Sam Von Duhn Grabs Chip Lead on
Last Hand of Championship Day Two
Jeff Banghart started day two of the WSOP Circuit championship event at Horseshoe Casino Council Bluffs as the chip leader, and relentlessly built his lead from there. But on the last hand of the day, Sam Van Duhn, a 35-year-old pro from Chicago, knocked out the 10th player to set the final table for tomorrow and take the lead with 444,500 chips. The winner of the final event will receive $219,576, a seat in the WSOP $10,000 event later this year, and a gold trophy ring.
Day two started with the 42 survivors from the day before returning at noon, hoping to make the final table. Level eight got underway with blinds of 600-1,200 and 200 antes. Banghart, with 86,800 chips, had the lead.
Nine players were eliminated in the round, with Banghart increasing his lead. Blinds were now 800-1,600 with 200 antes.
Only one woman, Deb Blair, a call center manager from Tucson, Arizona, made a final table in the preceding seven events, finishing eighth in the $1,500 no-limit contest. She went out in this round with three tables left when her pocket aces ran into a set of 8s. Soon after, the other remaining lady, Krista Gifford, was beaten by pocket aces to make this an all-male party.
After the level ended, blinds went to 1,000-2,000 with 300 antes. Banghart had increased his lead with more than 200,000 chips. We got down to the final 18 players who made the money when two others went broke at separate tables and tied for 19th place.
First player to cash out, in 18th place, was Matt Infranca, who went out near the end of level 10. He and the next two players out would collect $8,132. Blinds were now 1,500-3,000 with 400 antes. On a tear, Banghart had now upped his lead to about 300,000.
Level 11 saw four more players knocked out, and the remaining 12 returned from dinner playing with 2,000-4,000 blinds and 500 antes. Banghart was even farther in the lead now with close to 400,000 chips, nearly twice as many as anyone else.
Things slowed down considerably at this level, with only one more player eliminated. There were about seven more all-ins, but players escaped each of those times.
Now the blinds were 3,000-6,000, with 500 antes. Several players were short stacked, and for once, Banghart had not increased his lead, dropping down slightly.
It took only four minutes at the new level to lose player number 11 when Ray Flavin,all in with a paired jack, succumbed to a set of 8s on the river.
The 10 finalists now regrouped at one table, ready to lose a final player. Ten minutes later the deed was done. Von Duhn let out a piercing scream when, holding A-K, he turned an ace to beat pocket kings held by Jeff Bryan.
The final nine will return at 2 p.m. to battle it out for the championship.
Seats and chip counts
SEAT 1 Everett Carlton St. Paul, MN 42,000
SEAT 2 Kosta Sengos Sioux Falls, SD 210,000
SEAT 3 Sam Von Duhn Chicago, IL 444,500
SEAT 4 John Kincaid Omaha, NE 56,000
SEAT 5 Paul Kraus Los Angeles,CA 104,000
SEAT 6 Thadd Wolf Omaha, NE 70,000
SEAT 7 Doug Carli Alliance, OH 80,000
SEAT 8 Larry Vance Torrance, CA 81,000
SEAT 9 Jeff Banghart Bennington, NE 330,000
PAYOUTS
10.Jeff Bryan Fort Calhoun, NE $10,843
11.Ray Flavin Woodstock, IL $10,843
12.James Jewett Meridian, SD $10,843
13.Sean Johnson Chamberlain, SD $9,488
14.James English Tamarac, FL $9,488
15. Danny Ciaramella Grays Landing, PA $9,488
16.Brian Gabrielle Moosamin, Can. $8,132
17.David Wintroub Omaha, NE $8,132
18.Matthew Infranca Blue Springs, MA $8,132
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