2021 WSOP Day 33: Volpe and Cates Lead Final 35 of the $50K Poker Players Championship

7 min read
Paul Volpe

Day 33 of the 2021 World Series of Poker (WSOP) featured another full day of poker action at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino in sunny Las Vegas with Nov. 1 featuring seven bracelet events.

Anatolii Zyrin was one of the stars of the day after defeating a massive field of 9,399 entries in the $400 Colossus to win his second gold bracelet along with the hefty $314,705 top prize.

Meanwhile, Brian Yoon won his fourth gold bracelet in Event #57: $10,000 2-7 Lowball Triple Draw Championship for $839,350.

Five events are still in play highlighted by Paul Volpe holding the chip lead with 35 players remaining in the $50,000 Poker Players Championship with Dan Cates closest on his tail.

Read on to learn about what took place on Day 33 of the 2021 WSOP.

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David Slaughter Leads Final 65 Players in the WSOP $1K Super Seniors

Day 2 of Event #58: $1000 Super Seniors No-Limit Hold��em of the 2021 World Series of Poker has come to an end. A total of 65 super seniors bagged and tagged at the end of the night out of the total of 490 entries that started the event this morning with only 283 making the money with the minimum cash being worth $1,605.

Leading the field at the end of Day 2 is David Slaughter (1,835,000) with Randall Bolick (1,755,000), and Bill Stabler (1,725,000) being not too far behind. Slaughter finished 97th place for $5,191 in the WSOP Seniors Event less than a week ago, while Stabler finished runner-up for $409,456 in the WSOP Seniors Event back in 2018.

WSOP Super Seniors Day 2 Top 10 Chip Counts

RANKPLAYERCountryCHIP COUNTBig Blinds
1David SlaughterUnited States1,835,00092
2Randall BolickUnited States1,755,00088
3Bill StablerUnited States1,725,00086
4Reginald PowellUnited States1,565,00078
5Andrew BodewinUnited States1,355,00068
6Jean-Luc AdamFrance1,140,00057
7Robert ChowUnited States1,100,00055
8David SmithUnited States1,080,00054
9Steve MillerUnited States1,025,00051
10Joseph NeimanUnited States975,00049

The legendary three-time bracelet winner Sammy Farha busted in 66th place for $3,678, hedge fund manager Dan Shak in 97th for $2,583, and bracelet winner James Hess in 218th for $1,756. Hall of Famer Barry Greenstein started the day as one of the short stacks and was not able to spin it up into the money.

Players will return for Day 3 on Tuesday, Nov. 2 at 10 a.m local time in the Amazon room to compete for a top prize of $255,623 and the coveted WSOP gold bracelet. The event will start at Level 21 with blinds of 10,000/20,000 with a big blind ante of 20,000.

Check out all of the $1K Super Seniors updates

Team Newman Leads Final 10 in Event #59: $1,000 Tag Team

Michael Newman - Robert Ormont
Michael Newman - Robert Ormont

Day 2 has wrapped up in Event #59: $1,000 Tag Team with 10 teams remaining and Team Newman bagging the chip lead. Michael Newman and Robert Ormont will head into the third and final day of the tournament with a stack of 2,960,000, in front of duos Tomer Wolf and David Landell (1,900,000) and Mike Ruter and Samy Dighlawi (1,700,000).

Other teams that survived Day 2 include Team Erdwurm, Team Babbitt, and the father-daughter duo of Amanda Botfeld and David Botfeld.

