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WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
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Topic: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited (Read 174885 times)
TightEnd
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
«
Reply #195 on:
June 08, 2010, 07:06:49 PM »
Quote from: TightEnd on June 05, 2010, 01:29:22 PM
Event 8 result
2010 World Series of Poker
Event #8: $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em
Place Winner Prize (USD)
1 Pascal LeFrancois 568,974
2 Max Steinberg 352,916
3 Kevin Howe 249,351
4 Daniel Wjuniski 179,286
5 David Aue 130,617
6 James Andersen 96,422
7 Kurt Disessa 72,087
8 Joshua Brikis 54,579
9 Saar Wilf 41,843
10 Jose Gatmaitan 32,456
11 Matthew Ezrol 32,456
12 Darin Utley 32,456
13 Scott Vener 25,472
14 Charles Lehr 25,472
15 Phil Hellmuth 25,472
16 Looney Devin 20,257
17 Jared Michelizzi 20,257
18 David Frazier 20,257
19 Raymond Geary 16,275
20 Andrew Cohen 16,275
21 Vinny Pahuja 16,275
22 Richard Geyer 16,275
23 Erich Kollmann 16,275
24 Paul Fehlig 16,275
25 Ronald Eberhard 16,275
26 Ray Foley 16,275
27 Frank Weigel 16,275
28 Jesse Yaginuma 13,241
29 Cherie Beasley 13,241
30 Richard Savage 13,241
31 Samuel Dickson 13,241
32 Michael Stroh 13,241
33 Danny Wong 13,241
34 Agop Rustemoglu 13,241
35 Yannick Tessier 13,241
36 Jason Sackler 13,241
37 William Daymon 10,903
38 Spencer Hudson 10,903
39 Tam Ly 10,903
40 Ross Myers 10,903
41 Nicholas Heather 10,903
42 Johnny Kitchens 10,903
43 Steven Warwick 10,903
44 Orlando Maldonado 10,903
45 Alon Shahar 10,903
46 John McKinney 9,070
47 Eric Lee 9,070
48 Josh Schlein 9,070
49 Francis Anderson 9,070
50 Todd Lepow 9,070
51 David Daneshgar 9,070
52 Timothy Milliron 9,070
53 Matt Stout 9,070
54 Steve Sung 9,070
55 Thomas Taylor 7,648
56 Jeremy Dresch 7,648
57 Bobby Shasta 7,648
58 Pavel Myndrov 7,648
59 Richard Talerico 7,648
60 Khoa Nguyen 7,648
61 Joseph Parrish 7,648
62 Scott O'Leary 7,648
63 John Conaway 7,648
64 Adam Kotler 6,510
65 Frank Bonacci 6,510
66 Daniel Sosa 6,510
67 Renato Maciariello 6,510
68 Ryan Sidor 6,510
69 Kristina Tokeshi 6,510
70 Habib Khanis 6,510
71 Kyle Winter 6,510
72 Louis Crispino 6,510
73 Davin Costa 5,593
74 Daniel Quinn 5,593
75 Cameron New 5,593
76 Bruce Stern 5,593
77 John Esposito 5,593
78 James Hannah 5,593
79 Todd Lundwall 5,593
80 Brian Haveson 5,593
81 Ditmar Winkelmolen 5,593
82 Matthew Stern 4,866
83 Michael Mihelich 4,866
84 James Buckley 4,866
85 Cliff Josephy 4,866
86 Enrico Difranco 4,866
87 Jason Brice 4,866
88 Stacey Nutini 4,866
89 Trevor Pope 4,866
90 Tyler Patterson 4,866
91 Blake E Kelso 4,266
92 Kevin Boudreau 4,266
93 George Karatzas 4,266
94 Bill Jesernig 4,266
95 Roberto Romanello 4,266
96 Tye Babb 4,266
97 Jean-Robert Bellande 4,266
98 Alan Neubauer 4,266
99 Robbie Verspui 4,266
100 Samuel Trickett 3,792
101 Mike Ngo 3,792
102 Jordan Rich 3,792
103 James Petzing 3,792
104 Chadwick Livingston 3,792
105 Vittario Iemolo 3,792
106 Ludovic Agier 3,792
107 Anton Nikaj 3,792
108 Jay Goldstein 3,792
109 Michael Meredith 3,792
110 Steven Fager 3,792
111 Aaron Kanter 3,792
112 Pat Pezzin 3,792
113 Nicholas Binger 3,792
114 Melik Bagdasaryan 3,792
115 Sean Getzwiller 3,792
116 James Keys 3,792
117 Carl Johnson 3,792
118 Chance Steed 3,792
