The game has been going on for four long days and these players have to be exhausted. When you are playing a multi-day tourney and only have to worry about one game, you can get into a zone at times and almost go on auto-pilot. When the game changes at every level, you have to continue to be sharp or you risk sending your chips across the table. The marathon will continue to today and we will see who wins what is arguably the most prestigious title of the season. Here is your final table:
Erik Sagstrom – 3,675,000 Vitaly Lunkin – 2,490,000 David Bach – 2,345,000 John Hanson – 1,700,000 Huck Seed – 1,380,000 Chau Giang – 1,075,000 Erik Seidel – 965,000 Ville Wahlbeck – 645,000
Lunkin has been having a marvelous WSOP and you would have to think that he will continue to remain among the leaders of this tournament. He is a pretty well rounded player and has shown little weakness this year. Sagstrom is an interesting player and his name has been popping up quite a bit this year. This will be his first cash in a WSOP Event and it will be interesting to see if he can hold up to the pressure. We also have a few specialty players in here who excel at one or two of the variations. Don’t be fooled by the big chip lead, this is still anyone’s tournament.
In other tournaments…
The Triple Chance Tournament heads into day 3 with 16 players fighting it out for the bracelet. This is the second of 3 bracelet tournaments that we are going to see on Tuesday. Early on it appeared that this tournament was going to be dominated by some of the pro’s, but they have fallen by the wayside in day 2 and it is pretty much an unknown field that is left alive. An Tran is the only bracelet winner left and Eric Lynch is the only other player of note. The current leader is Jason DeWitt with 1,599,000.
The third bracelet will be given out in the Seven Card Stud Hi Low 8 or Better Event. They are down to 14 players and for once, Jeff Lisandro nowhere to be seen on a 7 Stud final table. Lots of fresh meat in this tourney and it would appear as though we will get a first time winner here. Brian Swinford will start the day off as the chip leader with 292,000.
Events 54 and 55 finished off their days way short of where they needed to be to get to a final table by the end of day 2. Event 54 started with 2818 and still has almost 400 players sitting down when they start the next session. Event 55 did not do any better as they started the day with 258 players and now have 75 left. Lots of big names hit the rail early in this one including Todd Brunson, Greg Raymer, Erick Lindgren and Barry Greenstein. These guys have to be wearing down as you see their names in almost every tournament at the start. Main Event kicks off in 3 days!
The game has been going on for four long days and these players have to be exhausted.When you are playing a multi-day tourney and only have to worry about one game, you can get into a zone at times and almost go on auto-pilot.When the game changes at every level, you have to continue to be sharp or you risk sending your chips across the table.The marathon will continue to today and we will see who wins what is arguably the most prestigious title of the season.Here is your final table:
Erik Sagstrom – 3,675,000
Vitaly Lunkin – 2,490,000
David Bach – 2,345,000
John Hanson – 1,700,000
Huck Seed – 1,380,000
Chau Giang – 1,075,000
Erik Seidel – 965,000
Ville Wahlbeck – 645,000
Lunkin has been having a marvelous WSOP and you would have to think that he will continue to remain among the leaders of this tournament.He is a pretty well rounded player and has shown little weakness this year.Sagstrom is an interesting player and his name has been popping up quite a bit this year.This will be his first cash in a WSOP Event and it will be interesting to see if he can hold up to the pressure.We also have a few specialty players in here who excel at one or two of the variations.Don’t be fooled by the big chip lead, this is still anyone’s tournament.
In other tournaments…
The Triple Chance Tournament heads into day 3 with 16 players fighting it out for the bracelet.This is the second of 3 bracelet tournaments that we are going to see on Tuesday.Early on it appeared that this tournament was going to be dominated by some of the pro’s, but they have fallen by the wayside in day 2 and it is pretty much an unknown field that is left alive.An Tran is the only bracelet winner left and Eric Lynch is the only other player of note.The current leader is Jason DeWitt with 1,599,000.
The third bracelet will be given out in the Seven Card Stud Hi Low 8 or Better Event.They are down to 14 players and for once, Jeff Lisandro nowhere to be seen on a 7 Stud final table.Lots of fresh meat in this tourney and it would appear as though we will get a first time winner here. Brian Swinford will start the day off as the chip leader with 292,000.
Events 54 and 55 finished off their days way short of where they needed to be to get to a final table by the end of day 2.Event 54 started with 2818 and still has almost 400 players sitting down when they start the next session.Event 55 did not do any better as they started the day with 258 players and now have 75 left.Lots of big names hit the rail early in this one including Todd Brunson, Greg Raymer, Erick Lindgren and Barry Greenstein.These guys have to be wearing down as you see their names in almost every tournament at the start.Main Event kicks off in 3 days!
