Posts Tagged ‘caesars atlantic city’

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Ladies Championship Final Results

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

2009/2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Caesars Atlantic City
Event #12
Ladies Poker Championship
No Limit Hold’em
Buy-In: $200 (+30)
Total Entries: 174
Total Prize Pool: $33,756
March 14, 2010

Final Results:

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Ladies Championship Event Winner Marguerite Spagnuolo

1 Marguerite Spagnuolo Staten Island, NY $10,937

2 Sophia Wei New York, NY $5,739

3 Sophany Kay New York, NY $3,376

4 Amy Siegel Setauket, NY $2,700

5 Delia Wan Stein Olney, MD $2,025

6 Gina Manidis Reading, PA $1,688

7 Antoinette Fiorenza Oviedo, FL $1,350

8 Donna DiCrescento Staten Island, NY $1,013

9 Diane Grippo Holbrook, NY $675

10 Jennifer DiNunzio $540

11 Ivonne Hernandez $540

12 Barty Adams $540

13 Heon Jo Kim $473

14 Silicia Washington $473

15 Jamie DyBas $473

16 Sue Doyle $405

17 Terry Lynne Smith $405

18 Maria Votlucka $405

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Ladies Championship Final Results

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Events Schedule and Results

Executive Staff, World Series of Poker Circuit – Caesars Atlantic City

Joe Domenico – Senior Vice President and General Manager
Vice President of Table Games – Fred Niceta
Public Relations Specialist – Christopher Jonic
Table Games Manager (Poker) – Thomas McDonough III
Poker Pit Manager – Jake Devries

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Main Event Championship Final Results

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

2009/2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Final Results: Caesars Atlantic City
Event #10
Main Event Championship
No Limit Hold’em
Buy-In: $4,900 (+250)
Total Entries: 174
Total Prize Pool: $817,015
March 12-14, 2010

Final Results:

1 Roland Isra New York, NY $264,715

2 Christopher Mitchell Sumter, SC $138,894

3 Dan Witcher Mt. Pleasant, SC $81,702

4 Chris Klodnicki Voorhees, NJ $65,362

5 Jesse Chinni Ellicott City, MD $49,021

6 Grayson Ramage Red Hook, NY $40,851

7 Feming Chan Atlantic City, NJ $32,681

8 Konstantino Dimitroulakos Tinton Falls, NJ $24,511

9 Richard Austin Lansdale, PA $16,340

10 Lloyd Whitehead Brooklyn, NY $13,072

11 Andrew Frankenberger New York, NY $13,072

12 Paul Wasicka Las Vegas, NV $13,072

13 Jerry Payne Dayton, OH $11,438

14 Jacobo Fernandez Hollywood, FL $11,438

15 Douglas Benedict Londonberry, NH $11,438

16 Manelic Minaya Tampa, FL $9,804

17 Shawn M. Busse Massapequa, NY $9,804

18 Nicholas Binger Las Vegas, NV $9,804

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Championship Event Winner Roland Isra

Battle on the Boardwalk

Roland Isra Overcomes Huge Chip Disadvantage at Final Table and Wins WSOP Circuit Championship at Caesars Atlantic City

Atlantic City, NJ – To win, all poker players must pay a price. More often than not, the price of victory is not measured by the size of the entry fee or the expenses of entering a poker tournament. For many poker players, the much greater sacrifice is the accompanying disappointment that comes with playing tournament poker full time. In between extraordinary moments of fulfillment manifested in tournament triumphs are torturous moments of defeat, disappointment, and despair.

Roland Isra, a 52 year old professional poker player from New York City, knows the perils of poker all too well. He has come to the threshold of a major tournament victory numerous times. But each and every prior occasion when it seemed that Isra might finally win big tournament, he suffered a bad bet or was the victim of some cruel misfortune. Nevertheless, Isra endured over the years and to his credit, finally earned a major breakthrough victory at the most recent World Series of Poker Circuit championship.

Isra overcame a number of significant chip disadvantages, outlasted many of the East Coat’s best poker players, and collected the top cash prize at Caesars Atlantic City, which totaled $264,715. He was also presented with his first gold ring, the ultimate token of achievement given out to all tournament champions who win WSOP Circuit events held around the country.

Isra, who was born in the former Soviet Union (actually the Republic of Georgia) worked as a jeweler for 25 years before he began playing poker seriously in 2002. Isra managed to cash in the 2005 WSOP Main Event, finishing 37th. He also achieved seven other WSOP cashes, and did well in many other tournaments played elsewhere. Yet, this victory marks his biggest tournament win ever.

This marked the fifth straight year Caesars Atlantic City has hosted a WSOP Circuit stop. The Main Event was the last of 12 tournaments played at Caesars, all of which are classified as “gold ring” events. This year’s championship attracted 174 entrants, from 20 states and seven different nations. The buy in was $4,900 (+250), creating a prize pool totaling $817,015.

The tournament was played over three days during March 12-14. More than half the field was eliminated on day one, which clocked in at 14 hours. Eight tables of survivors returned for day two which played for another 14 hours. The top 18 finishers collected prize money. Along those who cashed was Paul Wasicka, perhaps best known as the runner up finisher to Jamie Gold in the 2006 WSOP Main Event. Wasicka finished 12th. Another top pro who cashed was Jacobo Fernandez (14th), who enjoyed a huge year at the 2008 WSOP when he cashed seven times and made three final tables. Las Vegas pro Nick Binger also made the money, finishing in 17th place.

Final table play began on a Sunday afternoon and was held inside the Palladium Arena at Caesars. Christopher Mitchell arrived as chip leader and was in a comfortable position throughout the competition. He faced serious threats from various challengers, most notably Roland Isra and Dan Witcher in the late stages of the competition.

