August 29 2012, Donnie Peters

Tuesday was Day 4 of the $3,500 buy-in World Poker Tour Legends of Poker Main Event, and 18 players returned to action. When play was all said and done, six contenders remained at the official WPT televised final table. Josh Hale leads the group with with 7.325 million in chips. Joining him are notables Greg Mueller, Ali Eslami and Jeff Madsen.
WPT Legends of Poker Final Table
| 1 | Max Steinberg | 1,020,000 |
| 2 | Jeff Madsen | 1,030,000 |
| 3 | Raouf Malek | 3,130,000 |
| 4 | Greg Mueller | 3,490,000 |
| 5 | Josh Hale | 7,325,000 |
| 6 | Ali Eslami | 2,900,000 |
The action kicked off around 1300 PDT (2100 BST) and within about a half an hour, the first player was eliminated as Joseph Cheong hit the rail in 18th place. According to the WPT Live Updates team, Cheong was all in during he first level of the day with the blinds at 10,000/20,000/3,000 holding the 
. He was up against the 
of Jim Willerson. The board ran out 



and Willerson’s straight was the winner.
After Cheong was eliminated, Efren Abustan, Antonios Roungeris and Sam Barnhart hit the rail. The last of that group, Barnhart, fell to Hale during Level 24 with the blinds at 12,000/24,000/4,000. As reported, Barnhart got the 
in preflop against the 
for Hale. The flop, turn and river ran out 



and Barnhart was eliminated.
It was then time for Ramzi Srour, Alan Myerson, Cyrus Farzad and David Marshall to go. On the hand in which Marshall busted, Hale was against the one yielding the sword and gained a massive chip lead with the pot.
The blinds had increased to Level 25 at 15,000/30,000/5,000 when a flop of 

fell in the middle of the felt. Hale checked and Marshall bet 160,000. Hale check-raised Marshall’s bet to 450,000, but Marshall had other things in mind and moved all in for approximately two million. Hale was holding bottom set with 
and quickly made the call. Marshall held 
. Marshall didn’t find the miracle, come-from-behind victory she was looking for as the turn and river completed the board with the
and
.
That pot vaulted Hale to a huge chip lead with nearly five million in chips and sent the tournament to the final table of 10. To give you an idea of how big Hale’s lead was exactly, when the player redrew to one table of 10 and the stacks were counted, Hale’s closest competitors were Eslami and Madsen, both with 1.48 million. Hale had about 3.5 million more than either one.
After the redraw, it took 12 hands before Art Alaniz fell in 10th place. Jesse Martin then exited in ninth, followed by Stephen Granerp in eighth place, and with seven players left, the official WPT final table bubble had arrived.
Graner went out on the 76th hand of the final table and the bubble lasted just three hands from there. Willerson, the man who had eliminated Cheong as the first elimination of the day, fell in seventh place. With the blinds at 30,000/60,000/10,000, Max Steinberg raised from under the gun to 150,000. Willerson reraised all in for 1.025 million and then Hale reshoved for roughly six million. Everyone folded back to Steinberg, and he also gave it up.
When the hands were tabled, Willerson showed 
, but had unfortunately run into the 
of Hale. The flop came down 

and Willerson was still behind. He was looking for a king or running clubs to stay alive, but the
on the turn meant only a king would do it on the river. The dealer burned one last time before slapping the
on the river, which eliminated Willerson in seventh place. For his finish, he took home $60,400.
Hale will begin the final table with 7.325 million in chips and the button. He has over double Mueller’s second-place stack and what looks to be a stranglehold on the tournament. Surely, he’s in the best position to take the title, but each of the other five competitors want the $500,000 first-place prize just as badly. None of these players have earned a WPT title before and only Mueller and Eslami have made an official WPT final table before, placing fourth and sixth, respectively.
The final table is scheduled to have cards in the air at 1600 PDT (0000 BST) and you can be sure to find the complete recap of the action right here on PokerNews following the completion of play.
Photo and data courtesy of WorldPokerTour.com.
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August 28 2012, Brett Collson