119 Jon Brenneman 3,792
120 Michael Monter 3,792
121 Fabrice Halleux 3,792
122 Steven Dunkelberg 3,792
123 George Lusby 3,792
124 Jonathan Dull 3,792
125 Sean McElroy 3,792
126 Michael Chill 3,792
127 Vinicius Leal 3,792
128 Cory Parent 3,792
129 Donald Yaughn 3,792
130 Anthony Gargiulo 3,792
131 Timothy West 3,792
132 Daniel Reisman 3,792
133 Albert Winchester 3,792
134 Clifford Miller 3,792
135 Justin Kuzmicki 3,792
136 Marc Aubin 3,413
137 Ryan Schmidt 3,413
138 Richard Hoffmaster 3,413
139 William Childs 3,413
140 Patrick O'connor 3,413
141 Marc Mclaughlin 3,413
142 Calvin Anderson 3,413
143 Andrew Teng 3,413
144 Vagan Sudzhyan 3,413
145 Brent Sheirbon 3,413
146 Timothy Woolston 3,413
147 Keith Olsen 3,413
148 John Simunich 3,413
149 Ian Wiley 3,413
150 Cristopher Lasco 3,413
151 Victor Ramdin 3,413
152 Markus Gonsalves 3,413
153 Detlef Pashaus 3,413
154 Champie Douglas 3,413
155 Corey Burbick 3,413
156 Eric Schwartz 3,413
157 Aaron Thomas 3,413
158 Aaron Orourke 3,413
159 Gareth Teatum 3,413
160 Peter Chun 3,413
161 Michael Flores 3,413
162 Hugo Perez 3,413
163 William Massad 3,413
164 Walter Buss 3,413
165 Anthony Gargano 3,413
166 Robert Harcarik 3,413
167 Harvey Larocque 3,413
168 James Anderson 3,413
169 Joseph Ward 3,413
170 Joel Bullock 3,413
171 Michael Jensen 3,413
172 Steven Morra 3,128
173 Robert Flowers 3,128
174 Amnon Filippi 3,128
175 Vincent Graziano 3,128
176 Shawn Meyer 3,128
177 Edward Pellegrini 3,128
178 Allen Gillain 3,128
179 David Whalen 3,128
180 Daniel Adams 3,128
181 Yonghui Jiang 3,128
182 Raymond Amoroso 3,128
183 Gerard Zeitoun 3,128
184 Marc Davis 3,128
185 Martin Hruby PokerStars Team Pro 3,128
186 Simon Lam 3,128
187 Reagan Leman 3,128
188 Jason Helder 3,128
189 Omar Mehmood 3,128
190 James Keating 3,128
191 Douglas Bruce 3,128
192 Michael Frandsen 3,128
193 Laurence Grodin 3,128
194 Jason Elzinga 3,128
195 Christopher Tennapel 3,128
196 Joshua Hillock 3,128
197 Matthew Vance 3,128
198 John Oshea 3,128
199 Steven Kreinik 3,128
200 Walter Weiss 3,128
201 Matthew Livingston 3,128
202 Joel Erikson 3,128
203 Finley Rodgers 3,128
204 Maxim Sorokin 3,128
205 Maciek Gracz 3,128
206 Wartan Jalnakrian 3,128
207 Mark Newhouse 3,128
208 Eugene Yanayt 2,844
209 Jordan Smith 2,844
210 Roberto Betbese 2,844
211 Eric Von Guttenberg 2,844
212 Craig Restifo 2,844
213 Michael Bisutti 2,844
214 Anders Taylor 2,844
215 Noam Freedman 2,844
216 Richard Spirra 2,844
217 Alexander Kim 2,844
218 David Stefanski 2,844
219 Ryan Snickles 2,844
220 Jason Cluxton 2,844
221 Francisco Hernandez 2,844
222 Zachary Hirst 2,844
223 Jose Pimentel 2,844
224 Christopher Paasch 2,844
225 Tommy Le 2,844
226 Kenneth Terrell 2,844
227 Gregory Mathias 2,844
228 Bernie Yang 2,844
229 Andrew Aguilar 2,844
230 Mark Smith 2,844
231 Tyler Netter-Wainwright 2,844
232 Jason Darow 2,844
233 Brian Benhamou 2,844
234 Ryan Allen 2,844
235 Stephane Croes 2,844
236 Jesse Cohen 2,844
237 Yi Cheng 2,844
238 Sean Lenning 2,844
239 Vince Burgio 2,844
240 Joseph Just 2,844
241 Craig Rudolph 2,844
242 Clayton Mozdzen 2,844
243 Yisidro Bustillos 2,844
Well done, didn't realise he was from Glasgow
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
«
Reply #196 on:
June 08, 2010, 07:17:05 PM »
Me neither, he is Kasabian online, won the party million a few months ago.
