|
|
|
Poker Tournament Results
37th Annual World Series of Poker
 |
David Williams |
| 1 |
David Williams (Las Vegas, NV, USA) |
$163,189 |
| 2 |
John Hoang (Elk Grove, CA, USA) |
$110,920 |
| 3 |
Jack Duncan (Newport, WA, USA) |
$71,772 |
| 4 |
Mitchell Ledis (Portland, OR, USA) |
$45,673 |
| 5 |
Miami John Cernuto (Las Vegas, NV, USA) |
$35,886 |
| 6 |
Ivan Schertzer (Miami, FL, USA) |
$29,361 |
| 7 |
Johnny Chan (Cerritos, CA, USA) |
$22,836 |
| 8 |
Matthew Hawrilenko AKA "Hoss-TBF" (Boston, MA, USA) |
$16,312 |
| 9 |
Mark Dickstein (New York, NY, USA) |
$8,482 |
| 10 |
Victor Shkurka (Davie, FL, USA) |
$8,482 |
| 11 |
Jon Knauf (Garland, TX, USA) |
$8,482 |
| 12 |
Tam Nguyen (Salem, OR, USA) |
$8,482 |
| 13 |
Charlie Ng (Las Vegas, NV, USA) |
$8,482 |
| 14 |
Jim McManus (Kenilworth, IL, USA) |
$8,482 |
| 15 |
Neal Friets (Keene, NH, USA) |
$8,482 |
| 16 |
John Womack (Lauderhill, FL, USA) |
$8,482 |
| 17 |
Hojeong Lee (Brick, NY, USA) |
$5,220 |
| 18 |
John Hennigan (Santa Monica, CA, USA) |
$5,220 |
| 19 |
Humberto Brenes (San Jose, CA, USA) |
$5,220 |
| 20 |
Levon Torosyan (Los Angeles, CA, USA) |
$5,220 |
| 21 |
Leonard F. Lombardo (Plainfield, IL, USA) |
$5,220 |
| 22 |
Alvin Willis (Haines City, FL, USA) |
$5,220 |
| 23 |
Robert Haney (Dewitt, MI, USA) |
$5,220 |
| 24 |
Eugene Borbas (Tustin, CA, USA) |
$5,220 |
| 25 |
Rob Shepp (Las Vegas, NV, USA) |
$3,262 |
| 26 |
Michael Huguenot AKA "The Lawyer" (Pleasantville, NY, USA) |
$3,262 |
| 27 |
Julie Sun (San Francisco, CA, USA) |
$3,262 |
| 28 |
Bill Byers (Apollo Beach, FL, USA) |
$3,262 |
| 29 |
Katja Thater AKA "Miss Slick" (Hamburg, Germany) |
$3,262 |
| 30 |
Carl Brucker (Cleves, OH, USA) |
$3,262 |
| 31 |
George Shahrezay (Bell Gardens, CA, USA) |
$3,262 |
| 32 |
Kevin Song (Diamond Bar, CA, USA) |
$3,262 |
| 33 |
Thor Hansen (El Segundo, CA, USA) |
$2,610 |
| 34 |
Gioi Luong (Westminster, CA, USA) |
$2,610 |
| 35 |
Patrick Pezzin (Toronto, ON, Canada) |
$2,610 |
| 36 |
Tom McKenna III (Laurel, MD, USA) |
$2,610 |
| 37 |
David Sklansky (Las Vegas, NV, USA) |
$2,610 |
| 38 |
O'Neil Longson (Las Vegas, NV, USA) |
$2,610 |
| 39 |
Louis Pagnotti (Las Vegas, NV, USA) |
$2,610 |
| 40 |
Luca Pagano (Preganzio, Italy) |
$2,610 |
Tournament Report
Victory at Last!
David Williams Wins His First WSOP Gold Bracelet
2004 main event runner-up earns well-deserved top prize in Seven-Card Stud
championship
Las Vegas, NV - Aside from the multi-million dollar financial boon of a second-place
finish in the championship event at the World Series of Poker, the runner-up
position may very well be poker's most frustrating end-result. Just imagine
- day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year - suffering
through the torment of poker flashbacks. If I would have played that hand this
way, or done something different, maybe I would have been the world champion.
Instead, the name of the WSOP runner-up often becomes lost. Years later, it
is little more than the answer to a trivia question rather than a revered figure
inside the poker world. Just ask Julian Gardner, Alan Goehring, Kevin McBride,
Dr. Bruce Van Horn and several other top-quality poker players how many celebrity
contracts they have signed lately. All of these would-be champions were just
one big hand away from poker immortality.
David Williams finished second in the main event at the 2004 World Series of
Poker at a time when the popularity of poker was soaring. Like Sammy Farha before
him and Steve Dannenmann the following year, Williams became something of a
cult figure in poker circles following his countless appearances on ESPN's multitude
of poker broadcasts. Williams' natural charisma made him the perfect pitchman
to a new, hipper, more energetic generation than the one previous. And although
Williams has made the most of his fame, the one thing that had still eluded
the 26-year-old poker pro, thus far, was winning a WSOP gold bracelet.