Chris Klondicki arrived at the final table ranked second in chips. He had a unique opportunity to pull off an East Coast poker parlay. Klondicki won the Main Event championship at Atlantic City’s earlier WSOP Circuit stop, played three months ago. Klodnicki won his first gold ring and $215,915 at Harrah’s Atlantic City last December. He was also the only player to make back to back WSOP Circuit final tables at Caesars. He finished 8th in last year’s championship event. This time, he took fourth place.

The low blinds (6,000-12,000) and average chip stack of 570,000 at the start of play gave all competitors plenty of time to be patient and wait for a hand. Tournament structures for all the tournaments played at Caesars this year have received overwhelmingly positive feedback from many players and postings at online poker forums. Tournament players have been given plenty of starting chips and blind increases have been incremental, allowing for skillful play to overcome the short-term luck factor which is a part of all tournaments. This has resulted in several lengthy final tables, which have lasted 8 to 10 hours on average. However, this final table clocked in at 12 hours.

The nine finalists and their starting chip counts were as follows:

1 Feming Chan Atlantic City, NJ 292,000

2 Dan Witcher Mt. Pleasant, SC 411,000

3 Christopher Mitchell Sumter, SC 1,800,000

4 Grayson Ramage Red Hook, NY 627,000

5 Richard Austin Lansdale, PA 178,000

6 Roland Isra New York, NY 210,000

7 Chris Klodnicki Voorhees, NJ 1,110,000

8 Jesse Chinni Ellicott City, MD 427,000

9 Konstantino Dimitroulakos Tonton Falls, NJ 104,000

Final table player introductions can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/BB7E7

Players were eliminated in the following order:

Ninth Place: Lights Out for Austin
Richard Austin, a retail store owner from Lansdale, PA was the first player to be eliminated. He was low on chips and tried to steal a round of blinds and antes holding a marginal 10 8, but ended up making an ill timed bluff when he was called by an opponent holding pocket 9’s. Neither player improved, which meant Austin was out in ninth place. He collected $16,340 in prize money. Austin’s previous poker accomplishments include two other WSOP Circuit final tables, once for second place (two years ago in this same championship event) and the other for second place.

Eighth Place: Pastry Chef Rolled
Konstantino Dimitroulakos, a Greek-born pastry chef now living in Tinton Falls, NY arrived at the final table with the shortest stack. He survived for about an hour before going bust with A 8 offsuit, which lost to pocket 10’s. The final board showed QQJ28, giving Dan Witcher two pair. Dimitroulakos earned a nice payout totaling $24,511. He is one a nice run in tournaments, having cashed in three consecutive events.

Seventh Place: Feming Chan is No Johnny Chan
Feming Chan, who is self-employed and lives in Atlantic City, NJ went out on a bluff. He tried to steal pre-flop holding 9-6 suited. Grayson Ramage had a much bigger big stack and decided to fade the raise from the big blind with J 10 offsuit. Chan picked up a big draw, when the flop came J95, with two cards to Chan’s suit. But he ended up missing both the flush and straight draws, while Ramage’s top pair (J’s) held up. Chan settled for a payout which amounted to $32,681.

Sixth Place: Bucknell College Student Expelled
Grayson Ramage, a college student at Bucknell University, went out on a disappointing hand when he called an all in raise by the chip leader, Chris Mitchell. Ramage had pocket Q’s. But Mitchell held pocket A’s. Neither player improved, which meant Ramage was eliminated. Ramage’s take from the prize pool came to $40,851. Among his accomplishments are a 35th place finish in the 2009 WSOP Main Event, and a 3rd place showing at the Harrah’s Atlantic City WSOPC championship last December.

Fifth Place: Chinni Takes the Fifth
Jesse Chinni, a poker pro from Ellicott City, MD went bust when he moved all in with pocket 5’s, which lost to Dan Witcher’s A J. The board made a straight for Witcher. That meant Chinni had to settle for fifth place, which paid $49,021. Chinni, a 24-year-old graduate of the University of Maryland, has now made it to two WSOP Circuit final tables.

Fourth Place: Former WSOP Circuit Champion Ousted
Chris Klodnicki’s shot to win back to back WSOP Circuit championships in Atlantic City came to an abrupt end when he took the final table’s worst beat. Klodnicki, a poker pro who now lives in Philadelphia, PA moved all in with pocket 9’s. He was called by Dan Witcher, holding pocket’s 8’s. It looked like Klodnicki would double up, but an 8 of the river made Witcher a full house and also ejected one of the tournament’s most dangerous players. Klodnicki, a graduate of Lehigh University, who has enjoyed great success in tournament poker the last few years, collected $65,362.

A short interview with Chris Klodnicki, moments after his elimination from the tournament can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/89A41

Third Place: Witcher Bewitched
Dan Witcher, from Mount Pleasant, SC battled three-handed for nearly four hours before he busted out in third place. He moved all in with pocket 10’s, which turned out to be a base of terrible timing for the 25-year-old. Chris Mitchell called the big bet and flipped over pocket A’s. The better hand held up, which removed Witcher from the tournament. Third place paid $81,702.

Second Place: Christopher Mitchell Finishes as Runner Up
Chris Mitchell, a poker pro from Sumter, SC dominated this tournament over three full days. He held a dominant chip lead at the conclusion of Day One. By Day Two, Mitchell had increased his chip advantage to the point he was more than 2 to 1 over every other player that remained, except one. He also arrived at the final table with about one-third of the total chips in play. His runner up status and $138,894 in prize money for second place did not mask his disappointment with the final outcome. Mitchell suffered a serious of beats in the final stages of the tournament, and went card dead at the worst possible time. He ultimately lost his remaining chips when he missed an outside straight draw, which was topped by the champion’s two pair.

