The match that has been going on between Tom Dwan and Patrik Antonius was eating up many a headline before the WSOP, but was pretty much put on hold once the series started. Antonius was holding the lead at the time, and now that the WSOP is finally over, these two can get back to what they started.
When Dwan put the original challenge out, there were plenty of players that said they wanted a piece of him, but Dwan stated, “There looks to be a lot of interest in people wanting to play me, but they never seem to appear online.” That being the case, he has taken his challenge live and will be putting up $500,000 to play anyone for 500 hands in either Omaha or No Limit Hold’em.
All of the matches will take place in London and will start out with $500/$1,000 blinds. The match cannot end until someone is broke or the 500 hands have been played out. Rumor has it that 4 players have stepped up to take on Dwan in his latest challenge, but no details have been released as of yet as to who they are.
Dwan continues to be one of the hottest young names in the game and with his latest circus act, he pretty much assures himself that he will remain in the limelight. While his online play speaks for itself, his live play comes under a lot of fire as he plays very aggressively and recklessly. He has benefited from some incredible cards during his days on the High Limit Poker show, but still donked off a lot of money as he refused to ever back off. The style did manage to get him some large payoffs as the session was winding down, but you have to question how that will work in a heads-up match.
He no longer has the benefit of the element of surprise as everyone knows his name and how he plays. Antonius is proving that he is very beatable if you are patient and don’t get caught up in letting him bully you out of pots. Dwan is not afraid to throw a large amount of money at the pot in order to take it down regardless of what he has in his hand. You better be prepared to fight back when you have something or he will walk all over you.
Antonius has laid down the blueprint of how to beat him so far, but will other players follow his lead. When he pushes, you have to push back and when you get a hand, you have to make him pay. The ideal match would have him up against Doyle Brunson, Phil Ivey or Daniel Negreanu. All three of those players treat chips as weapons and have no problem mixing it up with middle cards. The fireworks would surely be going off if they sit across from Dwan in London.
After almost 2 full weeks of poker, the Final Table for the 2009 WSOP has been set. Darvin Moon as jumped out to a massive chip lead, but he now has about 4 months to start to think about how he can avoid blowing it. There is still plenty of talent left on the table, most notably Phil Ivey, and he is going to have to keep his head and not let the down time affect how he approached the last session.
The last elimination was a heartbreaker as Jordan Smith was positive he had the best and got slapped right in the teeth when the cards were flipped. Buchman opened for 650,000 and Moon made a smooth call from the button. The next to act was Jordan Smith on the small blind and he fired out a huge raise to make it 2,600,000 to go. Buchman immediately folded and Moon once again made the call. The flop came out all babies, 8c4d2d. Smith probably put Moon and a mid pair and checked to set up a check-raise. Moon bit and fired out 4,000,000 at which point Smith moved all in. The read was right, but unfortunately the mid pair that Moon has was 88 and he had flopped a set.
The turn card made things interesting as a 5h hit and now gave Smith 4 additional outs as he could hit an inside straight. 7 cards stood in the way of the final table being named. The river cards fell harmlessly as a 10h was turned and Smith was shown to the rail. He has $896,730 to console him, but even that may not be enough as he has the dubious pleasure of being bubbled on the final table of a WSOP Main Event.
The pace of play was actually a rather large surprise. 27 players started the day and with what was at stake, you would have thought that the players would have slowed things down a bit. That was hardly the case as it took only 20 minutes to get the first casualty of the day. One of the disappointments for the fans was when Anotonio Esfandiari went out early. He has a rather large television fan base and is great for the table when he is playing. At this point, the only true super star remaining was Phil Ivey.
Ivey never seemed to get going on the day, in fact he dropped about 2,000,000 from his starting total, but he did manage to avoid elimination and we all know anything can happen on a final table. You can bet he will try and find out everything he can about his 8 opponents before they all sit down for a friendly SNG tournament from November 7th – 10th.
Here are the final table chip counts for the November Nine:
For anyone who is waiting to see the main event on TV when ESPN begins its coverage later this month, read no further. The rest of you who want to keep updated can follow along.
It is the end of Day 7 for all of the 27 players remaining and the 11th total day for the tournament. The biggest news has to be the presence of Phil Ivey who is 4th in at the end of the day. He has put his large chip stack to work by punishing the rest of the field. It will be his first cash in the Main Event since being bounced on a bad beat by Chris Moneymaker in 2003, a hand that was immortalized as one of the best hands of the year. He has to be the odds on favorite to win the title as he is one of only a few professionals remaining. He is within firing distance of the chip leader, Darvin Moon, who has over 20 million in chips. Ivey sits with just over 11 million.
