The adjective amazing comes to mind. Exciting, intriguing, riveting, all 
those descriptors work. Hell, I’ll just say it, the 2006 World Series of 
Poker $50,000 H.O.R.S.E tournament will have the most exciting final table 
ever played. Statistics alone prove this point. Combined, the final nine 
players in WSOP Event #20 have three WSOP Main Event Championships, two WPT 
Championships, 27 WSOP gold bracelets, 116 WSOP final table appearances and 
more than a century’s worth of high-stakes poker experience. If you move 
beyond the statistics it gets even better. Imagine this heads up match: 
Doyle Brunson versus Phil Ivey, the greatest player ever versus the heir 
apparent. Think of it terms of this.Jack Nicholson versus Tiger Woods, 
Michael Jordon versus Lebron James, Babe Ruth versus Barry Bonds, heck, I’ll 
even go there – Muhammad Ali versus Mike Tyson. And that’s just one 
match-up. Pick any of the legends sitting as this table and you have a true 
poker fan’s dream. The threesome of Brunson, Chip Reese, and TJ Cloutier 
make up a trifecta of players that basically made the sport. Even though the 
game has changed since their heyday, these guys continue to dominate, raking 
in bracelets and money in waves. If you like history, it’s about to be 
written. Pick two of those three players and you have the greatest WSOP 
heads-up pairing ever.
Then, there are the others guys. Andy Bloch may be the best poker player to 
never win a gold bracelet. In one day, Bloch could sit atop the Pantheon of 
Poker and shed any doubts about his place.
Jim Bechtel is the 1993 WSOP Main Event Champion. Dewey Tomko has 20 WSOP 
final table appearances and three gold bracelets. Poor David Singer and 
Patrik Antonius. Even though they are two of the rising stars in a rising 
sport and have endorsement deals that would make anyone jealous; 
experience-wise, they’re lightyears behind. Yet, if either of them win 
tonight, they instantly become the greatest player in the sport.
My final point of intrigue- it’s a mixed game event, a chance for the cream 
of the crop to rise out of the WSOP No-Limit Hold’em mire. To thrive in an 
event that switches games at every level takes true talent, true mettle, and 
true lasting power.
There is one problem. Taking away from perhaps the greatest tournament ever 
played is the structure of the final table. After battling the game’s 
toughest field through both a sunset and a sunrise, the mixed game experts 
will now finish the tournament playing ESPN-friendly No-Limit Hold’em.
My associate Aaron Todd, who is covering the event live for Casino City, 
called the switch to No Limit Hold’em a sham job. He’s a nice guy. I’m going 
to call it a freaking joke. When Aaron said the players should boycott the 
final table and tell ESPN to shove their rule change, he bordered on Poker 
Prophet. Again, I’ll take it one step further. I think they should stand 
around the table refusing to play until they change the rules, and they 
should do it in style – by flipping off the cameras (to avoid the F-Bomb 
penalty).
It’s bad enough that the tournament started with used decks and marked 
cards. It’s a travesty that WSOP officials ended Day One far too early 
Wednesday, only to watch as the tournament ran so long on Thursday that they 
contemplated making it a four-day event. The final table controversy only 
proves the WSOP has tried everything they can to ruin this tournament, and 
couldn’t.
Regardless of the flaws, I’ll still be glued to the riveting live blogs and 
Internet reports. The statistical appeal, the exciting drama, and the lure 
of watching poker history unfold is unfortunately far too intriguing to let 
a ridiculous rule keep me from watching.
Simply put – it’s going to be amazing.