When heads-up play began, the two survivors were close to even in chips. It took about three hours for the outcome to be decided. The final hand of the tournament can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/40AA5

First Place: Roland Isra Wins!
Roland Isra, from New York, NY collected the $264,715 top prize, plus a seat into to the 2010 WSOP Main Event ($10,000 entry and expenses paid) to be held in Las Vegas in July.

An interview with Roland Isra moments after his victory can be seen here: (PART 1) — http://www.twitvid.com/DAB6C (PART 2) — http://www.twitvid.com/163CE

This concludes the WSOP Circuit at Caesars Atlantic City. This was the seventh WSOP Circuit stop of the 2009-2010 season following previous tournaments held in Chicago, Southern Indiana, Lake Tahoe, Harrah’s Atlantic City, Tunica, and Council Bluffs. Upcoming Circuit events will take place at Harrah’s Rincon, Harrah’s St. Louis, Caesars Las Vegas, and Harrah’s New Orleans. Harrah’s Rincon comes next and runs from March 17-31.

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Championship Event Final Results

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Events Schedule and Results

Executive Staff, World Series of Poker Circuit – Caesars Atlantic City

Joe Domenico – Senior Vice President and General Manager
Vice President of Table Games – Fred Niceta
Public Relations Specialist – Christopher Jonic
Table Games Manager (Poker) – Thomas McDonough III
Poker Pit Manager – Jake Devries

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #11 Final Results

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

2009/2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Final Results: Caesars Atlantic City
Event #11
Turbo No Limit Hold’em
Buy-In: $200 (+30)
Total Entries: 282
Total Prize Pool: $54,708
March 13, 2010

Final Results:

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Event #11 Winner Roman Valerstein

1 Roman Valerstein Newtown, PA $17,507

2 Adam Blyweiss Philadelphia, PA $9,629

3 Khan Tiath Fairfax, VA $4,924

4 Donald Paddy W. Friendship, MD $3,830

5 Patrick Quinn Gallitzin, PA $3,282

6 George Johnson Fishtown, PA $2,735

7 Joseph Balberchak Altoona, PA $2,188

8 Michael Leah Toronto, ON (Canada) $1,641

9 Ryan Miller Atlantic City, NJ $1,094

10 Miguel Bornero $657

11 Chad Daley $657

12 Brady Patrick $657

13 Dawn Faktor $547

14 Shelrese Leach $547

15 Paul T. Silva $547

16 Rusin Anton $438

17 Tuan K. Gbehan $438

18 Darren Cox $438

19 Marilyn Matthews $328

20 Jeremy Evan Alva $328

21 Ketan B. Pandya $328

22 Allen Chou $328

23 Kevin R. Sanchez $328

24 Paul A. Rizzitello $328

25 Stephen J. Wish $328

26 William H. Jennings $328

27 Susan Garrison Frazier $328

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #11 Final Results

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Events Schedule and Results

Executive Staff, World Series of Poker Circuit – Caesars Atlantic City

Joe Domenico – Senior Vice President and General Manager
Vice President of Table Games – Fred Niceta
Public Relations Specialist – Christopher Jonic
Table Games Manager (Poker) – Thomas McDonough III
Poker Pit Manager – Jake Devries

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – No Limit Holdem Championship End of Day 1

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

2009/2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Caesars Atlantic City
Event 10
End of Day One Standings
Buy-In $4,900 (+250)
Game No-Limit Hold’em Championship
Number of Entries 174
Net Prize Pool $817,022
First Place Prize $264,715 (plus $10,000 entry into 2010 WSOP Main Event)
Places Paid 18
Players Remaining 72

End of Day One Standings:
Note: Players will redraw for new table and seat assignment on Day Two

