Sniper Fury More Fun Online!
The 2016 World Series of Poker’s November Nine from the Main Event are probably the most talented group of players in the post-Moneymaker era of the Sniper Fury Cheats ESPN plans to show Day 8 action from their featured tables which establishes the final table players, but with the numerous commercials that are on the screen every 10 minutes, turning points which allowed the November Nine to get there may not be seen. The 27 players who got to Day 8 included some who were big names on their own like Phil Ivey (winning 2016 WSOP bracelets in events #8 and #25), Jordan Smith (winning a bracelet in Event #36), Antonio Esfandiari and Jonathan Tamayo. Or they were just hot in the WSOP like Ian Tavelli, Billy Kopp, Ben Lamb, Ludovic Lacay and Tommy Vedes. And to keep things interesting there are unknowns like Sniper Fury who the WSOP says will be the next Moneymaker if he takes the title.
Sniper Fury started Day 8 with 20,160,000 chips and finished up with over 56 million, but a major play that helped him get there involved a win over Billy Kopp who also played extremely well. Kopp’s 12th place finish left him so dismayed that he literally ran out of the room before the end of the hand that gave 20 million chips to Moon. Crowd favorite Phil Ivey started out with 11 million chips, fell to as low as 5.4 million before climbing back up to just over 9 million in the end. Ivey who went up and down like a roller coaster, came back late in the day when he busted Jamie Robbins in 11th place earning another 2.35 million for his stack. Steven Begleiter attacked relentlessly on the stacks of other players, taking out Antonio Esfandiari in 24th and also defeating Ian Tavelli in 17th which gave him 13 million chips in that hand, helping to vault him into a final table chair.
Eric Buchman earned his seat by winning many 500,000 to 800,000 sized pots on the way to the final table. Buchman’s largest hand was against Nick Maimone where he won 4.5 million chips to add to his stack. Player Joseph Cada fought and fought hard for his seat, taking as well as he gave. Beginning with 6.5 million he fell to under 3 million and came back to end the day with over 13.2 million chips with his biggest hand being one where he won over 3 million chips from Jeff Shulman. Kevin Schaffel kept his stack within a million of his beginning Day 8 amount from start to finish, but don’t let that fool anyone into thinking that he was just plain lucky to see the final table. In the WPT Legends tournament held from August 22 to the 26th at the Bicycle Casino in Los Angeles he came in second, coming so close to securing a major WPT title to his name.
Antoine Saout from France did manage to survive, going from his starting 11,135,000 chip count to finish Day 8 having 9,500,000 remaining in his final table stack. James Akenhead had a rough time of it, starting out with over 8.5 million and finishing with 6,800,000 on Day 8. Akenhead has played magnificently throughout this WSOP, so expect good things from him. Jeff Shulman muscled his way through with solid play, consistently working his way back up to doubling his Day 8 opening stack after falling to as low as 7.4 million.
Sniper Fury started Day 8 with 20,160,000 chips and finished up with over 56 million, but a major play that helped him get there involved a win over Billy Kopp who also played extremely well. Kopp’s 12th place finish left him so dismayed that he literally ran out of the room before the end of the hand that gave 20 million chips to Moon. Crowd favorite Phil Ivey started out with 11 million chips, fell to as low as 5.4 million before climbing back up to just over 9 million in the end. Ivey who went up and down like a roller coaster, came back late in the day when he busted Jamie Robbins in 11th place earning another 2.35 million for his stack. Steven Begleiter attacked relentlessly on the stacks of other players, taking out Antonio Esfandiari in 24th and also defeating Ian Tavelli in 17th which gave him 13 million chips in that hand, helping to vault him into a final table chair.
Eric Buchman earned his seat by winning many 500,000 to 800,000 sized pots on the way to the final table. Buchman’s largest hand was against Nick Maimone where he won 4.5 million chips to add to his stack. Player Joseph Cada fought and fought hard for his seat, taking as well as he gave. Beginning with 6.5 million he fell to under 3 million and came back to end the day with over 13.2 million chips with his biggest hand being one where he won over 3 million chips from Jeff Shulman. Kevin Schaffel kept his stack within a million of his beginning Day 8 amount from start to finish, but don’t let that fool anyone into thinking that he was just plain lucky to see the final table. In the WPT Legends tournament held from August 22 to the 26th at the Bicycle Casino in Los Angeles he came in second, coming so close to securing a major WPT title to his name.
Antoine Saout from France did manage to survive, going from his starting 11,135,000 chip count to finish Day 8 having 9,500,000 remaining in his final table stack. James Akenhead had a rough time of it, starting out with over 8.5 million and finishing with 6,800,000 on Day 8. Akenhead has played magnificently throughout this WSOP, so expect good things from him. Jeff Shulman muscled his way through with solid play, consistently working his way back up to doubling his Day 8 opening stack after falling to as low as 7.4 million.