SanIsidro

sanisidrocultura.org

2022 WSOP Day 17: Hastings Secures His Sixth WSOP Bracelet

2022 WSOP Day 17: Hastings Secures His Sixth WSOP Bracelet

Brian Hastings

Day 17 of the 2022 World Series of Poker at Bally’s and Paris Las Vegas took place on June 16 and saw three more gold WSOP bracelets awarded, including a sixth career piece of poker jewelry for Brian Hastings.

Hasting took down Event #31: $10,000 Limit 2-7 Lowball Triple Draw Championship after an almost two-hour heads-up battle with Eric Wasserson. The New Yorker now has six career bracelets and more than $4.7 million in live tournament cashes.

2022 World Series of Poker Hub

Bookmark this page! All you need to know about the 2022 WSOP is here.

Daniel Weinman finally got his hands on a WSOP bracelet after 15 years attempting to do so. Weinman went into the final day of Event #30: $1,000 Pot-Limit Omaha 8-Handed as the chip leader from the remaining ten players but still hand plenty of work to do. He got that work done and can now call himself a poker champion.

The third bracelet awarded on Day 17 came in Event #33: $3,000 6-Handed No-Limit Hold’em, a tournament that drew in a 1,348-strong crowd. Germany’s Nino Ullmann, who has only been in Las Vegas for a few days, outlasted them all. Ullman not only reeled in his first gold bracelet but a career-best score worth $594,079. The German plans to use his new bolstered bankroll to play in as many 2022 WSOP events as possible.

David Williams Leads the Race for the $1,500 H.O.R.S.E. Title

David Williams
David Williams

Only 22 players remain in contention to become the champion of Event #32: $1,500 H.O.R.S.E and it David Williams who leads the charge going into the third and final day. William bagged up 2,125,000 chips at the end of Day 2, nudging him ahead of Jason Daly (2,015,000) in second place.

Williams already has a WSOP bracelet to his name but he captured it some 16 years ago, which is one hell of a wait for a second. The 2004 WSOP Main Event runner-up will have to fight his way through Michelle Roth (1,405,000), Shirley Rosario (1,170,000), Japan’s Tamon Nakamura (1,005,000) among others if he is to end his bracelet drought.

Event #32: H.O.R.S.E Top 10 Chip Counts

Place Player Country Chips
1 David Williams United States 2,125,000
2 Jason Daly United States 2,015,000
3 Michelle Roth United States 1,405,000
4 Richard Bai United States 1,310,000
5 Shirley Rosario United States 1,170,000
6 Robin Rightmire United States 1,140,000
7 Kyle Loman United States 1,110,000
8 Tamon Nakamura Japan 1,005,000
9 Peter Brownstein United States 975,000
10 Steven Albini United States 970,000

All the $1,500 H.O.R.S.E updates are right here

Sverko Leads the $1,500 NLHE Freezeout Going Into Day 2; Jacobson Lurking

Martin Jacobson
Martn Jacobson

Being able to fire only a single bullet in Event #34: $1,500 Freezeout No-Limit Hold’em resulted in the 1,774 starting field reducing to a much more manageable 158 over the course of 17 levels that last 40-minutes each. When the dust settled on a fast and furious opening day, it was Gregor Sverko who emerged unscathed and with a tournament-leading stack of 1,046,000 chips.

While it is Sverko who leads the surviving 158 back into battle on Day 2, he is joined by a whole host of stars. The 2014 WSOP Main Event champion Martin Jacobson (488,000), winner of two $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em events Athanasios Polychronopoulos (588,000), reigning WSOP Main Event champion Koray Aldemir (200,000), Adrian Mateos (281,000), and Maurice Hawkins (536,000) are just a handful of names still in contention for this event’s bracelet and the $364,899 top prize that is awarded to the eventual champion.

Another ten one-hour-long levels are planned for Day 2 on June 17, which shuffles up and deals at 12:00 p.m. As always, PokerNews will be on the ground throughout.