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Dewi_cool
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
«
Reply #197 on:
June 08, 2010, 07:22:53 PM »
pocket
results for Kevin Howe
http://www.pocketfives.com/poker-scores/scarface2911/
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The very last hand of the night goes to Dewi James, who finds ACES and talks Raymond O’Mahoney into calling his all-in preflop bet of 15k. “If I had AQ, I’d call!” says Dewi. Raymond calls holding pocket 66’s.
JaffaCake
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
«
Reply #198 on:
June 08, 2010, 09:08:38 PM »
where are all the dazzling facts from this thread last year, how many bracelets are won by pros, facts about the winners, the numbers etc, I read the stuff about flushy on another site but sure it was on here last year.
And surely when one of the guys who's posted here the longest and now owns part of the site ships a bracelet it should be top of the news on the front page for the whole series, never mind a week later....it's even below who was chip leader after day one in the latest dtd tournament....fair enough u need to make the page look fresh but rotate the news under flushy's thing, nothing wrong with blowing your own trumpet, as it were
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The Camel
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
«
Reply #199 on:
June 08, 2010, 09:11:53 PM »
Quote from: JaffaCake on June 08, 2010, 09:08:38 PM
where are all the dazzling facts from this thread last year, how many bracelets are won by pros, facts about the winners, the numbers etc, I read the stuff about flushy on another site but sure it was on here last year.
And surely when one of the guys who's posted here the longest and now owns part of the site ships a bracelet it should be top of the news on the front page for the whole series, never mind a week later....it's even below who was chip leader after day one in the latest dtd tournament....fair enough u need to make the page look fresh but rotate the news under flushy's thing, nothing wrong with blowing your own trumpet, as it were
The thought of blowing Flushy's trumpet has put a horrible mental picture in my head.
«
Last Edit: June 08, 2010, 09:56:24 PM by The Camel
»
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DaveShoelace
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
«
Reply #200 on:
June 08, 2010, 09:15:36 PM »
Quote from: JaffaCake on June 08, 2010, 09:08:38 PM
where are all the dazzling facts from this thread last year, how many bracelets are won by pros, facts about the winners, the numbers etc, I read the stuff about flushy on another site but sure it was on here last year.
And surely when one of the guys who's posted here the longest and now owns part of the site ships a bracelet it should be top of the news on the front page for the whole series, never mind a week later....it's even below who was chip leader after day one in the latest dtd tournament....fair enough u need to make the page look fresh but rotate the news under flushy's thing, nothing wrong with blowing your own trumpet, as it were
The facts and figures were sent out every day by the WSOP on a press release, some of the feedback was that they sent out too much info and clogged up a lot of inboxes, so they decided not to do it as much this year. I actually thought they were really useful and fun, I presume it was thicko Americans who complained.
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TightEnd
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
«
Reply #201 on:
June 08, 2010, 09:31:50 PM »
I'm not receiving the fact based press releases this year, in fact this was a conscious decision by the wsop not to send them this year. As to flushy, I am delighted as anyone. Did a sweat thread, have asked to interview him, have offered to write up a tournament report for him etc. And news reports on the main site latest news can't be stickied. He will just have to win another one
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JaffaCake
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
«
Reply #202 on:
June 08, 2010, 11:11:55 PM »
I read all the facts n figures stuff somewhere this year tho, is it just on the WSOP site? I read the one on Flushy, it was good, saying how many tournies he'd won (cough cough), how much he'd cash etc etc, shame it missed out his WCOOP victory tho, sure whoever uses those facts woulda liked that. Maybe u could take it from there if u wanted? It's still just as long and random.
