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Georgian wins $1.28M title in Vegas

Posted under Tournaments,WSOP by admin on July 1, 2009 7:05 am ||

LAS VEGAS (AP) — A 37-year-old former pro bowler from Georgia outlasted a 44-year-old New Yorker in a marathon poker session Wednesday to win $1.28 million and the mixed-game H.O.R.S.E. title at the World Series of Poker.

David Bach of Athens, Ga., took the last of John Hanson’s chips with a nine-high in Razz on Wednesday morning, about 20 hours after the final table began Tuesday afternoon.

Heads-up play lasted about seven hours including breaks, as the players’ chips slowly swung back and forth across the felt at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas.

“I’m just going to go to bed,” said Bach, who said he was no stranger to long poker stretches — but it had been a few years.

“I’ll celebrate at some point,” he said.

Bach, a pro poker player nicknamed “Gunslinger” after Stephen King’s “The Dark Tower” novel series, took a 2-1 chip lead on Hanson four times during heads up play before finally ending the match. He had Hanson on the ropes for all his chips about four hours into heads-up play, but Hanson won the seven-card stud hand and regained the lead a few hands later.

“He wanted to play big pots with a big hand,” Bach said. “I just said to myself ‘Be a professional.’ “

Bach picked up roughly 5 million chips in a crucial limit Texas Hold ‘em pot when he made a pair of eights and called Hanson after the opponents built a large pot.

“No pair,” Hanson said after the betting in the hand was finished.

Chips have no monetary value; Bach needed to win all the chips in play to win the tournament.

Hanson won $789,199 for second place. He took third at the same tournament in 2007 for $852,000. He left the tournament room without speaking to reporters.

The final table officially lasted 18 hours and 44 minutes, the second longest in World Series of Poker history behind last year’s World Series of Poker Europe main event in London.

The $50,000 buy-in tournament rotates five games and tests the all-around player more than no-limit Hold ‘em. Instead of the drama of all-in bets that allow players to risk their tournament at anytime, H.O.R.S.E. is said to truly reward the more skilled players over time.

The mixed game tournament is largely considered the series’ most prestigious event behind its main event, the $10,000 buy-in no Limit Texas Hold ‘em tournament that offers poker’s richest prize.

The final table on Tuesday boasted five previous gold bracelet winners among eight players, including eight-time bracelet winner Erik Seidel and Huck Seed, who won the series’ no-limit Texas Hold ‘em main event in 1996. Seidel busted out eighth to win $162,382 while Seed finished fifth, winning $276,610.

Bach said he felt he had a good read on Hanson and two other opponents at the final table because they started the tournament Friday at the same table.

Bach said he knew that Hanson had some side bets on his finish in the tournament, which Bach believes helped him understand Hanson’s play.

“A lot of poker is if you can figure out someone’s motivation, you’re halfway to figuring out their hand,” Bach said.

WSOP to Shuffle Up and Deal

Posted under Tournaments,WSOP by admin on May 7, 2009 12:16 pm ||

Despite the sour economy and Nevada gaming revenues being down almost 10 percent in 2008 and more than 16 percent down over the first two months of 2009, is apparently not an overriding concern for officials for the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas who remain optimistic and confident that the variety and depth of the best poker players in the world will be the draw needed for the 57-event WSOP tournament that begins its six-week run May 26 at The Rio, the host casino for the event. petereastgate

To sweeten the pot, a $40,000 buy-in no-limit hold’em event on May 28 is expected to draw poker’s most elite players.  Then, two days later, the tournament will host a $1,000 buy-in no-limit event that is expected to attract another approximate 6,000 players.

If that’s not enough draw, on May 31, a special two-day Champions Invitational will take place with the 27 living previous World Series of Poker world champions being invited to participate in a no-limit hold’em event.

The 2009 World Series of Poker event will include 10 World Championship $10,000 buy-in events and seven $1,500 buy-in no-limit hold’em tournaments.  The $50,000 buy-in H.O.R.S.E. event, which mixes five different poker games, will take place on June 26.  The $10,000 buy-in World Championship No-Limit Hold’em Main Event will being on July 3 and reach its final table of nine players on July 15.

For the second straight year, players will then wait four months before returning to the Rio on November 7 to play for the championship, which ESPN will televise on a same-day taped delay.

Last year’s World Series of Poker event in Las Vegas drew 58,720 entries from 124 countries and awarded a prize pool of more than $180.7 million.  The winner in November was 22-year-old Peter Eastgate of Denmark, who became the tournament’s youngest-ever word champion, taking away $9.15 million in a four-hour heads-up final table with Russian Ivan Demidov.

