
Blinds: 2,000-4,000
Players Left: 19 of 720
Chip Leaders:
Martin Klaser - 290,000
Tom Chambers - 230,000
Chad Burum - 212,000
Michael Fetter - 200,000
Derek Kadota - 172,000
Joseph Haddad - 170,000
Larry Wright - 145,000
Ian Graham - 115,000
Gary Hutzler - 87,000
Daniel Klein - 86,000
Average Stack: 113,700
Eliminations:
Ed Smith
Shannon Shorr
Big Hands and Storylines:
The Hunter Becomes The Hunted
Not long after Dan “Stainley88” Adams amassed a stack of 130,000, he would see most of it disappear.
Derek Kadota raised to 11,000 from under-the-gun. Action folded around to Adams in the blind who made it 44,000. Kadota, covered by Adams, called with 60,000 behind. Adams moved all-in on the Q92 flop and Kadota called. The two turned over their hands:
Adams: AA105
Kadota: AQ102
Kadota was in the lead with two-pair, and his hand held up when the turn and river came 5 and K. That pot lifted “The Ghost” – so nicknamed because his opponents’ chips always seem to vanish (what that has to do with being a ghost I’m not quite sure. Do ghosts have the power to make other objects disappear? I don’t know, I’m just reporting what I was told) up to 240,000.
Adams is now down to 30,000.
Table Draw? More Like Table Unfair!
As the tournament played down to 27, the players were re-drawn to new tables on the other side of the Brasilia Room. The table draw, produced at random, made table 9 the center of the action. Not only were the 4 largest chip stacks assigned to the table, but Erik Seidiel and Shannon Shorr as well. By contrast, not a single player assigned to table 10 had more than 20 big blinds.
No Shorr Thing
Shannon Shorr met a similar fate to Dan Adams, his aces getting cracked in a most painful way. Shorr and Tom Chambers got all of their money in on a Q54 flop. The pot was worth 230,000 and the two turned over their cards:
Shorr: AAK7
Chambers: A853
The turn was the 9, but the river was the crushing 2, giving Chambers a wheel and leaving Shorr with only 5,000. Shorr would be eliminated a short while later when he was rivered again by, what else, a wheel.
Player Tags: Larry Wright, Gary Hutzler, Chad Burum, Michael Fetter, Joseph Haddad, Daniel Klein, Derek Kadota, Shannon Shorr, Tom Chambers, Daniel Adams, Martin Klaser
$1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha High-Low - Day 2 - Level 13 Recap
Jun 25, '08
Blinds: 1,500-3,000
Players Left: 32 of 720
Chip Leaders:
Martin Klaser - 270,000
Joseph Haddad - 131,000
Daniel “Stainley88” Adams - 130,000
Ed Smith - 113,000
Chad Burum - 105,000
Larry Wright - 98,000
Erik Seidel - 86,000
Doug Mandeville - 81,000
Sam Khouiss - 80,000
Shannon Shorr - 60,000
Average Stack: 67,500
Eliminations:
Berry Johnston
Chip Jett
Joe Hachem
Big Hands and Storylines:
Sooner Or Later, All Chips Lead To Klaser
Moments after scoring a big pot off of Erik Seidel, Shannon Shorr had the misfortune of tangling with Martin Klaser. Like all other comers today, Shorr did not fare very well. An 80,000 pot was shipped in Klaser’s direction when his AK83 was good for both the high and low on a board of 962Q5. Klaser is now fully in command of his table, with a staggering 270,000 in chips, while Shorr is left with 60,000.
Dan Adams: Bounty Hunter
While there are no actual bounties in this tournament, Dan “Stainley88” Adams has just succeeded in knocking out two of the more notable players in the field.
First, Chip Jett got his last 11,000 all-in pre-flop with AAK2 but Adams’ AQJ4 wound up victorious when the board – 108893 – made him a straight.
Then Adams continued his predatory ways against Joe Hachem, again getting his opponent all-in pre-flop. This time it was Hachem’s KK54 against Adams’ A742. The flop was a nightmare for Hachem: A74. Not only did it give Adams 3-pair, but Hachem’s low draw was counterfeited. To add insult to injury, the Q on the turn and 3 on the river gave Adams a runner-runner flush. Hachem’s elimination brought an end to the his first deep run of the World Series.
But Wait, There’s More...
Sandwiched between those two hands, Adams won a 100,000 chip pot when he and his opponent got it all-in on a K83 flop. Adams showed KK42 for top set and the second low draw while his opponent tabled A832 for the nut low draw and bottom two-pair. The turn and river were high cards – J and 10 – and Adams’ hand held up. He now has about 125,000.
Player Tags: Larry Wright, Erik Seidel, Chip Jett, Berry Johnston, Chad Burum, Joseph Haddad, Joe Hachem, Shannon Shorr, Sam Khouiss, Doug Mandeville, Daniel Adams, Martin Klaser