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Posts Tagged ‘Nenad Medic’

5
June
2008
Mucking
WSOP 2008: A Quick Rundown

I’d forgotten what the meat of the World Series of Poker is like.  When you’re there, the days of the week begin to blur together, just as the events start to blur together.  Four events are now in the books, with six more in action today.  It is dizzying to say the least.

Mr and Mrs David Singer

The early performance trend is that the pros knows poker.  Of the first four bracelet winners, we have one first time winner/casher (Grant Hinkle, in the crapshoot called the $1.5k NLHE cattle drive).  The other three bracelet winners claim bigger cashes than their WSOP victory this week.  Nenad Medic took down Event #1 $10k PLHE for a nice $794k (bested by his $1.7mil at the 2006 WPT Foxwoods $10k NLHE event), David Singer’s $214k for the Event #3 was his seventh highest cash (an even $1.0mil for his 2007 Caesar’s Palace Classic title was his best cash).  Erick “E-Dog” Lindgren took home $347k for his Event #4 $5k Mixed Hold-em bracelet, his best cash in almost seventeen months ($795k, 2007 Aussie Millions $100k event).

Upcoming Final Tables are packed with experienced pros young and old.  Event #5 $1k NLHE w/ re-buys includes chip leader Michael Banducci (seven WSOP cashes), Michael Binger (3rd place in ‘06 Main Event, ten WSOP cashes), and Atlanta native Jeff “yellowsub86″ Williams (first WSOP season, winner of ‘06 EPT Monte Carlo Grand Final).  The lower buy-in events likely will continue to produce Final Tables littered with wide-eyed newbies, but the higher buy-in events are filled with names we’ve all come to know.  Lindgren’s Final Table is a good example of that (in order of finish):  Lindgren, Justin Bonomo, Andrew Robl, Roland de Wolfe, David Rheem, Howard Lederer, David Williams, Pat Pezzin, and Isaac Haxton.  Robl’s $132k won in the last six months and Pezzin’s $142k in his four years of tourney play are the lowest amounts at this Final Table.

I’ll do these quick rundowns every few days.  Let me know if they are helpful and interesting, as well as if you’d like to see anything in particular.

3
June
2008
Mucking
WSOP Coverage

WSOP 2007 Event #1

Today marks a day of pause in the World Series of Poker coverage, as it should be the first day that online sites are forced to return to old posts and rid their site of photos older than 72 hours (above photo from 2007 WSOP Event #1, which doesn’t fall under these rules).  PokerListings has one of many views on this, but I can’t see how this is good for anyone.  A quick glance around the web shows most sites have not complied yet, so we’ll see how all of this progresses today.  As many have written, poker pros need more exposure, not less, so I can’t see how this benefits them.  There must be side deals that exempt certain sites, and the biggest early offenders seem to be some of the biggest sites.

As I’m not part of the official poker media anymore, it is interesting to look at how coverage is unfolding.  Several sites have mastered the art of the one-hour update restriction, which is a set-in-stone rule in effect the last two years (and policed in 2007).  Sites are not supposed to update their blog or website with live coverage more frequently than an hour at a time, although other news (interviews, news reports, etc) is not covered by this.  Probably the best at adapting to this restriction is CardPlayer and their coverage.  It pains me to say that, to be sure.  They were part of the first evil empire of poker media, and their people were quite arrogant throughout the 2006 WSOP, putting anyone without the CardPlayer badges in their place.  I don’t know anyone there, but their tournament coverage is top notch.  They have a common format they are using each hour to cover a tournament.  It includes the following (in order):  Blinds/antes, players left/# in starting field, Chip Leaders, average stack, and Big Hands and Storylines.  It gives you a better understanding of how a tournament is progressing and is very easy to read, and I find myself retyping CardPlayer in my browser more than once a day (I can’t leave their site up on my laptop due to too many old scars…).

Event #2 saw the largest non MaIn Event field in the history of the WSOP, and with it came the first significant poker operational problem of the WSOP.  A decision had already been made that these hugely popular WSOP-newbie tourneys would be split into two starting days.  This brought out an initial red flag of the field dissipating too quickly, getting dangerously close to what the cash bubble might be on Day 1A.  Think of it like a golf tournament, where you split the starting field of the Masters into two Days 1 & 2.  The second player group would know what score they would have to shoot to make the cut, a very big advantage over the first players.  225 players made it through Day 1A from a field of 2,048, while 224 bagged their chips on Day 1B from a field of 1,881.  With 378 players being ultimately being paid, it meant that the Day 1’s were too short (ending around a little after midnight, 19 minutes into Level 9) while the Day 2 was too long.  The WSOP started play for Day 2 at 3:00PM Monday, which in retrospect was at least two hours too late (play ended around 12:30AM for Day 1B, and policy is to give players at least twelve hours off).  I’m not sure of the exact time, but play ended on Day 2 around 6:00AM after play had gotten down to 18 players.  A vote was held, and players will reconvene now at 1:30PM.  All of this is an unfortunate side effect from the large field and quick evacuation of players on Days 1A and 1B.  It is most unfortunate as the money gets significant as the players dwindle, and most of the players aren’t used to fifteen-hour marathons that end as the sun rises the following morning.  I’m not sure why they didn’t simply tell the players to come back at 6:00PM and play to a winner for Day 3, unless it was as a convenience to any Harrah’s executive who would be at the Final Table.  Pokerati reports that ESPN made the call as they are planning to film the Final Table.  Again, why should that have anything to do with anything?

WSOP 2007 Event #1 Antonius

The first Final Table was all the WSOP could have hoped for, with top pros and recognizable names filling the seats.

1st  Nenad Medic    $794,112.00
2nd Andy Bloch    $488,048.00
3rd Kathy Liebert    $306,064.00
4th Mike Sexton    $248,160.00
5th Amit Makhija    $198,528.00
6th Chris Bell    $157,168.00
7th Patrik Antonius    $124,080.00
8th Mike Sowers    $99,264.00
9th Phil Laak    $74,448.00

My buddy Liz Lieu snuck away from her sick bed and entered Event #2 over the weekend.  She’s had an evil run with pocket aces all year, and she was knocked out of Day 1B with them.  She is blogging for PokerListings, so you can check her out there.

That is another trend this year, pros blogging virtually everywhere.  I’ll scout around to see if there are any particularly worth reading.  I’m hoping to snag some interviews remotely and will try to sneak in some WSOP content throughout the Series.

About C²

Imperfect husband, father, executive, and consultant capturing the struggles of personal, daily choices.


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