August 10 2011, Chad Holloway

Aside from the Main Event, the most highly anticipated tournament of the World Series of Poker is the $50,000 Poker Player’s Championship. As part of ESPN’s Tuesday-night lineup, new episodes of the WSOP aired this week featuring two hours of the aforementioned event. The tournament drew 128 players, creating a prize pool of $6,144,000, with more than $1.72 million of that reserved for first place.
Like in 2010, the event was an 8-game mix until the final table, at which point the game was switched to no-limit hold’em. Last year’s champ, Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi, returned to defend his title, but fell well short of making the final table. As expected, that table ended up being a star-studded affair, with just one amateur (bracelet winner Owais Ahmed) making the top eight.
$50,000 Poker Player’s Championship Final Table
| 1 | Brian Rast | 3,860,000 |
| 2 | George Lind | 2,840,000 |
| 3 | Phil Hellmuth | 2,345,000 |
| 4 | Owais Ahmed | 1,225,000 |
| 5 | Scott Seiver | 1,100,000 |
| 6 | Minh Ly | 4,490,000 |
| 7 | Ben Lamb | 655,000 |
| 8 | Matt Glantz | 2,685,000 |
Let’s Get It On: With the blinds at 25,000/50,000 with a 15,000 ante, Brian Rast raised to 125,000 from middle position holding 
. Phil Hellmuth responded by three-betting to 250,000 from the cutoff with 
, which cleared the field back to Rast. After a call, the flop came down 

, hitting both players.
Rast was first to act and led out with a massive bet of 2 million. “Wow, I hope he’s not drawing live,” Hellmuth responded as he slid his entire stack of 2.03 million into the pot. Indeed, Rast was drawing live to diamonds and called the additional 30,000. The Poker Brat was out of his chair, seeking comfort from his wife, as the
turn changed nothing. The
river improved Rast to sevens full, but it was no good against the jacks full of Hellmuth, who became the new chip leader with 4.755 million.
Ben Lamb Eliminate in Eighth Place: As the program returned from a commercial break, Ben Lamb was all-in for his last 295,000 and called by Scott Seiver.
Showdown
Seiver: 

Lamb: 

Lamb, who sat atop the WSOP Player-of-the-Year Leaderboard, could not find help. The board ran out an uneventful 



. While he was the first casualty, Lamb earned $201,338 for his eighth-place finish, which was his third final table of the 2011 WSOP to that point.
Leading Up to the Final Table: Here’s a look at the payouts and eliminations leading up to the $50,000 Poker Players Championship final table:
$50,000 Heads-Up Championship Payouts
| 9th | Jason Lester | $168,529 |
| 10th | Vladimir Shchemelev | $168,529 |
| 11th | Jeffrey Lisandro | $143,400 |
| 12th | Yan Chen | $143,400 |
| 13th | Josh Arieh | $124,723 |
| 14th | Michael Binger | $124,723 |
| 15th | Barry Greenstein | $108,503 |
| 16th | Sebastian Ruthenberg | $108,503 |
Scott Seiver Eliminated in Seventh Place: A short-stacked Scott Seiver open-shipped for 1.315 million from middle position with 
only to run into Brian Rast’s 
in the small blind. He moved all-in over the top and isolated Seiver, who only had a 19 percent chance of winning the hand. The 

flop wasn’t much help to Seiver, and the
turn left him looking for a eight on the river. Unfortunately for him, it was not meant to be, because the
blanked. Seiver took home $243,978 for his seventh-place finish.
George Lind Eliminated in Sixth Place: George Lind raised to 125,000 from middle position holding 
and received a call from Minh Ly on the button, holding 
. It was heads-up to the 

flop, which saw Lind check-call a bet of 150,000. The
turn was gin for Ly, who hit his flush; on the other hand, it proved disastrous for Lind, who hit an inferior two pair. After the latter checked, Ly fired out 380,000, Lind moved all-in for 1.025 million, and Ly snap-called. Lind needed either a queen or ten on the river, but instead the
reared its ugly head. Lind hit the rail in sixth place, earning $300,441 in the process.
Premature Fold: After Minh Ly raised to 125,000 from early position, Matt Glantz looked down at 
and moved all-in for 1.24 million. Action folded to Owais Ahmed in the big blind and he asked for a count, which prompted Ly to fold out of turn. The premature fold didn’t sit too well with Glantz, who gently scolded Ly.
Ahmed eventually made the call with 
and Glantz, who finished fourth in this event in 2008, was at risk. Ahmed admitted Ly’s fold influenced his call, which upset Glantz even though he was in a good spot to double. The 

