Monday, January 10, 2005

Monday Final Report

John Gale was sitting in the lobby smoking one in a series of Marlboro Red cigarettes and filling out the player biography sheet for the World Poker Tour producers. Gale is not a nervous man. In fact, he's an English gentleman from Bushey, a little town outside London. But when he needs a smoke (about every ten to 15 minutes), he really needs a smoke.

"It's terrible, isn't it?" he said to me yesterday after stealing away into the lobby in between final table hands.

Now that he's made it to the televised final table, he has time to relax a little bit.


Chip-leader, John Gale

But sitting in the lobby, he had a problem.

"I can't answer this question," he said, pointing to the player bio questionnaires. His wife was hovering over him, as was the producer for the WPT. Gale was smiling.

"My biggest loss," he mused. "I can tell you about my biggest win, but my my biggest loss? My wife is standing here."

That's John Gale, the man who has only played in two live tournaments his entire life. And the first one in Belfast, Ireland?

"That didn't really count because I only played for about ten minutes," Gale said.

Gale is not a poker pro. Far from it. He makes a good living in England as a management consultant. He's been playing for about a year online, usually in no-limit hold'em tournaments. When he's playing cash games, he plays Omaha.

"There's more action there," he said.

But now, he heads into the World Poker Tour final table of six as the chip leader with $1,330,000 in chips. After starting the day with with only $425,000 in chips, Gale found good fortune twice in the hour and half of play it took to get down to the final six players.

Before we get to that however, we must recall there were eight other players vying for the six seats on the WPT.

This is how it looked as we started the day.

Seat 1: Christian Kruel (.C.K.)$237K --Online qualifier
Seat 2: John Gale (gizzimow)$425K --Online qualifier
Seat 3: Patrick Hocking $502K (TheHawk) --Online qualifier
Seat 4: Steve Zolotow $147K (AmazingGrace) --Cash buy-in
Seat 5: Greg Debora $835K (ChosenKid) --Online qualifier
Seat 6: Nenad Medic $316K (serb2127) --Online qualifer
Seat 7: Mikael Westerlund $1,048,000 --Cash buy-in
Seat 8: Miami John Cernuto $256K --Cash buy-in
Seat 9: Alex Balandin $857K (ignatiusj) --Cash buy-in

The blinds sat at 8000/16,000 with a 3000 ante. Bar-owner and poker pro Steve Zolotow sat with the lowest stack and was unfortunate enough to be in the big blind on the very first hand.

When every player folded around to the blinds, ever the quipster, Zolotow said, "I like the way this is going so far."

In the small blind, Patrick Hocking raised it to make the total bet $88,000.

"Still like it?" Greg Debora said.

Apparently, Zolotow did not and gave Hocking the first hand.


Steve Zolotow

Two hands later, everyone folded around to Zolotow on the button. Zolotow pushed all-in for a little more than a $100,000.

Debora asked, "How much?"

Again, Zolotow quipped, "It's like buying a yacht. If you have to ask, you can't afford it." Zolotow admitted, he wanted to use the joke on TV, but felt like we wasn't going to make it. Then he turned to Debora and said, "There's no shame in folding.

Instead, Debora called from the small blind and Nenad Medic, in the big blind, went in the tank. It became fairly obvious that Medic had a big hand, but not aces or kings, when he asked if he and Zolotow both lost whether he would get 8th place money because he had more chips.



When the tournament director answered in the affirmative, Medic announced he was all-in for $201,000 more, turned to Debora and parrotted Zoltow. "There's no shame in folding," he said. This time, Debora complied and mucked.

Zolotow flipped up 89o. Medic flipped two queens.

Medic cringed a bit when the flop came down J94. He cringed more when the turn came a ten. Now, Zolotow was open ended with a pair of nines. That left four sevens, two nines, and two queens. Eight outs going into the river to beat Medic's QQ.

Zolotow said, "Give him trips. He needs trips."

And there it was on the river. The queen. Medic's set lost to a runner-runner straight.

Zolotow raked his pot and lived to quip again.

It would not last long, though.

When the big blind got back around to Zolotow, Alex Ballandin made it $50,000 to go from middle position and Zolotow called from his blind. The flop came down J39 with two diamonds. Zolotow immediately moved all in for just under $209,000 more.

