2016 WSOP Day 16: Mercier Shines Again, Le Takes a Bracelet, Riess on the Rise

6 min read
Danny Le

As he has all week, Jason Mercier stole the headlines on Day 16 of the 2016 World Series of Poker.

One day removed from a runner-up finish in his effort to win back-to-back $10,000 championship-level events, Mercier grabbed the chip lead in the $10,000 H.O.R.S.E. Championship and will be looking to win a fifth career bracelet, and his second of the summer, when the event's final day plays out on Friday.

Day 15 also saw a winner crowned in Event #22: $1,500 Limit Hold'em, Event #21: $3,000 Six-Max No-Limit Hold'em play down to five, and Event #21: $2,000 No-Limit Hold'em find its final 27.

Plus, two new events kicked off.

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Mercier Leads in $10K H.O.R.S.E.

Jason Mercier has taken up permanent residence in the Amazon Room, running deep in his third straight $10,000 championship-level event.

After winning the title for Event #16: $10,000 No-Limit 2-7 Single Draw Championship, he immediately hopped in Event #20: $10,000 Razz Championship and ultimately finished runner-up. Within minutes of that heads-up match, he late-registered Event #24: $10,000 H.O.R.S.E. Championship, and after two days of play, Mercier will take the chip lead into the event's final day on Friday with just 14 players remaining.

Top 8 Chip Counts

RankPlayerChip Count
1Jason Mercier1,597,000.
2Jesse Martin1,244,000.
3Nick Schulman1,170,000
4Bryn Kenney708,000
5Mikhail Semin684,000
6Yuval Bronshtein577,000
7Douglas Lorgeree519,000
8James Obst466,000

A $422,874 first-place prize and a WSOP bracelet awaits the winner in this one, but could be worth even more to Mercier, as he has a number of bets on winning multiple bracelets this year, including one that will pay $1.8 million if he can win three.

Mike Sexton bubbled the money and players who cashed, but failed to advance included Chris Ferguson, Erik Seidel, Roland Israelashvili, David Benyamine, Daniel Alaei, and Jason Somerville.

Play will resume at 2 p.m. with plans to play down to an eight-handed final table, and ultimately, a champion.

Danny Le Wins the $1,500 Limit

California poker pro Danny Le won Event #22: $1,500 Limit Hold'em on Thursday night.

"I finally got a gold bracelet," Le said. "I can��t believe it."

After three days of poker, Le got the best of a 665-player field filled with some of the best limit Hold'em players the world. Originally from Vietnam, Le earned $188,815 for the win, marking the biggest score of his career. He started the event's final day as chip leader and only fell out of it briefly during three-handed play.

Runner-up Scott Farnsworth reportedly thought he was entering a no-limit hold'em tournament and was forced to learn the game on the fly. As it turned out, instead of paying for lessons, Farnsworth was paid $116,663.

Final Table Results

PlacePlayerPrize
1Danny Le$188,815
2Scott Farnsworth$116,663
3Tyler Bonkowski$80,706
4Dave Tobin$56,740
5Dale Eberle$40,550
6Dustin Bush$29,466
7Andrew Beversdorf$21,778
8Daniel Huseman$16,376
9Esmeralda Villafuerte$12,532

Givens Looking for Bracelet No. 2, Negreanu Falls Short in $3K Six-Max

Event #21: $3,000 Six-Max No-Limit Hold'em was scheduled to play down to a winner on Thursday, but the final five players decided to bag up and call it a night to return for one final battle on Friday.

Fast-rising Colorado native Will Givens will have pole position when the tournament resumes, toting 6.03 million with blinds set to head to Level 31 (60,000/120,000/20,000). Givens is looking for his second bracelet after taking down a $1,000 no-limit hold'em event in 2014 for $306,634.

Joining Givens for the unscheduled Day 4 will be Calvin Lee (4.25 million), Mark Herm (2.77 million), Martin Kozlov (1.555 million), and Steven Thompson Vila (835,000). None has tasted WSOP gold before.