Shame those things can't be stickied, just have to get the lazy fker to write up that report or do an interview and that can be up there a while. Meanwhile on your sayso Tighty I've booked my flights to go next week and go one better than last year, just to get some more good news on the site
Hopefully the Scrote n the BrammDogg can give us something to cheer in the meantime.
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TightEnd
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
«
Reply #203 on:
June 08, 2010, 11:17:24 PM »
Good luck with the trip jeff. I'll try and do your bracelet in event 34 justice.
:_)
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JaffaCake
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
«
Reply #204 on:
June 08, 2010, 11:21:36 PM »
(don't think u need to credit this, it's a press release on the WSOP official site)
DEMPSEY KNOCKS OUT COMPETITION TO WIN EVENT 9
by: Nolan Dalla
Three Ladies Finish in Top 13 Spots – a WSOP First
James Dempsey Wins First WSOP Gold Bracelet
English Online Poker Pro Collects $197,470 in Prize Money
Rowdy English Crowd Cheers Dempsey to Saturday Night Victory
OVERVIEW
James Dempsey was the winner of the $1,500 buy-in Pot-Limit Hold’em championship (Event #9). He is one of England’s top online poker pros. Dempsey lives in Brighton, UK. He collected $197,470 for the victory plus his first WSOP gold bracelet.
Dempsey topped a field of 650 players and won the game’s most coveted prize. The tournament began on Thursday June 3rd and ended at 10:40 pm on June 5th.
Dempsey’s win at the Rio in Las Vegas was amplified by the roars of several English supporters. The cheering section, numbering perhaps 15 to 20 slurring and stammering fans, chanted constantly for eight full hours, making the final table scene resemble a third-world soccer match rather than a poker event. Things got so loud at one point, Mike “the Mouth” Matusow who was sitting nearby, complained the boisterous fans were too noisy.
English poker players are enjoying quite a strong WSOP through the first nine events. Dempsey became the second Englishman to win a gold bracelet this week, following Londoner Praz Bansi’s win in an earlier No-Limit Hold’em competition.
Dempsey also became the second consecutive Brit to win this event, following John-Paul Kelly’s victory in this same competition last year. Indeed, British players are acknowledged to be strong Pot-Limit players since many of the poker games played in England going back for more than 20 years are played using the Pot-Limit format.
The runner up was Steve Chanthabouasy (Portland, OR), a 36-year-old poker pro who cashed at the WSOP for the first time. Among those who also cashed were former gold bracelet winners Bob Slezak, Tom McEvoy, and Tom Schneider.
There were also three female finishers in the top 13 spots. J.J. Liu (Las Vegas, NV) finished third. Julie Farkas (Albuquerque, NM) finished tenth. Longtime poker player Melissa Hayden (Las Vegas, NV) took 13th place. This is believed to be the first time three female players have ever finished in the top 13 places at the WSOP in any open event.
For the official results and Event#9 tournament portal page, click here.
THE CHAMPION – James Dempsey
The $1,500 buy-in Pot-Limit Hold’em champion (Event #9) is James Dempsey, from Brighton, UK.
Dempsey is 27-years-old. He has been playing poker seriously since 2003.
Dempsey holds a commercial pilot’s license.
Dempsey concentrates mostly on online poker. However, he had amassed about $200,000 in live tournament cashes prior to this victory.
Dempsey’s favorite poker game is Pot-Limit Omaha.
Dempsey’s first recorded tournament cash was in 2005.
Several fellow British poker players who know Dempsey well remarked that he has had a reputation for playing exceptional tournament poker during the early to middle rounds of tournaments, but then sometimes gets bored and becomes disinterested. However, his record to this point does not appear to reflect this pattern. Out of 27 major cashes over the past five years, he now has six wins.
Dempsey has only cashed one time at the WSOP prior to this win.
Dempsey collected $197,470 for first place. He was presented with his first WSOP gold bracelet.
According to official records, Dempsey now has one win, one final table appearances, and two cashes at the WSOP. His career WSOP earnings now total $210,137.
WINNER QUOTES
On what winning his first WSOP gold bracelet means: “It’s great to win a tournament. But there’s no reason why this should hold any edge over another tournament. You play for money. Like someone can come in third in a tournament and make like $300,000 but if you win another event (with a smaller field or lower buy in) you might get first and its $200,000 – that to me does not make any sense at all. Poker players play for money. It’s great to win a major tournament. But I just think there’s too much put onto winning a World Series of Poker gold bracelet. You want to try and win one, of course. You win more money. But you see people playing three events at the same time. It’s just stupid.”
