SEIDEL MISSES NINTH WSOP BRACELET (Update)
19 June 2009
More action from Las Vegas as events 20, 21
and 23 unfold
One of the keenly watched events at the World Series of
Poker this week was #20 - the $1 500 Pot Limit Hold'em
competition - for two reasons; veteran player Erik
Seidel was going after his ninth WSOP bracelet, and he
had promisd to denote his winnings to children's
charity.
It looked as if he was on track to
achieve his goals, starting the last day around third in
chip counts, but it was not to be and he busted out in
seventh place - still a useful $24 000 donation for
charity.
Before he did so, Seidel set up the
final table by eliminating Phil “USCphildo” Collins in
tenth place, resulting in the formation of a final table
for the event that comprised: Englishman John-Paul Kelly
holding the lead at 627 000, followed by Jason Dewitt on
476 000, Erik Seidel on 337 000, Kyle Carlston (320
000), Marc Tschirch (268 000), Andrew Radel (250 000),
Kirk Steward (231 000), Aaron Virchis (191 000) and Ravi
Raghavan (145 000).
Although young and mostly
unknown, many of the survivors are talented Internet
players and the final table proved to be an entertaining
affair despite being dominated by UK pro player
John-Paul Kelly from the get-go. They had survived an
original field of 663 players which generated a prize
pool of $864 045, giving a winner's prize of $194 434
and a gold WSOP bracelet, and cashes right down to the
63rd finisher. In the field were well known names like
John Duthie, Justin Scott, Mike Sexton, Joe Sebok,
Roland de Wolfe, Mark Seif, and Kathy Liebert.
Heads up it was John-Paul Kelly, a 23-year-old pro from
Aylesbury in England against Marc Tschirch of Germany
following the elimination of Jason DeWitt in third
place. Kelly held a 550 000 chip lead going in, but his
opponent quickly narrowed the deficit, although he was
not able to overtake a rampant Kelly and he was bundled
out in second place for a payday of $120 102 - an
improvement on his performance last year when he cashed
but did not make the final table.
Kelly won the
respect that comes with any WSOP bracelet, and a
winner's check for $194 434 at the end of the five hour
final table, significantly boosting his career winnings
from live tourneys in Europe and Australia. Kelly has
been playing WSOP for the last three years, cashing
thrice and making a final table in 2008, but this week's
win was his best result yet.
Event 21 - the $3
000 buy-in H.O.R.S.E. attracted an entry field of 452
players, up 9 percent on last year and generating a $1
247 520 prize pool that put players right down to 43rd
position in the money and guaranteed a first prize of
$311 899.
The field included many top players,
among them Gavin Smith, Chau Giang and Steve Billirakis,
altough none of these made the final table.
The
winner was Zac Fellowes, a 25-year old affiliate
marketer from Vancouver in Canada who had the experience
of one previous WSOP final table behind him. Fellowes
entered the last day of play with a good chip lead which
he largely managed to maintain through to the heads up
against James Van Alstyne, although the latter entered
final table action in the lead. However, an aggressive
Fellowes managed to grow his stack as the table
progressed and ultimately picked up the title, the
bracelet and the $311 899 main prize. Van Alstyne had to
be content with a still useful second placing reward of
$192 866.
Other final tablers were Gabriel Nassif,
Timothy Finne, Chris Amaral, Stewart Yancik, Michele
Limongi, Martin Eikeng and Matt Hawrilenko.
The
explosive Finnish player Ville Wahlbeck, who is having
an extraordinarily successful WSOP thus far and must be
in contention for the WSOP Player of the Year kudos,
managed not only another final table this year, but a
second placing in Event 23 - the $10 000 buy-in 2-7 Draw
Lowball Championship (No-Limit).
The competition
pulled in an entry field of 96 despite the expensive
buy-in, building a prize pool of $902 400 for the
competitive likes of David Benyamine, Justin Smith,
Roland de Wolfe, Steve Sung, Michael Binger, Jean-Robert
Bellande, Jason Gray, Chris Bjorin, Greg Raymer, Vince
Musso, Archie Karas and 2008 lowball champ Mike Matusow.
Railbirds were anticipating a dream finish between
Wahlbeck and Steve Sung, both of whom were in the hunt
for their second WSOP bracelets, but in the end it was
Sung who was eliminated in third place to make way for a
hard fought heads up between Wahlbeck and Nick Schulman,
with the latter holding a 2 to 1 advantage.
The
duo slugged it out with Wahlbeck on the brink of
elimination several times, only to fight his way back
into contention, but Schulman managed to control the
game and was victorious, collecting his first WSOP
bracelet and $279 742 for his effort, whilst Wahlbeck
collected the runner-up's check for $172 864, adding to
his very profitable WSOP run this year.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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