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Bill Edler Wins $5k Short Handed Event


Author: LA Mike Tournament: 2007 WSOP
Published on: 23:00:41 on Jun 30, 2007

Event #45 $5k Short Handed tourney has just ended.  Bill Edler defeated Alex Bolotin to win the bracelet and $904,672.  The final table payouts were:

  1. Bill Edler  $904,672
  2. Alex Bolotin  $504,686
  3. Erik Friberg  $345,582
  4. Greg Pohler  $232,669
  5. Dutch Boyd  $169,369
  6. Gioi Luong  $110,860

Congrats to Bill on his first bracelet, he's a great guy and very well thought of by everyone on this site.

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Some Thoughts from WSOP Day 29


Author: Jeremiah Smith Tournament: 2007 WSOP
Published on: 21:46:04 on Jun 29, 2007

I had some trouble remembering just how many days the WSOP has been running now.  I must've stared at the title bar for a solid three minutes before I remembered Event #1 kicked off on June 1st.  As long as today actually is the 29th, that would mean we've been here for 29 days.  That's one solid month of poker 'round the clock at the Rio.  After blogging (almost all of) the HORSE final table yesterday, I'm kind of surprised at how mentally fatigued I am.  Either that or I'm just plain lazy.  Like any good poker story, the truth is probably somewhere in between. 

Some thoughts from this, the 29th day of the 2007 World Series of Poker:

Freddy Deeb pulled off an astonishing comeback this morning
This morning I overheard a conversation between Chau Giang and Melissa Hayden, both of whom were glad Freddy won. "I know he was gonna win.  Freddy play a lot of hands, more than anybody at table.  I play with Freddy for twenty years.  He deserve to win," said Chau.  Melissa agreed with Chau that Freddy winning was good for the game.  They felt like he was the best player at the final table because, "It all comes down to Razz," declared Melissa.  "You have to know when they pair and when they are counterfeited.  John Hanson is a very good player, but Freddy's been playing forever." Bruno Fitoussi had 10.5m of the 14.8m chips in play when they were three-handed. But in the end, I think Freddy had to stand on a chair to be seen over the pile of money he won ($2.28m). I'm glad ESPN stayed until 4 AM so I didn't have to.

Eugene Todd loves Phil Hellmuth, bro
I heard some obnoxious railbird yelling, "Let's go, Phil!  GO GET 'EM, PHIL!" The voice sounded familiar and when I turned around I saw none other than Eugene Todd, bro, cheering on Hellmuth as he was deep in the $5K six-handed event.  "I got money on him, bro.  Phil's amazing.  You can't say nuthin' 'bout him, bro.  The guy's got concentration....like nobody in the game, bro.  He's got the three D's: drive, determination, and devotion."  My mouth may have dropped open a bit because I didn't quite know what to make of Gene whipping out an alliteration to describe someone's poker game.

Eugene Todd has been strutting around the Rio
I was going to try to fit this in the previous Eugene Todd reference, but it really deserves it's own heading.  LA Mike ran into Gene strutting like a peacock down the hallway yesterday as he was fresh off his first major win.  When you look at Gene's results you'll see a solid string of cashes with several second and third places (including one vs. Phil Hellmuth at the $5k final table last summer). Although it's not his biggest cash, winning 1st place in a $2,500 Bellagio cup event prompted Gene to tell Mike, "The monkey's finally off the back, bro!"

There's some great poker being played in the $5,000 six-handed event
Dutch Boyd has been leading the field since halfway through yesterday, and doesn't seem like he's ready to look back.  However, he's not lacking for competition in the event.  Bill Gazes, Erik Friberg, Danny Noam, Gioi Long, Tony G, Keith Lehr, Nick Schulman, Dustin Woolf, Mike Guttman, Ram Vaswani, John Racener, Mark Vos, Lance Allred, and Alex Bolotin are still in the running as 29 players remain.  Unfortunately for Gene Todd (you didn't think I would make it through this thought with mentioning Gene, did you?), Phil Hellmuth took a bad beat when he got it all in with a set versus an overpair only to have his opponent river a higher set. 

Oh, and don't forget about everybody's favorite Wild Bill Edler.  Actually, Bill's not that wild.  At least not that I've seen.  But I've been dying to refer to him as "Wild Bill" for sooooo long...Bill's "sophisticated" approach to the game is perfect for this event; with 340k and blinds at 4k-8k Bill is the guy to watch in my opinion.  I hope we'll be seeing him at the final table tomorrow.

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