LA POKER CLASSIC A SELL-OUT
2 March 2007
Biggest names in the game among 791 players who
bought in at $10 000 each
The L.A. Poker Classic started over the weekend at the
classy Commerce Casino near Los Angeles, attracting 791
players who each bought in for a $10 000 shot at the
hotly contested $2.4 million first place prize. Players
who survive to the final table are guaranteed to win at
least $250 000.
By way of comparison, the 2005 event pulled in 538
players and was won by Michael Mizrachi and in 2006,
when Alan Goehring was the victor the field had grown to
692 players.
The top 54 players this year will be in a 'money bubble'
of a prize pool worth over $7.9 million, which makes the
2007 L.A. Poker Classic the largest $10 000 buy-in event
in the history of the World Poker Tour. Initial reports
indicate that the crush of players necessitated special
extension arrangements to fit everyone in.
Once play got underway the pace was fast and furious,
with only 368 players qualifying for Day 2 of the six
day event. Play is limited to 12 hours a day, with each
level lasting 90 minutes. The first day started
mid-afternoon, with each player holding a chip stack
worth $20 000.
Last year's World Series of Poker champion Jamie Gold
was among the first to exit, followed by top ace Daniel
Negreanu. He was not the only big name to fall early by
the wayside - last year's winner Alan Goehring did not
make it to Day 2 either, and other notable players who
busted out included Justin "ZeeJustin" Bonomo, Mark Seif,
Chip Jett, Layne Flack, Tuan Le, Vanessa Rousso, Joe
Hachem, Evelyn Ng, Gus Hansen, Clonie Gowen, Huck Seed,
Antonio Esfandiari, Cyndy Violette, Dan Harrington,
Allen Cunningham, Scott Fischman, John Juanda, Davidson
Matthew, Lee Watkinson, Tony Cousineau, David Williams,
Jim Bechtel, Padraig Parkinson, Amir Vahedi, Chris
Grigorian, Farzad Bonyadi, Eric Froelich, Jerry Buss,
James Van Alstyne, Kevin O'Donnell, Hasan Habib, Sammy
Farha, John Gale, JJ Liu, John Phan, Alex Jacob, Mike
Gracz, Bill Gazes, and Jennifer Tilly.
When play ended in the early hours of the morning Joe
Sebok looked to be in the strongest chip position,
although the official count was still awaited. But the
field is still chock-a-block with seriously good
professional players, and plenty of exciting action is
surely still in store. Play resumes today.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
More news here.
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