It is impossible to find a man quieter than Erik Seidel at the table. You can almost always see him well dressed and sitting quietly and if you talk to him you would think that he is no more than a quiet polite man. If you were to play against him, then you would believe that he was nothing more than a mediocre player at first. Unfortunately for you, you would quickly find that you were wrong about what you probably consider an antisocial man. Before you knew what was going on, all of your chips would be his.
Erik Seidel is a New York man that started his gambling career with backgammon. At this time he was attending Brooklyn College, however, though he later dropped out. After leaving college he took up backgammon professionally. Soon after that, he also began to play poker. He continued these two games until 1985. This is when the decision was made that it was time for a new job. He continued to play poker in his spare time for the years that he was a stock broker. After a few years, the stock market crashed and he lost his job but continued to play poker. Seidel took his first try at the World Series of Poker during 1988 after he worked on his game for a while.
Erik Seidel’s first nine games didn’t go as planned. He had absolutely no cashes during that time. Seidel eventually found himself against the World Champion, Johnny Chan, during the Main Event, and though he lost, it became obvious that great things would be seen from him later on.
Eric Seidel spent a few years playing high stakes poker while he was a stock broker. Seidel refrained from playing poker as a professional even as he won the bracelets in 1992 and 1993. After winning the $210,000 and his third bracelet in 1994 when he won the $5,000 Limit Holdem event, Seidel to decide to turn professional. He soon moved to Vegas with his wife.
Moving was the best decision Seidel could possibly make. He now ranks 5th all time for WSOP bracelets. On the whole, Seidel won eight different world series of Poker Bracelets to earn that ranking. He of course won them in different areas, including two wins in bracelets in No Limit Holdem, two wins in Limit Holdem, two wins in 2-7 Lowball, one win in Pot Limit Omaha, and a win in Omaha 8. In his career, he has managed to win over nine million dollars in tournaments. He also won his very first WPT title in April of 2008. He won the Foxwoods Poker Classic earning $967,390. He also now embraces the titles for the former Diamond Jim Brady, Four Queens classic, and Fiesta Al Lago events.
Erik Seidel enjoys music and is a huge music buff. He can usually be seen with a set of head phones that allows him listen to his favorite music as he plays. He also works for Full Tilt Poker. He is one of the people in charge of site design.
Seidel is just 48 and chances are he will be around for a long time to come. It will be interesting to see where he finishes on the all time list for WSOP bracelets.
Philippe Rouas moved all-in preflop and was called by Scott Fischman. Rouas held A-J and Fischman held 9c-9d. The flop fell 9-J-Q, giving Fischman a set and leaving Rouas needing one of the two remaining Jacks in the deck. The turn fell the 7h and the river the Ac and Philippe Rouas becomes our 14th place finisher. £45,250 will be the prize for his strong finish.
At the dinner break, John Juanda is still the chip leader. He has extended his chip lead to nearly 1.5 Million. Daniel Negranu is second in chips with 835,000 and Chris Elliott is third with 758,000.
Preflop, Talal Shakerchi moved all in and was called by Stanislav Alekhin. Shakerchi held Qd-Jd and his opponent held 9s-9c. The flop of 10d-7s-5d gave Shakerchi a flush draw. The turn fell the 9h, which gave Stanislav a set of nines. The 7d on the river completed Shakerchi’s flush but unfortunately also completed Stanislav’s full house. Talal Shakerchi becomes our 13th place finisher.
Later, Soren Kongsgaard moved all in preflop and was called by Stansilav Alekhin. Kongsgaard held As-7s and Alekhin held Ah-Kh. The flop of Kd-10d-9d left Kongsgaard far behind and needing either running straight cards or running sevens. The turn card of the 5h made the hand academic and Soren Kongsgaard became our 12th place finisher. He will take home £54,300.
Two short stacks tangled in a clash that resulted in our next elimination. Johnny Lodden was all-in against Peter Neff. Lodden held As-Kc and Neff held 9d-9c. The board gave Lodden a gutshot straight draw when the flop fell Jc-10s-6d. The turn 3h and river 8c missed both players and Johnny Loden finished in 11th.
Play then became 10 handed as we had to play to 9 players in order to make our final nine. It took an hour before we finally had our elimination. In a hand leading up to the elimination, Peter Neff was crippled by Scott Fischman. Fischman called an all in from Neff on a 5s-9c-7d flop holding pocket fives for a set. Neff showed 8s-10c for an open ended straight draw. An As on the turn helped neither player, but a river 5d gave Fischman quads and left Neff with only 62,000 in chips.