Ballandin buried his hands in his long hair, laboring over whether to make the call. When he emerged from the tank, it appeared he'd put on Zolotow on the diamond flush draw. Ballandin called. Zolotow showed his Q9, second pair with a queen kicker. Sure enough, Zolotow flipped up A6 of diamonds for the nut flush draw. The turn gave Zolotow his six, but no diamond. The river was no help either and Steve Z. busted out in 9th place, taking home $65,800 for his efforts. Zolotow pledged 5% of his winnings to PokerStars.com's Tsunami Relief effort, which PokerStars will match.

A few hands later, John Gale made it $50,000 to go and Greg Debora (I believe from the button) announced he was all-in. Debora still had more than $500,000 in chips. Gale immediately called and Debora flipped up AKo. I can't accuratle describe the look on Debora's face when Gale turned over AA. The flop brought Debora some hope, putting T9J on the board. The turn made it even more interesting. An eight. Any of four queens gave Debora the straight. Any of four sevens would put a straight on the board for a chopped pot. Instead, the river was a nine and Debora was crippled.


Greg Debora before the crippling hand

Later Gale would say of the nature of poker, "I could have the AK versus AA tomorrow. It can change so quickly."

While Debora was crippled, Christian Kruel would do him a favor worth more than $13,000.

With folds all the way to Kruel's button, Kruel made it $56,000 to go. Gale called from the small blind, and Patrick Hocking folded. The flop came down AQT rainbow. Gale checked and Kruel immediately announced he was all-in. Gale called immediately and Kruel showed his bluff: 84o. Gale showed his ATs for two pair and Kruel was done, cashing for $77,900.

Just a few hands later, Ballandin made it $55,000 to go and Greg Debora moved all-in from the button. Ballandin called and Debora showed KK. Ballandin showed his ATs. The flop came down A73 and Debora's king never came. The 22-year-old online qualifer from Toronto left the room with $91,700.

He left three other online qualifiers to finish the tournament: Nenad Medic, John Gale, and Patrick Hocking. Medic, from Niagra Falls, Cananda is student and poker player. You already know about Gale. Hocking is a former CPA from Medford, OR who now works in hospital administration. "I'm a total amateur," he admitted. "I don't know what to think. I can't believe it."

Hocking plays $5/$10 limit online and plays a lot of $10 and $20 Sit & Gos. He's been playing online for five years about which he said, "My wife likes that. It keeps me at home."

Rounding out the field are pro Miami John Cenudo, Mikael Westerlund, and Alex Ballandin, both of whom were profiled in the final report from last night (Sunday).

Seat 1: John Gale, England (gizzimow) $1,330,000
Seat 2: Patrick Hocking, Medford, OR, USA (The Hawk) $527,000
Seat 3: Nenad Medic, Niagra Falls, Canada (serb2127) $142,000
Seat 4: Mikael Westerlund, Gothenburg, Sweden $1,072,000
Seat 5: Miami John Cernuto, Las Vegas, NV $291,000
Seat 6: Alex Balandin, New York, (ignatiusj) $1,261,000

As for chip leader John Gale, he said, "I'm just over the moon to be here. I'll just take what comes and I'll still be smiling.

The final table is scheduled for 11am Tuesday. We're still working out the details on how we'll publish the action from this blog. Rest assured, you'll have very frequent updates as the play progresses. Check back Tuesday morning for full details.

Final table chip count going into televised table

Seat 1: John Gale, England (gizzimow) $1,330,000
Seat 2: Patrick Hocking, Medford, OR, USA (The Hawk) $527,000
Seat 3: Nenad Medic, Niagra Falls, Canada (serb2127) $142,000
Seat 4: Mikael Westerlund, Gothenburg, Sweden $1,072,000
Seat 5: Miami John Cernuto, Las Vegas, NV $291,000
Seat 6: Alex Balandin, New York, (ignatiusj) $1,261,000

Debora's final hand

For those wondering how Greg Debora busted...

Alex Balandin raised in early position to 55k. It folded around to Greg who pushed all-in on the button. Alex called and Greg showed KK. Alex turned up AT of hearts. The flop came down A73, leaving Greg with only two outs. The turn was a jack and the river was a 6. Greg left in 7th place and took home $91,700.