flop changed nothing, nor did the
turn. Glantz needed to dodge an ace on the river to take down the 2.71 million pot, which is exactly what he did as the
peeled off.
Matt Glantz Eliminated in Fifth Place: Minh Ly opened under the gun for 130,000 with 
and received a call from Matt Glantz who was holding 
. Phil Hellmuth called from the small blind holding 
, while Owais Ahmed came along from the big. The 

flop was a precursor to fireworks, and Hellmuth fired out 250,000 with his two pair. Ahmed quickly folded while Ly made the call. Glantz, who held both straight and flush draws, moved all-in for 2.415 million, which put the pressure back on the Poker Brat.
Hellmuth eventually mucked his two pair, while Ly ended up making the call. Glantz was behind with a 41 percent chance of winning the hand, but it was not meant to be. The
turn and
river sent him home in fifth place ($376,750).
Wild Card Hand: In the second hour of the broadcast, Brian Rast was dealt the Jack Link’s Beef Jerky Wild Card hand and raised to 200,000. To make things more exciting, viewers were given four possible hands to choose from: A.) 
; B.) 
; C.) 
; D.) 
.
Phil Hellmuth then raised to 450,000 with 
, and Rast called the additional 250,000. Co-host Norman Chad guessed that Rast held C.) 
, but admitted he was essentially playing pin the tail on the donkey – and he was the donkey!
Rast proceeded to fire out 400,000 on the 

flop, Hellmuth called, and the dealer burned and turned the
. Again Rast bet, this time 650,000, Hellmuth called, and the
spiked on the river. It went check-check and Hellmuth showed his pair of sixes. Can you guess what Rast had? Hint: It was the only hand Hellmuth could beat.
Owais Ahmed Eliminated in Fourth Place: As the broadcast returned from a commercial break, Owais Ahmed was all in for 1.725 million and called by Phil Hellmuth.
Showdown
Hellmuth: 

Ahmed: 

While Hellmuth was ahead preflop, the 

flop delivered a king and the lead for Ahmed. The
turn left Hellmuth looking for an ace on the river, and wouldn’t you know it, the
spiked! Hellmuth celebrated with his rail and Ahmed made his way to the payout desk to pick up $482,085 for his fourth-place finish.
Minh Ly Eliminated in Third Place: Phil Hellmuth opened on the button to 280,000 only to have Minh Ly move all-in for 1.925 million. Brian Rast quickly got out of the way while Hellmuth tanked. After deliberating for a few moments, he made the call and discovered he was a 62 percent favorite.
Showdown
Hellmuth: 

Ly: 

The 

flop gave Hellmuth a pair of sixes, and Ly a gut-shot straight draw. The
turn gave Ly an inferior pair, leaving him in need of help on the river. Alas, the
was not what he was looking for, and just like that, Ly was busted in third place ($665,763).
Heads-Up Play: Phil Hellmuth began heads-up play with 10,765,000 chips to Brian Rast’s 8,435,000. It didn’t take long for Hellmuth to jump out to a big lead. He hit hand after hand, to give him 16.57 million to Rast’s 2.63 million.
With the blinds at 60,000/120,000 and a 30,000 ante, Hellmuth limped with 
and then called a raise to 400,000 by Rast who was holding 
. The 

flop gave Hellmuth a flush draw, and he moved all-in after Rast bet 345,000. Rast called, putting himself at risk, and it was a coinflip; however, neither the
turn nor
river helped the Poker Brat. Rast doubled to 5.26 million.
In the next hand of the broadcast, Hellmuth limped with 
only to have Rast, who peeked down at 
, raise to 405,000. Hellmuth made the call and watched the 

bring him another flush draw. Rast bet 375,000 with his pair of kings, Hellmuth quickly raised to 1.275 million, and Rast responded by moving all-in for 4.19 million total. Hellmuth called, and once again the title was on the line. Hellmuth was looking to complete his flush, but he couldn’t do it. The
turn and
river assured Rast the double.
With Rast now in the chip lead, Hellmuth raised to 400,000 with 
. Rast called the additional 280,000 with 
, and was no doubt pleased to hit the nuts when the flop came down 

