SILVER FOX WINS WSOP EVENT
5 June 2009
A senior citizen heads-up!
At the World Series of Poker, two seniors fought it out
in the heads up of the $10 000 Seven-Card Stud World
Championship when Freddie Ellis (74) and Eric Drache
(66) tangled after surviving a tourney that lasted a
total of 13 hours, a star-studded entry field of 142
players and a final table that included three former
WSOP gold bracelet winners – Max Pescatori, Hasan Habib
and Jeffrey Lisandro.
In the end it was Ellis, a
semi-retired realtor who made his fortune on the New
York property market after abandoning a nightclub
singing career, who prevailed in the four hour heads up
to collect the winner's check for $373 744 and a world
championship gold bracelet.
Las Vegas resident
Drache, who was formerly a card room manager at the
Golden Nugget and Mirage Casinos was rewarded with a
$231 014 payday for his second-place finish. Many of
today's online and live poker operators can thank Drache
for breathing life into the concept of satellite
competitions, which over the years have allowed far more
players to qualify for major poker tournaments. He
introduced satellite tournaments at the 1982 WSOP.
For Ellis, a talented and experienced player, there
was an element of "first time lucky" as well - this was
his first WSOP competition.
The hard-fought
heads up attracted a large crown of rail-birds,
including many of the pofessionals currently in the city
who stopped by to watch the action from time to time.
Other big names in the 3 day event, who did not make
the final table but were in the money bubble, included
Daniel Negreanu, Mel Judah and defending champion Eric
Brooks.
The next event to reach its climax with
final table play will be #8 the $2 500 buy-in No-Limit
Deuce-to-Seven Draw, where John Monnette holds the chip
lead going into final table action after the original
field of 147 was thinned out to 35 by day 2, and 9
players at the end of the second day action. Monnette is
closely pursued by Raphael Zimmerman and the formidable
international ace Phil Ivey is playing strongly and is
definitely in with a chance to win his sixth WSOP
bracelet.
The prize pool for the event is $338
100, which means a winner's prize of around $96 361.
Among the interesting blow-by-blow WSOP statistics
is the news that by event 6, this year's WSOP had
recorded a total of just under 9 000 players, with
almost $17 million already paid from prize pools.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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