The 35 players remaining in Day 2 are now on their second break of the day and will return to action shortly.
The orange 1,000 chips will also be raced off and colored up at this time.
The 35 players remaining in Day 2 are now on their second break of the day and will return to action shortly.
The orange 1,000 chips will also be raced off and colored up at this time.
Ryan Feldman, co-owner of Hustler Casino Live, revealed on PokerNews' Life Outside Poker podcast that he was kicked out of the 2016 World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event over a conflict of interest stemming from his employment at ESPN.
In the 16th episode of the podcast, host Connor Richards speaks with the producer/founder of the most popular livestream in poker history about why he was booted from poker's biggest tournament, along with numerous other topics such as sports journalism, interviewing star athletes, leaving ESPN to start a poker stream, founding HCL and putting together some of the most entertaining lineups in poker history.
This interview was filmed in July at the 2024 WSOP inside Horseshoe and Paris Las Vegas.
The Life Outside Poker podcast is available on major streaming platforms including Apple Podcasts, Spotify and iHeartRadio. You can also watch the interview with Ryan Feldman by heading to the PokerNews YouTube channel.
Ater a preflop ebtting war, Greg Wood got it all in against two opposing players.
Greg Wood: K?K?
Player 1: A?Q?
Player 2: 5?5?
The runout of 4?9?2?K?6? improved him to top set of kings and he was awarded the pot for a triple up.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Greg Wood |
570,000
570,000
|
570,000 |
Level: 17
Blinds: 6,000/12,000
Ante: 12,000
On a heads-up flop of 7?7?6?, Jeff Copeland checked to Brandon Dirnberger, who bet 50,000, but then Copeland check-raised all in to cover.
After thinking it over for a few seconds, Dirnberger made the call to put himself at risk and the cards were tabled.
Brandon Dirnberger: 9?9?
Jeff Copeland: 4?8?
Dirnberger was in the lead with his nines, but the turn Q? immediately gave Copeland the upper hand with a flush.
Only a nine on the river could save Dirnberger, but it was the brick J? and he was sent to the rail while Copleland was awarded the pot.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jeff Copeland |
855,000
570,000
|
570,000 |
Brandon Dirnberger | Busted |
After a preflop betting frenzy, all of the chips between Cody Stanford, William Henricks, and Timothy Hicks got into the middle, with Hicks covering.
Cody Stanford: 10?10?
William Henricks: A?A?
Timothy Hicks: K?K?
Henricks was a big favorite with his pocket rockets, and the runout of 3?J?5?A?J? only improved him to the top full house to scoop the entire pot, eliminating Stanford.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
William Henricks |
560,000
468,000
|
468,000 |
Timothy Hicks |
466,000
-48,000
|
-48,000 |
Cody Stanford | Busted |
Level: 16
Blinds: 5,000/10,000
Ante: 10,000
Scott Karas opened to 30,000 and Sean Maurer three-bet to 85,000. Karas responded by four-betting to 255,000 but then Maurer five-bet-jammed for 501,000.
Karas sighed and paused for a second but announced a call to put Naurer at risk and the cards were tabled.
Sean Maurer: A?A?
Scott Karas: A?K?
The flop of 7?5?K? made it a good sweat, but the runout of 4?J? kept aces in the lead and the huge pot was shipped over to Maurer to put him over the 1,000,000 mark.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Sean Maurer |
1,010,000
600,000
|
600,000 |
Scott Karas |
60,000
-510,000
|
-510,000 |
|