On allegedly being his own worst enemy at the poker table, sometimes blowing off big chip leads purely out of boredom: “It’s something I used to do. But I think I matured a bit. Like today, I lost two big pots and then I was the short stack. But I really focused and tried to maintain my head. It’s definitely something in the past I used to do. I used to rush some of my decisions. But today, I gave myself some extra seconds to think it through and it worked out.”
THE FINAL TABLE
The final table consisted of no former WSOP gold bracelet winners, which guaranteed a first-time champion.
Three different nations were represented at the final table -- Canada, Great Britain, and the United States. One of the Americans (Mark Babekov) was born in Uzbekistan.
The final table began nine-handed.
Final table participants ranged in age from 27 to 52.
In general, many younger players grew up playing No-Limit Hold’em, whereas many older veteran poker players are more conditioned to playing Limit and Pot-Limit games. The age of players at this final table was arguably a reflection of the existing gap between young players and their older counterparts. Many No-Limit Hold’em final tables in recent years are dominated by players in their 20s. However, the youngest player in this finale was 27. Lowball and Omaha High-Low games also tend to attract a more veteran poker crowd.
This final table featured the first female top-nine finisher at the 2010 WSOP. J.J. Liu broke up the week-long stag party by becoming the first lady to take her seat in the finale.
The runner up was Steve Chanthabouasy, from Portland, OR. This was his first time to cash at the WSOP. He collected $121,963 in prize money. The heads-up match between Dempsey and Chanthabouasy lasted about two hours.
Chanthabouasy is a 36-year-old business manager. He was born in the Southeast Asian nation of Laos. His wife is from Cambodia. Chanthabouasy sat tableside draped in the pre-1975 Cambodian flag. He was also flanked by two smaller flags hoisted at tableside – representing Laos and Cambodia.
The third-place finisher was Joanne “J.J.” Liu, from Las Vegas, NV. She is a tournament regular who was born in Taiwan. Liu has 95 major cashes dating back to 1994 – 14 of which have taken place at the World Series of Poker. With her $86,512 cash in this event, she now has nearly $300,000 in career tournament winnings at the WSOP.
The fourth-place finisher was Mark Babekov, from Fairlawn, NJ. He is a real estate relocation specialist, originally from Uzbekistan. Babekov cashed for the first time at the WSOP in this event, worth $62,232 in prize money.
The fifth-place finisher was Scott Haraden. He is a painting contractor from San Diego,
. Haraden earned $45,393.
The sixth-place finisher was Armen Kara, from Brea,
. Kara now has four cashes at the WSOP. He earned $33,573 in prize money.
The seventh-place finisher was Joseph Williams, from Winnipeg, Manitoba (Canada). He is primarily a Pot-Limit Omaha cash player. This marked his first time to cash at the WSOP. Seventh place paid $25,166.
The eighth-place finisher was Edward Brogdon, from Thorndale, AZ. This marked his eighth time to cash in a WSOP event. The farmer and rancher collected $19,120 in prize money. This was his highest career finish at the WSOP, to date.
The ninth-place finisher was Gregg Wilkerson, from Denver, CO. He is a 36-year-old businessman. This marked Wilkerson’s best tournament performance ever. He earned $14,715.
The final table officially began at 2:30 pm and ended at 10:40 pm. The final table clocked in at 8 hours and 10 minutes – minus a one-hour dinner break.
OTHER IN-THE-MONEY FINISHERS
The top 63 finishers collected prize money. Aside from those who made the final table, former WSOP gold bracelet finishers who cashed in this event included – Bob Slezak (35th), Tom McEvoy (41st), and Tom Schneider (52nd).
With this finish, 1983 WSOP Main Event champion Tom McEvoy now has 43 career cashes, which is 17th on the all-time list. He is currently tied with Daniel Negreanu and Howard Lederer.
There were three female finishers in the top 13 spots. J.J. Liu (Las Vegas, NV) finished third. Julie Farkas (Albuquerque, NM) finished 10th. Longtime poker player Melissa Hayden (Las Vegas, NV) took 13th place. This is believed to be the first time three female players have ever finished in the top 13 places at the WSOP in any open event.
Last year’s winner was John-Paul Kelley, from Aylesbury, UK. The victory marked his first of two gold bracelet wins in 2009. Kelly also won an event at last year’s 2009 WSOP Europe. Kelly entered this year’s tournament, but did not cash.