Unofficial Final Table Seat Draw

 SEATTEAMCHIPS
 1Zachary Erdwurm - Steven Jones850,000
 2Michael Newman - Robert Ormont2,960,000
 3Alfie Adam - Vidur Sethi1,315,000
 4Tomer Wolf - David Landell1,900,000
 5Amanda Botfeld - David Botfeld790,000
 6Holly Babbitt - Michael Babbitt1,345,000
 7Benjamin Miner - Dmitriy Uskach1,065,000
 8Mike Ruter - Samy Dighlawi1,700,000
 9Mike Lutz - Matt Krebs430,000
 10Scott Johnston - Bob Fisher455,000

The duo of Jeff Platt and Brent Hanks made it deep in the day and were eliminated in 27th place when they ran pocket kings into the pocket aces of Team Wolf. Melanie Weisner and Xuan Liu of Team Weisner made it to the final two tables but were sent home in 18th place when their king-queen couldn��t fare against the ace-ten of Team Erdwurm.

Other partnerships that didn��t make it through the day include Mike Watson and Sarah Goddard, Asi Moshe and Uri Yochelman, and Stephen Song and Brock Wilson.

Day 3 will commence on Tuesday, Oct. 2 at 2 p.m. Pacific Time and will play down to a winning team. Each member of the winning team will earn $56,683 and a WSOP bracelet.

Check out all of the $1K Tag Team updates

Paul Volpe Bags Day 2 Chip Lead in Event #60: $50K Poker Players Championship

Paul Volpe
Paul Volpe

Day 2 of the $50,000 Poker Players Championship has been played to its conclusion with Paul Volpe emerging as the new chip leader after another six levels of play. Volpe, who holds three gold bracelets, was the only player to bag over a million chips (1,092,000).

Play began on Day 2 with 44 players (up from the 39 players that bagged from Day 1) and increased periodically throughout the day until reaching a total of 63 by the time late registration ended. Among the new entries were Jesse Klein (656,000), Alex Livingston (872,000), Chris Brewer (715,000), Nick Schulman (723,000), Cary Katz (197,000) and Dan ��Jungleman�� Cates (944,000) �C who made his 2021 WSOP debut and will be looking to improve on his sixth-place finish in the 2019 Poker Players Championship.

Notably absent was the defending champion Phil Hui, who has yet to make an appearance at the series this year.

$50K Poker Players Championship Day 2 Top 10 Chip Counts

RankPlayerCountryChip Count
1Paul VolpeUnited States1,092,000
2Dan CatesUnited States944,000
3Adam FriedmanUnited States913,000
4Alex LivingstonCanada872,000
5Chris VitchUnited States849,000
6George AlexanderUnited States820,000
7Brian RastUnited States790,000
8Yuval BronshteinIsrael775,000
9Chad CampbellUnited States764,000
10Nick SchulmanUnited States723,000

Other players who managed to bag into Day 3 include Day 1 chip leader Bryce Yockey (510,000), Eli Elezra (700,000), Anthony Zinno (415,000), and Daniel Negreanu, who managed to run his 77,000 in chips at the beginning of Day 2 up to 655,000 by the day��s end.

By the end of the day, just 35 players remained. Some players who were less fortunate include Frank Kassela, George Wolff, Benny Glaser, Shaun Deeb, and previous PPC champions Michael Mizrachi and Freddy Deeb �C all of whom were eliminated over the course Day 2.

Phil Hellmuth, who entered late into Day 2, was also unable to survive after being eliminated by a turned gutshot of George Alexander and failing to improve with a set.

The 63 entries generated a $3,016,125 total prize pool. Ten spots will pay, with the eventual winner taking home $954,020 in addition to a WSOP gold bracelet and the right to have their name engraved in the Chip Reese Memorial Trophy.

Event #60: $50,000 Poker Players Championship Payouts

Place Prize (USD)
1 $954,020
2 $589,628
3 $404,243
4 $286,983
5 $211,235
6 $161,422
7 $128,256
8 $106,120
9 $91,595
10 $82,623

The remaining field will return Tuesday at 2 p.m. local time to play another six levels. As with past days, levels will last 100 minutes each and players will get 15-minute breaks after each level. Players will go on an hour-long dinner break after Level 16 at around 9:20 p.m.

