FORUMS
LIVE
CHAT
POKER
RULES
HAND
RANKINGS
POKER
TERMS
ONLINE
POKER
POKER
ON T.V.
POKER
NEWS
ODDS CALCULATOR
ARTICLES
TRIP
REPORTS
STORIES
BOOK
REVIEWS
POKER
BOOKS
INFO
CENTER
SCHEDULES
WSOP
WPT
POKER
CARTOON
HALL
OF FAME
HAND
NAMES
FREE
GAMES
E-MAIL
LOGIN
LINKS
ADVERTISE
CONTACT
|
2005 World Series Of Poker
Sat-Sun
June 4-5, 2005
Event #3
Pot-Limit Holdem
$1,500 BUY-IN
Players: 1,071
Prize Pool: $1,477,980
|
1.
Thom Werthmann Bloomfield
Hills, MI $369,535
2. Layne Flack Las Vegas,
NV 185,855
3. Hieu Tony Ma
S. El Monte, CA 118,240
4. Martin Green Brighton,
England 103,460
5. David Gunslinger
Bach Athens. GA 88,680
6. Mario Valenzuela Temecula,
CA 73,900
7. Pierre Nasr Vancouver,
BC (Canada) 59,120
8. Arash Ganehian Marina Del
Rey, CA 44,340
9. Ernest Patrick Birmingham,
MI 29,560
10. Gavin Smith $16,260.00
11. Edward Moncada $16,260.00
12. Chris Stolzfus $16,260.00
13. Al Krux $13,300.00
14. Frank Whipple $13,300.00
15. Patrick Pezzin $13,300.00
16. Young Cho $10,345.00
17. Matthew Kirisits $10,345.00
18. Thomas Hunt III $10,345.00
19. Dave McAfee $7,390.00
20. Renee Wexler $7,390.00
21. Shannon Frankfather $7,390.00
22. Scott Levy $7,390.00
23. T.J. Burle $7,390.00
24. Jim Bechtel $7,390.00
25. Hoyt Corkins $7,390.00
26. Peter Zakhary $7,390.00
27. Nick Frangos $7,390.00
28. Jennifer Harman $5,175.00
29. Christopher Christy $5,175.00
30. Peter Davidson $5,175.00
31. Gerald Cheatham $5,175.00
32. Chance Langeness $5,175.00
33. Jason Younger $5,175.00
34. John Johnson $5,175.00
35. Anders Berg $5,175.00
36. Dave Danheiser $5,175.00
37. Bill Ferrand $4,285.00
38. Roger White $4,285.00
39. Nathaniel Mullen $4,285.00
40. Alan Adler $4,285.00
41. Delmiro Toledo $4,285.00
42. Alan Kessler $4,285.00
43. Joseph Casetla $4,285.00
44. Kenny Levy $4,285.00
45. Marc Shubbe $4,285.00
46. Bruce Gifford $3,475.00
47. Antonio Abesamis $3,475.00
48. Roger Barnes $3,475.00
49. Billy Seber $3,475.00
50. David Stroj $3,475.00
51. James Kileen $3,475.00
52. Kevin Kim $3,475.00
53. Marcel Luske $3,475.00
54. Arthur Christman $3,475.00
55. Joseph Cassidy $3,475.00
56. Marco Traniello $2,955.00
57. Mark Taylor $2,955.00
58. Dean Factor $2,955.00
59. Joshua Jones $2,955.00
60. James Catton $2,955.00
61. Elliott Howle $2,955.00
62. Stanley Bayne $2,955.00
63. Carlos Trujillo $2,955.00
64. Brett Wiesner $2,585.00
65. Craig Hartman $2,585.00
66. Michael Minetti $2,585.00
67. Jesse Daniel $2,585.00
68. Jorge Arias $2,585.00
69. Manuel Regis $2,585.00
70. Tao Yubin $2,585.00
71. Amie Martini $2,585.00
72. Jeffrey Klein $2,585.00
73. Keith Sexton $2,215.00
74. Todd Brunson $2,215.00
75. Aaron Jensen $2,215.00
76. Christopher Fear $2,215.00
77. Andrew Singer $2,215.00
78. Dewey Tomko $2,215.00
79. Michael Pryce $2,215.00
80. Isabelle Mercier $2,215.00
81. Robert Glenn $2,215.00
82. Asle Gtesteland $1,845.00
83. Tommy Tucker $1,845.00
84. John Gordon $1,845.00
85. Joseph Beevers $1,845.00
86. Scott Wilson $1,845.00
87. Jason Bloom $1,845.00
88. Alan Hance $1,845.00
89. Bobby Justice $1,845.00
90. Sean Colclough $1,845.00
91. Daniel Coury $1,625.00
92. KU Davis $1,625.00
93. Steven Sauser $1,625.00
94. Steve Zolotow $1,625.00
95. Andrew Bloch $1,625.00
96. Andrew Hallenbeck $1,625.00
97. Jason Strochak $1,625.00
98. Jonathan Dull $1,625.00
99. Jordan Siegel $1,625.00
