WEBVTT

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Hello everyone, Welcome back to a
brand new episode of the Poker Go Podcast.

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My name is Donnie Peters. His
name is Tim Duckworth. Day six

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of the World Series of Poker Main
Event just wrapped up. Where you're moving

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on today? Seven fifty nine players
remain ten twelve players started, So we

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have come an incredibly long way to
get where we are. Tim and I

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are going to discuss that. I
guess we're also going to hit on what's

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happening around the WSOP because there's some
other events going down. As always,

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please like and subscribe to the Poker
Girl Podcast wherever you listen to your podcasts,

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00:00:56.280 --> 00:01:00.920
and don't forget to leave a review, do you No, of course

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you don't. But we're gonna do
a lot. I'm gonna do a lot.

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You have to give me, you
guys, just like do you have

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winners, but you have to give
me the prize two night shift T shirts

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because the night shift is back,
so and I'll have the night shift two

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night shift T shirts. Got it? Okay? What am I doing?

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Give my pick any number? Yeah, start at seven and let's go to

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seven. Okay. Brett porchol win
a one eleven go again? Why he

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won the dim Light two nights ago. Okay, let's go ten go again,

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Jesus fourteen, Sean Philippe, who
is the first winner, Brett Porch

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okay, cool. Tim will be
in contact with you guys to get your

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T shirts out to you. The
Night Shift is back. Hopefully you're watching

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because it has been banging every single
light night, Aline Dade and Nick Shulman.

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It's been incredible stuff. Really truly
seen a lot of stuff on Twitter.

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Look it's been it's been amazing.
It's absolutely amazing. It's absolutely amazing.

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We have I think, one more
day until we draw the first two

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winners for the Poker Got Annual subscriber
giveaway, meaning get your butts in there

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at PokerGO dot com. And when you

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twenty dollars on your first year.
We are giving away three seats to next

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year's wsp Man event. That's right, three seats. Okay, we're paying

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for it. It's on our dime, okay. So we're gonna draw two

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winners on July fifteenth. We're gonna
draw one more winner in a couple of

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weeks time, sometime around Poker Masters. I forget exactly what we said,

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but we'll be promoting that plenty.
So yeah, that's coming down the pipeline.

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Get in there, void reprohibited,
no purchase necessary. Visit PokerGO dot

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com slash rules for official terms.
All right, how many? How many

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are? How much are people getting
paid? Can you tell me? Scroll

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down the rundown because when I put
that infide, you would say that it

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says they guaranteed hundred set. Listen. I'm asking you a question, so

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you will speak, not because I'm
not looking at the rundown. You're literally

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on my screen right here. Yeah, how it says day five started,

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which first of all, it's day
six four sixty four started approximately fifty nine

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remain I think it's fifty nine.
You know, you say twenty twenty three,

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there was forty nine. Headit it's
or ten five. I'm trying to

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give you some airtime on this podcast. I talk too much. I talk

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too much. That's part of the
reason why I talk too much is because

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you don't talk. Because because one, every time I come back here to

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do the podcast, you're sleeping or
two you're on Instagram. I'm not buying

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a bike or doing some shit over
there. There's nothing to do. Yes,

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Actually, I need to go home
and build it unbelievable. Help me

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build it unbelievable. All right,
So they're guaranteed what now, one hundred

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and sixty k. Jesus, that's
pay jump, next day jump fifty third

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place. We're going to basically go, uh table for table. Now we're

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gonna go two hundred k of fifty
three, two fifty K forty four,

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three hundred K thirty fifth, three
fifty K twenty six and then the random

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number of four hundred and fifty thousan
four hundred dollars at seventeen. So I

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got a question about this because you
you mentioned the paye jumps, and you're

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the guy who's probably the resident expert
circually more so than me in this area.

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Do we need chot clocks out there? Yes, I mean ten thousand

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percent. The stalling for the pay
jumps is getting to be outrageous. I

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mean, and listen, I I
would probably be doing the same damn thing.

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Don't get me wrong, Okay,
but it is getting to be a

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bit much. Yeah, So the
six to seven eliminations behind the pace we

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needed or the pace that was set
last year. People understand the page jumps,

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they understand the store, they know
the game to play. Putting a

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shot clock in the main event would
be new, just like when WP to

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The first event they did it,
I think was WPT chocktaw That was my

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first ever WPT event. It needs
it. The question in the WSP main

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event is when do you implement the
shock clock. If you put it in

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the bubble, right, we need
what is it, one hundred and fifty

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one hundred and sixty tables worth of
chockol. There's no chance you can do

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it near the bubble, there's just
too many. I think it's I think

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at day six. I mean maybe
they could, but it's just too hard.

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Day six would be a good day. I think that was even Day

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five. Day five is fifty tables. You could do it for fifty tables.

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I don't know, that's all I
would. I would rather start smaller

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and build up as opposed to just
introduce it and have it be or have

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it go haywire early on. So
I think now for sure, like day

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seven, they should for sure have
it day six, you know, I

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think you can definitely introduce it.
It's just the stalling is getting to be

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pretty crazy. And listen, I
understand that players are going to do it,

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and again, I know I'm like
hating on it, but I'm also

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going to say that I would be
doing it if there was a pay jump.

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I mean, that's just how it
is. I remember at the WPT

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World Championship a couple of years ago, a couple of times I stalled,

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and I wish I stolled longer at
the end to get a pay jump.

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But you know, that's just how
it is. It's not even like other

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players at the table are necessarily like
worried about it, because a lot of

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times the players will just be like, yeah, I'm just gonna stall,

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Like they'll just flat out say it, and the other players be like,

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yeah, I get it, Like, you know, it's a fifteen K

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pay jump, Why I would do
I think it would just create a better

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product overall. I agree. Now, obviously we're going into a forty K

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pay jump coming up, but this
was happening when the pay jumps were the

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minimum amount. Hey, yeah,
for sure, we were tracking. You

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know how often the tables broke because
we were trying to, you know,

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calculate what tables to take up there
for the features, and like these tables

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breaking every five minutes, ten minutes. But then once a pay jump came

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up, even though it was like
a five K pay jump, well even

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less twenty five hundred, the right
would rapidly slow down for a few tables.

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So it's not just we're not just
talking forty K pay jumps. We're

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talking all pay jumps where this is. This is happening because the end of

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the day, it's money, you
know, like whether it's twenty five hundred

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dollars or twenty five thousand dollars,
you know, every little dollar counts.

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Yeah, no, for sure.
So yeah, as Tim mentioned, one

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hundred and sixty k is guaranteed,
fifty third goes up to two hundred thousand

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and forty fourth two hundred and fifty
thousand. We're gonna try tomorrow or sorry

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today, on day seven to play
down to eighteen. That's the goal.

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It's the rule. The rule,
it's a requirements, the requirement. I

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mean that could take forever. It's
because we're behind, we're behind to take

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six levels. Oh yeah, yeah, players aren't gonna be happy about that.

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They can have a late to slot
the next step, because so they're

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gonna take them five hours to get
to nine. Yeah, I mean it

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is. It's gonna be a grind
tomorrow for sure. So up top looks

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like we have Kevin Davis leading the
way. That seems a little bit surprising

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that Kevin Davis is leading. What
do you have against Kevin Davis? Nothing.

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I just didn't think Kevin Davis was
the chip leader. I thought it's

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surprising. It's very flat. I
thought it was gonna be very flat.

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Yeah, So Kevin Davis has twenty
six million, two hundred and fifty thousand,

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and then one two, three,
four, five, six seven.

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Seventh place is Daniel Zadok with twenty
thousand, three hundred twenty million, three

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hundred and twenty five thousand, So, you know, pretty pretty flat.