Day 3 of the of the $3,500 buy-in World Poker Tour Legends of Poker Main Event began with 84 players looking to burst the money bubble and move closer to the $500,000 top prize. After a long day on the felts, only 18 survived, with Cyrus Farzad and his 2.6 million chips leading the way.
With the top 63 players making the money, the bubble was reached rather quickly Monday. It burst shortly after players returned from their second break; according to the WPT Live Updates team, Elio Fox moved all-in preflop from the hijack for 90,000 (15 big blinds) and former WPT Championship winner Yevgeniy Timoshenko called on the button. After play ended at the other tables, Fox revealed 
and Timoshenko tabled 
, putting the former World Series of Poker Europe Main Event champ at risk and in bad shape. The 



didn’t provide any help to Fox, who left the tournament area empty-handed.
Each remaining player was guaranteed at least $7,500, but the focus for most was to build a big stack leading up to the final table. Among the players who cashed but fell by the wayside on Day 3 were Todd Terry (53rd – $8,200), Matt Keikoan (52nd – $8,200), Ray Henson (39th – $9,500), Jared Hamby (38th – $9,500), Dwyte Pilgrim (36th – $11,100), Isaac Baron (34th – $11,100), Erick Lindgren (33rd – $11,100), and Timoshenko (25th – $13,400).
While those players succumbed, others thrived. Cyrus Farzad took the chip lead late in the evening after winning a big pot against Jason Koon, who entered the day as one of the chip leaders. Farzad and Koon saw a flop of 

and both checked to see the
hit the river. Koon led out for 47,000, but Farzad fired back with a raise to 200,000. Koon called, and the
landed on the river. Both players opted to check, and Farzad’s 
for a set of nines bested Koon’s 
for top pair.
“Every showdown we go to, you show a set or better,” Koon said to Farzad after the hand. “If you bet the flop, I go broke. That’s how good I’m running.”
That pot pushed Farzad way out in front of the rest of the pack, and despite losing back more than a million before play ended, he still leads the way going into Tuesday. Joining Farzad near the top of the leaderboard heading into Day 4 are Greg Mueller, Stephen Graner, Jeff Madsen, Max Steinberg, and Day 2 chip leader Ali Eslami.
Koon’s “run-good” didn’t last – he was the final elimination of the day, finishing in 19th place for $13,400. After losing a crucial flip to Jesse Martin, Koon was all-in for about 90,000 chips (4.5 big blinds) with 
against Max Steinberg’s 
. The board ran out 



to keep Steinberg in front and send Koon out the door. With that elimination, the players bagged their chips and play concluded for the day.
Here’s a look at the remaining players going into the penultimate day of action:
2012 WPT Legends of Poker Day 3 Chip Counts
| 1 | Cyrus Farzad | 2,600,000 |
| 2 | Greg Mueller | 2,396,000 |
| 3 | Stephen Graner | 1,882,000 |
| 4 | Jeff Madsen | 1,675,000 |
| 5 | Max Steinberg | 1,125,000 |
| 6 | Ali Eslami | 1,065,000 |
| 7 | Jim Willerson | 988,000 |
| 8 | Jesse Martin | 931,000 |
| 9 | Ramzi Srour | 838,000 |
| 10 | Sam Barnhart | 756,000 |
| 11 | Alan Myerson | 704,000 |
| 12 | Josh Hale | 680,000 |
| 13 | Joseph Cheong | 580,000 |
| 14 | Raouf Malek | 505,000 |
| 15 | Efren Abustan | 451,000 |
| 16 | Art Alaniz | 405,000 |
| 17 | David Marshall | 400,000 |
| 18 | Antonios Roungeris | 337,000 |
Day 4 begins Tuesday at 1300 PDT (2100 BST) and the last 18 players will play down to the six-handed televised final table. We’ll have a recap of the action at the end of the day, so be sure to keep it locked in to PokerNews.com.
Data courtesy of WorldPokerTour.com.
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