WANNABE NO MORE SAYS WSOP WINNER (Update)
19 June 2009
To date, this year's WSOP has paid out $57
532 883 in prizes
30-year-old St. Louis pipe-fitter and keen amateur
player Mike Eise is a member of the 'Wanna' Be Poker
Series' poker club back home, but this week proved that
he is a wannabe no more by taking down Event 28 - the $1
500 buy-in No Limit Hold'em competition, outlasting a
field of 2 638 entries. The big field generated a total
prize pool of around $3 600 870, which meant that 270
players cashed.
With 2.84 million Eise headed the
chip counts around the final table, which did not
feature any former bracelet winners, and looked like
this:
Seat 1: Zack Fritz Seat 2: Avi Braz
Seat 3: Rico Ramirez Seat 4: Jason Potter Seat 5:
Jose Luis Franco Seat 6: Mike Zulker Seat 7: Mike
Eise Seat 8: Jeff Chang Seat 9: Barry Berger
Six hours later, Eise emerged the winner after a
brief heads up with New York private equity trader Jeff
Chang, who faced a chip count disadvantage of 5 to 1 in
favour of his rampant rival. Eise claimed the main prize
of $639 331 and his first WSOP gold bracelet, leaving
Chang with the second place reward of $392 494 - not bad
for his first ever WSOP cash.
Rico Ramirez - a
retired former police officer - also recorded his first
WSOP cash by finishing third.
The three day
competition, which marks the halfway point in the 2009
World Series of Poker in terms of events, again
illustrated the popularity of the $1 500 buy-in level.
It the third of seven $1 500 No-Limit Hold'em
tournaments available this year. The previous two $1 500
buy-in No-Limit Hold'em events in 2009 recorded entry
fields of 2 791 and 2 506 players.
A law student
from Virginia University, Leo Wolpert, took the handsome
first prize of $652 682 and his first WSOP bracelet in
Event 29 - the $10 000 buy-in World Championship
Heads-up No-Limit Hold’em - surviving an entry field of
256 players vying for a prize pool of $2 406 400. His
epic 191 hand final against EPT founder John Duthie was
one for the books after a quarter final series that
featured Dustin Woolf v. Leo Wolpert; 10 bracelet winner
Johnny Chan v. Jamin Stokes; Nathan Doudney v. Bryan
Pellegrino and John Duthie v. Steve O'Dwyer.
Playing a balanced and skilful game, Wolpert held the
chip lead for much of the heads up, taking the win
against a truly tough and talented opponent in Duthie,
who collected a check for $386 636 for a brilliant but
second placed performance.
With the conclusion
of Event 29, World Series of Poker organisers Harrah's
Entertainment released statistics showing that so far 29
217 pokerheads have played, and atotal of $57 532 883
has been paid out.
Veteran pro J.C. Tran won his
second WSOP bracelet in Event 30 - the $2 500 buy-in
Pot-Limit Omaha contest, besting an entry field of 436
that delivered a prize pool of just over a million
dollars. Well known players like The Hendon Mob's Joe
Beevers, Noel Boeken and Eli Elezra were in the field
but failed to make the final table.
Big names at
the final table, which formed in the early hours of the
morning when Leif Force exited in tenth place, included
Tran (387 000), John Juanda (129 000) and Theo Jorgensen
(419 000), with other players including two Brits in the
lead: Ross Boatman in the chip lead on 718 000 and Jeff
Kimber (525 000). They were followed by Rami Boukai (325
000); Jean-Philippe Leandri (324 000) Dallas Flowers
(239 000) and Chad Layne (206 000).
The heads up
was decided when third placed Jean-Philippe Leandri was
eliminated by Tran, taking home $95 837 and leaving a
chipped up JC Tran and UK player Jeff Kimber to resolve
who would win. It was short and sweet, with Kimber
taking second place and a $145 656 payday, and JC
reveling in his second WSOP bracelet and the main prize
of $235 685.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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