Event 1: Luke Brereton Doubles Through Jason Kmetetz, Takes Chip Lead

$350 No Limit Hold’em Deep Stack (Re-Entry)
Level 27: 30,000/60,000 with a 10,000 ante
Players Remaining: 29 of 2,692
Average Stack: 1,856,552

Luke Brereton
Luke Brereton

There is already about 2,200,000 in the pot on the turn with the board reading AsKh2h8s and Luke Brereton gets his last 1,795,000 into the middle from the small blind against Jason Kmetetz in middle position.

Brereton tables AdKc, good for top two pair and Kmetetz doesn’t like what he sees.

“I can’t win,” said Kmetetz, tabling Ac10c in the process.

Brereton has Kmetetz drawing dead to the 5h river and wins a massive pot, leaving Kmetetz short in the process.

“I hope I have at least 100,000 left,” said Kmetetz after the river card is dealt. “How much is it?”

The dealer verifies the all in amount and Brereton doules up to take the chip lead. With 29 players left, he has about 10% of the chips in play.

Luke Brereton – 5,800,000
Jason Kmetetz – 380,000

Event 1: Adam Levy Eliminated by Tim Piperakis

$350 No Limit Hold’em Deep Stack (Re-Entry) 
Level 27: 30,000/60,000 with a 10,000 ante
Players Remaining: 30
Average Stack: 1,794,667

Adam Levy moves all in for his last 125,000 from the cutoff and Tim Piperakis calls from the small blind. The big blind folds and the cards are tabled.

Piperakis shows 2c2d and needs help against Levy’s QsQd. The flop is all clubs, giving Piperakis a flush draw and the turn is another club to leave Levy drawing dead to a chop.

Levy calls for a fourth club to chop on the river, but it bricks off and the accomplished pro hits the rail. He takes home $2,867 for his efforts.

Tim Piperakis – 1,450,000
Adam Levy – Eliminated

Event 1: Jon Borenstein Wins Three-Way All In

$350 No Limit Hold’em Deep Stack (Re-Entry)
Level 27: 30,000/60,000 with a 10,000 ante
Players Remaining: 30 out of 2,692
Average Stack: 1,794,667

Jon Borenstein
Jon Borenstein

There is a three-way all in preflop with Jon Borenstein showing QsQc from the small blind and up against the big blind’s Ah4h and under-the-gun’s AdKc.

The board runs out clean for Borenstein as it comes Jc8h6c6d5d and he picks up the pot and eliminates two players. He drags the pot and is contending for the chip lead with only 30 players remaining.

Jon Borenstein – 3,800,000

Event 1: Tim Piperakis Doubles Through Adam Levy

$350 No Limit Hold’em Deep Stack (Re-Entry) 
Level 27: 30,000/60,000 with a 10,000 ante
Players Remaining: 31 of 2,692
Average Stack: 1,736,774

Tim Piperakis moves all in from under-the-gun for just over 500,000 and Adam Levy moves all in for about 625,000 from the small blind. The big blind folds and the cards are exposed.

Piperakis shows 6d6s and is flipping against Levy’s AsJh. The flop is 10d7c6h and Levy is drawing to runners after Piperakis flops a set.

“That’s not good,” said Levy after the flop.

The turn is the Jd and the river is the 9c to give Piperakis the double up.

Tim Piperakis – 1,100,000
Adam Levy – 125,000

Event 1: Dani Dayan’s Big Slick Send Two Home

$350 No Limit Hold’em Deep Stack (Re-Entry)
Level 26: 25,000/50,000 with a 5,000 ante
Players Remaining: 37 of 2,692
Average Stack: 1,455,135

Dani Dayan
Dani Dayan

A player in the cutoff moves all in and the button moves all in over the top. Dani Dayan moves all in from the small blind, having both players covered.

All three hands are tabled with Dayan showing AhKh, the button showing KsQc and the cutoff having the only pair with his 6d6h.

The flop is AdAsKc and Dayan flops a full house to leave the cutoff drawing to running sixes and the button is dead. The turn is the 10c and the river is the Kc to send two players home and move Dayan up the chip counts.