Time-stamp issue

We had a time-stamp issue for a few minutes so, the posts were out of order. The issue has now been rectified. Again, a full report is forthcoming.

Kruel out, Debora out....we're dwn to the final six

Debora pushed in with KK, called by Balandin. An ace came on the flop and it was over...and down to six. Full report to come.

Christian Kruel busts

Christian Kruel just busted out. He'd raised frm the button to 56K, John Gale called in the SB and Patrick folded. The flop came AQT rainbow. Gale checked from the SB, and Kruel announced all in immediately. Turns out he was bluffing and Gale was slow-playing a flopped two pair.

Kruel showed 84o. Gale Showed ATs.

Gale took down a 500k pot and is now the chip leader. Kruel, from Brazil, is gone.

9th place money

Incidentally, Steve Z. cashed for $65,800 in 9th place. Next out gets $91,700.

Greg Debora hurting

Greg Debora just moved all in from the button with AKo after John Gale raised in MP to 50K preflop. John called immediately and showed AA.

The flop came down T9J., giving Greg four outs. The turn was an 8. The river a 9.

Total pot: 1.1 million

Debora is crippled for the moment, sittiing around 200K in chips. Gales is now very close to the chip lead.

Steve Z busts out

Steve Zolotow just left the tournament on a dramatic hand with Alex Balandin. In a $533,000 pot, Alex rasied preflop to $50K. Steve Z called out of the BB. The flop came down J39 with two diamonds. Steve announced all in for 209 more. Alex labored over the decision for a long time, then called with Q9o, giving him second pair with a queen kicker. Steve turned up A6 of diamonds, giving him the nut flush draw. The turn was a six but not a diamond, giving Steve more outs, but the river was a non-diamond jack and Steve is gone.

Steve Z, doubles up

Steve Z, all in preflop with 89o, just doubled up, rivering a straight against Nenad Medic who moved in with QQ.

Final table about to begin

We're getting ready to sit the final nine. We'll play down to six players, starting with 8000/16000 blinds. Scroll down to the Sunday final report for chip counts and seating.

I'll bring in the first update as soon as a player busts out.

--Otis

Sunday final report

Mikael Westerlund is a "really, really, really, really good salesman." At least that's what he'll tell you if you catch him after a really good day in the Bahamas. But more than that, he'll tell you that he doesn't sell anymore. He collects.

He collects chips and tournament wins.

Westerlund, from Gothenburg, Sweden gave up his salesmen job years ago to play poker professionally. A divorced father with, in his words, "a lot of kids," Westerlund has been on a rush recently. He won 230+ player tournament online. Just a little bit later, he won the biggest tournament his hometown casino had ever hosted.

Three days before the PokerStars Caribbean Adevnture was scheduled to begin, Westerlund made the decision: He was on a rush and he was going to the Bahamas.

"It's hot and I like hot," he said. It's awfully cold in Sweden right now and Westerlund wanted nothing more than to get to the tropics. The hotel was almost full. He couldn't find a flight. Somehow, he made it happen, made it to the Bahamas, and made it to the cage in time to buy in to the event.

After more than eleven hours of play today, Westerlund ended the day with just over one million dollars in chips and the enviable position of chip leader.


Chip-leader, Mikael Westerlund

Last I saw him, he was in the lobby debating strategy with WSOP champ Greg Raymer.

Earlier in the day, one of Westerlund's loved ones from Sweden e-mailed me and asked my to give him a hug and kiss for good luck. Instead, I shook his hand. The last thing I need to be seen doing now is kissing a Swedish chip-leader.

Depending on who you talk to around here, Westerlund is either a very good player or a man who got lucky and amassed a massive stack of chips. I'm in no position to judge one way or another. All I know is, for the moment, he's winning and he's all smiles.

Westerlund will be sitting in the seven seat when we begin Monday at Noon. And he'll have competition.

Second in chips is Alex Balandin with $857,000 in chips. He's an interesting cat who appreciates good literature. With a screen name of "ignatiusj" he apparently is some fan of Confederacy of Dunces. While he's open about his love of literature, he's not quite as open about how he makes his living. I sidled up to him just before we broke down to the final table and asked how he got into the tournament. Turns out, like Westerlund, Ballandin bought directly in. I asked if he was a professional poker player or had a regular day job.