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I mean, I know there's six
million difference, but still, I mean

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it is, it is pretty flat
overall. So it goes Kevin Davis up

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top twenty six million, two hundred
and fifty thousand. Shun Den Jao twenty

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three million, nine hundred and twenty
five thousand. That's one of two female

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players left. It's her and Kristen
Foxen are the only two left. Malo

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Latinos I probably butcher that name,
I'm sorry, twenty two million, three

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hundred and seventy five thousand, Guillermo
Sanchez Otero twenty one million, nine hundred

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and seventy five thousand, yaik Wu
twenty million, eight hundred and seventy five

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thousand, Jegoor Morose also known as
Yeggs twenty million, five hundred seventy five

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thousand, and then Daniel Zaduke twenty
million, three hundred and twenty five thousand.

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So those are the seven players with
at least twenty million chips. Looking

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throughout the rest of the field,
we have Orson Young eighteen million, three

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hundred and fifty thousand. We have
Jason James fifteen million, eight hundred and

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twenty five thousand. And interesting note
about Jason James. So if you remember

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when Espen Georgstad won the WSP Main
Event a couple of years ago, he

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won the tag team event with Patrick
Leonard, Well, Jason James won the

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Tag Team event this year and now
he's in the final fifty nine of the

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WSP Main Event. He's a lock
to win. I mean, yeah,

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right, that's how it works.
Nicholas Ostelle fifteen million, eight hundred thousand

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00:10:01.559 --> 00:10:07.759
for Leana nine hundred. We have
Kristen Foxen backed up fourteen and a half

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million, Jonathan Tamiles in there,
thirteen point three million, Joseph Rock is

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in there, thirteen zero point one
seven five million. You got the Hall

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of Famer, the six times be
goal bracelet winner, mister Brian Rast He's

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still in twelve million, six hundred
and seventy five thousand. Brian Kim nine

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million, nine hundred and seventy five
thousand, Russell Rosenbloom nine million, one

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00:10:31.159 --> 00:10:39.200
hundred and seventy five thousand, Arthur
Morris Pro Poker podcast pro Arthur Morris five

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00:10:39.240 --> 00:10:41.919
million, nine hundred and twenty five
thousand, just absolutely could not kill him

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00:10:41.919 --> 00:10:48.519
today. Jesse Capps is in there
quacking his way to day seven five million,

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nine hundred and twenty five thousand.
Alex Keating is in there. He's

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got five million, two hundred and
fifty thousand. He got Brandon Cantu,

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who had Phil Helmuth on his rail
at the end of the night, four

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point eight million for him. Stephen
Song, our guy team DPMC came into

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the day with the chip lead.
He finishes as one of these shorter stacks,

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remaining with two million, one hundred
and seventy five thousand. The shortest

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00:11:13.960 --> 00:11:20.879
stack returning looks to be Randy Getesco
with five hundred and seventy five thousand.

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00:11:20.000 --> 00:11:24.639
Two Big, two Big, It's
going to be two fifty I think.

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So yeah, they finished at one
two, one hundred thousand, So yeah,

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00:11:28.279 --> 00:11:30.960
I'm guessing two hundred and fifty thousand. All right, what do you

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What are your lead stories? Sir? Lead story was Chrissy Foxon dominating.

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She took a few steps backs,
but she's still in the mix. To

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me, that is a I think
biggest name. Now you could probably Algie

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Brian Rass, but you know,
we're gonna have to give a couple extra

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00:11:48.600 --> 00:11:52.200
points to Chrissy for being a female, being a high roller Crusha now crushing

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the biggest ten K in the world. So to me, that's my number

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one story. How about you?
I agree? I think Chris and fox

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And is the number one story going
forward. I think it's pretty credible what

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she's doing. You know, she
finished on fourteen and a half million.

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I forget where she came in exactly, but I mean today, if you

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watched the coverage on Poker Goro.
She had hand after hand after hand,

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and she was in there constantly,
you know, I mean she's she's aggressive

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by nature. She does stay active
at the table, but it of course

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helps when you pick up really good
hands. She had some nice momentum at

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the end of the night. She
busted a player when she had threes versus

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Ace King. She flopped a set
and held from there. The money went

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00:12:39.879 --> 00:12:43.799
on on pre flop, and then
she ran a nice bluff at least according

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to her, at the end of
the night. And I caught up with

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her afterwards to chat. And here's
that interview right now, all right,

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Kristin Foxin, how did they go
for you today? It was fun?

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It was uh, a rollercoaster,
very eventful day. Not a smooth day

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00:13:05.440 --> 00:13:09.399
by any means. A lot of
action, a little bit, yeah,

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intense, stressful, but ended on
a very good note. I was going

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00:13:13.480 --> 00:13:16.440
to ask you about that end there. You know, you pick up the

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threes, you call the all in, you flop a set. That must

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feel good to have that momentum going
into day seven, definitely, And I

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got a huge fluff throw for Stephen
Song, so that one really helped.

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00:13:28.000 --> 00:13:33.240
Yeah, yeah, definitely very grateful
for the end. I think I paid

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00:13:33.600 --> 00:13:37.080
Nicholas off in a hand where he
rivered a flush, and yeah, there

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was a it felt a little bit
like I'd gain momentum and then lose and

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00:13:41.279 --> 00:13:46.200
whatever. But yeah, I feel
great. You mentioned Stephen Song, you

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00:13:46.240 --> 00:13:50.440
mentioned Nicholas. Feels like everything's getting
a little bit tougher. How's the competition

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00:13:50.519 --> 00:13:52.159
been as you get closer and closer
to the finish line. Yeah, it

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00:13:52.200 --> 00:13:58.000
seems like the tables are increasingly getting
tough, and certainly the lineup towards the

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end of the day was a lot
tougher for then earlier. And I think

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00:14:01.360 --> 00:14:05.360
that's kind of the nature of the
main event too, because the weaker players,

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00:14:05.639 --> 00:14:09.720
you know, slowly get chipped away
at and maybe make mistakes, especially

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00:14:09.759 --> 00:14:15.360
as the pressure comes on. So
you obviously have a lot of experienced playing

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00:14:15.360 --> 00:14:18.120
poker, You've been on the big
stage many times, but probably nothing like

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00:14:18.279 --> 00:14:22.000
this. Do you feel it does? Is it exciting? How do you

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00:14:22.000 --> 00:14:28.399
stay grounded? What's going through your
mind? Actually feel surprisingly kind of just

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00:14:28.440 --> 00:14:31.360
like in the zone and focus.
I think you know that they talked about

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00:14:31.360 --> 00:14:33.159
going off the stream, and I
was like, I kind of feel good

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00:14:33.159 --> 00:14:37.720
on the stream like it. It
kind of puts like a little bit of

204
00:14:37.720 --> 00:14:41.919
pressure on, but I like it, and I yeah, I think I

205
00:14:41.000 --> 00:14:43.799
just feel kind of comfortable up here. Now. It seemed like you were

206
00:14:43.799 --> 00:14:48.759
picking up a lot of hands today
to play. I mean that must feel

207
00:14:48.799 --> 00:14:52.840
good, right, you're basics of
the main's getting playable hands. It's crazy.

208
00:14:52.879 --> 00:14:56.039
I ran in here and then right
away it was like stressful spots and

209
00:14:56.080 --> 00:14:58.919
then I'm never really you know,
I haven't got a read on anybody,

210
00:15:00.080 --> 00:15:03.120
so I'm like, what is happening
here? You know, you feel like

211
00:15:03.559 --> 00:15:05.360
are they three vetting me light?
Or they do they just have it?

212
00:15:05.480 --> 00:15:09.399
You know what is happening. So
there was some tough spots right away,

213
00:15:09.480 --> 00:15:11.480
a lot of hands. I mean
that was fun. I was saying earlier.

214
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I'm like, wow, I haven't
got aces or kings this whull tournament.

