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Tuesday, July 11, 2006

WSOP Update - Busy Weekend at the Series

With four gold bracelets awarded in two days, its was a busy weekend at the
World Series of Poker with many new faces receiving their first WSOP
pay-outs and some known faces finally grabbing WSOP gold. Event # 12 $5,000
Omaha High-Low 8/OB Sam Farha earned his second gold bracelet after a more
than a decade without a WSOP victory. To grab the title, Farha had to go
through poker phenom Phil Ivey, instantly making this heads up battle one of
the most intriguing clashes of the 2006 WSOP. The midnight start made the
gallery a little thin at the $5,000 Omaha High-Low 8/OB Event # 12 final
paring, but those who stayed were treated to a classic. Farha became a
household poker name in 2003 when he battled Chris Moneymaker in an epic
Main Event final table. Although he came in second, Farha's well-dressed,
slick-haired, unlit-cigarette demeanor made him an instant poker star.

Although he's cashed in only one event since that time (2005 WSOP Main
Event), he does lay claim to one gold bracelet, winning an Omaha event in
1996. Saturday changed his recent WSOP luck and that win coupled with
another cash already this Series proves the high stakes cash game player
might be well on his way to tournament stardom.

Ivey, who has been the main attraction for the rail birds since the WSOP
began, had the loudest cheering section as he sought his sixth bracelet.
With five titles already on his mantle, the 27-year old Ivey is already one
of the most decorated tournament players of all-time.

The performance of both Farha and Ivey is that much more impressive
considering the 265-player Event #12 field was filled with some of the
world's top tournament players.

With Chris Ferguson, Mike Caro, Andy Bloch, and Gavin Smith making the final
26 players, Event #12's final participants had 11 gold bracelets and one
World Poker Tour title between them. That does not include the millions won
at high-stakes cash games and the countless final table appearances in the
biggest poker tournaments worldwide.

Event # 10 $1,500 7-Card Stud

Another former WSOP Main Event runner-up finally won his first gold bracelet
at the $1,500 7-Card Stud WSOP Event #10.

David Williams, best known for his $3.5 million second place finish to Greg
"Fossilman" Raymer in the 2004 WSOP Main Event, secured his first WSOP
bracelet, giving credence to the claim that he's one of poker's brightest
young stars.

Besting a final table that included Johnny Chan (10 gold bracelets) and
"Miami" John Cernuto (3 gold bracelets), Williams won the first 2006 WSOP
stud event. Known for his No-Limit Hold'em skill, it was surprising to many
that Williams would have his breakout win in stud.

"I play a lot of mixed games against some very good players," Williams told
WSOP officials. "I play with Chau Giang, David Singer, Mike Wattel, and top
players who really know the game. I picked up some of the things they do,
and that has really helped me."

Although Williams is a favorite among poker fans and autograph seekers at
the 2006 WSOP, the majority of those watching the Event #10 final table were
waiting to see if Chan could grab a record-breaking 11th gold bracelet.

One day after watching Phil Hellmuth's attempt to tie Chan and Doyle
Brunson's career mark of 10 WSOP victories in Event #9, Chan was trying to
make his own poker history by becoming the first player to reach 11 wins.

It wasn't meant to be for Chan who went into the day severely short-stacked.
He ended up finishing in seventh place, outlasting only one other player.

To come in first, Williams had to go through John Hoang, who almost led the
tournament from start to finish. Finally giving up the chip lead right
before heads up play, Hoang battled Williams for three hours before
succumbing to the 26-year old.

For Williams, the chance to finally erase the "runner-up" image that often
accompanies a second place finisher in the Main Event was something he
didn't take lightly.

"It's really all I have thought about or cared about," Williams said. "I
wanted it so bad I changed my daily activities to put myself in a much
better position to win. Now, I am so happy I feel like crying. I'm fighting
back the tears right now. It's the best I've ever felt in my life."

Event #11 $1,500 Limit Hold'em

While the best players in the world were taking their shot at the $5,000
Omaha High-Low 8/OB event, a field of unrecognizable faces was battling in
the second Limit Hold'em tournament of the 2006 World Series.

One of those faces can now call himself a champion.

Bob Chalmers, a 59-year old business consultant from Vancouver, British
Columbia bested 700 players to earn his first bracelet and $258,344.

"What I realized from playing at this final table is that it takes a lot of
work to win," Chalmers said. "Sure, some luck helps. But it's really hard
work. There was not a time when I was not thinking of my stay at the final
table as like working. It seemed like a long time. The easy thing for me was
to understand that (winning) was going to happen in just a hand or two, but
it rather would be a process that took a long time - so I looked at it that
way."

Although the final table represented a good mix of solid poker players, the
casual fan would have trouble identifying many of the participants who were
competing at their first WSOP final table.

Doug Sabb, the only final table player who had won a gold bracelet (1997) or
had any WSOP final table experience, arrived as the short stack and made a
run at the title with a few double ups, only to suffer a brutal final half
hour that erased his stack and landed him in fifth place.