1 Dan Witcher Mt. Pleasant, NJ DNR

2 Jose Tavarez Santo Domingo (Domincan Rep.) DNR

3 Daolo Nigris Tenafly, NJ DNR

4 Vasilios Hruakinis Brick, NJ DNR

5 Isaac Schachnez Caracas (Venezuela) DNR

6 Mary Kate Hainal Havertown, PA DNR

7 Paul Wasicka Las Vegas, NV DNR

8 Christopher Mitchell Sumter, SC 373,400

9 Brandon Wilkins Orlando, FL 211,100

10 Jesse Chinn Ellicott City, MD 210,400

11 Pat White West Nyack, NY 191,400

12 Paul Volpe Turnersville, NJ 156,400

13 Manny Minaya Tampa, FL 134,000

14 Mitesh Shere New York, NY 131,800

15 Randall Malpass Clinton, NC 127,400

16 Casey Jarzanek St. Catharines, ON (Canada) 121,600

17 Tim Begley Freehold. NJ 116,500

18 Joseph Hurley Glovorsville, NY 107,900

19 Marcel van Lohuizen Pfuffikon (Switzerland) 107,700

20 Habib Wehbey Allentown, PA 94,700

21 Rick Austin Lansdale, PA 91,300

22 Daryl Jace Saugus, MA 89,700

23 Feming Chan DNR 88,800

24 Lloyd Whitehead Brooklyn, NY 87,600

25 Andy Frankenberger New York, NY 83,300

26 Oliver Busquet New York, NY 82,400

27 Randy T. Humphrey Oxford, NC 81,200

28 Chris Klodnicki Vorhees, NJ 80,400

29 Grayson Ramage Red Hook, NY 78,300

30 Shawn Busse Massapequa, NY 76,700

31 Paul Zaine Wintelsville, OH 74,200

32 Ryan Karp West Chester, PA 73,200

33 Trarell Thomas Buffalo, NY 71,700

34 Chris Whitail Hainesport, NJ 70,500

35 “Karate” Mike Santoro DNR 68,800

36 Jacobo Fernandez Hollywood, FL 65,400

37 Ron Rosenberry Basking Ridge, NJ 65,100

38 Kevin Kelly Brooklyn, NY 65,000

39 Ariel Rackman Queens, NY 57,000

40 Nick Binger Las Vegas, NV 55,700

41 Daniel Kelly Potomac, MD 55,200

42 Roland Isra New York, NY 55,000

43 Onofrio Reina Elizabeth, NJ 53,800

44 Doug Benedict Londonberry, NH 53,400

45 Dwight Pilgrim Brooklyn, NY 53,300

46 Alex Pawlyk New Brunswick, NJ 53,300

47 Sang Kim Leesburg, VA 51,600

48 Jonathan Wein Wedford, NY 49,600

49 Haralambos Tsivicos Ocean Township, NJ 47,300

50 Jeff Tirabassi Rochester, NY 47,100

51 Kurt Lichtman New York, NY 47,000

52 Dennis Summers Chalottesville, VA 46,100

53 Keith Crowder Elkins Park, NJ 45,800

54 Michael Esposito Seaferd, NJ 45,400

55 Jerry Payne Dayton, OH 42,900

56 Konstantine Dimitroulatal Trenston Falls, NJ 41,800

57 Gary Schwartz Masiagent, NY 38,300

58 Robert L. Mercer St. James, NY 36,300

59 Andrew Lee Ocean Township, NJ 36,100

60 Robert Kalteaux Seminole, FL 36,000

61 John Perry New York, NY 33,300

62 Sandy Taylor Innisfil, ON (Canada) 31,600

63 Don Dorey Virginia Beach, VA 28,600

64 Jason Deutsch Staten Island, NY 24,200

65 Sheree Bykofsky Atlantic City, NJ 24,100

66 Joanne Monteavaro New York, NY 23,700

67 Joseph Cappuccio Hammonton, NJ 21,300

68 Beth Shak Bryn Mawr, PA 21,000

69 Dave Cubeta Falls Church, VA 15,000

70 Frank Calo Syracuse, NY 14,900

71 Duane Hunton Timonium, MD 13,700

72 Alex Bolotin Brooklyn, NY 11,500

Prize Money

1st $264,715 (plus $10,000 seat into the 2010 WSOP Main Event)

2nd $138894
3rd $81702
4th $65362
5th $49021
6th $40851
7th $32680
8th $24511
9th $16340
10th $13072
11th $13072
12th $13072
13th $11438
14th $11438
15th $11438
16th $9804
17th $9804
18th $9804

A short interview with the End Day One chip leader, Christopher Mitchell (Sumter, SC) can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/556F0

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #9 Final Results

Friday, March 12th, 2010

2009/2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Final Results: Caesars Atlantic City
Event #9
No Limit Hold’em
Buy-In: $200 (+30)
Total Entries: 390
Total Prize Pool: $70,510
March 10, 2010

Final Results:

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Event #9 Winner Timothy Lux

1 Timothy Lux $21,282

2 Vimy Ha $11,282

3 Sara Slohler $5,641

4 Lawrence Oharloran $4,936

5 Todd Rebello $4,231

6 Kevin Gugliotta $3,526

7 Michael Dentale $2,820

8 John Clifford $2,115

9 William Wallace $1,410

10 Timothy Gallagher $846

11 Jack King $846

12 Alexander Lindit $846

13 Michael Valenti $705

14 Mukul Pahuja $705

15 Reginald McCullom $705

16 Brian Johnson $564

17 Mia Han $564

18 Robert Carpenter $564

19 Steven Riback $432

20 John Murrmann $432

21 Robert Abrahamyan $432

22 Theodore Mikolasy $432

23 Daniel Beavers $432

24 Anthony Scolazzo $432

25 Ryu Barnes $432

26 Ronald Gervolino $432

27 John Rollman $432

28 Ronald Isra $282

29 Hyong Kim $282

30 Vineet Chanhock $282

31 Cenk Vzel $282

32 Adam Varrenti $282

33 Gregory Rudolph $282

34 Ronald Faison $282

35 Lori Below $282

36 Andrew Knee $282

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #9 Final Results

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Events Schedule and Results

Executive Staff, World Series of Poker Circuit – Caesars Atlantic City

Joe Domenico – Senior Vice President and General Manager
Vice President of Table Games – Fred Niceta
Public Relations Specialist – Christopher Jonic
Table Games Manager (Poker) – Thomas McDonough III
Poker Pit Manager – Jake Devries

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #8 Final Results

Friday, March 12th, 2010

2009/2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Caesars Atlantic City
Event #8
No Limit Hold’em
Buy-In: $1,500 (+100)
Total Entries: 190
Total Prize Pool: $276,450
March 10-11, 2010

Final Results:

