Daniel Lowery Ends WSOP Circuit Main Event Tulsa Day 2 as Chip Leader

The WSOP Circuit Main Event which takes place at the Hard Rock Tulsa has seen its Day 2 end with only nine players remaining to reach the final table of the event. At this stage, it is Daniel Lowery who got the chip lead after the end of Day 2, with a total of 2,120,000 in chips, followed by David Brown who is not so much behind him, with a stack valued at 2,100,000 in chips.

Daniel Lowery is well-known to the poker lovers as a four-time gold ring winner. Now, it seems that the player has been focused on adding another WSOP Circuit event’s title and a gold ring to his collection, and the truth is that he has the actual chance of doing that.

At the time when Day 2 of the WSOP Circuit Main Event Tulsa started, Lowery was 37th in chips out of a players field of 111 players who returned. He had 115,500 in chips, but succeeded in taking the chip lead in the sixth level and more importantly, managed to keep it until the end of the day.

His major opponent at this stage – David Brown – sticked around the average stack for most of Day 2, but at the end boosted his stack to 908,000 before going to the final table of ten sixth in chips. This gave him the chance to work on making his stack even larger, ending the play literally by breathing down Lowery’s neck.

With Daniel Lowery, who holds the current chip lead with a total of 2,120,000, on top of the ranking at the end of Day 2, David Brown remains second with his stack of 2,100,000 in chips. The headstart of Lowery is very small, so there would probably be a reshuffling in the ranking, especially considering that David Brown is just as motivated as his opponent to win the event. Garry Simms is third, holding 1,690,000 in chips, and Will Berry is fourth with a stack of 1,620,000 in chips.

Hank Sitton, who occupies Seat 1 is fifth in the ranking, with a total of 1,060,000 in chips, followed by Collin Grubaugh with 980,000 in chips. The eighth place in the ranking at the end of Day 2 of the WSOP Circuit Main Event Tulsa is occupied by Tony Lay, and last is Jose Anaya with 780,000 in chips.

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Harry Evans

Harry Evans is a long-year journalist with a passion for poker. Apart from a good game of poker, he loves to write which is why he spent several years as an editor of a local news magazine.
Daniel Williams
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