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2005 Harrah's Atlantic City
Poker Tournament
World Series of Poker Circuit Event
Tournament Results
World Series of Poker Circuit Events
2005 Harrah's Atlantic City Poker Tournament
Main Event No Limit Hold'em
Final Results
January 18, 2005
Harrah's Altantic City Poker Tournament
Harrah's Atlantic City
Atlantic City, New Jersey
Buy-In:      
Prize Pool:         
Entries:
Nghi Van Tran 2005 Harrah's Atlantic City WSOP Circuit
Nghi Van Tran
Place
Name
Prize
1
Nghi Van Tran (North York, ON, Canada)
$780,615
2
Erick Lindgren (Las Vegas, Nevada)
$430,521
3
Nick Frangos (Mays Landing, New Jersey)
$236,550
4
Mimi Tran (Torrance, California)
$189,240
5
Aaron Bartley (Cary, North Carolina)
$141,930
6
Stan Goldstein (Los Angeles, California)
$118,275
7
Chad Brown (Los Angeles, California)
$94,620
8
Chris "Jesus" Ferguson (Pacific Palisades, California)
$70,965
9
Michael Esposito (Seaford, New York)
$47,310
10
Arthur Azen (Staten Island, New York)
$33,117
11
Michael Santoro (New York)
$33,117
12
Al "T" Ardebili (Jersey City, New Jersey)
$33,117
13
Sanjay Pandya (Smithville, New Jersey)
$28,386
14
Jennifer Harman Traniello (Las Vegas, Nevada)
$28,386
15
Ron Rose (Dayton, Ohio)
$28,386
16
Barny Boatman (Hendon, United Kingdom)
$23,655
17
Neal Gersony (Rocky Hill, Connecticut)
$23,655
18
Edward Atanasio (Orlando, Florida)
$23,655
Tournament Report

1. Nghi Van Tran, Toronto, Canada - $780,615
Date of Birth: April 9, 1967
Occupation: Engineer
Nickname: Henry Tran
Hobbies: Blackjack, skiing, tennis
Birthplace: Vietnam
Other: Started playing poker about four years ago

2. Erick Lindgren, Las Vegas, Nevada - $430,521
Date of Birth: August 11, 1976
Occupation: Poker Player
Nickname: Edog
Hobbies: Golf, basketball
Birthplace: Burney, California
Other: Made the final table in two previous WSOP tournaments

Final Table Started at: 2:30pm EST
Final Table Ended at: 8:30pm EST

Chad Brown $591,000
Stan Goldstein $457,000
Nghi Van Tran $412,000
Erick Lindgren $294,000
Mimi Tran $215,000
Aaron Bartley $171,000
Nick Frangos $148,000
Chris Ferguson $147,000
Michael Esposito $60,000

Short stack Michael Esposito was the first casualty. On Day 2, Esposito was
severely short-stacked on the bubble, struggling to outlast another short
stack just to reach the money. Esposito went all in, survived, and somehow
survived long enough to reach the final table.

When Esposito found Ac-7c in the small blind, he made his move. But Nick
Frangos, also dangerously short-stacked, had 8s-8c in the big blind, and
moved in to isolate Esposito. Frangos made a set on the flop, and Esposito
finished in 9th place, earning $47,310.

Chad Brown is an accomplished Seven-Card Stud player. He is widely
recognized from his televised showdown with cantankerous Men Nguyen and
relentless Ted Forrest in the
WSOP Seven-Card Stud event. Although he
began the day as chip leader, Brown was a completely benign presence at
the final table. He called off nearly all of his stack, and his primary beneficiary
was Nghi Tran, in the following bizarre hand:

The hand began on a humorous note, when no less than six players decided
to limp in for $12,000. It was like a $2-$4 "family pot". Nghi Tran killed the
buzz by uncooperatively raising $40,000 from the big blind. Only Brown and
Lindgren called. Flop: Qh-Th-2s. Tran bet $70,000, Brown called, and
Lindgren got out of the way. Turn: 3s. Tran bet $130,000, and Brown
flat-called again. River: 6d. Tran moved all in for about $155,000, and Brown
called. Tran turned over Q-J, which looked pretty pathetic, considering. But
Brown mucked.

Suddenly, Tran had nearly $1 million, and Brown was down to about
$165,000. Newly empowered by his enormous chip lead, Tran called Chris
Ferguson's all-in reraise with As-Jc. Jesus had pocket jacks, but Tran hit an
ace on the turn, and excommunicated Jesus in 8th.

By the time Chad Brown found 2c-2h in the big blind, his stack had dwindled
to $99,000. It was folded to Aaron Bartley on the button, who raised to
$36,000. Brown pushed. Bartley thought for a while, and called with As-9c.
He flopped trip nines and busted Brown in 7th.

Before busting Brown, Bartley had been quietly building his stack by diligently
taking down uncontested pots. After busting Brown, Bartley suddenly
emerged as a formidable force at the table, with over $500,000 in chips.
Bartley is a 22-year-old online player who recently crossed over into live play.
His online handle is GambleAB.