ODDS & ENDS
This is the 839th gold bracelet event in World Series of Poker history. Note: This figure includes every official WSOP event played, including tournaments during the early years when there were no actual gold bracelets awarded. It also includes the 11 gold bracelets awarded at WSOP Europe (to date).
Some poker purists consider Pot-Limit to be a greater test of skill than No-Limit. This is due to Pot-Limit’s emphasis on post-flop play. Since pots gradually escalate in size in Pot-Limit, the magnitude of every decision is amplified as the hand progresses. Contrast this with No-Limit, in which players can push “all in” at any time, which tends to create more coin-flip and races, which (some claim) reduces the element of skill.
Pot-Limit means a player can wager only up to the exact amount of what is contained in the pot at any time. By contrast, No-Limit means a player can wager any or all of his/her chips at any time.
The final table was played on ESPN’secondary stage. This is located near the ESPN Main Stage, which is the site where most of the biggest WSOP events are filmed. Many spectators prefer the secondary stage, since the setting is more intimate.
The official WSOP gold bracelet ceremony takes place on the day following the winner’s victory (or some hours later when the tournament runs past midnight). The ceremony takes place inside The Pavilion, which is the expansive main tournament room hosting all noon starts this year. The ceremony begins at the conclusion of the first break of the noon tournament, usually around 2:20 pm. The national anthem of the winner’s nation is usually played. The entire presentation is open to public and media. Video and photography are permitted by both public and members of the media.
Dempsey indicated he plans to attend the WSOP gold bracelet ceremony. He requested his national anthem not be played during the presentation. The WSOP plans to comply with the request.
EVENT HISTORY
Pot-Limit poker made its WSOP debut in 1984, when two Pot-Limit Omaha tournaments were offered. There were no Pot-Limit tournaments of any kind at the WSOP from 1970 through 1983.
The only Pot-Limit game played at the WSOP between 1984 and 1991 was Pot-Limit Omaha. Pot-Limit Hold’em action at the WSOP during this period was restricted to cash games.
The first Pot-Limit Hold’em tournament at the WSOP took place in 1992. The game has been a fixture on the WSOP schedule ever since. During many years, it was one of the first tournaments on the annual schedule.
This event’s inaugural champion was three-time WSOP gold bracelet winner John Bonetti. The always colorful ex-champ passed away during the 2007 WSOP.
Previous WSOP $1,500 buy-in Pot-Limit Hold’em event winners include:
John-Paul Kelly (2009)
David Singer (2008)
Michael Spiegel (2007)
Rafe Furst (2006)
Thomas Werthmann 2005)
Minh Nguyen (2004)
Prahlad Friedman (2003)
John McIntosh (2002)
No Event (2001)
No Event (2000)
No Event (1999)
No Event (1998)
No Event (1997)
Al Krux (1996)
Peter Vilandos (1995)
Jay Heimowitz (1994)
No Event (1993)
John Bonetti (1992)
Note about “No Event” years -- Several years (above) included Pot-Limit Hold’em on the schedule, but event buy-ins were higher than $1,500.
The largest live Pot-Limit Hold’em tournament in poker history took place at the 2006 WSOP when there were 1,101 entries.
Last year's event attracted 633 entries. Entries increased by about 2 percent over last year as this tournament attracted 650 players. This was the fifth of nine WSOP events completed so far which has seen an increase over last year’s numbers.
TOURNAMENT PLAY
The $1,500 buy-in Pot-Limit Hold’em championship attracted 650 entries. The total prize pool amounted to $877,500. The top 63 finishers collected prize money.
Dempsey’s win was amplified by the roars of several English supporters. The cheering section, numbering perhaps 15 to 20 slurring and stammering supporters, chanted constantly for eight full hours, making the final table scene resemble a third-world soccer match rather than a poker event. Things got so loud at one point, Mike “the Mouth” Matusow who was sitting nearby, complained the boisterous fans were too noisy.
When heads-up play began, Dempsey enjoyed better than a 2 to 1 chip advantage. But he lost a big hand and the lead swung in Chanthabouasy’s favor. Dempsey regained the edge and closed out the victory
The final hand of the tournament came when Dempsey was dealt . Chanthabouasy was dealt . Dempsey pre-flop raised, Chanthabouasy moved all-in and Dempsey called. The board ran out which presented some interesting possibilities for the dog hand. The fell on the turn and the came on the river, which snapped off Chanthabouasy’s straight draw. Dempsey won the tournament and a long night of celebration instantly began.