A couple of hands later, Neff moved all in preflop and was called by Ivan Demidov. Neff held pocket Kings and Demidov held Ah-10. The flop was one of the worst that Neff could have hoped for when the 10s-5h-3h fell. This gave Demidov a pair and a flush draw. The turn ended the drama when a 2h fell, giving Demidov a flush and eliminating Peter Neff in 10th place.
Our final table for the World Series of Poker Europe is now set. Below are the seat assignment and the chip counts for the final:
Seat 1: Robin Keston 849,000
Seat 2: Daniel Negreanu 1,002,000
Seat 3: Chris Elliott 281,000
Seat 4: Bengt Sonnert 385,000
Seat 5: John Juanda 1,349,000
Seat 6: Ivan Demidov 1,006,000
Seat 7: Toni Hiltunen 386,000
Seat 8: Scott Fischman 732,000
Seat 9: Stanislav Alekhin 1,278,000
Three top named pros have made the final nine with John Juanda going in as the overall chip leader. Negreanu is third in chips and Scott Fischman is right in the middle of the pack. Ivan Demidov has already made history regardless of where he finishes. He is the first player to make both the final table of the Main Event in Las Vegas and the final table of the Main Event in Europe.
Our final nine players will return tomorrow at 1 P.M. London time to try and stake their claim to this World Series of Poker Europe Main Event Championship. It should be an exciting finish.
Day 4 of the World Series of Poker Europe Main Event started with 24 players looking to make their way to the final table. This is shaping up to be one of the strongest fields since the poker boom with nearly half of the field top name professional. Daniel Negranu, Mike “The Mouth” Matusow, Andy Bloch, Erik Seidel, Mel Judah, Brandon Adams, Brian Townsend, Scott Fischman, Daniel Negranu, and John Juanda were all remaining in the field at the start of today’s play. Also left is one of the November Nine, Ivan Demidov. Demidov is trying to make his way to the final table of this Main Event before playing the Main Event final table of the World Series of Poker – Las Vegas in November.
It only took about 10 minutes to lose our first player. Preflop, Toni Hiltunen raised from middle position and Tim West moved all in from the button. Peter Neff was in the big blind and made the call. Hiltunen decided to get out of the way. Neff was holding 10s-10h and West held 3c-3d. The board missed both players and Tim West became the 24th place finisher, making £28,960.
Andy Bloch went all-in two hands in a row against John Juanda. Both times Juanda folded. On the next hand, Juanda raised preflop and was called by both Andy Bloch and Mel Judah. The flop fell 3d-Jd-5s and Juanda bet out. Judah folded and Andy Bloch moved all in for the third hand in a row. This time Juanda made the call. Bloch showed Ad-10d for the nut flush draw and Juanda showed 6d-7d for a weaker flush draw and a gutshot straight draw. The turn fell the 5h, and Bloch still lead. A river 6s gave Juanda a pair of sixes and ended Bloch’s run at this title. Andy Bloch becomes our 23rd place finisher.
Perttu Bergius lost most of his chips to Bengt Sonnert when Sonnert spiked an Ace on the river to outdraw Bergius. The very next hand, Bergius moved all in with Kd-Jh and was called by the 10d-3d of Jason Smith. The flop fell 6h-4c-4s, missing both players. The turn fell the 10s, putting Bergius behind the eight ball needing a King or a Jack. The river actually fell an 8, and Bergius was eliminated in 22nd place.
Mel Judah was running pretty short and moved all in preflop with 66,500. John Juanda made the call holding Ah-5d. Judah was holding pocket Queens. Juanda spiked an ace on the flop, and Judah was left needing one of two outs. The turn card fell the 2h and the river the 9c and Judah busts out in 21st place. After the hand, a player from the rail was heard commenting, “You know the expression ‘Run like God?’ It should be ‘Run like Juanda.’”
John Juanda raised preflop and Kim-Andre Torsvik made the call. On a flop of Kd-4s-Ks, Torsvik checked to Juanda, who bet out 20,000. Torsvik then check-raised for around half of his total chip stack. Juanda then moved all-in and Torsvik called. Juanda held pocket Queens and Torsvik held As-10s for the nut flush draw. The turn fell the Jc, but Torsvik needed a spade to fall that did not pair the board or an Ace. The river fell a harmless 4c, and Torsvik is out 20th place finisher.
Erik Seidel has eight World Series of Poker bracelets. Unfortunately, he will not win #9 this year. Seidel was down to just 18,500 and moved all in preflop. Scott Fischman made a min-raise but then Soren Kongsgaard reraised enough to force Fischman to fold. Seidel flipped over 7s-3c and Kongsgaard flipped over Ah-Ad. Seidel would need next to a miracle to survive. Half of that miracle hit the board when the flop fell 9d-4d-3h. The turn fell the 5s. Seidel would need a seven or a 3 to win the hand. The river fell the 2c to give Kongsgaard a wheel, and Erik Seidel is our 19th place finisher.
