I am reading the paper "Two Theorems on Extensions of Holomorphic Mappings" by PHILLIP A. GRIFFITHS. Proposition 2.9 of the paper is: If $\Psi$ is a pluri-sub-harmonic on the punctured ball $B_n^{*}$ and $n\ge 2$, then $\Psi$ extends to a pluri-sub-harmonic function on the whole ball $B_n$. Then, the paper gives a proof in the special case for $n=2$, where I am stuck.
By defining $$\Psi(0)=\lim\sup \Psi(z)$$ , it attempts to show that $\Psi(0)<+\infty$. When $z_1\not= 0$, we have the estimate $$\Psi(z_1,z_2)\le \frac{1}{2\pi}\int_{0}^{2\pi}\Psi(z_1,z_2+\epsilon e^{i\theta})d\theta$$ for $\epsilon>0$ small enough so that the integrand does not pass through $z=0$.
My question is: in the paper, it follows immediately that $\Psi(0)<\infty$. I do not know why it follows, since it seems that we do not have a uniform bound through this estimate.
Any hint is welcome. Thanks in advance!