Event 27: $3,000 No-Limit Hold'em (6-handed) |
Winner | Chris Moorman |
Runners | 959 |
Paid | 144 |
Final Table | 6 |
Player | Position | Points |
Chris Moorman | 1 | 25 |
Max Silver | 6 | 8 |
Joao Vieira | 25 | 1 |
Tom Middleton | 39 | 1 |
Vanessa Selbst | 56 | 1 |
Igor Kurganov | 100 | 1 |
Chris Ferguson | 117 | 1 |
Selector | Points |
Chris B | 26 |
Leigh | 9 |
Paul H | 9 |
Debbie | 8 |
Simon B | 8 |
Irish Tom | 1 |
Scottish Tom | 1 |
It's a great day for the British, winning the tournament, having two players on the final table and seven cashing in total.
It might be a surprise to some that this is Moorman's first bracelet. He might have been expected to have won a few before now, but remember this is a player who has bravely pursued a live poker career, despite having to overcome the handicap of looking like a 1940s movie gangster.
Silver had a huge lead for most of the tournament and began the final day with twice as many as the second-placed player. He lost some hands, but should have recovered with KK against Michael Gagliano's QQ, but another Q on the Flop ended his tournament surprisingly early from the position he was in.
A couple of key hands went Moorman's way. He was all-in pre-flop at the start of the final table against Steve Sung's JJ and caught an A on the River to stay alive. I wasn't sad about that as I carry a personal grudge against Sung for sucking out on me something horrible two years ago. Moorman then vaulted into a massive lead when the two biggest stacks got all-in against each other, chip-leader Gagliano having top two with QT on a QTx Flop, but losing to second-placed Moorman's QQ.
It looked like it would finish quickly. Three-handed, Morman held a 12m-1m-1m lead and it was still 10m-4m when Heads-up began on Hand 39 of the final table against Bernardo Dias. Sunday Millions winner bedias knows a bit about poker, though, and it took four hours before the game finally finished on Hand 132.
Crispy got most of the points, but he was bottom, so at least this lifts him a couple of places.
British calmness under pressure wins the day