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2004 World Series Of Poker
Wed-Thu May 12-13, 2004
Event #23
No-Limit Texas Hold’em
$1,500 BUY-IN $1,500 in chips

Players: 834
Prize Pool: $1,150,920


1 Ted Forrest (Las Vegas, NV) $300,300

2 Susan Pritchett (San Antonio, TX) $157,820
3 Bobby Slagle (Southland, TX) $92,080
4 Donnie Oswald (Waco, TX) $80,560
5 Spencer Mohler (Encinitas, CA) $69,060
6 Robert Goldfarb (Scottsdale, AZ) $57,540
7 Scotty Nguyen (Henderson, NV) $46,040
8 Ken Flaton (Las Vegas, NV) $10,360
9 Peter Roche (Ireland) $23,020
10 Charles Glorioso (Shreveport, LA) $12,660
11 Miles Michelson (Berkeley, CA) $12,660
12 James Vogl (London, England) $12,660
13 Chip Jett (Las Vegas, NV) $10,360
14 Ken Evanowski (Las Vegas, NV) $10,360
15 Donn O'Dea (Ireland) $10,360
16 Ayaz Mahmood (Houston, TX) $8,060
17 Mark Wilds (Houston, TX) $8,060
18 Maurice Atlani (Paris, France) $8,060
19 Steven Shkolnik (Woodland Hills, CA) $5,760
20 Patrick Poels (Phoenix, AZ) $5,760
21 Sam Grizzle (Las Vegas, NV) $5,760
22 Robert Clouston (Richmond, BC) $5,760
23 Jason Ginsbach (Las Vegas) $5,760
24 Patrick Batterberry (Truckee, CA) $5,760
25 Chris Anthony (Layton, UT) $5,760
26 Peter Vilandos (Houston, TX) $5,760
27 Martin Guttler (Zurich, Switzerland) $5,760
28 Jason Brown (Missoula, MT) $4,020
29 Tuyen Luong (Hacienda Heights, CA) $4,020
30 Claus Nielsen (Las Vegas, NV) $4,020
31 Hans Skjonstad (Oslo, Norway) $4,020
32 Sergey Khromov (Oslo, Norway) $4,020
33 Alan Wheeler (Tyler, TX) $4,020
34 Ronnie Ebanks (Hollywood, FL) $4,020
35 Kenneth Adams (Washington, DC) $4,020
36 Joel Fuji (Henderson, NV) $4,020
37 Paul Niemala (Las Vegas, NV) $3,340
38 Steven Chen (Niles, IL) $3,340
39 Michael Sherman (Las Vegas, NV) $3,340
40 Todd Zahner (Oceanside, CA) $3,340
41 Nez Coburn (Minneapolis, MN) $3,340
42 Keith Ouilty (Las Vegas, NV) $3,340
43 Guy Bowles (London, England) $3,340
44 Michael Joyce (Houston, TX) $3,340
45 Vladimir Kovalchuk (Philadelphia, PA) $3,340
46 Roger Larsen (Larvik, Norway) $2,700
47 Abraham Tannous (Richmond, CA) $2,700
48 Justin Sadauskas (West Chicago, IL) $2,700
49 Al Korson (Las Lunas, NM) $2,700
50 Sarah Casey (Las Vegas, NV) $2,700
51 Leslie Spear (Stateline, NV) $2,700
52 Elton Beebe (Austin, TX) $2,700
53 John Tolbert (Brutus, MI) $2,700
54 Tore Lagerborg (Trondheim, Norway) $2,700
55 Trent Sessions (Huffman, TX) $2,300
56 Kathy Liebert (Las Vegas, NV) $2,300
57 Paul Magriel (Las Vegas, NV) $2,300
58 Daniel Chomyn (Boulder, CO) $2,300
59 Massoud Nikjouian (Rockville, MD) $2,300
60 Bruce Vanhorn (Ada, OK) $2,300
61 Jorn Muller (Bodo, Norway) $2,300
62 Sima Swearingen (Beverly Hills, CA) $2,300
63 Robert Geers (Las Vegas, NV) $2,300
64 Thomas Duncker (Highland Falls, NY) $2,020
65 Bo Sehlstedt (Stockholm, Sweden) $2,020
66 Rob Lissenborough (London, England) $2,020
67 Shaun Johnston (New Orleans, LA) $2,020
68 Charlie Nguyen (Anaheim, CA) $2,020
69 Edward Moncada (Oakland, CA) $2,020
70 Ron Faltinsky (Montebello, CA) $2,020
71 Brian Plona (Miller Place, NY) $2,020
72 Rita Skingle (Aylesbury, England) $2,020
73 Baard Dahl (Oslo, Norway) $1,720
74 Marc Magazu (Las Vegas, NV) $1,720
75 Scott Gray (Dublin, Ireland) $1,720
76 Tero Kilkanen (Helsinki, Finland) $1,720
77 Tom McEvoy (Las Vegas, NV) $1,720
78 Ottis Anderson (Sugar Land, TX) $1,720
79 Jesse McGinty (Chandler, AZ) $1,720
80 Brad Daugherty (Las Vegas, NV) $1,720
81 Mike Laing (Las Vegas, NV) $1,720


Ted Forrest Does it Again, and Again, and Again, and Again, and Again:
The Story of Gold Bracelet Number Five

--Las Vegas poker pro wins second tournament at this year’s World Series of Poker

In 1993, professional poker player Ted Forrest did something that had never been done before. He became the first player in World Series of Poker history to win three gold bracelets in a single year. The �trifecta� of poker achievement that year came in Seven-Card Stud, Omaha High-Low, and Razz.

