Global flair to world poker final
NINE poker players from seven countries made the final table of the World Series of Poker main event in Las Vegas early yesterday after a 23-year-old from Costa Rica busted out of the no-limit Texas Hold 'em tournament in 10th place.
Poker professional John Hewitt was eliminated early yesterday with pocket 3s after losing to Eoghan O'Dea's broadway straight. O'Dea had a king-jack, and caught an ace on the turn to complete his hand.
"I think at the end, it was a little bit of relief," said O'Dea, the 26-year-old son of an Irish poker player who made two main event final tables and won a bracelet at the series in 1998.
"Things can change completely," O'Dea said.
Hewitt lost the bulk of his chips minutes before being eliminated after calling an all-in wager from 49-year-old Badih Bounahra of Belize with an unsuited king-queen. Bounahra had pocket kings, which doubled him to nearly 19 million in chips.
The blunder - Hewitt had at best a less than 50-50 shot to win the hand no matter what Bounahra was holding - put Hewitt extremely low on chips and opened him up significantly to attacks from other players with mediocre hands.
"The player he was up against was really tight," O'Dea said. "He definitely could have maybe let that go against him."
The nine finalists, including chip leader Martin Stasko of the Czech Republic with 40.2 million, will settle the US$8.71 million title in November.
Hewitt's ouster capped three-and-a-half hours of 10-handed play, during which the top players from a starting field of 6,865 players tried to avoid busting out on poker's biggest bubble - worth far more than the pay difference of US$174,233 between 10th and ninth place.
The finalists, all relatively unknown, now have until November to make names for themselves before coming back to play for the title.
"As far as life, this is one of the coolest days of my life and will be for many years," said Ben Lamb, a 26-year-old poker professional from Las Vegas who capped a summer during which his run at the 58-tournament series was better than any other player.
Lamb, who finished with an about-average 20.8 million in chips, is the front-runner for the series' player of the year award, ahead of 11-time bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth and already a winner at another tournament earlier this summer.
But Lamb said making the final table of the main event - poker's most prestigious yearly event - topped the remarkable run.
"Truthfully, this is way cooler than anything else," Lamb said. "If I had to stand out, this is it."
"Every poker player's dream is to be here, and to have all my success before and then be here still - it's surreal," Lamb said. "This is one of the biggest heaters, if not the biggest heater, in poker, ever."
The final table includes three Americans, plus entrants from Britain, Germany, the Ukraine and Ireland.
Poker professional John Hewitt was eliminated early yesterday with pocket 3s after losing to Eoghan O'Dea's broadway straight. O'Dea had a king-jack, and caught an ace on the turn to complete his hand.
"I think at the end, it was a little bit of relief," said O'Dea, the 26-year-old son of an Irish poker player who made two main event final tables and won a bracelet at the series in 1998.
"Things can change completely," O'Dea said.
Hewitt lost the bulk of his chips minutes before being eliminated after calling an all-in wager from 49-year-old Badih Bounahra of Belize with an unsuited king-queen. Bounahra had pocket kings, which doubled him to nearly 19 million in chips.
The blunder - Hewitt had at best a less than 50-50 shot to win the hand no matter what Bounahra was holding - put Hewitt extremely low on chips and opened him up significantly to attacks from other players with mediocre hands.
"The player he was up against was really tight," O'Dea said. "He definitely could have maybe let that go against him."
The nine finalists, including chip leader Martin Stasko of the Czech Republic with 40.2 million, will settle the US$8.71 million title in November.
Hewitt's ouster capped three-and-a-half hours of 10-handed play, during which the top players from a starting field of 6,865 players tried to avoid busting out on poker's biggest bubble - worth far more than the pay difference of US$174,233 between 10th and ninth place.
The finalists, all relatively unknown, now have until November to make names for themselves before coming back to play for the title.
"As far as life, this is one of the coolest days of my life and will be for many years," said Ben Lamb, a 26-year-old poker professional from Las Vegas who capped a summer during which his run at the 58-tournament series was better than any other player.
Lamb, who finished with an about-average 20.8 million in chips, is the front-runner for the series' player of the year award, ahead of 11-time bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth and already a winner at another tournament earlier this summer.
But Lamb said making the final table of the main event - poker's most prestigious yearly event - topped the remarkable run.
"Truthfully, this is way cooler than anything else," Lamb said. "If I had to stand out, this is it."
"Every poker player's dream is to be here, and to have all my success before and then be here still - it's surreal," Lamb said. "This is one of the biggest heaters, if not the biggest heater, in poker, ever."
The final table includes three Americans, plus entrants from Britain, Germany, the Ukraine and Ireland.
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