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Event #21 - WSOP No Limit Hold'em Short Handed Results & Report

37th Annual World Series of Poker

Event #21 - WSOP No Limit Hold'em Short Handed
Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino
3700 West Flamingo Road
Las Vegas, NV, 89103, US
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Bill Chen Chen Dynasty?
Bill Chen Wins Second WSOP Gold Bracelet This Week Math theorist wins yet another title and $442,511 more in prize...
Profile: Bill Chen
Date: July 13, 2006 Time: 12:00 PM

Buy-In: $2,500
Prizepool: $1,702,000
Entries: 740
Game Type: No Limit Hold'em

Place Country Name Prize
1 USA Bill Chen $442,511
2 USA Nath Pizzolatto $238,280
3 Australia Michael Guttman $139,564
4 USA Dan Hicks $107,226
5 USA Alex Bolotin AKA "Diesel" $78,292
6 UK Harry Demetriou $58,719
7 USA Harold Cohen $48,507
8 Canada Peter Jetter $43,401
9 USA Gregg Merkow $38,295
10 USA Don Mullis AKA "Final Table Mullis" $33,189
11 USA Bill Lewis $28,083
12 USA Michael Bickel $23,828
13 Canada Terris Preston $20,424
14 USA Tai Nguyen $17,871
15 USA Jordan Morgan AKA "iMsoLucky0" $16,169
16 USA Phil Gordon $14,467
17 Puerto Rico Karlo Lopez $12,765
18 USA Rohit Chopra AKA "Ro" $11,063
19 USA Jeremiah Smith $8,085
20 USA Dan Hicks $8,085
21 Canada Mark Stubbs $8,085
22 USA Phil Galfond $8,085
23 USA Wayne Boich $8,085
25 Canada Jason Sagle $8,085
26 USA Michael Cribb $8,085
27 Sweden Samir Shakhtor $8,085
28 USA Glynn Beebe $8,085
29 USA Kenna James AKA "Cowboy" $8,085
30 UK Joe Beevers $8,085
31 Sweden Kristian Liwell $8,085
32 Sweden Johan Kretz $8,085
33 USA Henry Nguyen $8,085
34 USA Corey Cheresnick $8,085
35 Norway Alexander Strandli $8,085
36 USA Anselmo Villareal $8,085
37 USA Michael Spiegel AKA "durango" $5,957
38 USA Ralph Levine $5,957
39 USA Robert Fox $5,957
40 USA Soroush Manavi $5,957
41 USA Randy Holland $5,957
42 USA Rich Zisser $5,957
43 UK Trevor Whiteway AKA "clever trevor" $5,957
44 USA Anthony Guadagni AKA "bbwolf" $5,957
45 USA Jim McManus $5,957
46 USA Rami Boukai $5,957
47 USA Steve Graham $5,957
48 USA Kevin O'Donnell $5,957
49 USA William Ihrie $5,957
50 USA Mack Lee $5,957
51 USA Farzad Bonyadi $5,957
52 Tony Maehem $5,957
53 USA Joe Graciano $5,957
54 USA David "C4" Plastik $5,957
55 USA Steve Friedlander AKA "Freeze" $4,255
56 USA Steve Cowley $4,255
57 USA Clifford Spiro $4,255
58 USA Thomas Popday $4,255
59 UK Jonathan Gaskell $4,255
60 USA Daniel Kaesser $4,255
61 USA Eric Cloutier $4,255
62 USA Mark Wilds $4,255
63 Estonia Irme Leibold $4,255
64 USA Ryan Hughes $4,255
65 USA Francois Safieddine $4,255
66 UK Richard Ashby $4,255
67 USA Kevin Song $4,255
68 Australia Tony Guoga AKA "G" $4,255
69 USA Richard Tatalovich $4,255
70 USA Russell Fox $4,255
71 Canada Dan Coupal $2,127
72 USA Alexander Borteh $2,127
73 UK Tom Birmingham $2,127
74 USA John Pires $2,127

Tournament Report

Chen Dynasty?

Bill Chen Wins Second WSOP Gold Bracelet This Week

Math theorist wins yet another title and $442,511 more in prize money

Las Vegas, NV - It's a peculiar thing that our culture gives far greater attention to the peripheral things than those which are genuine. We bestow our highest adulation on the rich, the famous, and the beautiful. Everywhere you look - be it magazines, newspapers, television, or the Internet - pop idols are the focus. It's one reason why athletes and movie stars make hundreds of times more money than school teachers.

When surveys are taken and school children are asked who they most admire and respect - it's usually a celebrity. Not a scientist, or an academic, or a philosopher. Can anyone name any of last year's Nobel Prize winners? Probably not. But we certainly know all the latest celebrity gossip. Society's warped sense of what constitutes 'value' will almost certainly produce catastrophic consequences down the road. In the meantime, we must do what we can to recognize the real extraordinary talents amongst us who stand out above the rest in the ways that really matter.

If mental endowment was the sole basis for being rich and famous, then Bill Chen would be a combination of Donald Trump and Paris Hilton. The quantitative analyst for Susquehanna (a highly-successful financial services firm founded by poker players) holds a PhD in mathematics from Cal-Berkeley. With all respect to other scholarly powerhouses in the game of poker, such as Chris 'Jesus' Ferguson (hold a PhD from UCLA) and Andy Bloch (a graduate of MIT and Harvard Law School), Chen may very well be the most brilliant mind in the game today.

