20-YEAR-OLD U.S. PLAYER TAKES THE ARUBA CLASSIC
16 October 2009
A disappointing result for Mizrachi
Poker pro Robert Mizrachi will be a disappointed man
this morning following the end of the Ultimatebet 2009
Aruba Classic tournament in the Caribbean; after leading
the pack for four days and making the final table
holding the chip lead, he had to settle for a chopped
second placing with winner Brandon Hall.
Hall, a
20-year-old from Littleton, Pennsylvania collected a
$753 330 take-home following the elimination of Chase
Steely in third place, which cleared the way for a Hall
vs. Mizrachi heads up, but at this stage the two
survivors from an original field of 474 hopefuls agreed
to a chop.
The two players agreed that Mizrachi
would take the lion's share of the chop due to his chip
leading position, and that each player would put up $30
000, the winner to add this amount to his agreed chop
balance.
In a dominant position, Mizrachi must
have been disheartened to watch his young opponent close
the gap and then overtake him to win the tournament.
Earlier, Hall had been reluctant to end play on the
fourth day as he had a flight to catch back to the
States; he must therefore have been glad that tournament
director Matt Savage persuaded him to hang in, leading
to a lucrative victory and a big dip into the event's
$2.3 million prize pool.
Hall faced some
impressive opposition on the final table, which included
Mizrachi in the lead, 2009 World Series of Poker
double-bracelet holder Brock Parker and fellow WSOP 2009
bracelet winner Eric Baldwin - all with substantial chip
stacks. Other players included Chase Steely, Jose
Roberto Santos and Matt Ross.
With the table down
to four players, a rather long delay occurred as the
survivors tried to reach a four-way chop, but they were
unable to agree and the action was resumed. Not long
after that Baldwin exited, leaving the heads up decider
between Steely, Hall and Mizrachi. Eventually Steely
found himself out in third place after a clash with
Mizrachi, deciding the Hall vs. Mizrachi heads up.
Once the heads up chop had been agreed, the action
lasted for only a quarter of an hour, with Hall emerging
vicorious and taking the big money. Mizrachi had to be
content with $414 680.
Remarkably, the Aruba
Classic was Hall's first live tournament final table,
although he has played in seven major tourneys including
the EPT German Open main event. His $753 330 Aruba win
massively extends his formerly $32 266 career earnings
record.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
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