MORTENSEN WINS WPT 2007 CHAMPIONSHIP (Final)
4 May 2007
Best out of 639, and a few records broken, too
Carlos "El Matador" Mortensen of Team Full Tilt Poker
showed true grit and skill at the Bellagio in Las Vegas
this weekend to win the World Poker Tour championship
bracelet for 2007, along with a winner's prize of almost
$4 million and a $25 000 seat at the World Series of
Poker later this year.
In a long and bitterly fought heads up with the highly
experienced pro Kirk Morrison, El Matador was at one
stage lower in chip count by a factor of three in the
tense final chapter of this year's highly successful
championship, yet he managed to prevail. In the process
he became not only the first player to win both a WPT
championship and a World Series of Poker main event
crown...but a few other records fell, too.
He became the first winner to pass $5 million in career
earnings at the Bellagio; his winner's check was the
highest yet in a WPT championship that boasted the
biggest ever prize-pool; his incredible recovery at the
final table is being hailed as one of the most exciting
and spectacular yet and he became the fourth largest
monetary winner in a single event in the history of the
game - only WSOP champions Gold, Hachem and Raymer have
won more.
To do it, Mortensen had to fight his way to the top
through 638 other players - many of them classy world
aces in their own right. The roll of big names who fell
by the wayside in this exciting seven days of truly
champion level poker (see previous InfoPowa reports)
included almost every respected and recognised player on
the planet.
Mortensen adds his latest victory to an impressive total
of major wins. In 2001 he was WSOP champ, he has two
other WSOP bracelets and has achieved final table status
at two WPT championships, including a North American
Poker title in 2004, again at the Bellagio. His career
tournament earnings prior to the current win totalled
$4.4 million.
His final opponent, who took home a hard-earned second
place prize of $ 2 011135. was the veteran poker pro
Kirk Morrison, who won a WSOP bracelet in a no limit
hold'em event in 1994, and another in the seven card
stud event back in 1998. After a seven year break from
tournament poker he returned in 2006 and has been
proving a tough and competent man to beat ever since.
But before that final confrontation, spectators were
treated to some heady final table poker from
exceptionally skilled and bold players like initial chip
leader Paul Lee (Los Angeles), Guy Laliberte (Beverley
Hills) Mike Wattel (Phoenix) and Tim Phan (Westminster
CA)
After a fairly tentative start as the players probed
each other's weaknesses and strengths things moved up a
notch when Wattel hit the rail at hand 21 - an early
victim for Morrison. For his 6th place finish Wattel
picked up $309 405 in prizes money. Morrison also
eliminated Tim Phan in 5th place, who was paid $464 110
for his efforts.
Lee played a disappointing game bearing in mind his
significant chip lead, and he paid the price for it,
seeing it whittled away in some aggressive plays by
Mortensen and Morrison. Throughout the game Mortensen
and Morrison clashed, often with costly results for the
former. At hand 52, for example a confrontation between
the pair left Morrison with $16 million in chips against
Mortensen's 1.15 million. However, he managed to recoup
his losses as Morrison continued to demolish the
opposition, knocking out Laliberte in 4th place and
sending the Californian home at hand 73 with $ 696 220.
By then Morrison had a two to one chiplead of $22
million over Lee and Mortensen combined.
Lee's challenge came to an end at hand 87 in some
million dollar and more action and betting that saw him
fall to Morrison and depart with $ 1 082 920 for his
third place.
At that stage it looked as if it was going to be all
Morrison, who had displayed impressive aggression and
talent to hold the chip lead with $19.45 million against
Mortensen's $12.8 million. Many expert onlookers were
putting their money on El Matador, however, citing his
experience and skills in heads up mode. However by hand
7 of the heads up they must have been worried, because
Mortensen seemed to be in trouble on a $4 million bet
that Morrison won.
It became worse around hand 106 when Mortensen trailed
Morrison by $22 million vs. $9.8 million, but continued
to play with spirit and daring as the big bets went back
and forth. By hand 135 Morrison's stack stood at $24.5
million and Mortensen was down to $7 million, with both
players going hammer and tongs at each other in ever
increasing blinds. With pots of the order of $3 million,
spectators were enthralled but it couldn't last, and at
hand 182, starting with a $5 million raise a series of
moves left Mortensen the winner - the ultimate "come
back kid" and a match that will go down in poker annals
as one of the greats.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
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