215
00:15:13.879 --> 00:15:16.919
And then it feels like they all
came today. So when you get

216
00:15:16.960 --> 00:15:20.279
to this point in the tournament,
you know there's sixty players left, first

217
00:15:20.279 --> 00:15:22.879
place, ten million, you're really
you know, you're deep in it.

218
00:15:24.559 --> 00:15:26.679
Do you set like kind of an
end goal or is it just like one

219
00:15:26.720 --> 00:15:30.440
hand at a time, take it
as it comes. I just keep telling

220
00:15:30.480 --> 00:15:33.960
myself, like ten hours of poker, you know, we're pretty deep.

221
00:15:33.039 --> 00:15:37.320
I know what to do all the
spots that come up. You know,

222
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I've played many times, so that's
what I'm reminding myself. All right.

223
00:15:41.440 --> 00:15:46.200
That was Kristen Fox and again fourteen
point five million. You know, she

224
00:15:46.279 --> 00:15:50.480
was up on the feature table all
day. Yeah, it was a long

225
00:15:50.480 --> 00:15:56.519
time. Yeah, I would throw
a fit well, but she also said

226
00:15:56.559 --> 00:15:58.799
things I kind of liked. She
kind of liked it. Yeah. I

227
00:16:00.039 --> 00:16:03.840
think it's much a momentum and confidence
thing more than I mean, if you're

228
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if you're winning, I'm assuming you're
gonna be like, yeah, keep me

229
00:16:07.720 --> 00:16:10.039
here. If you're losing, you're
probably gonna be like, hey, guys,

230
00:16:10.080 --> 00:16:12.000
hello, let's go, let's switch
it up. You know, I

231
00:16:12.320 --> 00:16:15.879
understand how that is. I think
she understands the games, of course.

232
00:16:17.799 --> 00:16:21.399
I mean I thought there was a
lot of fun action at all the tables,

233
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to be honest. So we're getting
to that point where you know,

234
00:16:25.639 --> 00:16:30.159
obviously everything is condensing down towards the
final table, and I mean we're we're

235
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in it. You know, these
players are all in it, like you

236
00:16:33.360 --> 00:16:36.879
know, it's it's the real fing
deal now, and you can certainly feel

237
00:16:36.879 --> 00:16:40.840
that the rails are starting to build. The tension is in the air is

238
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certainly getting thicker and thicker. It
seems like by the level, what else

239
00:16:49.639 --> 00:16:55.360
you got for stories I got?
I mean Brian I think Briana Rass is

240
00:16:55.399 --> 00:16:57.919
in there, okay hundred. He's
basically, you know, for those playing

241
00:16:57.919 --> 00:17:03.279
at Lunganham, the yeah, the
Aldi version of Tom Dwan, the what

242
00:17:04.079 --> 00:17:10.720
you know, the Aldi supermarket,
like the kind of cheaper knockoff version of

243
00:17:11.759 --> 00:17:18.160
the what version of what is Australia. It was trying to make some kind

244
00:17:18.160 --> 00:17:22.640
of like pun on Tom Dwan being
you know, Tom Dwan was the online

245
00:17:22.640 --> 00:17:26.279
guy, and I'm saying, like
Leana nine hundred, first of all,

246
00:17:26.279 --> 00:17:30.200
they're entirely different. I know it
didn't work obviously, it's this is a

247
00:17:30.200 --> 00:17:37.640
horrific Tom Dwan was cash cames Leana
nine hundreds tournaments. Yeah, I was

248
00:17:37.720 --> 00:17:38.839
just trying to look it didn't come
up. I didn't have enough time to

249
00:17:38.839 --> 00:17:44.160
prepare the joke. I mean,
Leana nine hundred is like the Michael Jordan

250
00:17:44.240 --> 00:17:49.240
of online poker tournaments. Who is
Chris Mormon? Chris Mormon? No no

251
00:17:49.359 --> 00:17:53.839
shot, who's had who spent more
time number one. You ran the fucking

252
00:17:53.839 --> 00:17:59.200
website. Who's spent more time number
one on Pocket five's lifetime. Chris Mormon

253
00:17:59.319 --> 00:18:04.519
is more like, it's Chris Morman. Chris Mormon is more Kobe Bryant than

254
00:18:06.559 --> 00:18:11.319
Leana nine hundred is Michael Jordan.
That's what it is. Volume shooter Kobe

255
00:18:11.319 --> 00:18:19.160
Bryant versus best tournament player online ever, Lean Knight hundred. I don't know,

256
00:18:19.240 --> 00:18:22.920
man, but shut okay, let's
move on. What do you mean,

257
00:18:23.000 --> 00:18:26.599
let's move on. Chris Mormon's a
volume player online. Man, Okay,

258
00:18:27.000 --> 00:18:30.359
I'm just saying, Lean Night Hunds
is the goat. That's what That's

259
00:18:30.400 --> 00:18:34.480
what. That's what it is.
That's what it is. Anyway, Mormon

260
00:18:34.559 --> 00:18:41.119
playing Trading's true, that's singular.
I think he's plaited a trading. Yeah,

261
00:18:41.279 --> 00:18:45.319
yeah, just just you know,
online crusher, crushing this main event.

262
00:18:45.400 --> 00:18:48.599
You know, I think we always
we used to have that back in

263
00:18:48.640 --> 00:18:52.799
the day, right, you know, the earlier years, and now maybe

264
00:18:52.799 --> 00:18:56.839
it's coming full circle. I still
think that his name is a little more

265
00:18:56.920 --> 00:19:03.559
unknown than it probably should be,
especially Milena. Yeah, especially, yeah,

266
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for sure. I Mean I felt
like I felt like watching the coverage

267
00:19:07.039 --> 00:19:10.480
they had to keep explaining it,
at least the early portion, you know.

268
00:19:11.359 --> 00:19:14.519
I mean, the guy is absolutely
incredible at poker, right, He's

269
00:19:14.640 --> 00:19:18.880
one of the absolute best ever when
it comes to tournament poker, and now

270
00:19:18.920 --> 00:19:22.599
he's on the big stage for everyone
to see it. Played some really good

271
00:19:22.599 --> 00:19:27.480
hands today from what I saw,
so yeah, it was it was fun.

272
00:19:27.559 --> 00:19:33.480
And now he's bringing fifteen point eight
million into day seven. I think

273
00:19:33.519 --> 00:19:37.920
Brian Rass is another one. I
mean I kind of felt like in a

274
00:19:37.960 --> 00:19:44.160
way, Brian Rass was kind of
just hanging around for a much much of

275
00:19:44.200 --> 00:19:48.039
the day, but then he uh
kind of surged like I don't know,

276
00:19:48.079 --> 00:19:52.119
second half of the day or something
like that, ended up bagging twelve million,

277
00:19:52.519 --> 00:19:56.519
six and seventy five thousand, so
Poker Hall of Famer six time goal

278
00:19:56.599 --> 00:19:59.240
brace the winner. I feel like
Rass is going to make this final table.

279
00:19:59.440 --> 00:20:02.559
I really do. Like, I
just feel like it's just kind of

280
00:20:02.559 --> 00:20:07.440
in the cards for him to make
it. So Arthur Morris was funny because

281
00:20:07.559 --> 00:20:10.519
obviously we know him and he's you
know, he plays a PGT regular,

282
00:20:10.680 --> 00:20:15.720
he's Poker Group podcast hat guy now
and all this sort of stuff. I

283
00:20:15.720 --> 00:20:18.599
mean, you just couldn't kill the
guy all day just couldn't kill. We

284
00:20:18.640 --> 00:20:22.759
got to hit on Jesse Kaffs.
That was my third one, probably the

285
00:20:22.799 --> 00:20:26.839
most eccentric player left. I mean, he's just going to use the word

286
00:20:26.920 --> 00:20:32.400
from cringe to cool, the phrase
green from cringing ring cool. Is that

287
00:20:32.440 --> 00:20:33.480
what happened? He went from cringing
to cool. No, I mean,

288
00:20:33.640 --> 00:20:37.440
I'm not sure if he's gotten to
cool, but he's turning the corner.

