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Poker Tournament Results

37th Annual World Series of Poker

Event #14 - WSOP No Limit Hold'em Rebuy Unlimited
July 8, 2006 at 12:00 PM
Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino
Tournament Schedule
Buy-In $1,000
Prize Pool $2,317,887
Entries 752 + 1670 rebuys
Report Available
Allen Cunningham

Allen Cunningham

Place Name Prize
1 Allen Cunningham (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $625,830
2 David Rheem AKA "Chino" (Los Angeles, CA, USA) $327,981
3 Captain Tom Franklin (Gulfport, MS, USA) $185,431
4 Steve Wong AKA "S 18" (Hoofddorp, Netherlands) $162,252
5 John Hoang (Elk Grove, CA, USA) $139,073
6 Thien Phan AKA "Tim" (Westminster, CA, USA) $115,894
7 Everett Carlton (St Paul, MN, USA) $92,715
8 Andrew Bloch (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $67,357
9 Alex Jacob (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $46,358
10 Illya Trincher (New York, NY, USA) $25,497
11 Christopher W. Loveland (Hollis, NH, USA) $25,497
12 Joseph Davis (El Paso, TX, USA) $25,497
13 Adam Naglich (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $20,861
14 David Wells (Scottsdale, AZ, USA) $20,861
15 Miami John Cernuto (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $20,861
16 Ray Lynn (Alexandria, VA, USA) $16,225
17 Kenna James AKA "Cowboy" (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $16,225
18 Sam Arzoin (Flushing, NY, USA) $16,225
19 Joe Leibman (Fort Atkinson, WI, USA) $11,589
20 Sean Picquelle (Costa Mesa, CA, USA) $11,589
21 Chip Jett (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $11,589
22 Tony Guoga AKA "G" (Melbourne, Australia) $11,589
23 Joshua Tieman (Kildeer, IL, USA) $11,589
24 Amir Vahedi (Sherman Oaks, CA, USA) $11,589
25 John Juanda (Marina Del Rey, CA, USA) $11,589
26 Nam Le (Huntington Beach, CA, USA) $11,589
27 Maciek Gracz (Raleigh, NC, USA) $11,589
28 Conor Tate (Bury, Manchester, UK) $8,113
29 Roger Barlow (Center Point, AL, USA) $8,113
30 Paul Snead (Kings Park, NY, USA) $8,113
31 Joseph Reitman (Los Angeles, CA, USA) $8,113
32 Kyle Wilson (Vancouver, BC, Canada) $8,113
33 Dan Schmiech (Houston, TX, USA) $8,113
34 Kathy Liebert (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $8,113
35 James Mordue (Beverly Hills, CA, USA) $8,113
36 Blair Rodman (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $8,113
37 Amy Tsao (Houston, TX, USA) $6,772
38 Ron Longcock (Ft Wayne, NC, USA) $6,772
39 Sigurd Eskeland (Oslo, Norway) $6,772
40 Eddie Zakaria (Windsor, ON, Canada) $6,772
41 Jesse Martin (Shrewsbury, MA, USA) $6,772
42 Huck Seed (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $6,722
43 Ben Armstrong (Tulsa, OK, USA) $6,722
44 Steve Zolotow (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $6,722
45 Sudo Le (San Jose, CA, USA) $6,722
46 Robert Cash (Kansas City, MO, USA) $5,447
47 Steven Rosen (Armonk, NY, USA) $5,447
48 Allen Kessler (Huntingdon Valley, PA, USA) $5,447
49 Mark Scott (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $5,447
50 Mike Wiggins (Brandon, FL, USA) $5,447
51 Steve Duncker (New York, NY, USA) $5,447
52 Paolo Grossi (Italy) $5,447
53 Barry Greenstein (Rancho Palo Verde, CA, USA) $5,447
54 Gioi Luong (Westminster, CA, USA) $4,636
55 Frank Sinopoli (Hollywood, FL, USA) $4,636
56 Phil Gordon (South Lake Tahoe, CA, USA) $4,636
57 Tad Jurgens (Gold Canyon, AZ, USA) $4,636
58 Humberto Brenes (San Jose, CA, USA) $4,636
59 Behzad Tehrani (Anaheim, CA, USA) $4,636
60 Champie Douglas (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $4,636
61 Stuart "'The Donator" Paterson (Boca Raton, FL, USA) $4,636
62 Annand "Victor" Ramdin (Bronx, NY, USA) $4,636
63 Anders Berg (Oslo, Norway) $4,636
64 Jay Mecklinger (Toronto, ON, Canada) $4,056
65 Brandon Schaefer AKA "Koga" (Seattle, WA, USA) $4,056
66 Mimi Tran (Torrance, CA, USA) $4,056
67 Nicholas Niergarth (Milwaukee, WI, USA) $4,056
68 Gary Haglund AKA "G-Pirate" (Colorado Springs, CO, USA) $4,056
69 William Brooks (South Lake, TX, USA) $4,056
70 Henry Lau (El Monte, CA, USA) $4,056
71 Anahit Galajian (Glendale, CA, USA) $2,028
72 Jim Bechtel (Gilbert, AZ, USA) $2,028
73 Scott "Magic" Lazar (Studio City, CA, USA) $2,028
74 Scott Manzi (Miami Beach, FL, USA) $2,028