; however, Hellmuth had picked up yet another flush draw. Rast led out for 500,000, Hellmuth moved all-in for 8.495 million, and Rast simply responded, “I’m sorry, Phil. I have the nuts. I call.”
Hellmuth wasn’t done, he had a 36 percent chance of hitting a flush. “I need a diamond or he wins,” Hellmuth said as he made his way to his rail. The
turn was no help to Hellmuth, and neither was the
river. Three missed flush draws devastated Hellmuth and left him with his third runner-up finish of the 2011 WSOP ($1,063,034).
“Buddy, if I was you, I’d tip that dealer a million,” Hellmuth said as he congratulated Rast on the victory. Uncharacteristically, Hellmuth was upbeat and gracious in his post-elimination interview.
“It was certainly something to fade the three flush draws,” Rast said in his post-victory interview with Kara Scott. Rast, who became the only double-bracelet winner of the 2011 WSOP, went on to add: “It’s really special, I don’t know, I feel good.”
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August 01 2011, Chad Holloway

To say the World Poker Tour’s Season IX was a success would be an understatement. Halfway through the season, the show, which airs Sunday nights on FSN, reported a 35 percent increase in viewers, and last week, the WPT reported that the recent Hollywood Poker Open episode attracted over 1 million viewers.
Season IX coverage culminated with the $25,000 buy-in WPT World Championship. The event, which originally took place May 14-20, 2011, at the Bellagio in Las Vegas, drew 220 entrants and created a prize pool of $5,309,500. First place was guaranteed $1.6 million.
In the first installment of a two-part broadcast, the WPT production team kicked things off with a recap of the events leading up to the final table. Needless to say, the prestigious event drew a plethora of big-name poker players including Mike Matusow, Andy Frankenberger, Vivek Rajkumar, Roberto Romanello, Eric Baldwin, and reigning champ David Williams. By the end of Day 1, 50 players had hit the rail and Christian Harder emerged as the chip leader with 249,975.
Tony G and Phil Hellmuth were among the late registrants for Day 2, but neither was able to get much going. When players bagged and tagged their chips at the end of the day, Abe Mosseri led the remaining 116 players with a 685,200-chip stack. On Day 3, the field was reduced quickly, and Randal Flowers, Eugene Katchalov, Phil Galfond, Daniel Negreanu, and Joe Bartholdi were among those who hit the rail, leaving just 52 players.
Headed into Day 4, everyone had their eyes set on cracking the top 27 and making the money. Former champions David Chiu and Yevgeniy Timoshenko both fell short of a payday, as did Frankenberger, the WPT Player-of-the-Year points leader. Unfortunately for poker pro Hafiz Khan, he earned the distinction of bubble boy since he was eliminated in 28th place. Here’s a look at some of the more notables names who cashed:
| 22nd | David “Devilfish” Ulliott | $37,167 |
| 16th | Christian Harder | $42,476 |
| 14th | David Williams | $53,095 |
| 13th | Steven Kelly | $53,095 |
| 12th | Ashton Griffin | $63,714 |
| 11th | Daniel Alaei | $63,714 |
| 10th | Nenad Medic | $63,714 |
| 9th | Shannon Shorr | $84,952 |
| 8th | Sam El Sayed | $119,464 |
| 7th | David Peters | $172,559 |
Interestingly, Sam El Sayed’s elimination in eighth place ensured Frankenberger would become the WPT Season IX Player of the Year, while David Peters’ bustout in seventh brought us to the coveted final table. Here are how things stacked up at the top of this week’s broadcast.
WPT World Championship Final Table
Seat 1: Galen Hall (5,040,000)
Seat 2: Justin Young (1,635,000)
Seat 3: Tony Gargano (4,130,000)
Seat 4: Roger Teska (3,910,000)
Seat 5: Scott Seiver (4,870,000)
Seat 6: Farzad Bonyadi (2,415,000)
First Hand: With the blinds at 30,000/60,000, Roger Teska raised to 120,000 from the button with 
and received a call by Scott Seiver who was holding 
in the small blind. Both players proceeded to check the 

