ALDRIDGE AND BOUKAI WIN WSOP FAME (Update)
12 June 2009
Events 9 and 10 completed
Two more bracelet winners collected big checks at the
40th World Series of Poker in Las Vegas over the
weekend.
In Event 9 - the $1 500 buy-in
Six-Handed No-Limit Hold’em competition - a final table
of six players came together after 2 days of action that
saw an original field of 1 459 whittled down to only 105
by the end of Day 1. Among those registered on the long
entry list were aces from both the online and live poker
sectors including: Jon Turner, Maria Ho, Chad Batista,
Jeff Madsen, Eric Froehlich, Clonie Gowen, Joe Sebok,
Jeff Williams, Justin Bonomo, Peter Eastgate, Kathy
Liebert, Ivan Demidov, TJ Cloutier, Chau Giang, Men
Nguyen, and Jimmy Fricke.
Celebrity player and
rapper Nelly, Justin Bonomo, Kevin Saul, Jeff Madsen,
and Bryan Micon were all gone by the end of the first
day, and the surviving six who gathered at the final
table included few easily recognisable names.
Bryce Yockey held the chip lead over opponents Ken
Aldridge, Peter Gould, Charles Furey, Carman Cavella and
Manny Minaya, with Praz Bansi eliminated just short of
the final.
Initially it looked as if the day
would belong to Yockey, but he was eliminated in fourth
place by Cavella, with Aldridge coming through in a
series of well played clashes to eliminate Gould and set
up the heads up with Cavella.
Cavella held a 650
000 chip lead as the duo went into the heads up and
early play was very cautious on both sides of the table,
but eventually Aldridge's grinding style of play told
and Cavella was eliminated with a $264 814 check for his
time and trouble.
Ken Aldridge collected his
first WSOP bracelet and the $428 259 top prize.
In Event 10 - the $2 500 Pot-Limit Hold’em/Omaha contest
- Californian player Rami Boukai took the honours, the
bracelet and the winner's prize of $244 862 after a
heads up against Najib Bennani, the climax of a final
table that took 13 hours to play out.
The
starting field of 453 went against the trend so far at
this year's WSOP, being slightly smaller than last
year's turnout for this event. The structure of the
event, which calls for a change between pot-limit
Hold'Em and pot-limit Omaha every nine hands, appealed
to the pros, and the field included Surinder Sunar, Amit
Makhija, Dan Shak, Katja Thater, Bryan Devonshire, Hevad
Khan, Jordan Morgan, Daniel Negreanu, Scott Fischman,
David Ulliott, Erik Seidel, David Sklansky, Robert
Williamson III, and Andy Black.
Phil Hellmuth
made his usual late entrance and suffered an equally
early elimination, along with fellow aces Alexander
Kostritsyn, Surinder Sunar and Amit Makhija. Internet
and live tournament poker star Hevad Khan lasted a
little longer and went out on the third day in position
11.
The final table came down to Rami Boukai,
Najib Bennani, Ben Grundy, Cornel Cimpan, Daniel
Makowsky, Paul Parker, Pawel Andrzejewski, John Kabbaj
and Sigi Stockinger
The heads up between Boukai
and Bennani was not decided until the early hours of the
morning, when third placed Ben Grundy headed for the
exit and a payday of $99 574.
Bennani had the
chip lead, but at only 100 000 it was not a sufficiently
large one to feel safe. His fears were justified as
Boukai won the first big pot and less than a half-hour
later was up by 3 to 1. Ten minutes later it was all
over as Boukai sashayed into the winner slot and his
first WSOP bracelet, along with the main prize of $244
862. For his second placing Bannani picked up $151 355.
For Boukai it was his second WSOP cash this year
- the Saudi Arabian-born pro placed 147th in the
Stimulus Special, winning $3 571 last week and adding to
his career winnings at that point of $320 000.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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