Tournament Report

Number Four….and Counting

Allen Cunningham Wins Fourth Gold Bracelet, Second in Two Years

Tranquil 29-year-old poker pro outplays tough final table and wins $625,830

Las Vegas, NV - The loudest poker personalities may get the fame, but the most skilled players get the money. Allen Cunningham is neither loud, nor famous. In fact, he is usually the quietest poker player in the room. But he is most certainly a skilled consummate poker professional, and he sure gets the money. Lots of money.

Cunningham topped a highly-competitive field of 752 players in the $1,000 buy-in No-Limit Hold'em world championship at the 2006 World Series of Poker. He won a whopping $625,830 in prize money. The victory marked the fourth time the 29-year-old poker professional from southern California has won a WSOP title.

This was the first tournament of this year's World Series with re-buys. All other tournaments played thus far have been single-elimination freeze outs. The 1,670 re-buys in this event helped to generate a total prize pool of $2,317,887. After two lengthy days of play, the nine finalists took the illuminated stage at the Rio Casino in front of a packed gallery and ESPN television cameras on hand to film the exciting finale.

The final table started off with 'Captain' Tom Franklin and Tim Phan sharing a considerable substantial chip lead over the rest of the field. Of the final nine, only Franklin and Cunningham were former gold bracelet winners. Franklin won his WSOP title back in 1999 (Limit Omaha). Cunningham's WSOP victories came in 2001 (Seven-Card Stud), 2002 (Deuce to Seven Lowball), and 2005 (No-Limit Hold'em).

Name	             Chip Count	   Seat #
Alex Jacob	      $106,000	    1
Allen Cunningham      $234,000	    2
Tim Phan	      $551,000	    3
Everett Carlton	      $86,000	    4
John Hoang	      $274,000	    5
Captain Tom Franklin  $590,000	    6
Steve Wong	      $295,000	    7
David Rheem	      $145,000	    8
Andy Bloch	      $157,000	    9

Alex Jacob's stay at the final table was short, and not so sweet. On the seventh hand of play, Jacob was down to his last 30,000 in chips after losing a big pot and called an all-in bet with ten-nine. Andy Bloch had ace-king. The flop came with two aces and Jacob was drawing dead. It was an ugly ten minutes. Alex Jacob, a Yale graduate, pocketed $46,358 as the first player out.

There has been some discussion in recent weeks about the best poker players never to have won a WSOP gold bracelet. Such a short list would certainly include Andy Bloch, both an MIT and Harvard Law School graduate who has used his considerable mental talents to earn money playing poker in recent years. Bloch, who won an event on last year's WSOP Circuit (which awards gold and diamond rings, by the way - not gold bracelets), was never able to establish any momentum and ended up going out in eighth place. Bloch lost his remaining chips with pocket nines against Allen Cunningham's ace-queen. An ace flopped, and Bloch failed to improve. Bloch knocked off $67,537.

Allen Cunningham took out another player when his ace-ten whipped out Everett Carlton's king-jack. Cunningham made two pair, smoking Carlton's chances of victory. This was Carlton's second time to cash at the WSOP. Interestingly, Carlton first took up poker seriously when he was recovering from surgery in the hospital and saw it being played on TV. Little did he know back then, that he'd appear at an ESPN final table and make $92,715 in prize money.

