Jeff Fielder is the overall leader
heading into Day 2 after building a stack of 437,500 chips on Saturday.
Fielder ascended to the top of the leaderboard when he won a massive pot
late in the day against Mark "P0ker H0" Kroon, who at the time
was second in chips. With the blinds at 1,200/2,400 and a 400 ante,
Kroon opened the pot with a raise to 6,100 and was called by Fielder and
both of the players in the blinds. The flop was 

and Kroon continued his
aggression with a bet of 11,700. Fielder, the only player in the room
able to knock Kroon out, made the call, and the two were heads up to the
turn. Kroon fired 22,700 and
Fielder called.
The river was the
. Kroon stacked out some chips,
then put them back in his stack and finally sat back in his chair and
thought for a bit. He eventually checked, and Fielder placed 30,000 in
chips just over the betting line. Kroon then check-raised to 75,700, and
Fielder began muttering to himself that he should have just checked
behind. After some more thought, Fielder decided he had to make the
call.
"Nice call," Kroon praised. Fielder tabled 
for trip fours to scoop the
nearly 250,000 chip pot. Kroon was left with around 185,000, and Fielder
was the overwhelming chip leader with 440,000.
The Main Event was a re-entry tournament, meaning that anyone who
busted out in Day 1a could re-enter Saturday if they chose pony up
another $1,600 for the buy-in. Several players elected to fire another
bullet, including Giorgio Medici, Eric Baldwin, Steve Gross, David
Singontiko and David Williams. Unfortunately for all of them
they will not be coming back for Day 2.
Some of the notables that registered only on Day 1b and failed to
advance to Day 2 were Jamie Gold, Steve Billirakis, Frank Kassela,
Eli Elezra, Gavin Smith and Bryan Devonshire.
There were a few big names that did move on to Day 2. Jeff Madsen
made it through with plenty of chips (181,500), as did Kathy
Liebert, Scott Clements, Dutch Boyd and Vanessa Peng. They
will be joined Sunday by Day 1a survivors William Reynolds, Sean
Getzwiller, Gavin Griffin, Dan O’Brien and James Carroll,
amongst others. Fielder will be the biggest stack in the room, while the
chip leader from Friday, Joe Kuether, will be next in line.
The remaining 134 players will return Sunday at 4 p.m. local time,
and they will play down to either a final table or through 12 hours of
play — whichever comes first. Be sure to check back in to the PokerNews Live
Reporting page as we will have all the flops, turns, and rivers from
here at Caesars Palace.
From Pokernews