Nghi Tran $936,000
Aaron Bartley $503,000
Erick Lindgren $460,000
Nick Frangos $234,000
Mimi Tran $189,000
Stan Goldstein $163,000

Stan Goldstein took a big hit when his pocket jacks lost to Lindgren's pocket
kings. Then, Goldstein moved all in with Kh-Qs, only to have Lindgren call with
Ac-9s. The board helped neither played, and Goldstein was out in 6th.

Nghi Tran $1,142,000
Aaron Bartley $647,000
Erick Lindgren $355,000
Mimi Tran $181,000
Nick Frangos $162,000

Lindgren raised to $50,000 in the cutoff, and Bartley called from the big blind.
Flop: Kd-Js-4d. Bartley checks, Lindgren leads out for $65,000, and Bartley
called. Turn: 10d. Bartley checked, and Lindgren moved all in for $240,000.
Lindgren took it down. "You should've checkraised [on the flop]," Lindgren
suggests, and a disappointed Bartley seemed to agree.

Nghi Tran $994,000
Aaron Bartley $516,000
Erick Lindgren $424,000
Nick Frangos $246,000
Mimi Tran $165,000

Despite the misstep, Bartley was still in a strong position. However, he was
about to get involved in two critical hands which would illustrate the danger
of tangling with the chip leader.

Nghi Tran opened for $35,000 under the gun, and it was folded to Bartley,
who reraised to $100,000 from the big blind. Tran called. Flop: Qs-8h-5h.
Bartley lead out for $100,000, and Tran reraised to $400,000. Bartley folded.

On the next hand, it was folded around to Bartley in the small blind. He
looked down at Ac-5s, and raised to $50,000. Once again, Tran came over
the top, reraising to $120,000. It seemed as though Tran was simply running
Bartley over, and Bartley must have thought so too, because he moved all in
for about $300,000. But Tran wasn't messing around this time. He had a real
hand, As-Qd, and he called. Bartley got no help and cashed out in 5th for
$141,930.

I was really impressed by Bartley's play at the final table. He played with real
guts. He wouldn't be pushed around, and he kept his opponents on the
defensive. At a time when he could have probably coasted to 3rd place for an
extra $95,000, he risked everything to give himself a chance to win by
trusting his read and standing up to an aggressive chip leader.

Nghi Tran $1,530,000
Erick Lindgren $420,000
Nick Frangos $234,000
Mimi Tran $161,000

Without many chips to maneuver, Mimi Tran had to resort to moving all in to
pick up blinds and antes. She did this several times successfully, but then lost
several confrontations with Nick Frangos. The first time, he doubled through
her with Ac-Kc against her Ah-9s. Then he busted her with As-Qd against her
8h-8c. Mimi wasn't involved in any big pots at the final table, and never
gained any real momentum.

Nghi Tran $1,254,000
Erick Lindgren $736,000
Nick Frangos $504,000

With the blinds at $10,000-$20,000, Lindgren raised to $80,000 from the
small blind. Frangos had Ah-Qs in the small blind, and pushed in his entire
$468,000. Lindgren called immediately with Ac-Kd. Frangos spiked a miracle
queen on the turn, but the 10d spiked on the river, giving Lindgren an
ace-high straight.

Nghi Tran $1,255,000
Erick Lindgren $1,240,000

Tran burst out of the gate at full speed. He challenged Lindgren with huge
opening bets, raising the $20,000 blind to $100,000. "He wants to play big
bet poker," Lindgren later said, explaining his strategy for dealing with Tran.
"He's a gambler."

Lindgren's adjustment was to slow the game down, making little raises to
bait Tran into playing bad hands, resulting in expensive mistakes. "I'll slow
right down," he said. "I'll let him take the little pots." Lindgren made small
opening raises, only $20,000 or $30,000, and he yielded to Tran's enormous
overbets, allowing Tran to quickly accumulate about $300,000.

On the 11th hand of heads-up play, Lindgren picked up Qh-10h on the
button, and made his customary raise to $40,000. Tran just called. Flop:
Qs-6d-4c. Tran lead out for $105,000, Lindgren raised to $280,000, and Tran
moved all in. "Really?" Lindgren asked, incredulously, as if to say "Are you
SURE that's what you want to do?" Kind of chiding, I guess. Then he went
into the tank.

Lindgren later explained his reasoning on the final hand: considering the
preflop action and Tran's previous aggression, there was no way that he had
AA, KK, QQ, AK, AQ or KQ. Lindgren also ruled out Q-J. "And there's no way he
bets $100,000 into me with two pair," Lindgren said, so he concluded Tran
didn't have two pair or a set. Against any other hands, Lindgren was a
favorite. The most dangerous hand that Tran could possibly have was 7-5 or
5-3 with a backdoor flush draw, against which Lindgren would be a 63%
favorite.

"Let's go," he said, and called confidently. Tran was visibly distressed as he
turned over 7h-5c. But the 3h spiked on the river, giving Tran the straight,
and the victory.

In a way, Lindgren's strategy worked perfectly, up to the very last card. He
got Tran committed to a weak hand, and made sure that he was the favorite
when the big money went in. However, Tran's approach was also effective, in
that it nullified many of Lindgren's advantages, and forced him to either
surrender lots of chips, or to roll the dice when he would prefer to wait for a
better spot.
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