289
00:20:37.440 --> 00:20:41.599
I feel I feel like we need
him up there. We need we need

290
00:20:41.640 --> 00:20:45.079
the ducks, we need to craziness. I mean, he's he's he's the

291
00:20:45.119 --> 00:20:48.920
wacko. That's what he is.
Like, he's the he's the crazy guy.

292
00:20:49.039 --> 00:20:52.640
You know, he's got seventeen rubber
ducks on the table. I'm not

293
00:20:52.720 --> 00:20:56.680
joking you guys. Watch the coverage. You'll see the rubber ducks. They're

294
00:20:56.720 --> 00:21:02.519
all over the place. His whole
rail is like they got duck stuffed animals.

295
00:21:02.519 --> 00:21:04.839
One guy had a looked like a
duck up blanket wrapped around him like,

296
00:21:06.079 --> 00:21:08.400
I mean, it's just it's it's
duck city out there. Jesse's like

297
00:21:08.480 --> 00:21:12.519
he's got that right, He's got
these shades. He pulls this like I

298
00:21:12.519 --> 00:21:15.680
don't know with this, like next
scarf thing like over his face when he

299
00:21:15.720 --> 00:21:21.119
plays a hand. He's got crazy
bracelets on that are all different colors.

300
00:21:21.119 --> 00:21:23.440
I mean he's like he's a character
for sure. Yea. And we've known

301
00:21:23.480 --> 00:21:26.200
Jesse. We used to he used
to work for Proker News, like and

302
00:21:26.279 --> 00:21:30.440
he's he's always been a little bit
wacky, like in a in a good

303
00:21:30.480 --> 00:21:33.839
way. And he like he's the
character. Like you need, you need

304
00:21:33.880 --> 00:21:37.960
a couple of things in every Wspmian
event. I think, right, you

305
00:21:37.000 --> 00:21:40.960
need the heroes, you need the
villains, then you need the wackos.

306
00:21:41.240 --> 00:21:44.640
Okay, like that's what you need. I remember, I mean not like

307
00:21:44.680 --> 00:21:48.759
wacko, like crazy wackle like fun
wacko. You know, like John hess

308
00:21:48.920 --> 00:21:51.319
a couple of years ago, he
was kind of like the wacko. You

309
00:21:51.359 --> 00:21:52.759
know, he had the colorful jacket, the hat, like he was the

310
00:21:52.799 --> 00:21:56.359
old guy battling with the younger guys, like you know that that type of

311
00:21:56.440 --> 00:22:02.559
wacko. I think Jesse Kapps is
like that type of person. And he's

312
00:22:02.599 --> 00:22:06.079
in there, you know, he's
he played some wild hands. Seemed like

313
00:22:06.079 --> 00:22:08.359
he got lucky a few different times, especially on the turn. In some

314
00:22:08.400 --> 00:22:12.079
spots he played that one hand earlier
where like the guy didn't see that he

315
00:22:12.200 --> 00:22:15.480
was all in, or the guy
didn't see that he wasn't all in.

316
00:22:15.599 --> 00:22:18.200
Dan see that he had one chip
behind. So the guy tabled his hand,

317
00:22:18.279 --> 00:22:22.799
which was King Queen and the flop
was King, like King nine to

318
00:22:22.799 --> 00:22:29.160
five or something whatever, and the
guy had top pair, but Jesse had

319
00:22:29.200 --> 00:22:33.240
tens and like Jesse saw his hand
but then had the chip behind. So

320
00:22:33.279 --> 00:22:36.960
it's like do I call? I
mean, yes, you call because you're

321
00:22:37.279 --> 00:22:41.039
you know, a ten to one
underdog, but there was like two and

322
00:22:41.039 --> 00:22:42.319
a half million out there. You
had to call your last five kit chips,

323
00:22:42.359 --> 00:22:45.079
so you just have to call.
And then he drills a ten on

324
00:22:45.119 --> 00:22:49.240
the turn. He got it all
in. Later in the night with pocket

325
00:22:49.359 --> 00:22:56.079
Jack's up against I think Ace Queen
against Jao, and she flopped an Ace

326
00:22:56.119 --> 00:22:57.400
but he turned to Jack, So
there's that. So, I mean,

327
00:22:57.440 --> 00:23:02.839
it was just it was a Jesse
Kap show, right, He's certainly becoming

328
00:23:02.880 --> 00:23:07.480
a character. M Jesse Strauss.
What. No, we're not calling him

329
00:23:07.519 --> 00:23:11.799
Jesse Strass. Okay, we're just
chipping the chest storry. No, but

330
00:23:11.839 --> 00:23:12.960
he was never down to a chip
in a chair. He said he had

331
00:23:12.960 --> 00:23:17.799
a five k left. Yeah,
but he was in the hand like you

332
00:23:17.839 --> 00:23:21.319
can't. You can't. He didn't
technically have a fight story about the tree

333
00:23:21.359 --> 00:23:25.960
top. He had one like he
played a hand, lost it and like

334
00:23:26.079 --> 00:23:29.839
kept one chip under his napkin or
whatever. No, he went all in.

335
00:23:30.160 --> 00:23:33.359
He like pushed all his chips and
think he was all in. He

336
00:23:33.519 --> 00:23:36.599
got off to it because he thought
he was busted. He went to clean

337
00:23:36.640 --> 00:23:38.640
up his napkin. There's one chip
left. Yeah, I'm sure he like

338
00:23:38.680 --> 00:23:41.079
went to clean up his napkin and
there was one chip left. Yeah,

339
00:23:41.079 --> 00:23:47.319
I'm so sure that that happened.
Put your tinfoil on that to that.

340
00:23:47.519 --> 00:23:48.559
I've heard stories, man, what
do you want me to say? But

341
00:23:48.680 --> 00:23:52.359
Jesse was still in his hand,
so like he still had equity in the

342
00:23:52.359 --> 00:23:55.759
pot, you know, like if
he would have folded that hand and was

343
00:23:55.799 --> 00:23:59.559
left with one chip and a chair, then it's a different story. But

344
00:23:59.599 --> 00:24:02.640
the duck live on and you spoke
with him afterward. All right, let's

345
00:24:02.640 --> 00:24:06.799
play that interview for you right now. I'm here with Jesse Kapps. You

346
00:24:06.880 --> 00:24:08.839
just put five point nine million in
the in your bag. How are you

347
00:24:08.880 --> 00:24:12.880
feeling right now? A feeling fantastic
to be honest with you, like this

348
00:24:14.000 --> 00:24:17.240
is this has been a dream of
mine since I was a kid, and

349
00:24:17.359 --> 00:24:21.119
like unfathomable, like how are we
here? This is? This is so

350
00:24:21.160 --> 00:24:23.920
cool man. Everyone's yeah, you
just mentioned you know, the quantastic everyone's

351
00:24:23.960 --> 00:24:27.119
talking about the ducks. Come on, Phillis in what's the deal with it?

352
00:24:27.160 --> 00:24:30.759
Looks like you've got fourteen ducks out
here right now on the table.