1 Thomas Taylor Innisfil, Canada $89,570

2 Vincent DeVita Bayville, NJ $46,997

3 Mark Nimorov Brooklyn, NY $27,645

4 Donald Matusow Philadelphia, PA $22,116

5 Christopher Carey Hillsborough, NC $16,587

6 Steven Tabb Newton, MA $13,822

7 Francis Anderson Poughkeepsie, NY $11,058

8 Scott Lazewski Manalapan, NY $8,294

9 Scott Tuchman Mays Landing, NY $5,529

10 Kevin Murray $4,423

11 Benjamin Klier $4,423

12 Emmanuil Digilon $4,423

13 Joshua Goldstein $3,870

14 Li Chen $3,870

15 Andrew Frankenbeier $3,870

16 Bernard Collins $3,317

17 Timothy Dougherty $3,317

18 Steven Curtin $3,317

Breakfast of Champions

Sandy Taylor Wins WSOP Circuit Event, $89,570 and Gold Ring at Caesars Atlantic City

Final Table Duration Sets Record

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Event #8 Winner Thomas Taylor

Atlantic City, NJ – The most recent World Series of Poker Circuit final table began on the eve of the Main Event and went so long, it ended just as players were funneling into the room preparing to play the next day’s championship. Indeed, if some poker tournaments have become an around the clock pursuit, most of the WSOP Circuit events played this year at Caesars Atlantic City may as well start serving breakfast. Today’s early bird special included hot coffee, bacon, eggs, and about ninety grand in prize money.

The man who scrambled his opponents and toasted the competition was Thomas “Sandy” Taylor, who brought home the bacon with his first WSOP-related victory, following a number of big cashes in other tournaments. He is a 27 year old professional poker player from Innisfil, Ontario (Canada). Taylor collected a cash prize totaling $89,570. He was also presented with his first gold ring, which is the ultimate token of achievement given out to all tournament champions who win WSOP Circuit events held around the country.

The $1,500 (+100) buy in No Limit Hold’em tournament won by Taylor marked the eighth of 12 WSOP Circuit events on this year’s schedule at Caesars Atlantic. The two-day tournament (which actually stretched into three days) attracted 190 entrants. Most of the field was eliminated on day one which clocked in at 14 hours. Six tables of survivors returned for day two which played another backbreaking session totaling 22.5 hours. This tournament was not for the faint of heart. The top 18 finishers divided up prize money from a $276,450 prize pool.

Final table play began on a Thursday night and was held inside the Palladium Arena at Caesars. The last hand of the tournament was finally dealt out the following morning at 11:35 am.

There were no previous WSOP Circuit winners among the final nine, thus guaranteeing a first time champion. Taylor arrived as chip leader and was in a comfortable position during most of the competition, or at least as comfortable one could possibly be propped in an upright position under glaring lights engaged in an all-nighter. Mark Nimorov managed to seize the chip lead away from Taylor about nine hours into the finale. Then later, Vincent DeVita took his turn as the biggest stack. Then, Taylor regained his advantage in the chip lead merry go round.

The low blinds (6,000-12,000) and average chip stack of 600,000 at the start of the marathon gave competitors plenty of time to be patient and wait for a hand. Truth be told, if patience was a virtue, the top finishers in this tournament must all qualify for sainthood. Tournament structures at Caesars this year have received positive feedback from many players and postings at online poker forums. Tournament players have been given plenty of starting chips and blind increases have been incremental, allowing for skillful play to overcome the short-term luck factor which is a part of all tournaments. This has resulted in several lengthy final tables, which have lasted 8 to 10 hours on average. But this finale obliterated all previous Caesars’ events on record, making the end result not only a test of poker skill, but of physical and mental endurance. It was the longest final table in the six year history of the WSOP Circuits, for a preliminary (non-Main Event).

The nine finalists and their starting chip counts were as follows:

Seat Player Hometown Chip Count

1 Don Matusow Philadelphia, PA 460,000

2 Mark Nimokov Brooklyn, NY 300,500

3 Scott Lazewski Manaklapan, NY 540,000

4 Francis Anderson Poughkeepsie, NY 620,000

5 Steven Tabb Newton, MA 375,000

6 Christopher Paul Carey Hillsborough, NC 319,000

7 Vincent DeVita Bayville, NJ 201,000

8 Thomas “Sandy” Taylor Innisfil, ON (Canada) 953,000

9 Scott Tuchman Mays Landing, NJ 90,000

Final table player introductions can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/4C05E

Players were eliminated in the following order:

Ninth Place: Local Player Busts
Scott Tuchman, a professional poker player from nearby Mays Landing, NJ, was the first to be eliminated. He was the shortest stack and moved all in with pocket 6’s hoping to double up. He got a call from A K, which managed to hit an ace on the flop. That’s not exactly what Tuchman had in mind as far as the final outcome. Hence, the player who had previously done well in various deep stack tournaments around the country ended up taking $5,529 in prize money. This marked Tuchman’s first appearance at a WSOP Circuit final table.

Eighth Place: A Bad Beat
Scott Lazewski, a poker pro from Manalapan, NY went out next when his A K took a bad beat against A J. Lazewski seemed headed for a double up, but a J came on the turn, ending Lazewski’s tournament life. The poker pro who also has a pilots license crash landed in eighth place with $8,294.

Seventh Place: Pocket Aces Cracked
Francis Anderson, an online poker pro from Poughkeepsie, NY was eliminated on what is every Hold’em poker player’s worst possible nightmare. He moved all in with pocket A’s and was called by a bigger stack holding pocket 9’s. Anderson was way ahead after the turn, but an ugly 9 fell on the river disconnecting the online pro from the finale. Anderson, who has won more than $150,000 in online play the last few years, added $11,058 to his poker bankroll.

Sixth Place: Another Pro Bites the Dust
Steven Tabb, a professional poker player from Newton, MA went bust holding pocket 7’s. He went all in a coin flip race against A K. When a K fell on the river, Tabb was sent packing. The Boston area poker pro has previously cashed several times in major events. Oddly enough, he specializes in 5 Card Draw games played online. This was Tabb’s highest WSOP related finish to date, worth $13,822 in prize money.