Tim Phan went out next when his ace-queen suited was covered by Chino Rheem's ace-king. Neither player made a pair, so the ace-king played and Vietnamese-born Phan was out. The Westminster, CA-based poker player collected $115,894.

With Allen Cunningham holding the chip lead, John Q. Hoang made a bold move with an all-in raise (his last 240,000) holding seven-six in the small blind. The fearless steal attempt failed when Tom Franklin called instantly and showed ace-queen. Hoang missed completely and was bounced off of the final table. Hoang, who was the runner up in last week's Seven-Card Stud championship, took fifth place this time, good for $139.073.

Dutch player Steve Wong was eliminated in fourth place when he tried to bluff at a 500,000 pot holding an ace-high and a backdoor flush draw. Chino Rheem wasn't going anywhere with his flopped set of sixes. He made the easy call and scooped Wong's last chip. Wong collected $162,252.

'Captain' Tom Franklin set his sights on winning gold bracelet Number Two. He looked to be the early favorite, but lost the chip lead to Allen Cunningham and never fully recovered. Franklin, who holds two college degrees, served with the US armed forces in Vietnam, and also plays the drums was pounded on his final hand of the night when he flopped top pair, but lost when Chino Rheems completed a flush. 'Captain' Tom Franklin was honorably discharged in third place, which paid $185,431.

The Cunningham-Rheems heads-up match lasted for nearly three hours. The most decisive hand of play took place early in the bout when Cunningham seized the chip lead. On the key hand, Cunningham raised 50,000 pre-flop, Rheem re-raised to 250,000 and Cunningham moved all-in. Rheem called. When Cunningham flipped over pocket queens against Rheems' ace-queen, the crowd sensed an immediate momentum shift. An ace would have ended the tournament and crowned Rheems the champion. But alas, the ace did not come and Cunningham won the big pot.

It took another 50 hands or so before Cunningham finally polished off his persistent rival. Rheem was getting low on chips and tried to make a sneaky pre-flop move holding jack-nine. Cunningham called the all-in raise with ace-queen and caught a gratuitous ace on the river to make a pair. David 'Chino' Rheem, a 26-year-old poker pro from Miami, Florida received $327,981 in his first WSOP final table appearance.

True to his character, Allen Cunningham's life story is unpretentious. He was a straight A-student at UCLA when he discovered his hidden talent for poker playing. While pursuing a degree in civil engineering, he started playing the game more seriously and began making money. In 1999, Cunningham enjoyed a breakthrough year in tournament poker - coincidently the same year that emerging rivals Phil Ivey, John Juanda, and Daniel Negreanu invaded the poker scene and began winning millions. In historical retrospect, Cunningham was part of a revolutionary movement in the game of poker, away from older, more traditional players towards younger, inventive new champions.

With this victory, Cunningham moved into elite poker territory. He joins nine players who have also won four WSOP gold bracelets - a list which currently includes Mickey Appleman, Bobby Baldwin, David Chiu, Artie Cobb, Tom McEvoy, Scotty Nguyen, Puggy Pearson, Amarillo Slim Preston, and Huck Seed.

At age 29, Cunningham is one of only four other players to win at least four gold bracelets before turning thirty. The others were Stu Ungar, Phil Hellmuth, Jr., Layne Flack, and Phil Ivey.

by Nolan Dalla

Overall Tournament Statistics (through end of Event #14):
Total Entries to Date: 14,596
Total Prize Money Distributed: $ 23,366,125

For official news and latest updates from the 2006 World Series of Poker, please visit: www.worldseriesofpoker.com

For official photographs from the 2006 World Series of Poker, please contact Eric Harkins (Image Masters PDI) at: image22@aol.com Or visit: http://www.worldseriesofpoker.com/photo_store/

For additions news and information from the 2006 WSOP, please contact: nolandalla@aol.com

World Series of Poker Commissioner - Jeffrey Pollack
Director, Sponsorship and Licensing -- Ty Stewart
Director, Communications and Operations - Gary Thompson
Director, Broadcasting and New Media - Craig Abrahams
Vice President of Specialty Gaming -- Howard Greenbaum
WSOP Tournament Director - Robert Daily
WSOP Tournament Director / Director of Poker Operations for Harrah's Entertainment - Jack Effel

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