While he might not end the day at the top of the leaderboard, Kyle Wilson has been playing some of his best tournament poker. If an average player were in the situations where Kyle found himself today, they would surely have been eliminated. Somehow he has managed to end the day well about the 200k mark despite losing all four times today when he held pocket aces and kings.
Today Kyle folded KK face up on a Q high board. His opponent showed QQ, wondering how Kyle didn’t go broke. Instead, he lost the absolute minimum of 20k. He did end up doubling a player up with KK versus their set, but managed to again lose the minimum on aces and kings again when his opponent hit a set both times.
During the dinner break, he seemed happy enough to have 105k because he knew how well he was playing. Of much greater concern to him was how his stable of horses were faring.
Kyle also attributed some of his success today to not bother counting his chips unless it was break time. “Usually I count my chips after every hand, but if you lose a pot all you end up thinking about is that you had 15k a few minutes ago.” He’s taken the same approach he does to cash games—let each hand play itself by chipping away at the small pots.
In one key hand, Kyle turned a straight flush draw with 8
7
and rivered the straight taking 30k from the big stack at the table in the process. It was winning those small that enabled Kyle to afford the necessary races versus the short stacks. His AK bested 1010 for an additional 15k just before his JJ held up versus AQ for an 80k pot.
All of the attention that had been given to Table 25 suddenly shifted to Table 38 when Carlos Mortensen filled the empty seat to Kyle’s immediate left. Carlos wasted no time mixing it up, taking about 60k from the young player seated between him and Humberto Brenes. The cameras love the shark and the matador, so there’s a chance you might catch a glimpse of Kyle mixing it up with them on ESPN.
Greg FBT Mueller decided he couldn’t stay away from the action at the Rio despite a full day in the Bellagio Cup III. Although hometown buddy Shawn Buchanon was eliminated, FBT ended with 35k. He’ll have the day off tomorrow to sweat Kyle as he enters Day 3 with a very healthy stack.

Shawn Buchanon won the most recent WPT title. The first of Greg FBT Mueller’s two WSOP final tables aired on ESPN recently. I’ve been waiting for the right opportunity to write about the third of the poker-playing trio from Vancouver. After watching him end Day 1D with a well-above-the-average stack of 100k, Kyle Wilson seems to finally have caught the breaks he has been looking for. (


“I’m very competitive, so it’s natural for me to try to think like my opponents. It’s really what I’m best at.” Kyle doesn’t think so much about his hand or even his opponent’s hand. “It’s about getting into the mind of your opponent to see the game from his perspective.” Although he’s known primarily for his cash game play, Kyle does have a highly respected World Championship of Online Poker victory under his belt as well.
I felt someone tapping on my shoulder, and as I turned around there’s this larger-than-life character sporting a pink hat and checkered pajama pants on his six-foot-sixish frame. “Hey, you really had pocket tens, didncha? Tell me the truth!” The hand Greg FBT Mueller was referring to had happened the previous night during a 10-20 NL game at the Bellagio. I had no idea who he was, but I was simultaneously hating him while watching in awe at the way he controlled our table.
Over the last year, I have been able to spend a little more time each tournament hanging out with Greg. That’s because he keeps making it deeper and deeper each event he plays (and when everyone else starts going home there's no one else to hang out with but wanna-be writers). This A-list cash game player has been making all the right moves in becoming an A-list tournament player. 
"I'll take a root beer. And a Sprite."
Here's the scene:


