Worst Beat Ever???

Posted under Tournaments,WSOP by admin on February 6, 2009 10:47 am ||

During the 2008 WSOP Main Event a Royal Flush took out Quad Aces on an All-In. The chances of a Royal Flush and Quad Aces being in the same hand are 1:2.7 Billion.

Kai Landry Wins WSOP Tunica

Posted under Tournaments,WSOP by admin on February 1, 2009 10:47 am ||

Kai Landry modestly says he has developed "no marketable skills" in his 37 years,  has no job at present, and even though he spends much of his time playing poker, he doesn’t feel he deserves the title of pro. (On his bio sheet he jokingly wrote that he was a whale fisherman.)

Well, pro or not, he played professionally enough tonight at the six-hour final table, carefully picking his spots and not making a discernible misstep as he took down the $5,150 championship event of the WSOP Circuit tour at Harrah’s Casino Tunica. The victory was worth $183,974, a gold-and diamond trophy ring, and a $10,000 seat into this year WSOP championship event, plus $1,000 expense money.

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At one point, with three players left, Landry was down to about 360,000 of the 3.1 million chips in play before making a comeback and rushing to victory.

Landry is from Biloxi, Mississippi, where he plays about three times a week at the Beau Rivage, dividing his poker time between small local tournaments and $2-$5 no-limit cash games. His best prior win was about $6,000 in an evening of cash play. He also had a 15th-place finish in an earlier $200 tournament here. Landry has been playing poker since he was 21, seriously for the past couple of years. He said his style of play varies depending on his opponents. At this final table he found his opponents were on the aggressive side, so decided to be cautious, slow-play and wait for big hands. With this big win, he "absolutely" plans to concentrate on tournaments in the future   This event drew 154 players who built a prize pool of $735,900. Mathew "All in at 420":Stout arrived at the final table with a massive chip lead which he held until the late stages, after which the lead would change back and forth.       

This Circuit series, which offered noon, 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. events, was very successful,. drawing 11,764 players who built a total prize pool of $3,788,335, a nice increase over last year’s numbers. Players arriving for this series were greeted by an expanded, remodeled and re-named hotel casino that underwent a $45 million renovation last year that included a new poker room and the 560-seat Paula Deen Buffet.

Harrah’s Casino Tunica is the largest of the Harrah’s Entertainment properties here, the largest casino between Las Vegas and Atlantic City and the most complete destination in Northern Mississippi. Tunica is also the third-largest gaming market in the United States.

We reached the final nine when Gavin Smith, the biggest remaining name, went out  after his pocket 8s lost to a set of treys. Kathy Liebert was the highest woman finisher.  She split 18th-place money when she and another player went out together during hand-for-hand play. Liebert is on the pro/celebrity team of Pic-Club, an investment club that offers online players a legal way to transfer money. Chris Moneymaker, the man who changed poker forever, entered the main event, but went out within a couple of hours on day one.

Final table play began at level 14 with blinds of 3,000-6,000 and 400 antes, 15 minutes left. Stout was way in front with 1.05 million chips.

Here were the starting chip counts:

Seat 1. Leonard Eidson 375,000
Seat 2. Brian McCoy     150,400

Seat 3. Glenn Hyde        155,000

Seat 4. Kai Landry                     375,000

Seat 5.  David Dao                    150,000

Seat 6.  Jeremy Byrum               404,500

Seat 7. Mike Leah                     335,000

Seat 8.  Frank Wyville                138,500

Seat 9. Matthew Stout               1,050,000

As the level ended, David Dao, starting lowest-chipped, doubled through Mike Leah with pocket kings versus pocket jacks. There was a break, and then blinds went to 4,000-8,000 with 1,000 antes. First out, 15 minutes into the new level, was Frank Wyville. He called all in with K-Q after Dao moved in with A-K. The board came 7-8-2-5-A, and Wyville cashed $22,077 for ninth. Wyville, 45, is a fire fighter from Anniston, Alabama who’s been playing two years and has two prior Circuit cashes.   A few hands later, Stout raised and Brian McCoy re-raised all in for 90,000. He was well behind with A-J to Stout’s A-K and when a board of 9-8-8-Q-4 didn’t help him, he finished eighth, which paid $29,436. McCoy is 33, from Memphis, self-employed and a player for six years. This is his first final table.