353
00:24:30.799 --> 00:24:33.279
Well, what's what's going on with
him? Only one of the ducks was

354
00:24:33.720 --> 00:24:37.480
I brought to the table. Everybody
else gifted me ducks. So as more

355
00:24:37.480 --> 00:24:41.400
and more fans come, they like
start adorning me with ducks. So all

356
00:24:41.480 --> 00:24:45.319
these ducks you see are ducks that
were given to me by friends. I

357
00:24:45.319 --> 00:24:48.359
know you saw it a little bit
of action in this event. We're not

358
00:24:48.440 --> 00:24:52.160
even talk about how much. But
I'm just wondering, as I actually won

359
00:24:52.240 --> 00:24:55.599
my CC for free as a charity
tournament, so like, yeah, give

360
00:24:55.640 --> 00:24:56.359
it, you know, sell it
a little bit after your friend stuff,

361
00:24:56.359 --> 00:25:00.200
But technically I'm indetermined for free even
better. So I want to know what

362
00:25:00.240 --> 00:25:03.759
would currently guaranteed one hundred and sixty
thousand dollars. What does that mean to

363
00:25:03.839 --> 00:25:07.400
you to lock up such a big
payday like that? Honestly, I've been

364
00:25:07.440 --> 00:25:12.519
telling people this. It's not even
about the money like when I was when

365
00:25:12.559 --> 00:25:15.160
you knew me, when I was
like first starting out being like a reporter.

366
00:25:15.160 --> 00:25:17.720
I just want to be a part
of the action. I wanted to

367
00:25:17.759 --> 00:25:19.559
be a poker ambassador. I try
to do that blog, you know,

368
00:25:19.759 --> 00:25:23.640
make poker fun again, and like
the money's great. Who I honestly,

369
00:25:23.960 --> 00:25:26.160
I care about the money, but
I don't care about the money, if

370
00:25:26.160 --> 00:25:29.640
you know what I mean. Like
it's all about the numbers, Like it's

371
00:25:29.640 --> 00:25:32.839
all about the excitement of the like
oh the pay jobs and stuff, but

372
00:25:32.880 --> 00:25:37.400
they're all just numbers to me.
I mean all four bet rip king nine

373
00:25:37.400 --> 00:25:40.960
offsue if it feels right just to
just because it's what I feel, you

374
00:25:40.960 --> 00:25:42.440
know, Yeah, I don't care. It's not really about the money.

375
00:25:42.440 --> 00:25:47.519
It's just about you know, you
know, am I playing the best hands?

376
00:25:47.680 --> 00:25:49.759
And is it fun? Final question
for me? You got a big,

377
00:25:49.799 --> 00:25:53.000
big rio here brewing. How big
is it going to get if you

378
00:25:53.039 --> 00:25:56.440
make this final table? I mean, I live here, so I guess

379
00:25:56.480 --> 00:26:00.799
I have a home field advantage.
But I mean people from like all walks

380
00:26:00.799 --> 00:26:03.559
of my life, and I am
involved in a lot of different things.

381
00:26:03.640 --> 00:26:10.000
My friends over there are like ravers, I have like childhood friends, just

382
00:26:10.039 --> 00:26:14.119
friends from different areas of life.
They aren't even pokers. So probably you'll

383
00:26:14.160 --> 00:26:18.319
see one of the bigger rails that
you've seen in a long time. Listen,

384
00:26:18.359 --> 00:26:21.240
he's gonna be one of those guys. I already know. You're gonna

385
00:26:21.240 --> 00:26:22.519
watch the coverage. Really gonna love
him. You're gonna hate him one hundred

386
00:26:22.519 --> 00:26:26.319
percent. Like there's no there's not
really gonna be any sort of in between,

387
00:26:26.960 --> 00:26:30.200
but entertainment value. I think he's
delivering. He's bringing it. He

388
00:26:30.240 --> 00:26:33.839
plays kind of unorthodox. I've played
with him before. I think last year

389
00:26:33.839 --> 00:26:37.559
in the main event, he showed
up on My Day one or yeah,

390
00:26:37.599 --> 00:26:41.240
my Day one day with fucking seven
ducks, Like and I know Jesse and

391
00:26:41.359 --> 00:26:44.279
like you know, he's just he's
trying to talk to you and like he's

392
00:26:44.400 --> 00:26:47.000
being whacky and whatever, and he's
just like, Jesse, shut up,

393
00:26:47.119 --> 00:26:51.319
like I mean, like you know, just like just do what you're doing.

394
00:26:51.839 --> 00:26:55.079
Brian Kim making another run. Yeah, Oh, we gotta talk about

395
00:26:55.079 --> 00:26:59.680
this hand with Luis Vasquez and Sammy
besha Head aka a Dealer. You saw

396
00:26:59.759 --> 00:27:07.119
it straight flush versus full House.
I believe the flop was Jack Jack ten

397
00:27:07.920 --> 00:27:14.440
with two spades, turn seven of
spades. The river was whatever. I

398
00:27:14.480 --> 00:27:18.160
think they got the money huh queen, Yeah, I think the river was

399
00:27:18.200 --> 00:27:22.240
a queen. They got the money
in on the river and besha Head had

400
00:27:22.319 --> 00:27:26.640
jack seven so flop trips turned the
full house. Luis Vasquez had eight nine

401
00:27:26.680 --> 00:27:32.519
of spades, turned a straight flush. I mean this happened with seventy players,

402
00:27:32.559 --> 00:27:34.599
seventy seventy or seventy six players left
in the wspmin event. I mean,

403
00:27:34.599 --> 00:27:40.759
what in the universe is happening?
So there was that besha Head was

404
00:27:40.799 --> 00:27:44.880
left with like five hundred K or
so, so you know, very short.

405
00:27:44.880 --> 00:27:48.240
I think the big line at the
time was one hundred and twenty K,

406
00:27:48.599 --> 00:27:51.720
and he ends up busting from there. I mean, I mean,

407
00:27:51.759 --> 00:27:55.079
what are you gonna do? I
mean, that's just a brutal cooler for

408
00:27:55.200 --> 00:27:57.960
him, trying to find out where
exactly he went out seventy fourth place for

409
00:27:57.960 --> 00:28:02.400
one hundred and twenty k. So, you know, good run for Sammy

410
00:28:02.480 --> 00:28:07.200
ultimately not what he wanted in the
end, but the ultimate cooler. Just

411
00:28:07.200 --> 00:28:11.200
some other players that busted out today. I know, we lost Reren Lynn

412
00:28:11.480 --> 00:28:15.279
at one point, Jesse, we
lost no Jesse Lows we lost yesterday.

413
00:28:15.319 --> 00:28:17.960
Actually he didn't make it through.
We have to correct ourselves in that he

414
00:28:18.039 --> 00:28:22.839
was not the DNR he did bus
yesterday at some point. How many players

415
00:28:22.880 --> 00:28:26.400
do they come back with today,
one sixty or something like that. Yes,

416
00:28:26.079 --> 00:28:30.319
we lost Christopher Bramer. Today,
we lost Leonard Mao. Today,

417
00:28:32.039 --> 00:28:37.880
we lost Tony Dunst. Today,
we lost Jake Farrow. Today we lost

418
00:28:37.920 --> 00:28:42.839
Alex Ponokaws. We lost Joe Tahan. We lost Daniel Anderson aka d moon,

419
00:28:44.839 --> 00:28:52.000
Casey Stewart today, Troy Quinnville.
Today I mentioned Sammy beshahead boo ding,

420
00:28:52.480 --> 00:28:56.240
Nick Howard, uh poker coach Mark
Wolpert, shout out Mark Wolpert.

421
00:28:56.279 --> 00:29:00.759
Second place and the seniors have been
for four and fifty. He's gonna add

422
00:29:00.759 --> 00:29:03.960
another one hundred and forty thousand dollars
score to his record. Here he bows

423
00:29:04.000 --> 00:29:08.480
out in sixty fifth place. We
lost Danny Tang today. He got it

424
00:29:08.519 --> 00:29:15.880
all in good ace ten of clubs
versus ACE seven versus jiao. She flopped

425
00:29:15.880 --> 00:29:18.039
a seven, he flopped a flush
draw, he turned a broadway draw,

426
00:29:18.079 --> 00:29:22.240
and he couldn't hit on the river. So we lose him as well.