Event # 13 $2,500 No Limit Hold'em

Max "The Italian Pirate" Pescatori arrived at the final table of Event #13
several minutes late. Even though he was playing in the biggest event of his
poker career, Pescatori wanted to watch his beloved Italian soccer team play
in the World Cup finals against France.

The decision paid off. Pescatori was there to see Italy win its fourth World
Cup on penalty kicks, then made it to the Amazon Room of the Rio All-Suites
Hotel and Casino in time to win his first WSOP gold bracelet. He collected
$382,389.

"Nothing can beat this. For me, this is incredible," Pescatori said. "I told
all my friends that they have to watch for Italy to win the World Cup and
then afterward to cheer for me on the Internet to win here at the World
Series. This is the greatest day of my life."

When the tournament was down to just three players, the chip leader and 2005
WSOP $1,000 Shootout winner Anthony Reategui had Justin Pechie outchipped
4-1 and Pescatori outchipped 7-1.

Reategui, who was the favorite to win against two first-time WSOP final
table participants, had already knocked out three consecutive players and
was well on his way to victory.

Pechie was crippled after Pescatori called Pechie's large river bet with
only King high, good enough to beat the stone-cold bluff. When Pechie next
entered the pot, he did so by going all-in with sixes, only to find that
Pescatori had pocket eights. Both men hit their set on the flop, but
Pescatori had the better three-of-a-kind and to emphasize his reemergence,
he hit quads on the river.

Reategui relinquished the chip lead to Pescatori, but looked as though he
might take back the lead when both men went all in on a 10-7-6 flop.
Reategui, who held top pair, was relived to see Pescatori had only a
gut-shot straight draw with his J8 suited.

Unfortunately for Reategui, Pescatori hit a jack on the river to steal the
victory. Much like in Germany several hours earlier, there were plenty of
Italian fans in the audience with something to cheer about.

Crowd favorite Mike "The Mouth" Matasow also played at this final table, but
remained relatively quiet despite his boisterous and infamous reputation.
When asked after the event why he was so subdued, Matasow told WSOP media
officials that he wasn't feeling very well during the match. Matusow
finished in seventh place.

Normally Crazy Event Dubbed "Tame" in 2006

Typically one of the most exciting events of the recent World Series
competitions is the $1,000 No Limit Hold'em Re-buy tournament, a chance for
the game's top professionals to square off against players with large
bankrolls.

Normally the strategy in these events is to take advantage of the re-buy
period and amass as many chips as possible. Often, players bring stacks of
re-buy chips with them to the table and continually go all-in until they are
comfortable with their chip stacks. If they lose with this strategy, they
always have the re-buy option.

In 2004, poker superstar Daniel Negreanu set the re-buy tone with an amazing
23 re-buys. His reasoning on the re-buy option is simple - the person with
the most chips after the re-buy is more than likely the favorite to win.
With some professionals plopping down $10,000 on a tournament, $1,000 plus a
few add-ons is no big deal when a gold bracelet is at stake.

This year, things are tame. There were 752 entrants into the event and only
1670 add-ons and re-buys, well under the normal total. As for Negreanu, he
bought into the event several times and accumulated a large stack, but
didn't make it out of round two. Neither did Michael "The Grinder" Mizrachi,
who according to live WSOP blogs led the re-buy charge with
double-digit-wallet dips.

Here are the final table chip counts. Play begins today (July 10) at 2 p.m.
PST.

Tom Franklin - $590,000

Tim Phan - $551,000

Steve Wong - $295,000

John Hoang - $274,000

Allen Cunningham - $233,000

David Rheem - $170,000

Andy Bloch $163,000

Alex Jacob - $106,000

Everett Carlton - $86,000

Women's Event Draws Record Numbers

The success of Oscar nominated actress Jennifer Tilly in the 2005 WSOP
Ladies Event may have had something to do with the record number of
participant in the 2006 version of the tournament.

In total, 1,128 women entered Event # 14 on Sunday. Last year, the same
event drew a then-record 601 players even though it is often considered an
afterthought compared to the larger-payout events that allow both men and
women.

Tilly, known to mainstream America as an actress, learned to play poker from
her boyfriend, Phil "The Unabomber" Laak, a popular and often unpredictable
player who has had much success on the World Poker Tour. Her poker success
has arguably attracted large numbers of new women to the sport, especially
after she became a WPT winner in the 2005 Ladies Invitational Tournament.

Her association with Laak has landed her the nickname the "Unabombshell."
Although she competed in this year's event, Tilly was unable to defend her
title against the record number of women. She is playing in many more events
this year, although to date she has not cashed.

Laurie Scott is the current chip leader with $175,500 chips closely trailed
by Sue Luckenbaugh with $173,000 chips.

Play in the Ladies Event begins again today (July 10) with 26 players and
will be continued until there is a winner.

posted by Jerry "Jet" Whittaker at 7/11/2006 10:04:00 AM

 

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