Another notable pro who is remaining in the tournament is Antonio Esfandiari. With a little over 4 million in chips is on the short end of the field. Esfandiari has seen little success in the WSOP and has a small fan base thanks to other televised poker events such as High Stakes Poker and the WPT. He has a very good skill set and can be dangerous at any point in a tournament so he is one to watch out for, but “The Magician” needs to have a few tricks up his sleeve to take down this bracelet.
After today, the ”November Nine” will be set, so look for updates on the tournament along with player profiles right here.
It has been two very long hard weeks of poker and it all comes down to one day. The November Nine, as the final table of the WSOP has now been dubbed, will be decided on Wednesday and then they have almost 4 months to stew on what could possibly be the greatest opportunity of their life.
With only 27 players remaining, the pressure gets turned up and we will see what these guys are made of. While most of the pros that have entered have since gone to the rail, two names are still glaring on the leader board. Antonia Esfandiari (4,470,000) has never really had a truly great run of cards, but he seems to make the most of every hand that he is involved in. He is grinding away and continues to survive. His style of play is ideal in this type of tourney and while he may never get that monster stack, do not be surprised to see his name on the final table.
The one person that everyone has to fear at this point is Phil Ivey (11,350,000). He is currently sitting in 4th place, but that doesn’t really matter. As he has been having an incredible WSOP, the rest of the field must take notice and beware of any hand that they play with him. He has a tendency to go early or go deep and deep is obviously the case here. Only one other player managed to get three bracelets this time around and Phil obviously has his heart set on being the second one to hold that honor this year.
While the rest of the players are going after the bracelet and the $8,546,435 that goes with it, Phil Ivey probably stands to make more in side bets were he to take down the Main Event. Everyone knows he loves to gamble and the circuit that he hangs around in is not scared to throw out a $1,000,000 on anything. You can rest assured that if Phil makes it to the final table, the gallery will be a star studded field of poker superstars with their hands in their wallets.
The overall leader of the tournament is an unknown player by the name of Darvin Moon (20,160,000). He has never had a cash in the WSOP and has sure picked a great time to break his cherry. At this point, all of the players are guaranteed well over $300,000 and once they get it down to two tables, the payouts start to increase significantly.
Unfortunately for Moon, he will have to sit across from Ivey when play resumes. You can be assured that his eye balls will be popping out of their sockets when he sees that chip stack and make it is sole purpose in life to move it across to his side of the table. How will Moon handle the pressure of being the big stack with one of the greatest poker players in the world on his table? Only time will tell, but we should have that answer in about 24 hours.
No, you did not misread that. With day one having 4 sessions and day 2 having 2 sessions, it took 6 days to complete the first two days of the WSOP Main Event for 2009. While there were quite a few early exits from some of the superstars, there were just as many of them that flew to the top of the leader board and have put themselves in a premium position to make an honest run at the title.
The field has to be worried that three of the hottest players in this year’s WSOP are gathering chips in much the same fashion that they did on their way to bracelets already this year. Phil Ivey (376,000), Greg Mueller (287,300) and Jeff Lisandro (229,300) all have formidable stacks and they way that they have been playing this year, people have to be worried when they take a seat at their tables.
Friday marks the first time that all of the players will be sitting in the same room. The field got a rest day on Thursday and everyone comes back fresh for the big run at the final table. The overall chip leader will be Amir Lehavot (610,500) when they get started again. He has caught an amazing run of cards and has a 150,000 chip lead over the next closest player. That is quite amazing at this level of the tournament. It is actually reminiscent of the run that Jamie Gold put together when he won his championship. He continue to hold a huge lead throughout as nobody ever seemed to be able to put the hands together that could make a dent in his stack.
Other notable players that still have chips in front of them are Eric Cloutier (383,500), JC Tran (284,600), Kenny Tran (273,000), Justin Bonomo (223,300), Paul Wasicka (184,900), Dutch Boyd (163,600) and Phil Hellmuth (142,900).
Day 3 should see some decent movement as some of the newbies start to get antsy, especially when they are sitting at a table with one of the big name pros. If any of these players can catch a run of cards, their stack will get humongous as the amateurs seek to be the one that took them out. Someone like Hellmuth could walk out of the session with well over 1,000,000 in chips if the poker gods are looking down at him in a positive way.