GRIFFIN TAKES MONTE CARLO POKER CROWN AND EURO 1.82
MILLION
6 April 2007
US player continues to show he can mix it with the
best
A pair each of British, Scandinavian and American
players sat down with a Canadian and an Irishman this
week to decide who would take home an almost Euro 2
million pay check and the respect for winning the
prestigious European Poker Tour Grand Finale in Monte
Carlo.
The competitors at that final table in the Salle des
Etoiles (Hall of the Stars) had all fought their way
through an entry field of 706 of some of the best
players in the world, paying Euros 10 000 for the
privelege of competing for the giant main prize of Euros
1.8 million, although even the first man out would
receive a six figure consolation.
Well known names around the table included the Hendon
Mob's Ram Vaswami; WSOP and Aussie Millions final tabler
Andy Black from Ireland; WPT Canada and Aussie Millions
finisher Marc Karam and Chicago player and at one time
the youngest WSOP bracelet holder Gavin Griffin, who
qualified this year through Pokerstars. Other players
had qualified online or in land events as regular and
experienced tournament players, setting the scene for
some exciting poker.
Starting as chipleader, Griffin continued to play a
winning game throughout, although it was a close run
thing at the close. But there was plenty of action
before that stage was reached, with an early (on the
fifth hand) elimination of Ram Vaswami. After a clash
with Marc Karam, Vaswami hit the exit with an eighth
place payout of Euro 159 270.
Fourteen hands later if was Andy Black's turn, with the
short-stacked Irishman falling to aggressive play from
Norway's Kristian Kjondal, and leaving the contest with
Euro 238 910 for his seventh placing. Thirteen hands
after that Black was joined at the rail by Pokerstars UK
online qualifier Steve Jelinek who became Karam's second
victim, but pocketed Euros 305 270 for his sixth
placing.
American Josh Prager was the next man out at hand 33
following a lively exchange with Danish player Soren
Kongsgaard. Prager collected Euros 391 550 for his fifth
place. Two determined young men - eventual winner
Griffin and the Norwegian Kristian Kjondal provided the
next elimination action, which ended with the departure
of the Norwegian with a Euros 471 180 cash-out for a
fourth place finish.
Denmark's Soren Kongsgaard and Gavin Griffin tussled to
decide who would be third man out and who would enter
the heads up with Karam, and it was the Dane who went
down convincingly to the American. Kongsgaard collected
a Euros 610 550 bank account booster for his third
placing, leaving the final contest for the really big
money to Griffin and Karam.
With a 1.4 million lead in chips, Karam was in a strong
position entering the heads up, and early play was
relatively cautious, although Griffin managed to narrow
the lead right down by the mid-twenties hand count of
heads up play. With one or two flashes of big action, it
was a long war of attrition which eventually saw Griffin
taking the chip lead through disciplined, steady play.
On hand 150 after some big money action the American
managed to scoop a 3 million or more pot which made his
lead convincing, but not much later Karam scored on
another pot, the second largest of the heads up,
bringing the two back to an almost equal pegging.
With such close positioning, and after over two hours of
thoroughly professional and absorbing heads up play it
was finally Gavin Griffin who narrowly won the big Euros
1.825 million money and the kudos of being the EPT
Champion, whilst his worth opponent from Canada Marc
Karam took the runner-up position and Euros 1 061 820.
For Karam, it was an improvement on his performance in
the EPT Monte Carlo competition last year, where he
finished fourth, collecting Euros 195 000.
Clearly on top of the world, Griffin joked with
reporters, and commented: "My first trip to Europe was
pretty good. I'll definitely be back. Nothing beats the
prestige of winning a bracelet, but this is a special
win for sure."
Griffin's poker credentials and c.v. are further
enhanced by this significant victory against a
formidable field of players. When only 22 years old he
won a World Series of Poker bracelet in 2004 and he has
mixed it and truimphed over top tier players. The Monte
Carlo field included names like Phil Ivey, Greg Raymer,
Phil Hellmuth, Patrik Antonius, Johnny Lodden, and
William Thorsson, and Griffin finished above them all to
take this major title.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
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