"Neither," he said he said with a disarming smile. "I'm a professional gambler, but not poker."

Because he's from New York and I don't mess with New York guys, I didn't press any futher. If he makes the televised table, maybe Shana Hiatt can get more out of him.


Alex Balandin

Just behind Balandin with $835,000 in chips is Greg Debora (ChosenKid). Beyond having a name that I consistenly messed up all day long, Debora, 22, won his way into the tournament through a PokerStars.com satellite and has amassed quite a cheering section along the rail.

Here's how the final table looks going into tomorrow:

Seat 1: Christian Kruel (.C.K.)$237K --Online qualifier
Seat 2: John Gale (gizzimow)$425K --Online qualifier
Seat 3: Patrick Hocking $502K (TheHawk) --Online qualifier
Seat 4: Steve Zolotow $147K (AmazingGrace) --Cash buy-in
Seat 5: Greg Debora $835K (ChosenKid) --Online qualifier
Seat 6: Nenad Medic $316K (serb2127) --Online qualifer
Seat 7: Mikael Westerlund $1,048,000 --Cash buy-in
Seat 8: Miami John Cernuto $256K --Cash buy-in
Seat 9: Alex Balandin $857K (ignatiusj) --Cash buy-in

Of muggings and bust-outs

The day began with 56 players at six tables. Every table was strong, but the scariest was near the rail. Spiro Mitrokostas (55Lucky55), Greg Raymer, Miami John Cernuto, Evelyn Ng, and Ted Lawson.


Spiro Mitrokostas, Greg Raymer, and Miami John fill out the end of the afternoon's first power table

It didn't take long before the players at the table started asking Raymer about getting mugged recently at the Belaggio. Two guys jumped him and pulled a gun as he made his way back to his room. He fought them off and they took to running.

He told the table he was lucky they didn't decide to use the gun.

With a laugh that made me giggle for an hour or two, Miami John said to Raymer, "Good read."

Later, Raymer in a sniffling fit told the table, "When I sniff, it's allergies, not a tell."

As friendly as the table was, the afternoon was a bloodbath.

Raymer got involved with AK vs online qualifer Pat Walsh who held TT. The flop came with both an ace and a ten, giving Raymer TPTK and Walsh the set. It was over for Raymer soon after that, leaving him to give a final interview, collect his $13,000 for 32nd place, and hang out at Atlantis.


Greg Raymer's final interview after busting out in 32nd

WSOP second-place finisher David Williams' chipstack was up an down all day long. His final had was a remarkable pot. Alex Ballandin raised the BB by 3x from the button. In the small blind, DW pushed all in for his final $43K. In the BB, Ted Lawson called for his remaining $43K. With the odds to call, Balandin called the all-ins. Williams' flipped up KQo, Lawson had AJo, and Balandin held QJ. Lawson took down the pot when nobody else improved and Williams was gone in 25th place $17,300. Twenty minutes later Lawson gave it all away, calling Erick Lindgren's all-in bet with A7s. Lindgren held KK and Lawson was out. Lindgren would last until 21st place.

While the room would argue about whether the following was a bad beat or just a way that small pairs win against AK, it was still like watching a bad accident. Evelyn Ng, who was among the chip leaders in the final 23 players, lost her entire stack to online qualifier Greg Debora (ChosenKid). Debora raised preflop to $22K (blinds were 3000/6000). Ng made it $72K to go. Debora pushed all in. Ng asked for a count. Debora had her covered. Ng thought for two minutes before calling. Debora flipped up 66 (one was a club). Ng had AKo with no clubs. The flop came with an ace and two clubs. Running clubs on the turn and river gave Debora the runner-runner flush and sent Ng home in 22nd place. It seemed it was about that time that Debora started making his run to the final table.


Debora is in third place heading into Monday

Two other crowd favorites met their end as well. Former Pokertars.com support man Terrence Chan was short-stacked just before the bubble yesterday and rallied all the way to 20th place.