427
00:29:22.279 --> 00:29:23.880
And then I think on the final
hand of the day. Today we lost.

428
00:29:23.880 --> 00:29:32.079
Carlos called us in sixtieth place.
That brings us down to fifty nine

429
00:29:32.079 --> 00:29:37.680
players again, all guaranteed one hundred
and sixty thousand dollars. I guess we

430
00:29:37.720 --> 00:29:40.200
got a draft. Do you want
another chop value for us? Yeah?

431
00:29:40.240 --> 00:29:42.599
Yeah, fuck yeah, I'm playing
chop value seven hundred and ninety one thousand,

432
00:29:42.599 --> 00:29:47.799
seven hundred and twenty two. Yeah, we got a draft. Let's

433
00:29:47.799 --> 00:29:52.640
go through yesterday's lineup. You had
Stevensong winning for twenty five K Fantasy Yeah,

434
00:29:52.759 --> 00:29:57.079
and Christino anymore. Brian cam Nicholas
asked that they are all still in.

435
00:29:57.279 --> 00:30:00.440
You have people that bat at Jesse
Honest, Fred Land, Tony Don's,

436
00:30:00.720 --> 00:30:04.599
Dannielle Anderson, Joe t Han.
I also Jesse Lowns was never in.

437
00:30:07.039 --> 00:30:10.519
Well you did drafting though, I
know, but that was our mistake.

438
00:30:10.759 --> 00:30:12.440
We thought he'd be the DNR,
but he wasn't. I also had

439
00:30:12.640 --> 00:30:18.319
Chrissy Fox, and Nicholas asked that
on my team, I have Chrissy Winning.

440
00:30:18.559 --> 00:30:22.119
I also have Arthur Morris, Brian
rass Do Yogo Coela. They're all

441
00:30:22.160 --> 00:30:26.240
silly in My players eliminated Red land
Mark Walpa, Carlos Kaltis who you just

442
00:30:26.240 --> 00:30:33.319
mentioned in Sammy the Dela. So
it's time to draft. I'm in the

443
00:30:33.359 --> 00:30:38.759
mood to have nine absolute killers,
Okay, at the final table. That's

444
00:30:38.799 --> 00:30:45.440
what I'm in the mood for.
So I'm gonna start with Kristin Foxen,

445
00:30:45.960 --> 00:30:52.319
got it. I'm gonna add lean
in nine hundred AKA Nicholas Astet, Brian

446
00:30:52.480 --> 00:30:56.240
Rast's put him in there, Brian
Kim, Let's put him in there.

447
00:30:59.319 --> 00:31:07.920
Let's put but Orson Young in there, Stevens Song. I've been taking anyone

448
00:31:07.920 --> 00:31:11.440
in the top seven chip counts,
by the way, for what it's with.

449
00:31:11.200 --> 00:31:15.480
What do you want me to do? I don't. Let's go Jegor

450
00:31:15.640 --> 00:31:19.039
Morose. Put him in for the
Ryo. I mean the rails a bonus.

451
00:31:19.720 --> 00:31:22.799
He's been seems like he's been playing
super well. Okay, we're drafting

452
00:31:22.880 --> 00:31:26.720
like the final title we want,
so I think that's part of it.

453
00:31:26.079 --> 00:31:29.680
I think that's the bonus. That's
why I just want. I want you.

454
00:31:30.559 --> 00:31:33.279
I want whoever the best nine players
are in this tournament field. I

455
00:31:33.319 --> 00:31:37.839
want them to make it. Okay, I don't know if these people are

456
00:31:37.880 --> 00:31:40.599
the best. I'm trying to pick
players that I know are probably really good

457
00:31:40.599 --> 00:31:42.599
players, but I don't know.
I just I just want absolute crushers.

458
00:31:44.440 --> 00:31:48.359
How many? How many have I
picked? You have? I know?

459
00:31:48.440 --> 00:31:52.480
I said I gotta pick absolute crushers, but I gotta throw Jesse KapS just

460
00:31:52.480 --> 00:31:56.400
just because, just because, right, and then let's throw in uh,

461
00:31:56.319 --> 00:32:05.119
let's throw in uh Alexander shill Go
Alexander Shilko, the winner of the PSPC,

462
00:32:06.039 --> 00:32:09.039
say one more time, She'll go
He's not in there? Yes,

463
00:32:09.079 --> 00:32:15.160
he is in there. S Hy, you said Alexander, didn't I didn't

464
00:32:15.160 --> 00:32:19.480
have the spelling right, Oh yeah, it's Ali. I mean, I'm

465
00:32:19.480 --> 00:32:22.039
pretty sure it's said Alexander. That's
an okay thing. I'm gonna beat you

466
00:32:22.079 --> 00:32:25.200
today. Okay, go ahead,
got Fox and I've got asked that.

467
00:32:25.440 --> 00:32:31.680
I'm going for fun caps. You're
my third pick. That Ray is going

468
00:32:31.720 --> 00:32:35.880
to be crazy. You know what
we need to We need to head a

469
00:32:35.880 --> 00:32:38.119
little internationally, all right, I'm
gonna bring it. I'm gonna keep my

470
00:32:38.160 --> 00:32:45.960
Portuguese guy because we lost one,
so I'm gonna keep Diogo Coelo. I

471
00:32:45.960 --> 00:32:49.640
think I have to go now Japanese. I'm going to international. I think

472
00:32:49.680 --> 00:32:52.079
the media hype will be pretty big
for him. What's his name? Where

473
00:32:52.160 --> 00:32:57.839
he go Hierroki Yeah, Hierroarchi nawa. We need a Brazilian, just one.

474
00:32:57.839 --> 00:33:00.240
Which one should we go with?
Okay, we're going with. You're

475
00:33:00.319 --> 00:33:05.039
so need an old man? I
lost Walper, need an old old man.

476
00:33:05.200 --> 00:33:09.240
So Russell Rosenboom, welcome to the
team. How many is that one

477
00:33:09.319 --> 00:33:15.079
to need an old man? You're
old, You're on the team. That's

478
00:33:15.119 --> 00:33:21.359
seven. I have a friend that
has a piece of Tomayo, so I

479
00:33:21.359 --> 00:33:24.119
think that would be fun to see
him on the rail and kind of by

480
00:33:24.200 --> 00:33:30.920
proxy have a bit of a sweat. So I'm adding Jonathan Tamayo. And

481
00:33:31.000 --> 00:33:38.279
we're going to close it off with
Spain's undressed Gonzales because Spanish is going to

482
00:33:38.319 --> 00:33:43.039
be crazy. I'm going for rail
more than crushes. We're very different our

483
00:33:43.079 --> 00:33:47.079
teams, but mine, I feel
like we could be entertaining for our watching

484
00:33:47.200 --> 00:33:52.599
or being here and hearing chance and
and that kind of that's the vibe.

485
00:33:52.599 --> 00:33:54.880
I'm going for vibes. As jay
Rene would say, it's all about the

486
00:33:54.960 --> 00:33:59.920
vibes. It's all about the vibe, all about the vibes. You know,

487
00:34:00.200 --> 00:34:02.720
you know who says it's all about
the vibes. People who don't have

488
00:34:02.759 --> 00:34:08.719
any vibes. Wow an insult.
I'm okay, that's such a ridiculous saying.

489
00:34:08.800 --> 00:34:12.719
It's all about the vibes. That's
what my table is all about.