Twenty-six players began the day, and two very notable eliminations occurred back-to-back in 19th and 18th. First, Daniel Negreanu, down to his last 12 big blinds, pushed all in over a raise from Andros Ioakimides with the K?10? and found himself at risk against Ioakimides' 10?10?. A ten-high flop and a brick turn signaled the end for "Kid Poker."

Then, defending champ Justin Liberto, after losing a race to Alex Queen for a chunk of his stack, saw his bid for a second straight bracelet in this event end. He called off his last 16 big blinds with the K?7? when Kozlov pushed from the small blind with the 6?6?, and the board ran out dry for both players, keeping Kozlov's sixes in the lead.

The last five players will return at 12 p.m. Las Vegas time with a first-place prize of $531,577 on the line.

Riess Bags Big in Event #25

The 11 a.m. event for Thursday was Event #25: $2,500 No-Limit Hold'em, and 2013 WSOP Main Event champ Ryan Riess was among the players advancing with a big stack, putting 155,000 in the bag to sit in sixth place when Day 2 gets underway.

Riess has yet to really put together a signature performance in the years since his Main Event win, but he's in good position to possibly do so after 10 levels of play.

The tournament drew 1,045 players, and 228 survived Day 1. With 157 places paid, the money should be reached fairly early on Friday. Chip leader Chuc Nguyen (196,600), Shankar Pillai (180,000), Bryan Piccioli (149,700), Jason Koon (115,600), Taylor Paur (86,000), and Negreanu (64,200) are a few more players in good shape stack-wise, as is 888poker New Jersey ambassador Tom Cannuli. He bagged up 67,500 in chips after Day 1.

The Day 2 schedule calls for a noon restart.

Spinella Leading, Varnell Third in Event #23

Anthony Spinella, who took down the inaugural WSOP.com $1,000 Online Bracelet event last year for $197,743, is in hot pursuit of another piece of WSOP gold after finishing Day 2 of Event #23: $2,000 No-Limit Hold'em as the chip leader with 1.06 million.

Meanwhile, Craig Varnell, who was at that same final table and finished third for $73,079, finished third in chips with 989,000 �� Andrey Pateychuk was second at 1.022 million. Varnell notably won the WPT500 last year at ARIA for $185,800. He's also cashed in both editions of Colossus. He certainly knows what it takes to make runs in big-field no-limit hold'em events.

Sam Chartier (956,000), Matt Stout (550,000), Thiago Nishijima (542,000), and John Dolan (454,000) were also among the 27 finding bags.

A total of 283 players began the day, with 213 set to be paid. Players walking out with their wallets a little fatter included Jeff Madsen (29th), Chris Hunichen (41st), and Aaron Steury (105th).

The remaining 27 players get back to the felt at noon.

$1,500 Omaha Hi-Low Draws Almost 1,000

Event #26: $1,500 Omaha Hi-Low drew a healthy 934 entries on Thursday, creating a $1,261 million prize pool that will pay the top 141 spots. A min-cash is worth $2,242, while a top prize of $244,103 and a WSOP bracelet awaits the winner.

After ten levels of play, approximately 260 players survived with Anthony Furlough bagging the overnight lead. Francesco Barbaro winner of this event in 2011, also bagged big.

Actor James Woods, pros George Danzer, Matthew Ashton, and David "ODB" Baker, and current WSOP Player of the Year leader Ryan Laplante also survived.

Play will resume at 2 p.m. local time with plans to play 10 more levels.

What's On Tap?

In addition to all the other action described above, Event #27: $1,000 Seniors No-Limit Hold'em Championship will begin at 10 a.m. local time on Friday and Event #28: $10,000 Limit Hold'em Championship will start at 3 p.m.

As the 2016 WSOP rolls on, be sure to stay tuned to PokerNews for continued coverage, brought to you by our sponsors, 888poker.

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