Fifth Place: Tow Truck Driver Gets Hauled Away
Christopher Paul Carey, a tow truck driver from Hillsborough, NC stood the test of time. But he finally went out holding A Q, which lost to pocket A’s. Carey received a payout totaling $16,587.

Fourth Place: Matusow (Not that Matusow) Out Fourth
Don Matusow (no relation to the famous poker pro), who works in sales and lives in Philadelphia, exited after he lost a race to a small pocket pair. Matusow took A K up against pocket 5’s, which was flattened when a 5 fell on the turn, making a set for Vincent DeVita. The grandfather who has made it to numerous final tables in small tournaments in the area, collected a nice prize which amounted to $22,116.

Third Place: Nimorov No More
Mark Nimorov, an Israeli native who now lives in Brooklyn, NY was eliminated after taking the chip lead momentarily. But he suffered a bad run of cards late and went out with pocket 9’s which was steamrolled by Vincent DeVita’s pocket K’s. The business owner scooped $27,645 from the prize pool.

Second Place: DeVita Finally Succumbs
Vincent DeVita, a senior vice president from Bayville, NJ finished as the runner up. He collected a well deserved $46,997 in a final table performance that was one of the most impressive of any at Caesars this year.

The biggest hand of the tournament occurred when DeVita moved all in pre-flop with A J, and Taylor snap called with pocket 10’s. When a 10 fell, that gave Taylor the huge pot, and eventually led to his victory. The key hand of the tournament can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/4CF1F

DeVita managed to make a comeback and the two players battled for nearly three hours of heads up play. The final hand of the tournament came when DeVita’s A J lost to Taylor’s pocket 5’s.

First Place:
Thomas “Sandy” Taylor, from Innisfil, Ontario (Canada) won the coveted WSOP Circuit gold ring and the $89,570 top prize. Not merely content with nearly six figures in profit and the WSOP Circuit’s ultimate token of achievement, following 36 hours of poker playing within just two days, Taylor waltzed over to the registration area for the championship event and plunked down the entry fee, which began just a few minutes after his victory. “I’m not finished yet,” he said.

The WSOP Circuit at Caesars Atlantic City continues through March 14. This year’s schedule includes 12 gold ring events, along with multiple second-chance tournaments, single table and mega satellites, in addition to cash games going around the clock inside the Caesars Poker Room. The $4,900 (+250) Main Event starts on Friday, March 12th and will be a three day event.

This marks the fifth straight year that Caesars Atlantic City has been a part of the WSOP Circuit. This is the seventh WSOP Circuit stop of the 2009-2010 season following previous tournaments held in Chicago, Southern Indiana, Lake Tahoe, Harrah’s Atlantic City, Tunica, and Council Bluffs. Upcoming Circuit events will take place at Harrah’s Rincon, Harrah’s St. Louis, Caesars Las Vegas, and Harrah’s New Orleans.

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #8 Final Results

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Events Schedule and Results

Executive Staff, World Series of Poker Circuit – Caesars Atlantic City

Joe Domenico – Senior Vice President and General Manager
Vice President of Table Games – Fred Niceta
Public Relations Specialist – Christopher Jonic
Table Games Manager (Poker) – Thomas McDonough III
Poker Pit Manager – Jake Devries

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #7 Final Results

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

2009/2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Caesars Atlantic City
Event #7
No Limit Hold’em
Buy-In: $1,000 (+80)
Total Entries: 196
Total Prize Pool: $190,120
March 9-10, 2010

Final Results:

1 Paul Vogel Merrick, NY $61,599

2 Keith Crowder Philadelphia, PA $32,320

3 Charles Croft Sumter, SC $19,012

4 Kenneth Packer Fayetteville, NC $15,210

5 David Zeitlin New York, NY $11,407

6 Bruce MacGregor Port Orange, FL $9,506

7 Anthony Tannoya Woodbridge, VA $7,605

8 Pedro Vicente Jersey City, NJ $5,704

9 Eugene Castro New York, NY $3,802

10 Dean Shultz $3,042

11 Adam Lippert $3,042

12 Howard Boltz $3,042

13 Jesse Chinni $2,662

14 Albert Riccobono $2,662

15 Michael Caswell $2,662

16 Joseph Pitti $2,281

17 Cuong Phung $2,281

18 Peter Lios $2,281

Paul Vogel Earns Well Deserved Victory

Amateur Poker Player from Merrick, NY Wins WSOP Circuit Event, $61,599 and Gold Ring at Caesars Atlantic City

Generous Tournament Structure at WSOP Circuit Continues to Gain Positive Feedback

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Event #7 Winner Paul Vogel

Atlantic City, NJ – Paul Vogel, a 42 year old information systems manager from Merrick, NY won his first major poker tournament today. He won the $1,000 (+80) buy in No Limit Hold’em tournament held at Caesars Atlantic City. Vogel collected the top cash prize totaling $61,599. He was also presented with his first gold ring, which is the ultimate token of achievement given out to all tournament champions who win WSOP Circuit events held around the country.

The father of five considers himself to be a recreational poker player. But he has aspirations of improving and doing big things in the game. Vogel plays online primarily. However, he has competed in the WSOP Main Event twice. This marked Vogel’s first major victory ever and was the biggest payday of his career, so far.

This marked the seventh of 12 WSOP Circuit events on this year’s Caesars schedule. The two-day tournament attracted 196 entrants. Most of the field was eliminated on day one, which clocked in at 14 hours. Four tables of survivors returned for day two which played another 18 hours. The top 18 finishers divided up prize money from a $190,120 prize pool.

