CARROLL THE CHAMP
4 May 2007
Over half a million dollars in prize money for
winner of WSOP Circuit event at Caesar's Palace
The relatively unknown Cory Carroll was the surprise
winner of the World Series of Poker Circuit event at
Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas this week, taking the top
prize of $506 176 along with a seat into the WSOP Main
Event in July at the Rio. Over three days and against a
starting field of 336 players, many of them top names in
the poker world, Carroll proved he had what it takes to
be a champion.
His low profile was perhaps best summed up by pro Shane
Schleger, who joked: "He's the best player you've never
heard of!"
With a buy-in of $5 000 + $150 the NL Hold'em tournament
attracted 336 entrants, surpassing initial expectations
by the tournament organisers . The total prize pool
reached an impressive $1 629 600 and the money bubble
covered the top 36 places. With 75 minute levels, the
tournament was fast and furious, with over 77 percent or
some 260 players busted out on the first day.
Among the better known names at the start were players
like Greg Raymer, Chris Jesus Ferguson, Scotty Nguyen,
Men the Master, Erick Lindgren, Barry Greenstein, David
Williams, Max Pescatori, Amir Vahedi, Chris Ferguson,
Jeff Madsen, Lee Watkinson, Billy Baxter, Rene Angelil,
Huck Seed, Peter "Nordberg" Feldman, J.J. Liu, Gavin
Smith, Kathy Liebert, Joe Sebok, Harry Demetriou, CK Hua,
J.C. Alvarado, David Sklansky, Daniel Alaei, David "The
Dragon" Pham, Joe Bartholdi, Anna Wroblewski, Evelyn Ng,
Dan Alspach, and Barry Shulman.
With 75 players left, Day 2 saw the same fast but expert
pace until the field had been reduced to 9. Carroll was
chip leader on $713 000, ahead of Steve Wong with $573
000 and David Pham with $491 000. Savvy players like
"Miami" John Cernuto, Erick Lindgren, Layne Flack, Erica
Schoenberg, Peter Feldman, Mikael Thuritz, Shannon Storr,
Nick Schulman and Eugene Todd were among those who
didn't make it to the final day has all fallen by the
wayside by then.
When the final table convened Wednesday, Chad Brown and
David Pham were probably the two biggest named pros
still competing on a final table that looked like this:
Cory Carroll 713 000
Steve Wong 573 000
David "The Dragon" Pham 491 000
Vasile Buboi 349 000
Paul Kitsos 327 000
Justin Pechie 307 000
Eric Davis 272 000
Michelle Law 192 000
Chad Brown 136 000
Brown was first out after a clash with Buboi and headed
home with $32 592 early in the game. He was followed
around hand 20 by the only remaining female in the
competition, Michelle Law who was ousted by Carroll for
an 8th spot finish and a check for $48 888.
Steve Wong lasted a little longer - to hand 23 - before
being eliminated by Buboi and heading for the rail in
7th position and a payday of $65 184. By then Carroll
had built his stack to over a million and was playing
controlled, methodical poker. Justin Pechie was
responsible for the next departure at hand 28 - David
Pham in position six with a check for $81 840 in his
pocket.
Paul Kitsos went down to Carroll at hand 59, collecting
$97 776 for his trouble, and with four players remaining
Carroll was back in the chip lead at 1.5 million,
playing calm and unruffled, smart poker. It took some
time before the next casualty, but Eric Davis met his
match in Carroll at hand 100 and headed home in the
number three slot with $130 368.
Facing off for the heads up, Carroll was clearly ahead
in chips at 2.167 million against Pechie's 1.193
million, and on the seventh hand of heads-up play,
Carroll took down the largest pot of the tournament
worth 1.4 million to widen the gap further.
Five hands later Pechie had a slight lead after some big
wins but shortly thereafter at hand 14 he was back down
to 100 000 after some devastating moves and good cards
for Carroll. The next hand was the end for Pechie, as
Carroll claimed the main proze leaving his opponent with
a second place payout of $260 736.
"I felt good the whole final table, especially after
David (Pham) exited," said Carroll after the game. "I
stayed confident. I was crippled on the first day with a
coin toss and down to 800 in chips. I won a second toss
and never looked back."
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
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