100. Gerard Denham $1,625.00
|
|
|
|
Pot-Limit
Ace:
Thom Werthman Wins Largest Pot-Limit Holdem
Event in World Series History
Thom
Werthman, a 35-year-old owner of a high-tech
telecommunications company in Detroit,
MI, staged a memorable comeback and won
a stunning upset victory over one of poker’s
most enigmatic personalities. When play
became heads-up, Wertherman overcame a
3 to 1 chip deficit versus the always-unpredictable
Layne Flack, who was shooting for his
6th WSOP gold bracelet. But after a two-day,
26-hour poker marathon, it was the newcomer
Werthmann who earned his first major tournament
victory.
The
$1,500 buy-in Pot-Limit Hold’em championshipp
started with 1,071 players, making it
the largest pot-limit hold’em event in
WSOP history. In fact, it was the third
largest field ever to play in a WSOP event
– a statistic expected to be short-lived
since this year’s tournament is smashing
records daily.
When
the final ten players assembled around
the final table, Layne Flack had an impressive
chip lead. Other than Englishman Martin
Green – no one seemed to pose a threat
to the freewheeling poker enigma originally
from Missoula, Montana -- who has drawn
comparisons to the late Stu Ungar. No
one could possibly foresee that the mild-mannered,
self-admitted recreational poker player
in Seat 7 would be the last man sitting
at the final table at 1:55 am. The finalists
started with the following chip counts:
THE FINAL TABLE:
Seat
1; Arash Ghaneian 87,000
Seat 2: Ernest Patrick 118,000
Seat 3: Gavin Smith 73,000
Seat 4: Mario Valenzuela 116,000
Seat 5: Pierre Nasr 118,000
Seat 6: Tony Ma 48,000
Seat 7: Thom Werthmann 265,000
Seat 8: David Bach 130,000
Seat 9: Layne Flack 391,000
Seat 10: Martin Green 282,000
After
Gavin Smith went out in 10th place, players
were eliminated as follows:
9th
Place – Tony Ma plays a short-stack
as well as anyone in poker. He came in
desperately hoping to double up, and did
better than that. He tripled up. Twenty
minutes into the finale, Ma moved ‘all
in’ with K-K. Arash Ghaneian had A-Q and
a third player, Ernest Patrick had 8-8.
The flop came K-J-J – good for a full-house
-- which catapulted Ma back into the game.
Meanwhile, Patrick was down to the felt
and exited in 9th place. Ernest Patrick,
a 56-year-old builder from Birmingham,
MI, collected $29,560.
8th
Place – Arash Ghaneian, an Iranian-born
poker pro who now lives in Marina Del
Rey, CA went out next. He took a blow
on the previous hand losing to Ma, then
tried to steal from the button with 7-6
suited. Mario Valenzuela was sitting in
the small blind with K-J and re-raised,
and Ghaneian was pot-committed. A jack
flopped and Ghaneian was forced to take
the walk of shame. He received $44,340.
7th Place –
Pierre became short-stacked and was delighted
to look down and see pocket queens. David
‘Gunslinger’ Bach lived up to his name
and called a 30,000 raise with K-2 suited.
The crowd became electrified as the hand
was played out. The flop came 9-5-4, with
one diamond. Nasr smiled with confidence.
The queen of diamonds fell on the turn,
which gave Nasr a set (three queens).
Then, the crowd roared when a third diamond
fell on the river, giving the Gunslinger
a flush. Nasr, a Lebanese-born jeweler
now living in Canada, backed away from
the final table in shock and disappointment.