Final table play began on a Wednesday night and was held inside the Palladium Arena at Caesars. There were no previous WSOP Circuit winners among the final nine, thus guaranteeing a first time champion. Paul Vogel arrived as chip leader and was in a comfortable position throughout the competition. He faced serious threats from various challengers, but never lost his chip lead at any point during the nine hour finale.

The low blinds (2,500-5,000) and average chip stack of 165,000 at the start gave all competitors plenty of time to be patient and wait for a hand. In fact, the tournament structures for all the tournaments played at Caesars this year have received overwhelmingly positive feedback from many players and postings at online poker forums. Tournament players have been given plenty of starting chips and blind increases have been incremental, allowing for skillful play to overcome the short-term luck factor which is a part of all tournaments. This has resulted in several lengthy final tables, which have lasted 8 to 10 hours on average.

The nine finalists and their starting chip counts were as follows:

Seat Player Hometown Chip Count

1 Anthony J. Tannoya Woodbridge, VA 140,000

2 Bruce F. MacGregor Port Orange, FL 293,500

3 Kenneth Packer Fayetteville, NC 130,000

4 David Zeitlin Brooklyn, NY 129,500

5 Brandon Croft Sumter, SC 271,500

6 Paul Vogel Merrick, NY 405,000

7 Keith Crowder Philadelphia, PA 275,500

8 Pete White Jersey City, NJ 135,000

9 Eugene Castro New York, NY 98,000

Final table player introductions can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/7507E

Players were eliminated in the following order:

Ninth Place: Castro Overthrown
Eugene Castro, a poker professional from New York City, was the first player eliminated. He was short stacked and got all his chips into the pot with the best hand. But his A J ended up losing to K J when a K flopped. Castro is the founder of an organization called Poker Player International. He has earned three major tournament victories, and has over 20 cashes in his tournament career. He finished in the money in last year’s WSOP Main Event held in Las Vegas. Ninth place paid $3,802.

Eighth Place: White Goes Dark
Pete White (a.k.a. Pedro Vicente), a recreational poker player from Jersey City, NJ was making his second final table appearance so far at this year’s Caesars series. He took fifth place in an event played just three days ago. This time, White finished in eighth place after being low on chips and moving in on a steal attempt. He was called by pocket 10’s which ended up scooping the pot. White added $5,704 to his poker bankroll and remains a player to watch for the remaining events to be played here in Atlantic City.

Seventh Place: Tannoya Out
Anthony J. Tannoya, a computer engineer from Woodbridge, VA went out in seventh place. He survived about two hours at the final table before finally running out of chips. The former Air Force serviceman flew away with $7,605 in prize money.

Sixth Place: Big Draw Misses
Bruce F. MacGregor, a land developer from Port Orange, FL was eliminated after he missed a monster draw, and went bust. MacGregor had A 10 suited and flopped a flush draw as well as a straight draw. But two bricks on the turn and river ended his tournament life. MacGregor, who is a Vietnam veteran, pocketed a nice score to the tune of $9,506. His previous tournament accomplishments include a win at a major event held in Costa Rica, as well as 14 other cashes in major tournaments throughout the U.S.

Fifth Place: Brooklyn Pro Can Fuggetaboutit
David Zeitlin, a poker pro from Brooklyn, NY took two beats late and lost most of his stack. He finally moved all in on what turned out to be his final hand, holding pocket 4’s. He was called by an opponent with A J, who caught an A. The pretty much ended Zeitlin’s night. The 36 year old pro collected $11,407.

Fourth Place: Packer Sent Packing
Kenneth Packer, a 39 year old self employed part-time poker pro from North Carolina, took a brutal beat on his final hand. His stack was slightly below average and after the chip leader made a raise, Packer moved all in with pocket K’s. He got a call, and looked to be in great shape to double up. But the board came with four clubs, and the chip leader’s Ac played to make the nut flush. Packer was disappointed with the result but could certainly be proud of the cash prize for fourth place, which amounted to $15,210. Packer noted that he mostly plays in cash games, and has been a winning player for the past ten years.

Third Place: Adult Nightclub Manager Gets Last Call
Brandon Croft, who manages an adult nightclub in South Carolina, was bounced from the final table when he tried to bluff on the river following a missed flush draw. He ran into Paul Vogel’s set of 5’s, who called the bluff instantly. Croft had battled for nearly three hours when play was at three handed, but finally succumbed to the temptation to try and steamroll his opponent, at what turned out to be the worst possible moment. This was Croft’s second final table appearance in a WSOP Circuit event at Caesars. He collected his biggest payday ever, at $19,012.

Second Place: Crowder Crushed
Keith Crowder, a 39 year old real estate investor from Philadelphia, PA was certainly a tough adversary. He was able to draw very close to even in chips at one point when play was heads up. In fact, the determined duo played nearly 100 hands together and battled for about three hours before Crowder ultimately lost his final hand holding A Q to a pair of 8’s. Crowder picked up a big draw after the flop, but missed twice, which gave the last pot of the night to Paul Vogel. Crowder’s take of the prize pool amounted to $32,320. He has previously made it to other final tables at major poker tournaments played elsewhere. But this was his best WSOP related finish, to date.

The final hand of the tournament can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/EBF44

First Place: Vogel Victorious
Paul Vogel, an information systems manager from Merrick, NY won a WSOP Circuit title for the first time and officially collected $61,599 in prize money.

An interview with Vogel moments after his victory can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/89390

The WSOP Circuit at Caesars Atlantic City continues through March 14. This year’s schedule includes 12 gold ring events, along with multiple second-chance tournaments, single table and mega satellites, in addition to cash games going around the clock inside the Caesars Poker Room. The $4,900 (+250) Main Event starts on Friday, March 12th and will be a three day event.

