Lunkin wins the $40,000 event at the WSOP

Submitted by: laxie on Mon, 01/06/2009 - 11:46am
Vitaly Lunkin wins Event Number two in the 2009 WSOP, the $40,000 buy-in Special 40th Annual No-Limit Hold'em Event
 

After four days of play, Vitaly Lunkin made it through a not unexpectly tough field of 200  to win WSOP 2009 Event Number 2, the $40,000 buy-in Special 40th Annual No-Limit Hold'em Event with a $7.7m prize-pool.

The win marks Lunkin's second WSOP bracelet. Isaac Haxton was the chip leader when the day began, with Ted Forrest and Noah Schwartz sitting on the short stacks. Both Forrest and Schwartz went out early, then Lex "RaSZi" Veldhuis followed them to the rail after pushing all in with only to run into Greg Raymer's pocket kings.

That hand gave Raymer the chip lead, and the Fossilman was still in the top spot as Alec Torelli fell in sixth. Then Lunkin gradually began chipping up past Raymer and toward the eight million-chip mark, winning almost all of his pots without showing a hand.

Justin Bonomo was the next to fall after shoving his stack on a ten-high flop with pocket jacks and getting called by Haxton who held . The remaining four battled through the dinner break and for more than forty hands altogether before Dani "Ansky" Stern exited when his couldn't catch up to Haxton's .

After a few hands of three-handed play, Raymer, Haxton, and Lunkin all had almost exactly 8 million-chip stacks. With all three having almost exactly 50 big blinds each, it appeared we might be seeing a lot more poker before losing another player. But suddenly a huge pot developed between Haxton and Raymer, with all of their chips going in the middle on the strength of Haxton's pocket nines and Raymer's pocket fives. No five came to save Raymer, and the Fossilman hit the rail in third.

When heads up play began, Haxton had a bit more than a 2-to-1 chip advantage over his Russian counterpart. But it only took Lunkin seven hands to wrest the advantage away from Haxton. About an hour later, Haxton won nine straight hands and retook the lead. A sequence of huge, dramatic hands followed. First Lunkin doubled up to take the lead. Then Haxton hit a five-outer on the river to top Lunkin's pocket aces and retake the advantage. Then Lunkin doubled again. Finally, a short-stacked Haxton ran into Lunkin's aces, and this time couldn't catch the needed cards to crack them.

Besides the gold bracelet, Lunkin earns $1,891,012 for his win.

 

Information from www.worldseriesofpoker.com