2010 WSOP STATISTICS
Through the conclusion of Event #9, the 2010 WSOP has attracted 11,732 total entries. $20,221,200 in prize money has been awarded to winners.
Through the conclusion of Event #9, the nationalities of winners have been:
United States (4)
Canada (2)
England (2)
Hungary (1)
Through the conclusion of Event #9, the national origin (birthplace) of winners has been:
United States (3)
Vietnam (1)
Canada (2)
England (2)
Hungary (1)
Through the conclusion of Event #9, the ratio of professional poker players to semi-pros and amateurs who won gold bracelets is as follows:
Professional Players (6): Michael Chow, Michael Mizrachi, Praz Bansi, Josh Tieman, Peter Gelencser, James Dempsey
Semi-Pros (0): None
Amateurs (3): Duc Pham, Aadam Daya, Pascal LeFrancois
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TightEnd
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
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Reply #205 on:
June 08, 2010, 11:54:05 PM »
Quote from: TightEnd on June 05, 2010, 03:34:06 PM
PokerNews
The first week of the 2010 World Series of Poker is in the books, eight bracelets have been awarded, and the 58,000 square feet of additional playing space in the Rio Convention Center’s Pavillion Room isn’t the only reason the WSOP feels a little emptier this year.
Numbers are down nearly across the board, and although the $50,000 Players’ Championship saw a 22% uptick in entries, it was quite a different event than the one held a year ago. Not only was the format changed from H.O.R.S.E. to an 8-game mix, but the tournament was scheduled at the beginning of the WSOP rather than midway through. Additionally, this year’s Players Championship was one of only three events ESPN is taping for broadcast. Pundits and players alike thought the return of the TV cameras could perhaps draw the 140-150 players the event saw between 2006 and 2008, or perhaps even a number closer to the 201 who bought in to last year’s $40,000 NLHE event. However, even the conservative line set by the media on Day 1 of the $50K came in at 125.
As we took a closer look at the 116 players who entered the $50K in 2010, several themes began to emerge. Here are some of the trends we noticed as we broke down the field.
Young players make a strong showing
Turning the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. event into an 8-Game championship brought out a powerful contingent of young players, many of whom play in the highest-stakes NLHE and PLO cash games online. Tom Dwan, Phil Galfond, Cole South, Brian Townsend, David “WhooooKid” Baker, Nick Schulman, Isaac Haxton, Mikael Thuritz, David Benefield, Ashton Griffin, Justin Bonomo, Alexander Kostritsyn and Brian Hastings certainly all fall into this category, and a few of them (Dwan, Galfond, Townsend, Kostritsyn and Bonomo) have played in this event for several years now. A number of players better known for their NLHE and PLO tournament results also turned out, including Jason Mercier, Joe Serock, Scott Seiver, Dario Minieri, Tuan Le, Sorel Mizzi, Daniel “djk123” Kelly, Shawn Buchanan, Marco Johnson, and Mike “SirWatts” Watson. This year, the young cash gamers fared better than the young tourney pros. Baker (6th), Thuritz (8th), Schulman (9th) and Kostritsyn (10th) all made the money.
Some younger players who previously gave the $50K a shot and were missing this year? Matt Hawrilenko, Jon “Pearljammer” Turner, James “mig.com” Mackey, David Williams, Joe “Joe Tall” Bunevith, Brian “tsarrast” Rast and Kirill Gerasimov.
Dude, where’s my patch?
Pros sponsored by or affiliated with a major online poker site comprised 46% of the $50K field this year (53 of 116), a slight uptick from 43% of the field (41 of 95) in 2009. Here’s how they break down by site:
Full Tilt Poker– 36 (up from 30)
PokerStars – 11 (up from 6)
Ultimate Bet - 2
Doyles Room – 2
Titan Poker – 1
Party Poker – 1
Notable $50K no-shows
Ville Wahlbeck, Mike Wattel, Ray Dehkharghani, and John Kabbaj all cashed in this event in 2009 but did not play in 2010. Other notable absences included Johnny Chan, Allen Cunningham, Annie Duke, Mike Sexton, David Grey, John Hennigan, Gabe Kaplan, Jason Gray, Ali Eslami, Frank Kassela, Jani Sointula, Jery Buss, Cory Zeidman, Bruno Fitoussi, Max Pescatori, Andy Black, Fabrice Soulier, Rob Hollink, Jim Bechtel, Rafi Amit, and Brandon Adams.
