BRITAIN VICTORIOUS IN PARTY POKER NATIONS CUP
18 April 2008
Heads up between the UK and Ireland a thriller
The 2008 Party Poker.com Nations Cup concluded this week
with a truimph for the UK team after a heads up against
Ireland. Team Great Britain, captained by Roland de
Wolfe with members Neil Channing, Surinder Sunar, Joe
Beevers, Ian Frazer and PartyPoker.com VIP online
qualifier Charlie Durbin were jubilant over the win.
The team event featured world class line-ups from the
USA, Germany, Holland and Sweden. All six teams competed
in a “tag” final where each team captain’s judgement was
vital, as it was up to the leaders to make tactical
substitutions and strategic “time outs.”
“I’m absolutely delighted,” said Brit team captain de
Wolfe. “In many ways it is even better to win a team
event for your country than win an individual title. I
am so proud that the selections for my team were
vindicated,” he added.
“We knew that it would be tight early on so I played
Surinder. We fancied that he could exploit his tight
image and he had played so well in his heat that it
simply had to be him. Next we put on Joe Beevers. At
that point we needed to sure things up as we were near
the chip lead. This was a choice I made based on the
situation. If we had been leading I would have put in
Ian Frazer to get at them but Joe did a good job.
"I played third and always fancied this period of the
tournament. I had a good run against Holland’s Thierry
Van Den Berg and knew that blind stealing would be key
at this stage before the blinds got too big. Neil had to
play last as he had the form and confidence. Even though
neither Ian Frazer or Charlie Durbin were involved at
this stage, both were key to our success. Both played
excellently in the heats and the decisions were hard but
we were only allowed to play four players in the final.”
Channing anchored Britain to victory in a tense heads-up
with Ireland’s Donnacha O’Dea. After a number of swings,
the key turning point was when Channing went all-in with
8 4 off suit, only to get called by O’Dea’s 2 2. The
Irish Open champion was behind on the flop and the turn
only for a 4 to hit on the river and cripple the Irish.
Very soon O’Dea was all-in with 10c 3c, only to be
called by Channing’s 10h 9h. The 10 on the turn was
enough to win Britain the cup they had previously taken
in 2006.
Channing was originally pencilled in as a television
reporter for the event coverage but after his Irish Open
win was asked by captain de Wolfe to take his place in
the line-up. “I am just as proud of this as I am of my
win in Ireland,” said Channing. “It was an honour to be
picked to represent my country and great to be chosen to
play the crucial final leg for the team.”
After six heats Britain arrived at the final table joint
second in chips with Holland, just behind leaders
Germany. The action started fast and it was all Holland
as online qualifier Quirijn Van der Peet dramatically
took down a massive pot against Germany’s Benjamin Kang
to turn the tournament on its head.
This triggered a number of substitutions, particularly
for Ireland, who used their full quota of replacements
in a short period of time. After starting with Marty
Smyth, followed by Liam Flood, captain Padraig Parkinson
put himself on for one hand only to substitute himself
straight away as his view was that he had to play
Donnacha O’Dea for as much of the final table as
possible. It was a tactic that very nearly paid off and
there was no doubt that Ireland were the team with the
most support throughout.
Team USA started as the short stack and departed first.
USA captain Robert Williamson III had understandably put
in Chris Ferguson to start and try and make the best of
a bad situation after a terrible week. After all the
blinds were small and there was plenty of play on the
table. Ferguson’s 9 9, however, ran into O’Dea’s A K and
an A on the river sent ‘Jesus’ to the rail. Jamie Gold
was outside preparing himself to play but that was the
last the tournament saw of a strong side that also
included Chad Brown, Montel Williams and Thomas Keller.
Next out was defending champions Sweden who had started
the session with Mats Rahmn and made serious in-roads
thanks to Johan Storakers and, particularly, William
Thorson. 2006 PartyPoker.com Poker Nations Cup hero
Anders Henriksson’s A 5 got busted by O’Dea’s 10 10. The
flop went 4 J J and nothing on the turn or river meant
that Bo Sehlstedt’s side were down to 1,000 chips. Dutch
captain Marcel Luske was left to finish them off. At
this point the noise of the Irish supporters was
growing. Parkinson’s decision to play O’Dea as much as
possible looked to be paying dividends after a
disappointing set of results in the heats and many
thought the Emerald Isle were going to pull off an
unlikely victory.
With all this happening Germany appeared to be making a
fantastic comeback. After starting with Benjamin Kang,
captain Michael Keiner played Andreas Krause, Sebastian
Ruthenberg and then Thomas Bihl and it was “Buzzer” Bihl
who doubled-up through Neil Channing to get them right
back in contention. Bihl’s J J held up against
Channing’s K 8. However, it was Germany who fell next.
The blinds were going up and Channing continued to bully
the table. Channing pushed with 9h 7h only to get called
by Bihl’s 5 5 but a 9 on the flop gave Great Britain the
massive pot, crippling Germany and leaving Marcel Luske
to finish them off next hand.
Next to go was Holland, who had been up and down
throughout the final table. Luske’s 10 s 9 s was busted
by O’Dea’s A K off suit after two kings had hit the
board. Marcel had started with impressive online
qualifier Quirijn Van der Peet and played Daan Ruitter,
Thierry Van Den Berg and himself. Seen as outsiders by
PartyBets.com before a card was dealt in the tournament,
Dutch captain Marcel Luske was pleased with his team’s
performance.
This left O’Dea and Channing heads-up, only for the
Irish Open champion to eventually conquer the Irish
poker legend. Ireland captain Padraig Parkinson was
philosophical about the defeat: “We were the oldest team
in the tournament. It’s quite obvious that poker is a
young man’s game.”
A PartyPoker.com spokesman said: “Neil Channing is
running so good that Great Britain looked like the
winners when it got short handed. Full credit must go to
Ireland, however, who brought a great atmosphere to the
tournament and very nearly pipped them at the post. On
paper, the likes of Chris Ferguson and Jamie Gold for
Team USA look very intimidating but it seems like when
they cross the Atlantic for these tournaments they just
can’t quite get it right.”
“It was an amazing experience for the five
PartyPoker.com VIP online qualifiers. A week alongside
the world’s best pros in a unique team atmosphere is
intimidating but ultimately exciting and unforgettable.”
The winning team scooped $100 000 in this unique
tournament that saw players pursuing personal and team
glory, along with the honour of representing their home
nation. One PartyPoker.com VIP qualifier played on each
team alongside five world class poker professionals from
the same participating nations, except the USA who
featured celebrity player Montel Willams. Each player
paid a buy-in of $5 000 making a total prize pool of
$280 000 with $100 000 added by PartyPoker.com.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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