Championship: Jeremy Ausmus Eliminated by Jordan Meltzer

$3,500 WPT Showdown Championship (Re-Entry)
Level 6: 200/400 with a 50 Ante
Entries: 995

Jeremy Ausmus opened to 1,000 under the gun, and Jordan Meltzer three-bet to 2,800 on the button. Ausmus called.

The flop was AsKs9d, and Ausmus checked. Meltzer continued for 1,600, Ausmus check-raised to 6,400, and Meltzer called. The turn was the 5s, and Ausmus moved all in for 8,050. Meltzer called to put him at risk.

Meltzer: AcKc (aces up)
Ausmus: AdQd (pair of aces)

Ausmus was already drawing dead to the 4h river, and he was eliminated.

Things haven’t gotten any easier for the table with Ausmus’ exit, though, as Mohsin Charania has just filled the empty seat.

Jordan Meltzer – 62,000
Mohsin Charania – Eliminated

Championship: Jean Gaspard Eliminated by Stewart Newman

$3,500 WPT Showdown Championship
Level 6: 200/400 with a 50 ante
Entries: 927

Stewart Newman

On a flop of KcTs9c, the player in the big blind checked and the player under the gun checked as well. Jean Gaspard bet 2,000 and Team SHRP member Stewart Newman tossed out two yellow, 5,000 denomination chips and announced a raise to a different amount.

The big blind folded, as did the under the gun player before Gaspard moved all in for about 20,000. Newman snap-called.

Newman showed 9h9d, good for bottom set and was in the lead against Gaspard’s KdJd. The turn was the 4s and the river wast he 6d.

Newman faded Gaspard’s gutshot straight draw and sent Gaspard to the rail at least temporarily. He still has several hours to re-enter.

Stewart Newman – 55,000
Jean Gaspard – Eliminated

Championship: More SHRP Team Members

$3,500 WPT Showdown Championship
Level 5: 150/300 with a 50 ante
Entries: 927

Jessica Dawley

The Championship is now a handful of entries away from topping $3,000,000 and we should get there before too long with a steady parade into the ballroom.

Two recent entries put more Seminole Hard Rock Poker team members in the field. Two-time WSOP bracelet Loni Harwood is grinding away in the meeting room while Jessica Dawley is sitting in the middle of the packed ballroom. She’s also looking for another big run after a 12th place finish in the 1,973-entry Event 1 and tenth place in the 2,923-entry Event 9.

Loni Harwood

Championship: Allen Kessler Gets All In, Chops

$3,500 WPT Showdown Championship
Level 5: 150/300 with a 50 ante
Entries: 927

There was about 15,000 in the pot on the turn with the board reading JsTs2d9d, Allen Kessler checked from middle position and his opponent went all in from late position.

Kessler tanked for a minute before calling and was all in for about 12,000.

Kessler’s opponent tabled QsQc and Kessler showed QhQd to chop the pot with his opponent. The river is the meaningless As and both players pull their bets back.

“You should’ve waited until the river to move all in,” said another player at the table. “Then Allen would’ve folded.”

Allen Kessler – 19,500

Championship: Charlie Carrel Treads Carefully Postflop

$3,500 WPT Showdown Championship (Re-Entry)
Level 5: 150/300 with a 50 Ante
Entries: 869

Jordan Scott

Charlie Carrel had 3,000 chips out in front of his button in what appeared to be a preflop three-bet behind unknown action. Picking it up live, Jordan Scott four-bet to 8,500 in the big blind, and Carrel five-bet to 17,500 total. Scott called the remainder to see a flop.

It came 8d7c2c. Scott checked, and Carrel checked behind. That action repeated after the Qs turn and 9s river, with Carrel checking back both streets.

It probably wasn’t the result Scott was hoping for; he showed AhAc to win the pot with a pair of aces. The two men traded some quiet conversation after the hand, during which Carrel mentioned that he was “pretty happy about that.”

“You didn’t have it, did you?” Scott asked.

Carrel quietly slipped his noise-cancelling headphones back over his ears and said nothing further about the hand.