Dani Dayan – 2,350,000

Event 1: Marcus Stein Extending Lead

$350 No Limit Hold’em Deep Stack (Re-Entry) 
Level 26: 25,000/50,000 with a 5,000 ante
Players Remaining: 42 of 2,692
Average Stack: 1,281,905

Marcus Stein raises to 120,000 from early position and action folds all the way to the big blind, who moves all in for 435,000. Stein verifies the amount with the dealer and then pushes a call forward.

Stein shows JsJd and has his opponent’s QsJc dominated. The board runs out Kc9c4d6dAs and Stein’s jacks hold up to eliminate his opponent.

Stein drags the pot and extends his chip lead to put even more distance between himself and the rest of the field.

Marcus Stein – 4,100,000

Event 1: Big Pot Poker

$350 No Limit Hold’em Deep Stack (Re-Entry) 
Level 25: 20,000/40,000/5,000 Ante
Players Remaining: 49 of 2,692
Average Stack: 1,100,000 (27 big blinds)

Marcus Stein drags the biggest pot of the tournament
Marcus Stein drags the biggest pot of the tournament

Jon Borenstein’s hold on the chip lead was short-lived, through no fault of is own. Marcus Stein at an adjacent table battled a smaller stack most of the day before he found a needed double before dinner. He did it again and won the biggest pot of the tournament so far.

It was a pre-flop battle before he was all-in for effectively 1.5 million and in great position with KhKc against TdTh. The news got even better on the KdJc4s flop and he locked up the hand on the 7d for a full double up to 3.1 million.

Event 1: Jason Kmetetz Doubles Up

$350 No Limit Hold’em Deep Stack (Re-Entry)
Level 25: 20,000/40,000 with a 5,000 ante
Players Remaining: 49 of 2,692
Average Stack: 1,098,776

A player in middle position raises to 80,000 and Jason Kmetetz three-bets to 220,000 on the button.

“How much do you have left?” asked the player in middle position.

“I’m not hiding anything,” said Kmetetz. “It’s all right here.”

The floor comes over and rules that a player is entitled to a “reasonable estimation” of his stack and Kmetetz breaks his stacks down into stacks of 20 chips. He has about 600,000 behind.

Middle position calls and they are heads-up to a flop of 9s6s4s. Middle position checks and Kmetetz moves all in for 625,000. His opponent goes into the tank for several minutes.

“Get the camera man,” said Kmetetz. “He’s either going to have a good victory or I’m going to win. It’s fifty-fifty.”

After some time in the tank, middle position calls.

“I probably lost,” said Kmetetz.

Kmetetz shows 10d10s and is in the lead against his opponent’s 8s8h.

The turn is the 5s and the river is the 10c, giving Kmetetz a double up to back over an average stack.

“Is it over?” asked Kmetetz.

Jason Kmetetz – 1,650,000

Event 1: Two Million Chip Man

$350 No Limit Hold’em Deep Stack (Re-Entry) 
Level 25: 20,000/40,000/5,000 Ante
Players Remaining: 54 of 2,692
Average Stack: 997,000 (25 big blinds)

Jon Borenstein is the first to reach 2.5 million
Jon Borenstein is the first to reach 2.5 million

The chips are flying tonight and Event 1 down to the last six tables. Even with the average stack hanging around 1 million, those are good enough for 25 big blinds.

Jon Borenstein continues to move up the counts while others are falling. He hit the 2.5 million mark at the start of Level 25 though he shipped a couple hundred K to a neighbor in a bad beat double up.

Event 1 is scheduled to play out today but more likely it will hit the 3am hard stop and return tomorrow. Unless this pace keeps up, then we might see a $140,000 payout.

Event 1: Post-Dinner Rush

$350 No Limit Hold’em Deep Stack (Re-Entry) 
Level 24: 15,000/30,000/5,000 Ante
Players Remaining: 81 of 2,692
Average Stack: 667,000 (22 big blinds)

Jason Kmetetz (Loxahatchee, FL)
Jason Kmetetz (Loxahatchee, FL)

There’s usually a lot of action after the dinner break; players getting frisky with full bellies and happy heads. Event 1 was no different and entire table of players hit the payout desk including Seminole Hard Rock Tampa ambassador Wally Maddah.

“Are you going to put me in the blog if I win a hand?” That was the question from Jason Kmetetz.

He was short stacked with ten big blinds and called all-in from the big blind after an early position shove. Kmetetz’ QcQd was dominating TsTh and the As5d4s3dKh board gave him the full double to 670,000.

And he made the blog.