Check out all of the $50K PPC updates

Robert Hankins Leads The Field Into Day 2 of Event #61: $600 Deepstack Championship No-Limit Hold'em

Robert Hankins
Robert Hankins

Day 1 of Event #61: $600 Deepstack Championship No-Limit Hold'em has come to a conclusion. There were a total of 3,916 entrants generating a prize pool of $1,997,160. The winner will take home the first-place prize of $252,491 paired with the coveted 2021 World Series of Poker gold bracelet.

They were 588 players to make the money but only 448 players advanced to Day 2 and are guaranteed a payout of $1,051.

Among the players leading the field into Day 2 is ten-time World Series of Poker Circuit ring winner Robert Hankins who bagged a whopping 868,000 from a starting stack of 30,000. Hankins recently won his tenth WSOP ring in August of this year at Harrah��s Cherokee for the first-place prize of $132,241. He has now put himself in a position to capture his first WSOP bracelet which would add to his already impressive list of accomplishments in the tournament poker world.

Samuel Taylor (838,000), Justin Arnwine (779,000), Nana Senachika (646,000), Cole Ferraro (625,000) and two-time WSOP bracelet winner Mark Seif (550,000) follow close behind.

Event #61 Day 1 Top 10 Chip Counts

RANKPLAYERCITY / STATE / COUNTRYCHIP COUNTBig Blinds
1Robert HankinsUnited States868,00087
2Samuel TaylorUnited States838,00084
3Radoslav StoyanovBulgaria830,00083
4Dhaval MudgalIndia786,00079
5Justin ArnwineUnited States779,00078
6Kc VaughanUnited States743,00074
7Matas BudginasUnited States719,00072
8Ping LiuUnited States702,00070
9Nissar QuraishiUnited States687,00069
10Alan FerraroItaly686,00069
Mark Seif
Mark Seif

Day 2 will restart at 12 p.m. local time on Nov. 2 at the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino. The 448 remaining players will be starting at Level 18 with 5,000/10,000 blinds and a 10,000 big blind ante. They will play 10 levels with a duration of 60-minutes. There will be 15-minute breaks every two levels and a 60-min dinner break after Level 23 (�� 6:30 p.m.).

Check out all of the $600 Deepstack Championship updates

Tsugunari Toma Bags a Massive Stack on Day 1 of the $1,500 PLO8

Tsugunari Toma
Tsugunari Toma

After a solid fifteen levels of play, Day 1 of Event #62: Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better is completed. There were 725 total entries for this event with 113 players headed to Day 2.

Leading the field into Day 2 is Japan's top live poker tournament earner Tsugunari Toma (1,076,000 chips) who bagged an astonishing million-plus chip stack. To put this into perspective, Toma bagged nearly triple that of his nearest competition in Steve Chanthabouasy, who bagged a healthy stack of 393,000.

From the middle to the end of the day, Toma was on cruise control. He found himself on the better end of almost every spot and used his tournament experience to bag up an impressive stack.

Event #62 Day 1 Top 10 Chip Counts

RANKPLAYERCountryCHIP COUNTBig Blinds
1Tsugunari TomaJapan1,076,000179
2Steve ChanthabouasyUnited States393,00066
3Paul HolderUnited States380,00063
4Maury BarrettUnited States373,00062
5Michael TrivettUnited States342,00057
6Raymond HensonUnited States339,00057
7Sean RemzUnited States333,00056
8Nathan GambleUnited States328,00055
9Andrew YehUnited States318,00053
10Dustin DirksenUnited States314,00052

Others who bagged up healthy stacks at the end of the night include Mike Matusow (228,000 chips), Paul Holder (380,000 chips), and Nathan Gamble (328,000). Gamble added to his stack near the end of the night, which resulted in David Williams hitting the rail before the closing bell.

The players will return Tuesday at 2 p.m. local (PST) time and play 10 levels of 60 minutes each, with a 15-minute break after every two levels, and a 60-minute dinner break at the end of Level 21 (~8:30 p.m. local (PST) time).

Check out all of the $1,500 PLO8 updates

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