April 18 2011, Chad Holloway
While this past Sunday was the first without the major online tournaments in the U.S., this didn’t stop FSN’s coverage of the World Poker Tour’s ninth season. This week, FSN aired Part II of its Foxwoods World Poker Finals broadcast. We’ll be covering the entire final table at the Foxwoods World Poker Finals in this recap – from first elimination to last.
The World Poker Finals drew 242 players and created a prize pool of $2,276,978, with $548,752 reserved for first place. Some of the entrants included Howard Lederer, Barry Greenstein, Jason Mercier, Gavin Smith, and Josh Arieh. While many of those players managed to make the money, the final table was dominated by young guns. “This young, aggressive poker bunch should make for great poker action. The cards are about ready to fly, let’s go watch the bluffing begin,” co-host Vince Van Patten said to kick things off.
Here is how the final table looked at the top of the broadcast.
Final Table
Seat 1: Nikolai Yakovenko (637,000)
Seat 2: Jeff Forrest (1,933,000)
Seat 3: Thomas Marchese (2,986,000)
Seat 4: David Inselberg (392,000)
Seat 5: Keven Stammen (269,000)
Seat 6: Mohsin Charania (1,097,000)
First Hand: Action began with the blinds at 12,000/24,000 with a 4,000 ante. In the first hand, Nikolai Yakovenko raised to 58,000 from the cutoff and received call from Jeff Forrest on the button and Thomas Marchese in the small blind. The flop came down and action folded to Forrest, who promptly fired out 84,000. Yakovenko folded his
while Forrest made the call.
When the dealer burned and turned the , Marchese bet 234,000, Forrest called, and the
hit the river. Both players checked and Marchese showed
for a rivered pair of nines with a missed flush draw, which was enough to beat Forrest’s
.
Charania Eliminated in 6th Place: Action folded to Keven Stammen and he moved all-in for 355,000 holding . Mohsin Charania, who was also short-stacked, moved all in behind with
. The rest of the field folded and the board ran out
. Stammen doubled to 800,000 while Charania was left with just 30,000.
All in the next hand with , Charania received calls from the
of Forrest and
of Marchese. The
saw Marchese win the pot and Charania hit the rail in sixth place for $104,741.
Stammen Out in Fifth Place; Yakovenko in Fourth: After Stammen ran into the
of David Inselberg and was sent packing in fifth place ($128,650), Yakovenko raised to 100,000 with
and received a call from the
of Inselberg in the big blind. When the flop fell
, Inselberg checked his top two pair, Yakovenko bet 50,000, and Inselberg raised to 150,000. Yakovenko wasted little time in moving all in for 885,000 and discovered the bad news after Inselberg made the call. The
turn and
river changed nothing and Yakovenko was eliminated in fourth place ($170,773).
Big Slick No Good for Marchese: In back-to-back hands, Marchese peeked down at big slick and proceeded to double Forrest and Inselberg respectively. The doubles shook up the chip standings and left Marchese, who started the final table as chip leader, in second place with 2,390,000. Meanwhile, Inselberg had vaulted to the chip lead with 3,220,000, followed by Forrest on the short stack with 1,705,000.
Big Pot: Forrest raised to 225,000 with only to have Marchese move all-in with
. To call would cost Forrest all of his chips, about 1.6 million more, and that is exactly what he did. With 3,630,000 in the pot, the flop fell
to solidify Forrest’s lead. The
turn left Marchese drawing dead, and the
was run out on the river for good measure. Marchese was left with just under 800,000 after the hand.
Marchese Finishes in 3rd Place: In the very next hand, Forrest raised to 275,000, Marchese moved all-in for 770,000, and Forrest made the call.
Marchese:
Forrest:
Historically, Big Slick had been disaster for Marchese and this time would prove no different as the flop came down , pairing Forrest’s six and giving him the lead. The
turn and
river were no help to Marchese and he was eliminated in third place for $211,759.
Heads-Up: Forrest entered heads-up play with 5,185,000 to Inselberg’s 2,130,000. On the fourth hand between the two, Forrest raised to 200,000 with and Inselberg made the call with
. Inselberg then checked the
flop, Forrest bet 250,000, Inselberg check-raised to 600,000, and Forrest moved all-in. Inselberg made the call and was looking for a six, seven, or nine to double into the chip lead. If not, Forrest would capture a WPT title in his first-ever attempt.
The turn meant Inselberg was drawing to a seven on the river, but it was not meant to be as the
came down. Inselberg finished as runner up ($325,608) while Forrest became the WPT Season 9 Foxwoods World Poker Final Champion and took down the $548,752 first-place prize.
“It definitely doesn’t even feel real yet. I don’t know when it will finally hit me, you know, that I’m a WPT champion, but it’s completely, it’s a dream come true,” Forrest said after his big win.
1 | Howard Lederer | $320,400 |
2 | Hoyt Corkins | $1,089,200 |
3 | Tuan Le | $1,549,588 |
4 | Nick Schulman | $2,167,500 |
5 | Nenad Medic | $1,717,194 |
6 | Mike Vela | $1,704,986 |
7 | Jonathan Little | $1,120,310 |
8 | Cornel Cimpan | $910,058 |
9 | Jeff Forrest | $548,752 |
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Wed, 02/23/2011 – 02:42 – PokerPages Staff
The second week of the Poker After Dark $150,000 Cash Game concluded on Friday on NBC.
Poker pros Olivier Busquet, Phil Laak, Greg Mueller, David Peat, Eli Elezra and Howard Lederer sat down at the felt in Las Vegas
Laak and Elezra were involved in the first notable pot of the second session.
Elezra made it $7,400 to go with pocket queens and Laak came along for the ride with pocket nines.
A 9-10-5 flop prompted Elezra to fire an $11,000 bullet with his over pair. Laak immediately made it $50,000 before leaving the table as Elezra pondered his next move.
The Israeli went into the tank before deciding to muck his hand. He admitted that he thought Laak was bluffing though it proved to be a superb lay down from the 49 year-old.
Busquet, Elezra, Peat and Laak then generated significant heat pre flop with pocket pairs.
Laak opened for $1,200 only for Peat and Elezra to make it $4,800 to go. Busquet sensed an opportunity to squeeze and re-raised to $12,000.
Elezra (J-J) moved all of his chips into the middle and Busquet tanked before folding his hand, revealing pocket tens.
Peat, who had been central to the action during the first session, then got involved after calling down Busquet’s $2,000 pre flop raise with 10h-5h.
Busquet had his opponent dominated with pocket queens but a 4h-9c-9h flop gave Peat a flush draw.
Busquet bet $8,000 and Peat completed. Busquet then checked the Js turn and Peat checked behind. That play proved to be a mistake as Peat caught the 2h on the river.
Busquet lead out for $25,000 and Peat called him down to snare the $76,500 pot.
Lederer (A-K) finally got involved in the action late on when he met Busquet’s $93,600 all-in pre flop bet.
Busquet flipped over A-A and the board ran dry as the New York native took down the $191,600 pot.