Former Pokerstars.com support host, Terrence Chan, once almost a victim of the bubble, makes an astounding run to 20th place

Spiro Mitrokostas had been hanging around all day long, as well, making everyone around him happy with his good cheer. Finally, he pushed in with 66 and Steve Zolotow called with 77. The flop came TTx. Then Spiro found life with the turn, a six. The river counterfeited his boat, though, when it came a ten. Spiro went out in 19th place.

When we broke down to two tables, the most dramatic hand came when Alex Brenes raised pre-flop and Mikael Westerlund announced all in. After some thought, Brenes called. Westerlund showed AQ of diamonds. Brenes disgustedly slapped A7 of spades on the table. As the Brenes family chanted in Spanish for Brenes' seven, the dealer laid out the flop, turn, and river. Neither hand improved and Westerlund raked a pot that was somewhere in the neighborhood of $600K.

Here's how the field finished before the final table:

$11,600
56th--John Smith
55th--Cory Ward
54th--Nicholas Matala
53rd--Cliff Josephy
52nd--Stephen Tanner
51st--Alan White (ulieudie)
$13,000
50th--Phuong Tran
49th-Daniel Ashman
48th--Millie Shiu (Poker Snoopy)
47th--Paul Snead (PECSC)
46th--Avery Cardoza
45th-Jospeh Lang (Mojo99)
44th--Peter Gunnarson
43--Daniel Larsson
42nd--William Thorson (william)
41st--Yousif Massoudnia (youssepe)
40th--Chris McKormack
39th--Steve Billirakis (mrsmokey1)
38th--Chris McIntytre (carlspacker)
37th--David Mgyuen (peckle)
36th--Henrik Kask (jugman)
35th--Jeff Hubberman (j1hubbs2h)
34th--William Goff
33rd--Pete Giordano (thebeat)
32nd--Greg Raymer (fossilman)
31st--Morten Sembach (redrumxxx)

$15,600
30th--Justin Bonomo (ZeeJustin)
29th--Ryan Shore (Heavy Sho')
28th--Mark Smyriski (smurfla)
27th--Benjamin Sprengers (-BBJ-)
26th--George Kell Dickson (GKD326)

$17,300
25th--David Williams (rugdoctor)
24th--Ted Lawson (fedlos)
23rd--Matthew Rosenquist (Quister)
22nd--Evelyn Ng (Evy Babee)
21st--Erick Lindgren

$20,200
20th--Terrence Chan
19th--Spiro Mitrokostas (55Lucky55)
18th--Anders Henriksson (gambler1)
17th--Jeff Henry(The Shrike)

$25,900
16th--Allen Cunningham (Acunningham)
15th--Pat Walsh (PW756)
14th--Michael Woo (hh1689)
13th--Shawn Buchanan (buck21)

$34,600
12th--Patrick Antonius (patman)

$45,000
11th--Alex Brenes

$55,400
10th--Mike Goodman (anakinso)

The final nine

After a chip count and re-draw for seating, PokerStars seated its final table nine strong. Pokerstars' Dan Goldman grabbed the mic, introduced the players, and began to do play-by-play. There was some hope among the players that we'd play down to the final six for the televised table tonight and have tomorrow to rest. As it turned out, the inevitability of chip protection took hold.

Only the first hand of the remaining nine players held any real drama.

Nenad Medic raised to $38,000. In the small blind, Ballandin re-raised the pot to $130,000. I thought we'd see folds all around the Ballandin at that point. Instead, Christian Kruel pushed all in from the BB with his remaining $219,000. Medic got out of the way and Ballandin called, flipping up JJ immediately. I peeked over Steve Zolotow's head and Kruel laughed and flipped up the two remaining jacks. The flop and turn brought some drama, putting three hearts on the board. Ballandin held the jack of hearts and was begging the river to flush him. It didn't happen, though.


Christian Kruel

Apart from two players stealing two consecutive raises from Greg Debora and Debora eventually raising a third time (this time, all in), the final hands of the level were a practice in stack protection and blind stealing.

Tonight, the players rest. Tomorrow, they meet again to see who among them will make it to the final six and to the TV table.

Five online qualifiers remain with four cash buy-in competitors.

It's hard to imagine how tomorrow will end and Tuesday will begin.

All I know is the chip-leader is a really, really, really good salesman who apparently knows how to collect chips and likes the Bahamas a great deal.