Peters Leads the Final 6; Winters and Chidwick Make the Final Table Again
David Peters mashed his way to the chip lead in Event #4: $10,000 Short Deck Hold'em after picking up a hot run of cards late in the day. Peters sat in the middle of the pack for the early stages of the day, but a couple massive hands vaulted him out front. First, he tripled through Justin Bonomo and Seth Davies when his ten-nine made a straight to crack kings and ace-king. Later he would knock out Anthony Zinno with jacks against queens by getting lucky and rivering a gutshot straight draw. Peters continued with that momentum and ended the night with 5,450,000. He'll lead the final table heading into Day 2.
Among others to make it to the final table were Sean Winter and Stephen Chidwick. It's been an extremely impressive series for Winter so far who has made the final table of all four events. So far he has a 6th, a 5th, and a 2nd place finish with over $250,000 in cashes over the course of the series. Along with Winter, Chidwick makes his third final table of the series. Chidwick has a victory and a third place so far and currently leads the points race at the US Poker Open, but they could swap places depending who runs deeper in this event.
Here's a look at how the Final Table Stacks Up:
Seat | Player | Chip Count |
---|---|---|
1 | David Peters | 5,450,000 |
2 | Seth Davies | 3,250,000 |
3 | Ben Yu | 1,795,000 |
4 | Sean Winter | 1,135,000 |
5 | Ben Lamb | 325,000 |
6 | Stephen Chidwick | 645,000 |
Players played through 15 levels today and a total of 42 entrants made it into the tournament. Among those entries who didn't make it through were Alex Foxen, Sam Soverel, Kristen Bicknell, Phil Hellmuth, Cary Katz, Koray Aldemir, Manig Loeser, and Justin Bonomo. Making another deep run was Jerry Robinson who almost made his third cash of the series, but ended up falling on the bubble when he shoved king-ten into David Peter's pocket jacks. He couldn't catch up and hit the rail as the bubble boy.
The 42 players created a prizepool of $420,000. The top six made it into the money on Day 1. All of those returning for Day 2 are guaranteed a payout of at least $25,200 but they are all aiming for the top prize of $151,200. Players will return at 1 p.m. local time and action will be live streamed on PokerGo from the start of the day which will begin at 2 p.m. Remember that you can subscribe to PokerGO for just $10 a month or $99 a year to watch nine straight days of U.S. Poker Open final table action plus PokerGO��s full catalog of programming.
PokerNews will return with coverage of Day 2 as well so make sure to tune back in so you don't miss a thing.