Jordan Scott – 100,000
Charlie Carrel – 49,000

Championship: Ryan Van Sanford Bests Mike Del Vecchio

$3,500 WPT Showdown Championship
Level 5: 150/300 with a 50 ante
Entries: 869

Ryan Van Sanford

There was about 12,000 in the pot already with a board of 8d3s2h5dJh. It was a heads-up battle between two WPT Champions.

Mike Del Vecchio, who just recently won WPT Rolling Thunder, bet 6,800 from the hijack and Ryan Van Sanford, who put his name on the Champions Cup in Jacksonville a couple years ago, called from the cutoff. Del Vecchio showed 9d9h, but Van Sanford won the pot with TdTh.

Ryan Van Sanford – 55,000
Mike Del Vecchio – 27,000

Championship: Lily Kiletto Can’t Find a Fold

$3,500 WPT Showdown Championship (Re-Entry)
Level 5: 150/300 with a 50 Ante
Entries: 869

Jonathan Kramer (left) and Lily Kiletto (right)

Lily Kiletto was involved in a heads-up pot against Jonathan Kramer on the turn of a Jd9h7dKc board. Kramer was out of position, and based on the table talk, it sounds like he had check-raised Kiletto on the flop. On the turn, Kramer bet 8,000 into a pot of about 17,000, and Kiletto called.

The river was the 6h, and Kramer moved all in for his last 20,900 chips. Kiletto sunk deep into the tank, talking through her decision as she pondered. “Sorry, guys,” she apologized for the delay. “I have two pair. Top two.”

Kramer sat as still as a statue, and someone eventually called the clock on Kiletto. A few seconds before her countdown expired, Kiletto called, committing most of her own stack to put Kramer at risk.

Kramer showed 7s7h for a set of sevens, and Kiletto mucked as she paid off her debt.

“I don’t think you can fold top two there,” Marcus Stein reassured her. “It looked like he bricked a draw.”

Jonathan Kramer – 75,000
Lily Kiletto – 8,500

Championship: Back from Break; McKeehen Back in Action

$3,500 WPT Showdown Championship (Re-Entry)
Level 5: 150/300 with a 50 Ante
Entries: 869

Joe McKeehen

Players are back in their seats and two hours removed from hitting their 90-minute dinner break with more than five hours left to registration.

Championship players are split between the ballroom and meeting room across the hall, over there we found our most recent champion. Joe McKeehen’s biggest poker prize came with his 2015 World Series of Poker Main Event bracelet but he added a little more to the trophy case last night.

McKeehen was part of the $2,200 Eight-Handed Freezeout and defeated Sean Perry for the title in the early hours this morning. He can be excused if he’s a little tired today but he’s stacking chips, most recently at the expense of fellow Philly area player Allen “Chainsaw” Kessler.

Championship: Defending Champ

$3,500 WPT Showdown Championship (Re-Entry)
Level 4: 100/200 with a 25 Ante
Entries: 820

Justin Young

The clock is running down on Level 4 and the Championship players will take a break when the clock runs out. We’re waiting on an updated entry count but players continue to roll into the ballroom at a regular pace getting the prize pool closer to $3 million with each new seat taken.

One of the more recent entrants was Justin Young, our defending champion. The WSOP Circuit winner put $670,000 in his pocket for winning last year’s WPT Seminole Hard Rock Poker Showdown Championship and pushed his career total to $4.5 million.

Championship: Hinkle Experience

$3,500 WPT Showdown Championship (Re-Entry)
Level 4: 100/200 with a 25 Ante
Entries: 820

Blair Hinkle

The entry count kicked back into gear and crossed over 800 in the third hour, clearly passing $2.5 million in the prize pool and steadily climbing.

Blair Hinkle knows a little something about getting through huge fields like this. He earned his first WSOP bracelet in 2008 by besting a field of 1,344 players, a nice score but not his biggest.

Hinkle followed that up by conquering the first $10 Million GTD Seminole Hard Rock Poker Open in 2013 with better than a thousand more players than his WSOP win. He earned more than $1.7 million from a prize pool that almost reached $12 million.