WORLD SERIES OF POKER ACTION (Update)
20 June 2008
Big money continues to flow through latest four
events to be concluded
Scott Seiver ran away with Event 21 - the $5 000 buy-in
No-Limit Hold'em tourney, holding an impressive lead for
most of the action as he closed in on the first prize of
$755 856 this week.
He accounted for most of the final table eliminations
before entering the heads up with Dave Seidman and
sending him home with a $482 372 runner-up prize.
It's been a proftable WSOP for Seiver this year so far;
the Las Vegas poker pro has enjoyed two money finishes,
one of them just short of the final table lineup in the
$1 500 Pot Limit Hold'em event.
Seiver entered the final table with a more than two to
one chip count advantage over his nearest opponent,
Rajesh Vohra from Florida, and he managed to maintain
his lead with skilled and bold play leading to the 40
hand long heads up challenge. Other competitors at the
table were Jacobo Fernandez, Adam Geyer, Ben Sprengers,
Chuck Sklar, Scott Freeman and Anders Henriksson.
In Event 22 - the $5 000 H.O.R.S.E. - Marcel Luske
looked good at the final table but just missed making
the heads up, which eventually saw Jens Voertmann facing
Doug Ganger with a 2 to 1 chip lead after almost four
hours of tough three handed poker.
The original entry field of 414 had been narrowed down
to 16 players by the start of Day 3 of the much
anticipated multi-poker-style tournament, and that
finally resolved into a final table with a wealth of
talent and experience that included Todd Brunson,
Jennifer Harman, Jared Davis, Rostislav Tsodikov, Steve
Zolotow and Hoyt Corkins.
Voertmann took the bracelet and the almost $300 000 main
prize in the end, a final hand of stud/hilo that left
second placed Ganger pocketing a check for $182 822.
The name Hinkle will have a familiar ring following
Grant Hinkle's $1 500 No-Limit Hold'em bracelet win
early in this year's events. This week it was brother
Blair who added another WSOP bracelet to the family
trophy cabinet in Event 23 - the $2 000 No-Limit Hold'em
event.
Among the chipleaders going into the final table, Blair
Hinkle took out six of the eight eliminations before
romping home after a heads up with Canadian player Mark
Brockington to win the first prize of $507 563 and make
a new record book entry - the first siblings to win
bracelets in the same WSOP.
For a first time bracelet win, or by any other standard,
it was an impressive performance with Hinkle calling the
shots almost from start to finish of the final table
action and maintaining a strong lead with skilful and
aggressive playing.
Brockington was outclassed in the heads up, not winning
a single hand and despatched in second place on the
eighth hand by Hinkle. His second placing was worth $326
552.
Respected pro Max Pescatori truimphed in Event 24 - the
$2 500 Pot-Limit Hold'em/Omaha, besting an entry field
of 457 to add another WSOP bracelet to his cv, together
with a first placing check for $246 471. This was the
second occasion on which Pescatori has won the event -
the last time in 2006.
To defeat final tablers of the quality of Allen
Cunningham and Minh Ly required experience and talent,
both demonstrated in abundance by the "Italian Pirate"
as Pescatori is nicknamed.
In the heads up, Pescatori was faced by Kyle Kloeckner,
a relative newcomer and former philosophy major turned
poker pro from St. Louis. Although he held the chip lead
going into the heads up, a WSOP debut with a bracelet
win was not to be for Kloekner, who fell to Pescatori's
talented play in the 30 minute finale. His reward for an
exciting second place finish to a great event was a
check for $152 410.
As we went to press, the final four had been reached in
the exciting Event 25 - the $10 000 Heads-Up No-Limit
Hold'em World Championship, which saw a last minute rush
of entries for the limited 256 entry field. The
oversubscribed field played down to 32 contestants in
the first three rounds of action, which took some time
to decide.
Those who made it through included Venessa Selbst, who
is enjoying a successful WSOP thus far, Robert and Mike
Mizrachi whom she was subsequently to eliminate, Brandon
Adams, Sammy Farha, Kenny Tran, Erick Lindgren, Gavin
Griffin, Andy Black, Alex Jacob, David Williams and Lyle
Berman. Beating this sort of talent was never going to
be easy as the survivors moved forward over the weekend
to three more rounds to decide the final four.
The ultimate winner will collect a useful $539 056 in
this championship, inducing a highly competitive
atmosphere that saw Round 5 deliver the final eight, all
of whom qualified for payouts of $36 096:
Vanessa Selbst vs. Michael Mizrachi
Robert Mizrachi vs. Jonas Entin
John Patgorski vs. Gavin Griffin
Michael McNeil vs. Jonathan Jaffe
Alec Torelli vs. Scott Montgomery
David Williams vs. Lyle Berman
Brandon Adams vs. Emil Patel
Roman Paradiso vs. Kenny Tran
Winners of this round were as follows, and they advanced
to the final four matchups which stood poised to decide
the matter as we went to press, with each player
qualifying for $54 144 payouts:
Vanessa Selbst vs. Robert Mizrachi
Jonathan Jaffe vs. Gavin Griffin
Kenny Tran vs. Brandon Adams
Lyle Berman vs. Alec Torelli
Vanessa Selbst maintained her magnificent run,
eliminating both Michael and Robert Mizrachi to join the
Final Four:
Vanessa Selbst vs. Alec Torelli
Kenny Tran vs. Jonathan Jaffe
Online Casino News courtesy of
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