Recognizing that all glory is fleeting, on July 7, 2006, David Williams erased
two years of uncertainty and conjecture by winning his first-ever WSOP title.
To everyone's surprise, Williams won his poker prize in a game for which he
is not particularly known - seven-card stud.
"I play a lot of the mixed games against some very good players," Williams
later explained. "I play with Chau Giang, David Singer, Mike Wattel, and top
players who really know the game. I picked up on some of the things they do,
and that really helped me. I also talked to (noted sports handicapper) Alan
Boston who is a very solid stud player and got some very good advice from him."
Whatever the stud specialists shared with Williams must have worked. Williams
topped a field of 474 players in the $1,500 buy-in Seven-Card Stud championship
and won $163,118 for first place. With all due respect to the other competitors,
Williams' victory almost looked too easy.
On the scale of tough final tables, this one was certainly high up on the list.
Three of the eight finalists were former gold bracelet winners - including Johnny
Chan (with 10 wins), Miami John (with three wins), and Jack Duncan (with one).
David Williams arrived as the chip leader.
Seat # - Name - Chip Count
- "Miami" John Cernuto $86,000
- Jack Duncan $106,000
- Mitchell Ledis $42,500
- David Williams $142,000
- Matt Hawrilenko $32,000
- Ivan Schertzer $118,500
- Johnny Chan $26,500
- John Q. Hoang $169,000
Matt Hawrilenko, from Philadelphia, arrived as one of the shortest stacks.
He lasted 45-minutes before finally losing his remaining chips on a draw with
big cards, which missed completely. Hawrilenko, who finished fifth in last year's
$3,000 buy-in limit hold'em championship, took eighth place this time - earning
$16,312.
It's not often that ten-time gold bracelet winner Johnny Chan is short stacked
at a poker table. But he arrived with little ammunition on this night. Low on
chips throughout, Chan was eliminated when he lost with a pair of sixes to "Miami
John" Cernuto's trip nines. Those in the packed gallery expecting to see yet
another night of history being made at this year's WSOP in what would have been
Chan's record-breaking 11th gold bracelet left disappointed, along with Chan.
The 1987 and 1988 world poker champion collected $22,836.
Ivan A. Schertzer went out next. The attorney from Florida went out losing
to David Williams' three kings. The final verdict was seventh place - and a
settlement for $29,361.
Another famous name went out when longtime poker pro "Miami John" Cernuto went
bust. Three-time WSOP event winner Cernuto (one of the world's best Omaha high-low
tournament players) was bidding for win number four, but instead was bounced
off the final table when his pair was topped by a set. The former air-traffic
controller landed safely in fifth place, good for $35,886.
Mitchell Ledis, from Las Vegas, was the next player to go out. On his last
hand, he started off with buried kings, which failed to improve. His adversary,
David Williams made three sevens and that ended the night for Ledis. The real
estate investor closed the deal for $45,673.
Jack Duncan was well on his way to becoming one of this year's most compelling
human interest stories. The 78-year-old casino owner from Washington State who
used to play poker regularly with the late casino pioneer Benny Binion back
in the 1950s showed that he can still play with the best by finishing in third
place. Duncan, the winner of a gold bracelet in 2002, hoped to become the second-oldest
WSOP event winner (to Paul McKinney who won last year) by taking the top prize
in this tournament. Instead, Duncan lost when his pair of queens was cracked
by John Hoang's pair of aces. Third place paid $71,772.
John Q. Hoang battled valiantly for more than three hours before finally succumbing
to defeat. The 39-year-old former software engineer was outchipped during the
entire heads-up match, although Williams was certainly put to an unwanted test
of endurance. Williams won the final hand with a rather unimpressive (6s-4s)
Ks-3h-4c-Jd (8h) versus Hoang's (Ad-8s) 4c-5s-9d-3c (10s). A lonely pair of
fours is normally not very worthwhile in seven-card stud, but in Williams case
- it was worth $163,118, and a lot more in terms of significance. Hoang, who
won also won major tournament in Tunica, MS in the past, collected $110,920
for second place.
Williams' win seemed so right. Prior to finishing second to Greg "Fossilman"
Raymer in the 2005 world championship, Williams attended Southern Methodist
University in Dallas. He first acquired knowledge of game theory by playing
the card game called "Magic." The $3.5 million cash prize for second place certainly
changed Williams' life. He moved to Las Vegas, turned pro, and accepted big-money
endorsement deals. But no amount prize money buys peer respect and self-assurance.
When the WSOP coveted gold bracelet was strapped to Williams' wrist inside the
Rio poker arena, the latest poker champion displayed great appreciation for
the significance of the victory.
"It's really all I have thought about or cared about," Williams said following
his greatest personal triumph. "I wanted it so bad that I changed my daily activities
to put myself in a much better position to win. Now, I am so happy I feel like
crying. I'm fighting back the tears right now. It's the best I've ever felt
in my life." |
Back to results
Back to schedule
|
|
Tue, Nov 17, 2009 - 12:00am CST
|