490
00:34:12.760 --> 00:34:15.880
The wait, we didn't pick a
winner. I'm still saying with Christy Fox,

491
00:34:16.239 --> 00:34:23.599
you gotta pick Kristen Fox. He's
letting he's letting you down. He

492
00:34:23.599 --> 00:34:25.880
hasn't let me down. He's got
he count us the field blowns. I

493
00:34:25.880 --> 00:34:29.599
mean, whatever that happens, he's
on today seven. He can spin it

494
00:34:29.679 --> 00:34:37.719
up from there. I got one
more thing before we move off to the

495
00:34:37.760 --> 00:34:43.480
main event. You got anything else
that No, it's just segment called w

496
00:34:43.639 --> 00:34:47.280
SP Main Event. By the numbers. Oh god, I'm just gonna raffle

497
00:34:47.320 --> 00:34:51.960
off some numbers that I can't wait
for this nonsense. This is what do

498
00:34:52.039 --> 00:34:55.519
you mean? Nonsense? I would
just apply total prize money for four forty

499
00:34:55.559 --> 00:35:04.519
seventh place are st player Thomas gian
Domenico eighty three youngest player with there's an

500
00:35:04.519 --> 00:35:07.480
eighty three year old still left.
No, no, this is this is

501
00:35:07.559 --> 00:35:10.280
like the main event, the whole
main youngest player. Wait, can't be

502
00:35:10.679 --> 00:35:15.320
obviously he's twenty one. It was
June fifth, so he's twenty one and

503
00:35:16.000 --> 00:35:20.679
thirty days. Yeah, a little
bit less. Twenty eight came out Players

504
00:35:20.719 --> 00:35:23.639
three hundred and fifty eight. Okay, but like that number was small.

505
00:35:24.039 --> 00:35:30.199
Yeah, usually tracks around three percent. Okay. I want to see if

506
00:35:30.199 --> 00:35:35.960
you can guess the top. I
think you can get the top five US

507
00:35:36.000 --> 00:35:42.000
states by participation US. That's what
I said. California correct number one,

508
00:35:43.119 --> 00:35:46.840
Nevada correct number two. Sorry for
reference, California was eleven hundred and ten

509
00:35:46.880 --> 00:35:52.800
players, Nevada seven ninety seven,
Florida correct six hundred and sixty two.

510
00:35:52.039 --> 00:35:58.079
I'm going to roll crushing this.
See how far you can go. Let's

511
00:35:58.079 --> 00:36:01.119
see if you're not going to get
nine. No chance. New York,

512
00:36:01.480 --> 00:36:06.119
yes, four hundred and sixty six. Have I gotten them in order?

513
00:36:06.199 --> 00:36:07.320
Oh? Wait? No, no, so you said no, no,

514
00:36:07.320 --> 00:36:09.159
no, sorry you missed one.
New York was fifth? Yeah, okay,

515
00:36:09.280 --> 00:36:15.559
my fourth fourth. So I have
California, Nevada, Florida, and

516
00:36:15.599 --> 00:36:21.000
then New York, Texas. Yeap, Texas had five hundred and twenty three.

517
00:36:21.119 --> 00:36:25.639
Now you need number six Pennsylvania.
Ooh close, they were eight one

518
00:36:25.639 --> 00:36:31.599
to seventy seven. You're read that
right area of the country. You're in

519
00:36:31.639 --> 00:36:36.199
the right area. Wait wait a
sec is that a state? Wait,

520
00:36:36.239 --> 00:36:37.840
I'm not very good state, not
very good at states. I didn't think

521
00:36:37.880 --> 00:36:43.800
it's great. It has to be. This is riveting radio riveting. I'm

522
00:36:43.880 --> 00:36:51.840
sure you need New York, Rhode
Island, Connecticut, not West Virginia,

523
00:36:52.360 --> 00:36:58.159
Baltimore, No or sorry, Maryland, New Jersey, New Jersey. Yeah,

524
00:36:58.199 --> 00:37:00.280
yah, two thirty four. Uh, noise, I mean I should

525
00:37:00.440 --> 00:37:04.440
I'm an idiot. I should have
guessed Illinois seven two fifteen. You mentioned

526
00:37:04.440 --> 00:37:09.320
Pennsylvania one seventy, Arizona one seventy
three, Massachusetts one sixty nine. Total.

527
00:37:09.679 --> 00:37:13.719
How many states do you, guys? Have? Fifty? All states

528
00:37:13.760 --> 00:37:19.440
participated? Okay? Uh? Top
ten countries by participants in the USA?

529
00:37:20.199 --> 00:37:22.679
Well done? How many do you
think? Is this just man of men?

530
00:37:23.079 --> 00:37:28.280
This is just how many do you
think percentage wise? Fifty seven?

531
00:37:28.920 --> 00:37:32.199
No? Sixty six point nine?
All right, second country? You can

532
00:37:32.239 --> 00:37:37.519
get the top second country, or
I think you can get the top six.

533
00:37:37.639 --> 00:37:43.440
I think you can name eight of
the ten. There was only ten

534
00:37:43.480 --> 00:37:47.039
countries. Lady gave me ten asks
for all of them. Haven't you just

535
00:37:47.119 --> 00:37:52.920
named some countries on the ten?
England? Yeah, they were second,

536
00:37:52.639 --> 00:37:58.920
Spain not at all. Brazil.
Brazil was six with one point five percent.

537
00:37:59.199 --> 00:38:02.280
United Kingdom had five point one percent. Germany. Germany was eighth one

538
00:38:02.679 --> 00:38:09.360
three percent, France fourth two point
two percent, Canada third four point seven

539
00:38:09.360 --> 00:38:15.039
percent. I haven't gotten number two
rate. No, you got to you

540
00:38:15.079 --> 00:38:16.920
got one, two, three,
two two was United Kingdom. Oh,

541
00:38:17.000 --> 00:38:22.159
sorry, you need five, seven, nine and ten. I don't think

542
00:38:22.199 --> 00:38:29.760
you get seven unless you're really smart. China No, I just feel like

543
00:38:29.800 --> 00:38:34.519
I've seen a lot of Chinese people. Argentina, Nope, I don't know.

544
00:38:34.719 --> 00:38:37.960
Go ahead. Japan was fifth one
hundred and fifty eight. Seventh,

545
00:38:37.320 --> 00:38:40.360
very surprising. Austria one point four. But I think that mean that's not

546
00:38:40.760 --> 00:38:44.079
I think that's a lot of people
that are like from Germany, that are

547
00:38:44.119 --> 00:38:45.960
just declaring is Austrian, et cetera, et cetera for the tax reasons?

548
00:38:46.880 --> 00:38:53.320
Tenth Israel, big big tick up
in Israel. Yet number nine the Kangaroo

549
00:38:53.480 --> 00:38:59.079
Crew. Wow, Australia five of
us. I thought about guess in Australia,

550
00:38:59.119 --> 00:39:01.199
but then I was like, n
one hundred and twenty five Austrillions here

551
00:39:01.880 --> 00:39:05.239
title, I've seen them all.
How many countries in the world is that

552
00:39:05.239 --> 00:39:07.360
one hundred and eighty eight? I
got no idea. Well one hundred and

553
00:39:07.360 --> 00:39:13.280
eight countries participated. So that's some
main events. That's to chew on,

554
00:39:13.599 --> 00:39:15.000
Hey what do we what else we
got? We got some other events.

555
00:39:15.000 --> 00:39:20.840
We got the one KPLO mystery Banley
wrapped up Germany. Sasha Wilhelm won that

556
00:39:21.079 --> 00:39:24.599
for his first bracelet in two hundred
and eighty two thousand dollars ten K eight

557
00:39:24.679 --> 00:39:30.800
game. It was at four,
but Mike Watson had literal peanuts when I

558
00:39:30.840 --> 00:39:37.440
wrote this quick refresh YEP. Mike
Watson out Carvin Anderson, crushing over Die

559
00:39:37.519 --> 00:39:42.159
Ishibashi and Ali Islami. They are
currently guaranteed one hundred and eighty two K

560
00:39:42.280 --> 00:39:47.639
first is four one hundred and thirteen
fifteen hundred PLO six max bagged at the

561
00:39:47.639 --> 00:39:52.840
final table of six. They're all
guaranteed forty six K versus two hundred and

562
00:39:52.920 --> 00:39:59.079
sixty nine long tran leading Mike Lea
Joseph Sanders also at the final table.