And now, he is experiencing a huge personal breakthrough Most poker players would be thrilled to win a WSOP gold bracelet once in a lifetime. Bill Chen is currently winning two bracelets -- a week. Chen demolished a highly-competitive field of 740 players in the Short-Handed World Poker Championship. It came just seven days after he won his first gold bracelet in the $3,000 buy-in Limit Hold'em championship (good for $343,618).

Played six to a table, short-handed hold'em magnifies strengths and weaknesses. Simply put, there is no opportunity to sit around and wait for big cards and good hands. Short-handed poker forces the player into making more decisions, which are by circumstance tougher decisions. This format naturally favors those players with the best analytical abilities.

After 731 players were eliminated over the first two days of the tournament, Chen walked over the final table in a relatively swift four and a half hours - the quickest final table yet at this year's World Series of Poker presented by Milwaukee's Best Light. Chen made it look almost too easy. Chen's victory is even more remarkable for the fact that he was at a sizable chip disadvantage from the start - ranked fifth out of six finalists. The chip leader, Michael Guttman arrived fresh off his second-place finish in the Pot-Limit Omaha championship, held three days ago.

Name	           Chip Count	Seat 
Bill Chen	    $175,000	 1
Alex Diesel Bolotin $280,000	 2
Harry Demetriou	    $378,000	 3
Mike Guttmann	    $587,000	 4
Nath Pizzolatto	    $102,000	 5
Dan Hicks	    $321,000	 6

The first player of the final six was eliminated when longtime tournament veteran Charidimos 'Harry' Demetriou went out on a tough beat. Demetriou was dealt pocket jacks, normally a very strong hand in short-handed play. But not when the opponent holds pocket aces. Demetriou moved all-in after the flop and was quickly called by Alex Bolotin. The two aces held up and Demetriou finished in sixth place, which paid $58,719.

Next, Bolotin got a taste of his own medicine. About an hour after Demetriou's exit, Bolotin was getting low on chips and lost with ace-queen to Nath Pizzolatto's pocket eights. Bolotin, originally from Minsk, Belarus and now living in Brooklyn, took home $78,292.

Dan Hicks, who made it to the final table at the WSOP Circuit championship held at Caesar's Palace earlier this year, could do no better than fourth place in this event. On his final hand of the tournament, Hicks was dealt ace-eight, which was dominated by Mike Guttman's ace-jack. Neither player made a pair, but the jack played as a high card - putting Hicks out of the event. He received $107,226.

The next player to bust out was Mike Guttman. One of three players at this final table living abroad, the Australian went out holding ace-king against Bill Chen's pocket jacks. Guttman's 'big slick' failed to pair up, resulting in a third-place finish. Guttman collected $139,564.

The heads-up match between Bill Chen and Nath Pizzolatto lasted just two hands. Chen held a slight chip lead when the astonishing hand that ended the tournament was dealt out. Chen raised pre-flop holding king-queen. Pizzolatto called the standard raise holding eight-six. On the turn, the board showed J-7-5-10 - giving both players had a straight draw. A nine on the river cemented a straight for both players - a dream for Chen and a nightmare for Pizzolatto. After Pizzolatto bet out, Chen raised all-in and Pizzolatto called.

Chen tabled his king-high straight which flattened Pizzolatto's jack-high straight. The runner-up, Nath Pizzolatto received $238,280. Remarkably, this was the Houston-based poker player's first time to ever play at the World Series of Poker. Pizzolatto became a serious poker player last year when he was hospitalized after a life-threatening accident. Instead of lying immobile in his hospital bed, Pizzolatto started playing poker online. Eight months later, he was sitting at a WSOP final table and cashing out for nearly a quarter of a million dollars.

For all of his personal and professional success, both at the poker table and away, Bill Chen remains remarkably modest. He does not wear any jewelry. He does not even wear a wristwatch. Friends taunted Chen after he won his first WSOP gold bracelet, nicknaming the understated math wonk 'Bling Bling.' There is currently some division as to whether Chen is now to be called 'Bling Bling' or 'Brains and Bling.'

'Math works,' Chen stated matter-of-factly as he posed for photographs in front of a pile of chips and money. 'Math and poker do work. A lot of my play is not about reading my opponents. Sure, when I get a clear read on someone, I act on it. But that is rare. Most of my play in this event and in the limit event has been to balance my play, balance my bets and bluffs, and call with the right frequency. I try to gauge what my opponents range of starting hands is, and then devise my counterstrategy from that. It's all part of game theory.'

Poker players everywhere will get a chance to learn more about Chen's poker secrets in his new book, 'The Mathematics of Poker,' co-written with Jerrod Ankenman. It's scheduled to be released soon. If book sales might be helped by Chen's win last week, they will certainly get an even bigger lift from this second win.

With two weeks still to go at this year's World Series of Poker, the question everyone will be asking is, 'Will Chen win gold bracelet Number Three? If so he would join the exalted ranks of Ted Forrest and Phil Ivey as the only trifecta winners in a single WSOP year. The Chen Dynasty may have just begun.

by Nolan Dalla

Overall Tournament Statistics (through end of Event #21):
Total Entries to Date: 19,569
Total Prize Money Distributed: $ 41,526,132

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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