flop, bringing about the
turn.
Again Seiver checked, but this time Teska bet 150,000. Seiver made the call and then checked the
river. Teska bet again, this time 400,000, and Seiver paid it off. First hand to Teska.
Aces in the Big Blind: With blinds at 40,000/80,000, Galen Hall looked down at 
under the gun and raised to 160,000. Action folded to Farzad Bonyadi in the big blind and he squeezed out 
. He paused for a moment before moving all-in for 1,115,000. Hall asked for a count before making the call. Bonyadi was a 92 percent favorite and was never in any danger. The board ran out 



. Just like that, Bonyadi doubled to 2.33 million.
Huge Pot for Bonyadi: On what would be Hand #42 of the final table, Roger Teska raised to 100,000 from the button with 
and was called by Farzad Bonyadi holding 
in the big blind. It was heads up to the 

flop, which saw Bonyadi check-call a bet of 125,000. The
turn saw Bonyadi check-call another bet, this time 350,000, leading to the
on the river. Bonyadi checked for the third time in a row, Teska decided to execute his bluff to completion with a bet of 650,000, and Bonyadi simply said, “I call.” It was the right choice and Bonyadi raked in the 2.76 million pot.
Justin Young Eliminated in Sixth Place: Three hands later, on Hand #45, action folded to Galen Hall on the button and he raised to 205,000 holding 
. Justin Young was in the small blind and raised to 550,000 with 
. Tony Gargano got out of the way in the big blind, Hall moved all-in, and Young called off for 2.5 million.
Young was in a tough spot and only had a 25 percent chance of winning the hand. The 

meant Young could chop with a deuce, but neither the
turn nor
river proved fruitful. Young was eliminated in sixth place and earned $225,654 for his performance. “Today I played OK,” Young said after his elimination. “When I three-bet Galen there, I was kind of hoping he would push, but he did it so confidently it made me kind of second guess myself for a second, but I still got what I wanted. It’s just unfortunate he woke up with ace-king.”
The Raw Deal: Tony Dunst was back with his popular segment, The Raw Deal. He discussed the WPT Season IX as a whole. Dunst explained that there were some important lessons to be learned from the season, including, having a plan, thinking about exactly what hands you’re trying to fold out when bluffing, and looking for opportunities to thin value bet.
Tony Gargano Eliminated in Fifth Place: It didn’t take long for the next elimination to occur, just one hand in fact. On Hand #46, Scott Seiver was under the gun and min-raised to 200,000. Action folded around to Tony Gargano in the small blind and he shipped his entire stack of 2,020,000 in the middle. After the big blind folded, Seiver snap-called and the cards were turned over.
Showdown
Gargano: 

Seiver: 

Seiver, who was a 70 percent favorite to win the hand, had Gargano in bad shape. The 

flop gave Seiver a pair of aces and left Gargano drawing to runner-runner for a straight. Unfortunately for him, the
turn left him drawing dead. The meaningless
was put out on the river as Gargano hit the rail in fifth place for $278,749.
Tune in Next Week: Next Sunday FSN will air Part II of the WPT’s Season IX World Championship. Be sure to check your local listings. If you happen to miss it, don’t forget you can read the recap right here on PokerNews.
| 1 | Alan Goehring | $1,011,886 |
| 2 | Martin De Knijff | $2,728,356 |
| 3 | Tuan Le | $2,856,150 |
| 4 | Joe Bartholdi | $3,760,165 |
| 5 | Carlos Mortensen | $3,970,415 |
| 6 | David Chiu | $3,389,140 |
| 7 | Yevgeniy Timoshenko | $2,143,655 |
| 8 | David Williams | $1,530,537 |
| 9 | ??? | $1,618,344 |
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