One woman, 115 men
The number of female players in the $50,000 Players Championship reached a high watermark in 2007 when seven women (Jennifer Harman, Annie Duke, Cyndy Violette, Kristy Gazes, Isabelle Mercier, Jerri Thomas, and Maureen Feduniak) bought in. This year, however, only one woman played — Harman.
It's the Economy, Stupid
The $50,000 Players Championship isn’t the only event that drew a lower-than-anticipated number of entrants. Thus far, the fields in the lower buy-in NLHE events are anywhere from 7 to 27 percent smaller than they were in 2009. There are numerous factors at work here that are contributing to the lower numbers. For one, the U.S. economy is still seriously shaky and recreational players have less disposable income to spend on travel and tournament buy-ins. European pros are feeling the crunch, as well. Across the pond, the Euro is tanking, and the Players Championship probably had a lot more appeal when the Euro was trading at $1.58 than the $1.20 it is today — it’s lowest level in more than four years. There's also the simple fact that many international players are just not here yet, choosing to depart for Las Vegas a bit closer to the Main Event. Finally, there are far more $1,000 and $1,500 buy-in events on the docket this year. While there was only one $1K “Stimulus Special” in 2009, there will be six this summer.
Aside from the $50K, the only events that saw a significant increase in field size were two of the higher buy-in tournaments offered this week — the $5,000 NLHE Shootout and the $2,500 2-7 Triple Draw. For all you stats lovers, here’s a more detailed look at the tournament entry numbers through the first ten events:
2010 World Series of Poker tournament entries, Events #1-10
Event #1 – $500 Casino Employees NLHE, 721 players, down 16.7% from 2009 (866 players)
Event #2 - $50,000 Players’ Championship, 116 players, up 22% from 2009 (95 players), down 22% from 2008 **
Event #3 - $1,000 NLHE, 4,345 players, down 27.7% from 2009 (6,012 players)***
Event #4 - $1,500 Omaha 8 or better, 818 players, down 11% from 2009 (918 players)
Event #5 - $1,500 NLHE, 2,092 players, down 25% from 2009 (2,791 players)
Event #6 - $5,000 NLHE Shootout, 358 players, up 27.8% from 2009 (280 players)
Event #7 - $2,500 2-7 Triple Draw, 291 players, up 13.2% from 2009 (257 players)
Event #8 - $1,500 NLHE, 2,341 entries, down 7% from 2009 (2,506 entries)
Event #9 - $1,500 PLHE, 650 entries, up 2.6% from 2009 (633 players)
Event #10 - $10,000 Seven-Card Stud, 150 players, up 5.6% from 2009 (142 players)
this ok for you Jeff? If I get it, I post it
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JaffaCake
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
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Reply #206 on:
June 09, 2010, 01:07:43 AM »
love it, feeding my wild side...
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TightEnd
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
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Reply #207 on:
June 09, 2010, 01:22:54 AM »
The 27th and final seat in the WSOP $1,000,000 Tournament Of Champions will be decided by a one table sit-n-go.
Voting for the WSOP Tournament of Champions closes on June 15th 2010, and the final seat in the 27-player field will be determined in a nine-person tournament on June 10th. The nine players taking part in the tournament June 10th 2010, with the winner playing the $1,000,000 TOC June 27th 2010 are:
Andy Bloch
Liv Boeree
Don Cheadle
Tom Dwan
Elky Grospellier
Gus Hansen
Michael Mizrachi
Sorel Mizzi
Paul Wasicka
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My eyes are open wide
By the way,I made it through the day
I watch the world outside
By the way, I'm leaving out today
dino1980
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
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Reply #208 on:
June 09, 2010, 01:34:56 AM »
Loving the 'third world soccer match' line that's up there with Dalla's infamous 'literally all hell broke loose' line.
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LeedsRhodesy
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Re: WSOP 2010 Thread. Feed your wild side revisited
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Reply #209 on:
June 09, 2010, 09:06:15 AM »
Quote from: dino1980 on June 09, 2010, 01:34:56 AM
Loving the 'third world soccer match' line that's up there with Dalla's infamous 'literally all hell broke loose' line.
Middy has chips in event 17 22/250 with $818k ftw
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