WORLD SERIES OF POKER UPDATE
12 June 2009
Jeff's second bracelet, Negreanu pipped at
the post and a first for the Stammdog
Australian-born Jeff Lissandro won $124 959 and, perhaps
more importantly, his second WSOP bracelet this week in
Event 16 - the $1 500 buy-in Seven-Card Stud competition
against a final table that included experienced and
skilled players such as Nick Frangos and John Juanda.
Lissandro's previous bracelet was won back in 2007 in a
seven card stud event.
On this occasion Lissandro
survived a field of 359 players before he reached the
heads up with seven card stud expert and two-time
bracelet holder, Rodney Pardey, who took bracelets in
the event in 1991 and 1994.
Lissandro went into
final table play with the chip lead and never really
relinquished it as he powered through the opposition to
ultimately face Pardey in the heads up. This was a brief
affair, ending when Pardey put all his chips in on
fourth street, and managed to make a Broadway straight
only to see Lissandro take the first-place prize with a
flush.
In forming the final table, it was once
again necessary for the tournament director to approve
play beyond the 3am limit required by the WSOP rules,
although in this case it took a mere further fifteen
minutes to decide the table, which included Lissandro in
the chip lead, followed by Steven Stencil, John Juanda,
Rodney Pardey, Eric Pardey, Nick Frangos, Mitch Schock
and Daniel Struder.
Big name poker ace Daniel
Negreanu had the disappointment of being pipped at the
post in the heads up as he tried for his fifth WSOP
bracelet in Event 14 - the $2 500 buy-in Limit Hold'em
Six-Max contest.
There was no disgrace in the
defeat as Negreanu worked his way through a field of 367
entrants to the final table, besting names such as
Jordan Cairns, Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi, Ylon
Schwartz, Chau Giang, Jean-Robert Bellande, Chip Jett
and Marco Traniello.
But it was none of those
whom the Canadian ace faced in the heads up; Brock 'TSoprano'
Parker - a highly respected Internet player who is a
formidable Limit Hold'Em expert - was the man to beat.
Most observers had their eye on Negreanu and that fifth
bracelet, but the cards just were not with him following
the departure of third placed Tommi Horkko, which set up
the heads up with Parker.
Negreanu initially held
the chip lead with 400 000 chips ahead of his opponent,
but Parker's cards were hot and he used his considerable
talent to exploit that to the full as the heads up
flowed first this way and then the other in an exciting
end to a great tournament. Parker just hammered away at
Negreanu's stack until he held a considerable advantage,
and then moved in to bust the Canadian just one
tantalising spot short of his third limit hold’em
bracelet. Parker's flopped pair of aces beat Negreanu's
flopped second pair with all of the money getting in on
the turn, and Kid Poker couldn't better it.
Negreanu's second placing was worth $138 280 while
Parker claimed his first WSOP bracelet along with $223
688.
Parker was gracious in victory, paying
Negreanu compliments and saying: "He's a nice guy and I
hope he wins more bracelets. He was definitely one of
the best players at the table and one of the players I
least wanted to have to face, but it turned out to be
easy because of the cards."
There's still plenty
of Negreanu steam left in this WSOP - he's currently
playing in the $10 000 buy-in Omaha 8 World
Championship.
Another WSOP bracelet 'first' was
achieved in Event 13 - the $2 500 buy-in No Limit
Hold'em tourney, which saw Ohio poker pro Kevin 'Stammdog'
Stammen take home his first WSOP bracelet.
Stammen collected a check for $506 786 for his first
placing after a heads up against Angel Guillen, who
earned himself $312 800 as the runner-up.
The
duo bested a field that included big name players like
Phil Ivey, Kirill Gerasimov and Roland De Wolfe,
although none of the trio made the final table, which
looked like this:
Seat 1 - Oktay Altinbas (480
000) Seat 2 - Shawn Glines (1 092 000) Seat 3 -
Antoine Berube (477 000) Seat 4 - Keven Stammen (1
400 000) Seat 5 - Gregg Merkow (495 000) Seat 6 -
Bahador Ahmadi (1 786 000) Seat 7 - Matthew Lynn (348
000) Seat 8 - Torrey Reily (380 000) Seat 9 -
Angel Guillen (1 500 000)
The heads up was
decided when Stammen eliminated Shawn Glines in third
place for a $202 694 payday, leaving Stammen and Guillen
to fight it out after only 70 hands of final table
action. Stammen held a 2-to-1 chip lead which he grew to
almost 6-to-1 as the final game progressed, leading to
the elimination of his opponent.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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