It�s been said, �history repeats itself.� If that�s so, then look for Ted Forrest�s name to come up at the top of the money list again very soon. In Event #23 at this year�s World Series, Forrest topped a near-record field of 834 entries and won his second bracelet within two weeks. On April 24th, Forrest defeated 257 players and won the $1,500 Seven-Card Stud event, netting $111,440. This time, the field was much larger � just five players short of the all-time record of any event in World Series History (the record still stands at 839 for the championship event last year � which is expected to be shattered when the main event begins next Saturday). After plowing through the proverbial trees, Forrest added another $300,300 to his poker bankroll for the win.

With five gold bracelets to his name, Forrest joins the even more exclusive ranks of poker�s hierarchy. Five WSOP wins puts into the same class with Bones Berland, Chris �Jesus� Ferguson, Layne Flack, Berry Johnston, and Stu Ungar. But one could say that Ted Forrest is really in a class all his own. He�s certainly won as much money as anyone in the game over the past decade -- most of the profits concentrated in high-limit cash games out of the public eye. For years, while the biggest events in poker were being held inside one room, Ted Forrest could often be found away at a corner table playing for (and usually winning) sums of money that dwarfed the tournament prize pool.

This year, Forrest decided to enter more tournaments, in part, because the prize pools have reached the point where they are now worth his time. Certainly, this year�s World Series of Poker promises to be the biggest gathering in poker history, both in terms of prize money and attendance. Numbers are up about 60 percent over last year, and the tournament will see an explosion next week when championship week begins.

Of all Ted Forrest�s accomplishments in poker, this win might have been his most convincing. Forrest, who estimated he has won between 25 and 30 major events during his twenty-plus years as a pro (the number would be considerably higher if Forrest had not taken his long hiatus from tournaments), not only had to overcome a mammoth field, he also had to overpower a talented second day lineup that included some of poker�s best no-limit hold�em players � including Scotty Nguyen, Ken �Skyhawk� Flaton, Donn O�Dea, Chip Jett, and others. Play ended after day one at 3:15 am. Four players had more chips than Forrest when play was narrowed down to the final two tables.

When the final nine players had been decided, Ted Forrest took his seat under the bright lights of the main table on the ESPN stage. He came in second in chips with $210K to Peter Roche�s $237. Witnesses who gathered inside the second floor ballroom at the Horseshoe Casino may as well have been watching a horse race. The two chip leaders were coming down the homestretch and the favorite was about to make his move. Play began.

Scotty Nguyen took a tough early blow, losing most of his stack to Donnie Oswald � with A-K topping Nguyen�s A-Q when an ace flopped. In the proverbial horse race that was the final table, Nguyen went lame.

Meanwhile, Forrest took the inside rail and seized the lead when he devastated chip leader Peter Roche on a single stride. The remaining finalists watched with delight as the two chip leaders went to war. In the end, Forrest�s 7-7 bested Roche�s A-K. That put Forrest into the lead for the first time. Forrest was now off to the races.

If Nguyen went lame, then Roche broke a leg. Roche must have had high hopes at the start of the finale with all those chips, but instead he was the first player to exit. He collapsed with A-7 against pocket 10s. Roche was out 9th.

Others would fall in rapid succession: Ken �Skyhawk� Flaton was short-stacked the entire time. He went out in 8th place. 1998 World Champion Scotty Nguyen went out next � 7th. By this time, Forrest had over half of the chips on the final table. At that point, it looked like everyone else was playing for second.

Robert Goldfarb was the next player eliminated in 6th place. Then, Spencer Mohler got hammered when his pocket kings were crushed by quads � Bobby Slagle�s four 8s. That loss demoralized Mohler, and he went out soon thereafter (with Q-Q losing to A-A) with nearly $70,000 in prize money.

Forrest could now see the finish line. He held the reigns with the vast majority of chips in play � over $700K while the other three players shared the remaining $400K, or so.

Donnie Oswald went out next, in 4th place when his K-Q lost to J-J. He received $80,560. That left three players.

Of the final three, Bobby Slagle was easily the most animated. He ordered shots of Jack Daniels when he won key hands, and probably had a double when he broke Goldfarb with quads. On his final hand of the night, Slagle tried to move Forrest out of the pot with a bluff when an ace turned. That turned out to be a horrible decision, as Forrest had two pair. Slagle was drawing dead and hit the rail with third place prize money -- $92,080.

Only two horses were left in the race. It took exactly one hand for Ted Forrest to cross the finish line:

TED FORREST: J-J
SUSAN PRITCHETT: A-8

The final board showed 10-10-6-4-J. Forrest ended up with jacks full of tens, and his fifth World Series of Poker title.

At the conclusion of the tournament, Forrest was asked about his hunger for another gold bracelet � potentially matching the trifecta he cashed eleven years ago.

�It�s still a possibility for me to get four (this year) Forrest said,� as he was being photographed in the winner�s circle. �One can dream, right?�

Ted Forrest has exactly seven more �open� events to win another gold bracelet. He says his best chance to win will be in the Razz event held this Saturday, an event Forrest has won before. Here�s a tip: Don�t bet against him.


-- Official Report by Nolan Dalla, Media Director -- 2004 World Series of Poker




2004 World Series of Poker

Event 1 Event 2 Event 3 Event 4
Event 5 Event 6 Event 7 Event 8
Event 9 Event 10 Event 11 Event 12
Event 13 Event 14 Event 15 Event 16
Event 17 Event 18 Event 19 Event 20
Event 21 Event 22 Event 23 Event 24
Event 25 Event 26 Event 27 Event 28
Event 29 Event 30 Event 31 Event 32
Event 33 Day 1 Day 2 Day 3
Day 4 Day 5 Day 6 Day 7

 

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