BATTLE FOR BRACELETS CONTINUES AT WSOP (Update)
12 June 2009
Finland's first bracelet, a solid win for
Anthony Harb and a good turnout by the ladies
A 28-year-old poker pro from Michigan, Anthony Harb, won
his first World Series of Poker bracelet over the
weekend as Event 11 - the $2 000 buy-in No-Limit Hold’em
- came to an exciting conclusion with a heads up between
Harb and Californian pro Peter Rho.
The final
table included Peter Rho and Scott Hall, Harb and Jim
Geary, Brent Sheirbon, Adrian Dresel-Velasquez, Jonathan
McGowan, Michael Dyer and Adam Adler, with Harb up among
the four leaders who each had over a million in chips.
At one point it looked as if Rho was going to
take the game as his chipstack grew to almost twice that
of his closest opponent, but Harb was working his way
through the opposition, eliminating players and
eventually taking the chip lead and growing it
considerably, Rho made a fighting comeback and re-took
the lead as the competition to stay the course for the
heads up continued. Finally Geary fell in third place
for a payday of $230 670 and what promised to be a
thriller of a heads up was set as Harb and Rho squared
off, with the chip lead back with Harb....but only just.
It was relatively brief at only 30 minutes, but
the heads up featured some big pots and two determined
and aggressive players that made for a highly
entertaining finish to a three day tourney that featured
long hours of play and quality opposition. Harb proudly
took his first bracelet and the $569 199 main prize,
leaving a worthy opponent in Rho, who collected the
second placing money of $350 019, boosting his career
winnings from the Aussie Millions earlier this year when
he was also runner-up.
Finnish professional
poker player Ville Wahlbeck (33) will take his country's
first ever WSOP bracelet home along with the winner's
purse of $492 375 after defeating David Chiu in the
heads up of Event 12 - the $10 000 buy-in Mixed Game
World Championship.
Making the win all the more
remarkable was the fact that Wahlbeck had earlier
finished third in the $10 000 buy-in Seven Card Stud
World Championship event, stringing together a punishing
6 consecutive days of 12 hour poker! That may have been
exhausting, but it was also profitable, with the Finnish
player collecting $150 000 for his third place in the
stud event and almost half a million for the Mixed
competition.
The heads up ended on an Omaha 8
passage which saw the Finn clinch the win with A Q 8 8
and a rivered Broadway Straight after a tough tussle
with an implacable David Chui in which the lead changed
hands twice.
Throughout the final table Chui did
most of the elimination work, but Wahlbeck had the chip
lead for much of the time against some formidable
opposition in the shape of Huck Seed, Todd Brunson, Mark
Gregorich, Scott Dorin, Mike Wattell and James Van
Alstyne.
Huck Seed cracked the first of the
six-figure payouts in the tourney with his 5th place
finish worth $102 286, and Scott Dorin earned $199 940
for his third placing, which set the scene for the tense
Wahlbeck vs. Chui heads up.
Chiu's reward for a
talented and determined display of poker skills was a
take home $304 176 second place payday.
The match
attracted an entry field of 194 players.
WSOP
organiser Harrah's Entertainment's latest statistical
update covers the first 14 events of the 40th World
Series of Poker and discloses that 57 nations have been
represented in Las Vegas this week, with 84.8 percent of
entrants from the United States thus far, with Canada
the next biggest contributor and the United Kingdom
third.
Whilst North American players find it
geographically easier to attend, there are players from
considerably further afield such as Britain, the United
Arab Emirates, Australia, Morocco, Korea, India, China,
Belarus, Bavaria, France, Russia, Finland, Germany and
Turkey.
In the US states context, most entrants
have so far come from California, with sizeable
contingents from other states such as Nevada (1 649),
Texas (987), Florida (896), and New York (819). Over the
border in Canada, the most players came from Ontario
province, trailed by British Columbia (221), Quebec
(114), Alberta (98), and Manitoba (20).
In the
world's biggest poker event so far this year, a total of
17 093 entrants have registered for the 14 events we
have seen either concluded or in progress. Of the ten
bracelets awarded , nine have gone to Americans and one
to a Russian - Valery Lumkin - in the special $40 000
buy-in 40th Anniversary competition.
Providing
some singularly attractive feminine scenery as well as
tough and talented poker is Event 17 - the $1 000 buy-in
Ladies No-Limit Hold’em World Championship - which has
for the fourth year running attracted an entry field in
excess of a thousand players - 1 060 to be exact.
As InfoPowa went to press the field was in its
second day and down to 250 survivors, including Maria
Ho, Tamara Tibbles, Maria Myrnick, Anh Le, JJ Liu,
Svetlana Gromenkova, Anna Wroblewski, Beth Shak, Evelyn
Ngi and Christina Lindley.
Jeffrey Pollack, the
World Series of Poker Commssioner says that the event is
important to the Series because it provides an entry
point to the global competition for woman who might
otherwise be discouraged by the hefty male demographic
of the event.
“This is a gem of an event for
us,” Pollack explained recently. “More than a thousand
women for yet another year in a row have decided that
this is where they want to stage their biggest event in
the world. We appreciate their support of this event, we
celebrate it, and we celebrate the women who play poker
around the world.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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