He received $59,120 for 7th place.
6th
Place – Layne Flack was right on
schedule to win another gold bracelet.
With all due respect to the other players,
it seemed Flack might run away with the
title when he crushed Mario Valenzuela,
thus eliminating another player and taking
nearly a 3 to 1 chip lead. Flack was dealt
10-10 and hot a ten on the flop. Valenzuela
had pocket queens and was ‘all in’ and
drawing to two outs. He missed. The Mexico
City-born demolition contractor now living
in southern California imploded – earning
$73,900 for 6th place. After the hand,
Flack had 740,000 in chips.
5th
Place – It was the Gunslinger’s
time to get shot down. David ‘Gunslinger’
Bach went up to nearly 300,000 in chips
at one point, but had a tough run in his
final half hour at the table. He made
his last stand with A-K and was covered
by Thom Werthmann, holding pocket 2s.
With 350,000 in the pot, the Gunslinger
needed to catch an ace or king, but missed.
Bach, a former pro bowler who has turned
to poker playing for a living, ended up
with poker’s equivalent of a spare. Fifth-place
paid $88,680. With that pot, Thom Werthmann
rocketed up close to 500,000 in chips
and suddenly Layne Flack had competition.
4th
Place – England has produced a
long line of great pot-limit players.
Martin Green hoped to add his name to
the Brit legacy, but fell three spots
short of the top prize. Green was getting
short on chips and pushed in under the
gun with A-J. Flack, with a mountain of
chips called with K-4 and spiked a 4 on
the river, making Mr. Green blue. Green,
who edits a major horseracing publication
in Brighton, jockeyed into 4th place –
good for $103,460.
3rd
Place – Tony Ma survived three
hours with a short stack before finally
succumbing to defeat. Ma looked down,
saw and ace, and moved in. Thom Wethermann
couldn’t get his chips in fast enough
with A-J and when a jack flopped, Ma was
essentially bounced to the rail Vietnamese-born
Tony Ma, who has won numerous poker tournaments
in his distinguished career (he was Card
Player magazine’s “Player of the Year”
in 1999) received $118,240 for 3rd place.
When
heads-up play began, Flack enjoyed a substantial
chip lead over Werthmann – 1,150,000 to
480,000. Twenty minutes later, Flack was
up 3 to 1. Then, the winds of fate shifted.
Arguably the most decisive hand of the
tournament took place when Werthmann made
a pot-sized bet holding 8-6 after the
flop came 6-3-2. Flack re-raised the pot
with two overcards and a spade flush draw.
Werthmann moved the rest of his chips
in, and it was essentially a coin flip
situation with two cards to come. Flack
failed to catch the spade or overcard
which would have given him his 6th gold
bracelet, and Werthmann had new life.
The chips counts were now close to equal.
Werthmann
seized the chip lead when he took a 300,000
pot on non-showdown hand, then Flack won
most of those chips back when he made
two pair and Werthmann missed a straight
draw.
With
the championship hanging in the balance,
the final hand of the night was dealt
on Sunday night at 2 am, with throngs
of spectators jammed around the table
observing the two glary-eyed finalists.
Flack was dealt 5-5 and was the clear
favorite over Werthmann’s A-2. Werthmann
desperately needed to catch and ace. He
caught not one ace, but two. The
final board showed A-K-Q-A-J, which gave
Werthmann trip aces and his first WSOP
title.
Flack, who normally is not sentimental
about gold bracelets or poker glory, was
visibly disappointed with the outcome.
He commented earlier that he had given
his previous five bracelets as gifts to
various family members. He hoped his sixth
bracelet might go to his brother. But
alas, that bracelet ended up on the wrist
of the new unanticipated champion. Layne
Flack, the Montana-born poker wunderkind,
collected $185,855 as the runner up.
For
Thom Werthmann, this was a two-day dream
come true. He had previously cashed two
times, including 179th in the main event
last year (2,576 entries). He earned a
whopping $369,535 and the coveted gold
bracelet studded with diamonds.
Official Report
by Nolan Dalla World Series of
Poker Media Director
World
Series of Poker Circuit Director of Operations
Ken Lambert
World Series of Poker Tournament Director
John Grooms
Rio Poker Room Manager Michael
Matts
Rio Poker Tournament Director Robert
Daily
|
|
|
|
|
|