TWO MORE BRACELETS WON AT WSOP (Update)
27 June 2008
Hougaard holds off last minute challenge, and
Benyamine gets the jewelry at last!
Large entry fields, plenty of professionals and big
money continued to feature in events 36 and 37 at the
2008 World Series of Poker in Las Vegas over the
weekend.
In Event 36, the $1 500 buy-in No-Limit Hold'em, a
starting field of almost 2 500 players generated some
big six-figure prizes and deep cashes for the survivors.
Having bested them all, it was Jesper Hougaard who
started the 155 hand final table of nine players as the
chip leader, and despite a spirited late challenge from
his final heads up opponent Cody Slaubaugh, he
controlled the game.
The 31 hand heads up ended with Hougaard, who hails from
Denmark, taking his first WSOP bracelet and a first
place prize purse of $610 276, leaving Slowbaugh with a
still impressive second prize of $389 128. The third
place went to Aaron Kanter, who earned respect by
fighting back from the short stack to become a serious
threat throughout. His take home was $258 862.
One of poker's most recognisable names, David Benyamine
won his first WSOP bracelet in Event 37, the $10 000
buy-in Omaha Hi-Low World Championship, playing against
a field that included opponents of the calibre of Doyle
Brunson, John Juanda, Howard Lederer, Tony G, Phil
Hellmuth, Johnny Chan, Alexander Kostritsyn, Jeffrey
Lisandro, Greg Raymer, Barry Greenstein, Michael
Mizrachi, Thor Hansen, Jeff Madsen, Daniel Negreanu,
Jimmy Fricke, Mike Matusow, Tony Ma, Men "The Master"
Nguyen, Carlos Mortensen, Richard Ashby, Max Pescatori
and Gary Benson.David Chiu, Toto Leonidas and Ram
Vaswami.
By the end of Day 1 the 235-strong entry field was down
to 123, and by the end of Day 2 only 18 players were
still in contention, with Ras Vaswami holding the chip
lead.
The composition of the final table was decided when
Benyamine eliminated 1986 WSOP Champion Berry Johnston
in tenth place, setting up an international final match
with Benyamine holding a significant chip lead over
David Chiu, Toto Leonidas, Jason Gray from Australia,
Greg Jamison, Hieu 'Tony' Ma, Eugene Katchalov, Mike
Matusow and Ram Vaswami from the UK.
The heads up contestants were decided when Benyamine
eliminated Jason Gray in third spot, to face his sole
remaining rival, fellow American player Greg Jamieson
from Iowa.
With a three-to-one advantage in chips, Benyamine
quickly decided the match with efficiency and courtesy
to take home the major $535 678 main prize and his first
bracelet. Jamison collected a $331 350 second placing
check on his way out. The contest was Jamison's second
final table this year, and his third career WSOP cash.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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