563
00:39:59.440 --> 00:40:05.480
The three K horse will jump over
to that's got says nineteen, but I'm

564
00:40:05.480 --> 00:40:10.039
pretty sure it's less than that.
Seventeen players. Our boy Paul Campbell was

565
00:40:10.199 --> 00:40:15.280
chip leader forever. He's given away
a million chips. He's down at eighth.

566
00:40:15.559 --> 00:40:17.880
We'll ram Chu now chip leader,
head of John Raisner, your boy,

567
00:40:17.920 --> 00:40:22.679
Gary Bolden and our boy David Odi
b Baker, Siln contention, Jeremy

568
00:40:22.719 --> 00:40:29.960
osmas As mentioned Paul Campbell and he's
male bo Jang and stud champion a Rush

569
00:40:30.039 --> 00:40:35.119
Gahanian rounding out. That's seventeen.
That is definitely oh yeah, it's three

570
00:40:35.159 --> 00:40:39.440
D, so it can be coming
back tomorrow underway Today Day one B the

571
00:40:39.440 --> 00:40:44.400
three K. We had a five
hundred and ninety one players surviving, Dusty

572
00:40:44.440 --> 00:40:49.280
Smith, Chipleader, some players through
Borrows, collib Brooke Wilson at Jeff Madsen

573
00:40:49.320 --> 00:40:52.920
called Gussie a chance corner, Ryan
Lank, Tristaway, Chris Finichin, Eugene

574
00:40:52.920 --> 00:40:55.280
Todd Brow, Jeremy Becker, and
Connor Dryan and another van kicked off to

575
00:40:55.360 --> 00:40:59.679
day fifty K. No them hold
him hi Roller one hundred and fifty entrance

576
00:41:00.000 --> 00:41:04.880
fifty six bag. There's forty minutes
of late registration on Saturday. Ship leader

577
00:41:05.679 --> 00:41:09.039
Joseph Chung three point three to five
million, Eric Saidel, David Peters,

578
00:41:09.079 --> 00:41:15.400
bres Gatten, Michael Manchek in the
top five. Interesting note about Jason Chung.

579
00:41:15.480 --> 00:41:19.800
He made the ten k WSP online
final table, so there was a

580
00:41:19.920 --> 00:41:23.599
chance that he could be at the
final table of this and the final table

581
00:41:23.639 --> 00:41:28.320
of that. Good problem to be
in in my opinion. I mean,

582
00:41:28.440 --> 00:41:31.000
yeah, I guess so, Like
I said, one level of registration lifting

583
00:41:31.039 --> 00:41:35.760
that the three K mid Sakes Championship. There is also a level of registration

584
00:41:35.840 --> 00:41:40.159
in that on Saturday morning, so
I got to give a shout out yep,

585
00:41:40.159 --> 00:41:45.280
because you brought up the three K
mid Stakes Championship. So our friend

586
00:41:45.280 --> 00:41:52.159
friend of the podcast, Mo Nuwara, who cashed in the main event for

587
00:41:52.199 --> 00:41:55.760
I think forty K in his first
EVERSP main event. He's currently one of

588
00:41:55.880 --> 00:42:02.079
nine in the WSP dot com online
bracelet evant the one K p l O

589
00:42:02.159 --> 00:42:07.000
six Max Championship. He also bagged
three hundred and forty thousand in the three

590
00:42:07.079 --> 00:42:15.599
K four that's the tenth highest,
tenth biggest stack on one B So looking

591
00:42:15.639 --> 00:42:19.079
pretty good, mister. I mean, I guess he's still staying with me.

592
00:42:19.400 --> 00:42:22.440
I mean, when does this three
K thing end? Because I think

593
00:42:22.440 --> 00:42:27.119
he has a fight. I think
I think it's well, he wasn't gonna

594
00:42:27.119 --> 00:42:30.079
play this because his flight, So
I guess he's gonna have to move his

595
00:42:30.079 --> 00:42:32.679
foot again. Good problem to have, yeah. It is always this good

596
00:42:32.920 --> 00:42:37.400
problem to have, all right,
I mean, listen, stay seven of

597
00:42:37.440 --> 00:42:44.119
the main baby, let's go,
let's go. I think do they do

598
00:42:44.159 --> 00:42:49.039
they have the do they have the
table? Drop? Yeah? Oh?

599
00:42:49.119 --> 00:42:53.639
I mean look at this table.
Nicholas Astette or sorry, Kristen Foxin is

600
00:42:53.679 --> 00:43:00.280
in seat one, Nicholas Astette is
in seat two, Brian Rass is in

601
00:43:00.360 --> 00:43:06.000
seat six. Pretty good. Shun
Dan Jao the other woman is in ceed

602
00:43:06.039 --> 00:43:08.920
eight. Pretty good. I mean
that's just that's the best fulm. That's

603
00:43:08.960 --> 00:43:13.000
the best table by far. I
don't even care what the other tables are.

604
00:43:15.039 --> 00:43:20.000
What are some of the other tables. You got orson young Jonathan Tomio,

605
00:43:20.159 --> 00:43:24.679
Brian Kim and Stephen Song at another
table. That's a good one,

606
00:43:24.360 --> 00:43:32.000
ye Joe Sarh Rock Yeah, no
one really had his caps diego oh yeah,

607
00:43:32.119 --> 00:43:37.000
I mean that's Caps cass Caps right
here. I don't know if you

608
00:43:37.159 --> 00:43:42.480
go is there, but you got
Russell Rosenboom, you got Caps, you

609
00:43:42.559 --> 00:43:46.400
got Jason James, the tag team
winner, and you got Brandon Kntu.

610
00:43:47.679 --> 00:43:52.119
You got least Luis Vasquez at that
table. Louis Vasquez is an active player.

611
00:43:52.800 --> 00:43:55.920
It's gone back to our Titans,
we jofted. I think we need

612
00:43:55.960 --> 00:44:00.480
to put some more value. We
should put more value on Brandon cant because

613
00:44:00.519 --> 00:44:02.719
having Brandon Cantu means we might not
fill home with on the Rhyo for the

614
00:44:02.760 --> 00:44:07.880
main event. Well, we're getting
Phil Helmies to walk up onto the stage

615
00:44:07.920 --> 00:44:10.719
no matter what happens. Yeah,
that's so I don't like, I don't

616
00:44:10.760 --> 00:44:14.320
care if Brandon can'toos they or not. You're gonna get You're gonna get Phil.

617
00:44:14.360 --> 00:44:17.559
Hemmiys is what I'm saying. So
so, yeah, all right,

618
00:44:17.559 --> 00:44:21.599
cool, that's gonna do it for
us. Not too long of a pod,

619
00:44:21.679 --> 00:44:24.159
but it's almost two a m.
So we got to get our asses

620
00:44:24.159 --> 00:44:30.440
out here because day seven of the
w s o P. Tim thinks it's

621
00:44:30.440 --> 00:44:32.639
gonna be a long one. I
have no opinion. I'm hoping it's not

622
00:44:32.679 --> 00:44:37.440
gonna be a long one. We'll
see. We will already watch all the

623
00:44:37.519 --> 00:44:40.360
action on at poker go dot com. You fish, Let's go. My

624
00:44:40.480 --> 00:44:43.920
name is Donny Peters. His name
is Tim Duckworth. We'll talk to you

625
00:44:43.960 --> 00:45:04.079
guys on the next episode. So
you oh h

