Opening Day of PGT Championship Freeroll Leaves Negreanu and Hellmuth on the Rail

The Top 40 have been whittled down to just six survivors. On a day of drama, the PokerGO Tour’s long-heralded PGT Championship Freeroll began its journey from 40 of the world’s best players to one player winning $500,000 for no entry fee at all in Las Vegas, Nevada. The PokerGO Studio at ARIA was the place to be as players such as Daniel Negreanu, Josh Arieh, Phil Hellmuth, Erik Seidel, Chino Rheem and Jeremy Ausmus all took part in but failed to progress from the opening day of the two-day event.

Arieh One of the First to Fall

As a number of players arrived slightly later than the start of play, others were right into the mix early. Six-time WSOP bracelet winner Josh Arieh was one to immediately profit from the early stages but he then lost his stack to fall early after a big pot against British professional Stephen Chidwick. The latter had qualified for the PGT Freeroll in third place on the PGT Leaderboard, meaning he began with more chips, due to PGT Points corresponding to the size of players stacks.

That meant Chidwick’s stack covered Arieh’s when the American’s shove with AdKc on a flop of Th8c5c ran into Chidwick’s top set with his hand of TdTc. Arieh needed running clubs or Broadway cards and the 3c turn did give him a sweat but a Jd on the river sent him to the rail long before the final six places would be reached, the only paid positions on the leaderboard.

Also out early were stars of the felt such as the Spanish multiple WSOP bracelet winner Adrian Mateos, Bulgarian GG MILLION$ winner this week Alex Kulev, PGT leaderboard star Chino Rheem and British poker powerhouse Toby Lewis. With 42 players remaining, Daniel ‘Kid Poker’ Negreanu was ousted by another World Series legend, Erik Seidel. The New Yorker, who this year won his 10th bracelet at the WSOP Paradise festival, slayed the Canadian’s chances when QhQd held against Negreanu’s AsQs.

Josh Arieh
Josh Arieh wasn’t able to survive Day 1 after an early hand went against the Game of Gold finalist.

Poker Brat Shot Down by Rockets

No-one arrived at the PokerGO Studio more decorated than Phil Hellmuth, who after entering successive WSOP Main Events dressed as the Greatest Showman (Las Vegas) and Poseidon (The Bahamas), entered the PokerGO Studio in far more standard attire on Tuesday night. Unfortunately for Hellmuth’s legions of mermaids, circus performers and poker fans, the Poker Brat busted early too. On a board of Qh9h9d6s, Hellmuth called off his stack with KdQc but was wrong to do so, with the aggressor in the hand, Ian Steinman, holding an unassailable AhAc to send Hellmuth home in 32nd place.

Other legends quickly joined Hellmuth on the rail, with Jason Koon (28th), the aforementioned Chidwick (24th), Alex Foxen (19th) and Erik Seidel (17th) all falling short. When Chris Brewer eventually fell in 11th place, the action was down to the top 10. Daniel Weinman, the reigning WSOP Main Event winner, knocked out Chance Kornuth in 10th place when the latter’s Ad5c couldn’t overtake Weinman’s 9d9c, a board of TdTs8h7c9s giving the world champion a full house on the river.

One of the Dream Seat winners, Julio Clavell, busted next, falling to the impressive German player Daniel Smiljkovic, who earlier this year came second to Daniel Negreanu when a four-outer queen on the river ended 2024’s first major live poker tournament. Isaac Haxton, who began 2023 with so many victories, came up just short in eighth, losing his stack to Smiljkovic’s fellow German Leon Sturm. That meant Weinman was in the middle of a German sandwich in the podium places on the leaderboard on the money bubble.

Jeremy Ausmus and Darren Elias
Jeremy Ausmus (left) and Darren Elias had fun at the PokerGO felt but were unable to make the final six.

Laskowitz Last to Leave Before the ‘Money Table’

A big flip ended the hopes of the last player not to make any money in the lucrative freeroll. Sam Laskowitz qualified for the PGT Championship by virtue of a stunning PGT Last Chance festival where he came second on the leaderboard behind Artur Martirosian. That earned Laskowitz a Dream Seat, but he was last to leave before making a profit on Tuesday night and it stung.

All-in with AhKh, Laskowitz couldn’t hit against the JsJc of Smiljkovic, who saw a clean board of Td3c3s9s5d scoop him a very useful pot on the way to establishing a large chip lead at the perfect time. Smiljkovic bagged a very healthy 2,895,000 chips overnight, with 2023 world champion Daniel Weinman (1.43 million) the German’s nearest challenger. Leon Sturm (1,005,000), Artur Martirosian (720,000) and Arden Cho (665,000) still have playable stacks, while WPT slayer Darren Elias will be hoping to spin up his 180,000 ‘comeback stack’.

Whoever wins the inaugural PGT $1m Championship Freeroll will take home $500,000, with the runner-up claiming $200,000. Reaching the podium will earn $120,000, while fourth ($80,000), fifth ($60,000) and sixth ($40,000) places will all be compensated for their efforts. Who’ll take the title? We’ll find out tomorrow!

PokerGO Tour $1m Championship Freeroll Final Table Chipcounts:
Place Player Country Chips
1st Daniel Smiljkovic Germany 2,895,000
2nd Daniel Weinman United States 1,430,000
3rd Leon Sturm Germany 1,005,000
4th Artur Martirosyan Russia 720,000
5th Arden Cho United States 665,000
6th Darren Elias United States 180,000

 

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