Event #34: $1,500 Freezeout No-Limit Hold’em Top 10 Chip Counts

Place Player Country Chips Big Blinds
1 Gregor Sverko Croatia 1,046,000 104
2 Keith Kordowski United States 812,000 81
3 Raffaele Sorrentino Italy 788,000 79
4 Jason Hickey United States 752,000 75
5 Michel Leibgorin France 679,000 68
6 Kevin Schulz United States 666,000 66
7 Euan McNicholas United Kingdom 626,000 62
8 Jonas Wexler United States 621,000 62
9 Christopher Maguire United Kingdom 607,000 60
10 Athanasios Polychronopoulos United States 588,000 58

Don’t miss any of the $1,500 NLHE Freezeout action

Ashby Leads The Way in the $2,500 Mixed Big Bet Event

Richard Ashby
Richard Ashby

A bumper crowd of 281 players bought into Event #35: $2,500 Mixed Big Bet on Day 1 but only 101 of those still had chips in front of them when the tournament director called time on the day’s action. Richard Ashby, who already has a WSOP bracelet in his collection, bagged up a tournament leading stack of 387,100 chips, and holds quite a commanding lead going into Day 2 on June 17.

The specialized nature of this tournament lured in some of poker’s most stellar names, many of whom progressed to Day 2. Brian Rast (193,900), Keith Lehr (191,400), and David Prociak (171,700) each bagged and tagged top ten stacks.

Further down the ladder you find such luminaries as Benny Glaser (135,700), Brad Ruben (101,900), Robert Mizrachi (101,400), Yuri Dzivelevski (95,000), Josh Arieh (87,300), Phil Ivey (51,300), and Daniel Negreanu (23,600).

Honestly, check out the overnight chip counts and you will not believe how many superstars are still in the mix in this tournament.

They all return to the action from 1:00 p.m. on June 17 and play another ten 60-minute levels. We can hardly contain our excitement.

Event #35: $2,500 Mixed Big Bet Top 10 Chip Counts

Place Player Country Chips
1 Richard Ashby United Kingdom 387,100
2 Did Not Report United States 273,000
3 Steve Friedlander United States 204,200
4 Bariscan Betil United States 199,300
5 Sterling Savill United States 195,900
6 Brian Rast United States 193,900
7 Keith Lehr United States 191,400
8 Andrew Robl United States 184,000
9 Daniel Mayoh Austria 180,500
10 David Prociak United States 171,700

Love mixed games? You’ll love these live updates

Barry Greenstein Bags Big in the $1,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo Event

Three-time WSOP bracelet winner Barry Greenstein is one of the big stacks in Event #36: $1,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better after he ended Day 1 with a stack of 146,000 chips. It is 14 years since Greenstein captured the $1,500 Razz title, now he is looking to end that drought in another Stud format.

Although Greenstein has done his chances of glory in this event no harm, there is a long way to go with 152 players joining him on Day 2. The Poker Hall of Famer will lock horns with the likes of chip leader Pearce Arnold (244,500), Michael Mizrachi (104,500), Mike Matusow (90,500), Jeff Madsen (38,500), Phillip Hui (55,000), and John Cernuto (24,500) among others.

Tune into PokerNews from 2:00 p.m. on June 17 to discover if Greenstein can build on his impressive start.

Event #36: $1,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo 8 or Better Top 10 Chip Counts

Place Player Country Chips
1 Pearce Arnold United States 244,500
2 Kenny Hsiung United States 224,000
3 Bruce Hoyt United States 196,000
4 Ali Eslami United States 189,500
5 Chad Campbell United States 185,000
6 Angelo Mancini Italy 171,500
7 Yuichi Kanai Japan 167,500
8 Harris Soetikno Australia 165,000
9 John Holley United States 163,500
10 Claude Marbleu France 155,000

Keep up-to-date with all this event’s updates

You’ll Also Like :
Why Come Poker is Failing
The Real Poker Crack