The third player to depart during this level was Glenn Hyde. After Leah opened for 20,000 with 6h-5h, Hyde went all in from the small blind for 45,000 more holding K-J. Leah called, and a board of 8-5-4-7, brought him a straight. Hyde’s only out was a 6 to give him the same straight, but he missed. Seventh place paid $36,795. Hyde is a 55-year-old business analyst from Atlanta with 30 years of poker experience. This is his second final table in this series, having finished fourth in a $300 preliminary event. He also has two final tables at the New Orleans Circuit last season and won two events at Southern Indiana.

Blinds moved up to 6,000-12,000. Dao had been moving in hand after hand without a call. Finally, he did it again and got stung. With the board showing 9-K-6-10, he pushed in holding 9-10 for two pair, losing to Jeremy Byrum, who had Q-J for as straight. Dao was down to 100,000, then went all in the next two hands, doubling up the second time. His wild ride continued a bit later when he was all in yet again for $320,000 with A-7 against Jeremy Byrum’s A-9 and zoomed up by catching two more 7s. Then, on the level’s final hand, he peeled 235,000 chips off Stout’s sturdy stacks, again with three 7s, a set this time. With 928,000 chips, he was now in a virtual tie with Stout.

Another break, and blinds became 8,000-16,000 with 2,000 antes. A couple of hands later, with a seemingly safe board of 2-7-5,  Leah pushed in for 188,000 holding pocket queens. He got a quick call from Stout, who held pocket aces and had trapped him by merely calling Leah’s small pre-flop raise in a four-way pot. After a 9 and king came, Leah departed, taking home $44,154 for sixth. Leah, from Toronto, Canada, has been playing for four years and has over a half-million in live tournament cashes.

This event got down to four when a short-chipped Byrum was all in from the small blind with K-J. He flopped a jack but couldn’t catch Leonard "LB" Eidson’s pocket queens and went out with $51,513 for fifth. Byrum, 33, from Katy, Texas, has been playing for three years.

Next, Stout solidified his lead by taking a 400,000 pot from Dao with a paired ace to Dao’s paired queen. When Dao sighed, Stout reminded him, "You can’t win every pot, David." On the next hand, Landry, with pocket jacks, doubled through against Dao, who moved in for the millionth time, this time with A-K. Then Dao doubled up again, this time with two pair after Stout missed his flush draw.

On the level’s last hand, Eidson tried an all-in move with his last chips holding A-7. Landry and Stout called and checked down the board of 8-J-6-10-10. Landry had 6h-5h, and his paired 6 was enough to leave Eidson in fourth place, worth $61,816. Eidson, 35, is from Bulls Gap, Tennessee, works in construction and has been playing 15 years.

We were now playing with blinds of 10,000-20,000 and 3,000 antes. As the hour level went by, the chip counts drew much closer, with Stout and Landry now both holding about 1.2 million to 900,000 for Dao. Then, on the last hand, the biggest pot of the night thus far came down. Dao, holding Kc-10c, opened for 120,000 and Landry called. The flop came10-9-2. Dao, pairing his 10, moved in for 720,000 and Landry, with pocket 4s, decided to call. An ace and queen made no difference and suddenly Dao had the lead with about 1.7 million while Landry was down to 360,000.

New blinds of 12,000-24,000 were added to the structure. Landry hung on, doubling up and building his stacks, eventually pulling ahead of Stout. Then the two got into a confrontation as Landry moved in for 700,000 with pocket 7s and Stout called with A-K. A board of 6-4-9-5-7 gave Landry winning trips and Stout went out third, which paid $73,590.

Stout, 24, is a pro from Las Vegas who’s played for 20 years, four seriously, and turned pro three years ago after being a college student. He has nearly $500,000 in tournament cashes, the biggest being $59,210 when he won a $500 Circuit event at Harrah’s Atlantic City last year. He started playing five-card draw with his brothers and sister at age four and likes Omaha hi-lo for the complexities as well as no-limit tournaments for the money. His goal is to one day start a charity poker tournament tour.

Heads-up, Landry and Dao were very close to even in chips. Dao pulled ahead, but then lost most of his chips after re-raising all in with pocket 4s. He ran into Landry’s queens, losing after the board came 6-6-2-2-7.

Dao could only hold on for a few hands. On the last deal the board showed 4c-Kd-10d-Ad. Holding Js-Qh, Landry had a straight and bet out. With Jd-7s, Dao had draws to a royal flush and raised all in. He missed everything when a 6s hit the river, and Landry was our new champ. Dao, 60, is a retired physician originally from Vietnam now living in Elizabethtown, Kentucky who’s been playing four years. He’s won about $80,000 in tournaments including a small cash at last year’s WSOP main event.