WSOP MAIN EVENT KICKS OFF
13 November 2009
Raucous crowds and familiar faces at the Rio
in Vegas
Three months and 23 days after the composition of the
final table of the World Series of Poker main event was
decided, the much-anticipated grand finale kicked off at
the Rio in Vegas Saturday.
The opening ceremonies
boasted all the Vegas razzmatazz we have come to expect
from this multi-million dollar spectacular as some 600
railbirds crammed into the Penn and Teller theatre at
the Rio to cheer on their favourites and ogle legendary
players in the game.
Spotted among the crowds
were Greg Raymer, Jen Harman and Marco Traniello, Phil
Gordon, 2008 November Niners Dennis Phillips, Ylon
Schwartz and 2008's youngest to date world champion
Peter Eastgate; Daniel Negreanu and 2004 world champion
Greg Raymer; Jeff Shulman and his WSOP coach Phil
Hellmuth; Daniel Negreanu, Barry Greenstein, Doyle
Brunson, TJ Cloutier, Cliff "JohnnyBax" Josephy and
Chris "Jesus" Ferguson.
And to give a flavour for
the value of this biggest competition in international
poker, consider these numbers released by the organisers:
First prize in the 2009 WSOP main event: $8 547 042
Indianapolis 500: $3 048 005 Daytona 500: $1 530
390 U.S. Open (Tennis): $1 600 000 U.S. Open
(Golf): $1 350 000
Final tablers presented to the
crowd were:
Seat 1: Darvin Moon (58 930 000)
Seat 2: James Akenhead (6 800 000) Seat 3: Phil Ivey
(9 765 000) Seat 4: Kevin Schaffel (12 390 000)
Seat 5: Steven Begleiter (29 885 000) Seat 6: Eric
Buchman (34 800 000) Seat 7: Joseph Cada (13 215 000)
Seat 8: Antoine Saout (9 500 000) Seat 9: Jeff
Shulman (19 580 000)
Average age at the table at
that stage was 34.8, with printer Kevin Schaffel the
oldest at 52 and Joe Cada the youngest at 21 (he turns
22 on November 18th)
This year's big surprise,
46-year-old Maryland logger Darvin Moon headed the chip
counts, unbagging over 24 million more chips than his
nearest rival Eric Buchman.
Tournament director
Jack Effel and WSOP Commissioner Jeffrey Pollack
controlled proceedings, starting on the rather sombre
note of a moment's silence for Hans 'Tuna' Lund who
recently passed away.
Then the raucous crowd
chanted and yelled for their favourites and displayed
T-shirt slogans that ran from Darvin Moon's "Bad Moon
Rising" to Schaffel's rather clever play on words "Schaffel
Up and Deal" as the players were introduced,
photoflashes sparkled and high-powered video lights
glared.
Moving to the Amazon Room around 1pm
local time, the big event was launched this year by
poker legend Doyle Brunson, who made the famous "Shuffle
up and Deal" call, accompanied on stage by last year's
champ and currently the youngest ever WSOP winner, Peter
Eastgate. The poker veteran came up with a typically
Brunson quip after surveying the noisy railbirds: "This
looks like a football game!"
The action began at
a slow pace as players cautiously felt each other out.
French engineering student Antoine Saout was
noticeable for his selective aggression which created
excitement in a clash with Moon that proved to be very
expensive for the logger. At hand #45 Saout called the
Marylander's all-in bluff to double up to 22 million at
Moon's expense, lifting the Frenchman into the mid-field
and leaving a rather embarrassed looking Moon to ponder
his massive, if affordable, loss.
The huge hit
probably contributed to Moon's vulnerability at hand
#107, when Buchman took the chip lead, leading Moon by
almost 5 million in chips, a situation that Moon was to
reverse later in the game.
A daring all-in move
by Phil Ivey also set tongues wagging when he put his
tournament life on the line with over 8 million chips
and pulled it off to strengthen his rather weak chip
count at that point. By the dinner break he was fifth in
chip counts.
The short-stacked 26-year-old Brit
pro James Akenhead had one narrow escape against
Buchman, but it wasn't enough to save him from being the
first player to be eliminated at hand #59 after around
four-and-a-half hours of play.
Akenhead ran kings
into Kevin Schaffel's aces and found himself short. He
put threes up against Schaffel's nines and headed for
the exit in 9th place, collecting $1 263 602 for his
time and trouble.
"Obviously I'm very
disappointed, but I went in as the short stack and I had
to get it in and gamble," Akenhead said. "I gambled and
got lucky once, and busted out ninth anyway. It was bit
more harsh, but it wasn't my day. Kings against aces,
what can you do?"
Half an hour later, at hand
#68, Schaffel was himself eliminated by Eric Buchman,
pocketing the 8th placing prize of $1 300 231.
"What are you going to do?" asked Schaffel. "I got it in
with aces against kings twice. I was right back in it. I
was down to seven and a half million, I got up to 15 and
then 19. I think I was counting my chips to like 43
million and I would have been right behind Darvin.
"There's just nothing you can do. It was a sick
flop. I still had six outs if the board didn't pair
after that, but we all know what happened."
Shortly after seven-handed play commenced, Buchman rose
to leader prominence following a Moon vs. Stephen
Begleiter big-bet clash which saw Moon check-raise
Begleiter to 15 million on a four high flop with two
spades and almost 11 million chips in the pot, only to
fold when Begleiter shoved for just six million more.
That put Buchman in the lead and Begleiter second
with Moon trailing in third. Moon improved his position
later to second and by dinner break the chip counts
looked like this:
Eric Buchman: 54,725,000
Darvin Moon: 41,250,000 Steve Begleiter: 38,100,000
Antoine Saout: 28,725,000 Phil Ivey: 14,900,000
Joe Cada: 10,700,000 Jeff Shulman: 7,175,000
By hand #153 Frenchman Antoine Saout, with some truly
audacious play, had doubled up through Begleiter as well
to become chip leader on 52 775 000 ahead of Buchman and
Moon. And alarmed Phil Ivey fans were pointing to his
low-stack position on the table with only 8 million in
chips.
Hand # 175 saw the popular Phil Ivey
dismissed from this year's WSOP as he was eliminated in
7th place ($1 404 014) by that man Moon. Showing little
emotion, the poker pro departed as the table - and the 1
200 strong spectators - applauded.
Shortly after
Ivey's departure, the chip counts were updated to show:
Eric Buchman - 55,500,000 Antoine Saout -
53,075,000 Darvin Moon - 39,325,000 Jeff Shulman -
17,275,000 Steven Begleiter - 16,150,000 Joseph
Cada - 13,450,000
Twelve hands later, at # 187,
it was Begleiters' time to depart with a 6th placing
cheque for $1,587,160 - another victim of the cool and
calm Moon in a 23.25 million pot that gave the logger
the chip lead again at 63.9 million.
When
InfoPowa went to press the action was paused whilst
security men piled a mountain of currency onto a table,
topped by the much respected and coveted main event
winner's bracelet - a significant incentive for the
remaining five men around the table.
Chip counts
were:
Darvin Moon - 63,925,000 Eric Buchman -
53,250,000 Antoine Saout - 51,725,000 Jeff Shulman
- 15,525,000 Joseph Cada - 10,350,000
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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