At this point in the day, John Juanda had a massive chip lead. He held 1.1 Million in chips. His next closest opponent is Bengt Sonnert with 610,000.
Sadly, one of my favorite players was the next to be eliminated. On a flop of 4s-7s-9h, Mike Matusow moved all-in and was called by Johnny Lodden. Matusow held Js-10h for the gutshow straight draw and Lodden held 5s-6s. The turn fell the 5c to give Lodden a pair but Matusow still had seven outs. The river fell the 2s, completing Lodden’s flush and eliminating Matusow. Mike Matusow is our 18th place finisher and will receive £36,200 for his strong finish.
Brandon Adams moved all in preflop against Daniel Negreanu. He held As-Qd against the Kc-Qc of Negreanu. A king hit the flop, putting Adams far behind. Sadly, wheel cards fell on the turn and river and Adams became our 17th place finisher.
Daniel Negreanu was at it again soon afterwards. On a flop of 3s-7h-6h, Justin Smith bet out and Negreanu raised enough to put Smith all-in. Smith made the call showing 7c-7d for a set of sevens. Negranu showed 4h-5h for a flopped straight. Smith would need the board to pair to win the hand, or catch running straight cards to chop. The turn came one of the needed straight card when the 5d hit. At this point Smith had 9 outs to win and 3 outs to chop. The river fell the Kh and Justin Smith is our 16th place finisher.
It was only a few minutes later when Brian Townsend moved all in against Scott Fischman. Townsend held Ac-8s and Fischman held 10h-10d. The flop fell Qc-5h-8h, giving Townsend a pair of eights. The turn of the Jh gave Fischman a flush draw. The river fell the Jc and Townsend became our 15th place finisher. He will receive £45,250 for his finish.
The action for Day 4 continues. Players will continue play to the final table. The remaining action will be in the next post.
Scott Fischman decided that he would give Brian Townsend a very generous gift. Townsend raised to 28,000 preflop. Ivan Demidov reraised to 56,000, followed by a three bet by Fishman to 150,000. Townsend then decided that this was a good time to move all in for 194,000 in total. Fischman decided that he would gamble. Why do I say gamble? Well, Fischman had 10c-2d. Townsend held pocket Kings. Fischman needs to stop hanging around Doyle Brunson. The flop missed both players. A King hit the turn, giving Townsend a lock on the hand. The river fell the 10d just to tease Fischman. After the hand Townsend was up to 355,000 in chips. What have we learned here boys and girls? If your name isn’t Doyle Brunson, don’t play 10-2.
William Haughey was eliminated in 26th place. He took home £25,340 for his finish. Details of his bustout must have been deemed classified, as we certainly don’t have them. Panicos Panagi moved all in from the big blind for 54,500 and was called by Johnny Lodden. Panagi held Qd-Qc and Lodden held Ah-10d. The board hit Lodden hard when it fell 2d-Ad-10s. Panagi needed one of two queens to win the hand. The turn and river blanked out and Panagi was our 25th place finisher.
With Panicos Panagi’s elimination, play for Day 3 concluded. Justin Smith finished as the chip leader with 650,000 in chips. Daniel Negranu finished second with 610,000. John Juanda finished third with 580,000. Check out the names left in our remaining 24 players. Daniel Negranu, John Juanda, Brian Townsend, Brandon Adams, Andy Bloch, Scott Fischman, Erik Seidel, Mike Matusow, and Mel Judah are all still alive. The remaining field in this event is probably one of the strongest field for a Main Event since before the beginning of the poker boom. It should be interesting to see which of these players will make the final table.
Daniel Negranu, and Mike Matusow both have recently won bracelets and should be in the proper mindset to take this title down. Daniel and Mike have both done well at this WSOP Europe. Daniel has cashed three times out of the four events and should prove to be a strong contender.
Andy Bloch should be an interesting player to watch. Ever since he finished 2nd to Chip Reese in the 2006 $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. event, Bloch has been touted as one of the best players to not have a bracelet. He again finished runner up in a bracelet event earlier in the year to Nenad Medic when he won the first event of the 2008 WSOP in Las Vegas. Bloch is a fantastic player and a nice guy overall. It would be nice to see him do well.
Don’t count out Mel Judah or Erik Seidel. Mel Judah has tons of experience and has been at Main Event final tables in the past. Erik Seidel has been runner up at the Main Event in the past and only 4 players have more bracelets in history than Seidel. It would be great if this event could be #9.
Day 4 of the WSOP Europe Main Event will start Wednesday at 1 p.m. London time and will play to the final table.