This marks the fifth straight year that Caesars Atlantic City has been a part of the WSOP Circuit. This is the seventh WSOP Circuit stop of the 2009-2010 season following previous tournaments held in Chicago, Southern Indiana, Lake Tahoe, Harrah’s Atlantic City, Tunica, and Council Bluffs. Upcoming Circuit events will take place at Harrah’s Rincon, Harrah’s St. Louis, Caesars Las Vegas, and Harrah’s New Orleans.

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #7 Final Results

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Events Schedule and Results

Executive Staff, World Series of Poker Circuit – Caesars Atlantic City

Joe Domenico – Senior Vice President and General Manager
Vice President of Table Games – Fred Niceta
Public Relations Specialist – Christopher Jonic
Table Games Manager (Poker) – Thomas McDonough III
Poker Pit Manager – Jake Devries

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #6 Final Results

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

2009/2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Caesars Atlantic City
Event #6
No Limit Hold’em
Buy-In: $500 (+60)
Total Entries: 210
Total Prize Pool: $101,850
March 8-9, 2010

Final Results:

1 Rohan Long Windsor, CT $32,592

2 Alexander Pawlyk New Brunswick, NJ $17,926

3 Juan Lopez Wilmington, DE $9,167

4 Joseph Cramer Carlisle, PA $7,130

5 Francis Sage Morton, PA $6,111

6 Carlos Alarcon Wayne, NJ $5,093

7 Mitchell Martin Las Vegas, NV $4,074

8 Willliam Groom Brooklyn, NY $3,056

9 Howard Wolper Atlantic City, NJ $2,037

10 Richard Hall Wilkes Barre, PA $1,222

11 Susheel Patelvenkat $1,222

12 Jonathan Poots $1,222

13 William Collins $1,019

14 Lucas Smith $1,019

15 Brian Pagano $1,019

16 Edward Berger $815

17 Bill Cashwell $815

18 Anthony Velasquez $815

19 Spencer Mensh $611

20 Dylan Drazen $611

21 Jinhiang Chin $611

22 John Hottenstein $611

23 Paul Nicholson $611

24 Clifton Meinweiseser $611

25 Thomas Cipriano $611

26 Jennifer Knopf $611

27 Sung Kim $611

What a Comeback!

Rohan Long Wins WSOP Circuit Event and First Gold Ring at Caesars Atlantic City

Jamaican-Born Recreational Player Survives Eight All-Ins and Overcomes 20 to 1 Chip Disadvantage in Thrilling Victory

Generous Tournament Structure at WSOP Circuit Continues to Gain Positive Feedback

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Event #6 Winner Rohan Long

Atlantic City, NJ – There’s a classic rock song made famous by Janis Joplin where the lyrics go, “Freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose.” What the lyric means is, there’s a certain sense of emotional contentment that comes with being on a free roll, whether the situation is life or poker. Once you’ve committed yourself to the notion you can’t lose, in fact – you have won.

Rohan Long, a real estate broker from Windsor, CT knows the feeling all too well. He pretty much resigned himself to a middle of the pack finish at what was his first World Series of Poker Circuit final table recently. Long managed to survive far longer than either the cards or odds normally would have dictated. With each near miracle dealt from the deck, he gained the confidence and aggression necessary to overcome massive odds and ultimately pulled off a stunning upset victory.

Long survived at least eight all in situations when play was at three handed, and later heads up. Each time, he doubled his stack size up to the point where he ended up achieving the greatest comeback of the year of any player in a WSOP Circuit tournament. Once play became heads up versus a tough-minded online poker pro named Alex Pawlyk, Long pretty much summed up his feelings by announcing, “I’m on a complete free roll now. Nothing can stop me.”

In a sense, having Long in a complete care free zone made him the worst possible adversary for a skilled professional. Rather than the usual tense atmosphere that characterizes the later stages of many major poker tournaments, Long’s presence and attitude ended up creating a great comeback drama, which was unquestionably the most exiting final table of this year’s series at Caesars Atlantic City.

Long, who was born in Jamaica and now lives in Connecticut, won the $560 buy in No-Limit Hold’em tournament and collected the top cash prize totaling $32,592. He was also presented with his first gold ring, which is the ultimate token of achievement given out to all tournament champions who win WSOP Circuit events held around the country.

This marked the sixth of 12 WSOP Circuit events on this year’s Caesars schedule. The two-day tournament attracted 210 entrants. Most of the field was eliminated on day one, which clocked in at 14 hours. Four tables of survivors returned for day two which played another 10 hours. The top 27 finishers divided up prize money from a $101,850 prize pool.

Final table play began on a Tuesday night and was held inside the Palladium Arena at Caesars. There was only one previous WSOP Circuit winner among the final nine. Local poker player Howard Wolper arrived with the goal to win his second gold ring. But Wolper went out early, thus guaranteeing a first time champion. Meanwhile, Juan J. Lopez arrived as chip leader and was in a comfortable position throughout the competition until he crashed and burned in third place.

The low blinds (5,000-10,000) and average chip stack of nearly 250,000 at the start gave all the competitors plenty of time be patient. In fact, the tournament structures for all the tournaments played at Caesars this year have received overwhelmingly positive feedback from many players and online poker forums. Tournament players have been given plenty of starting chips and blind increases have been incremental, allowing for skillful play to overcome the short-term luck factor which is a part of all tournaments.

The nine finalists and their starting chip counts were as follows:

Seat Player Hometown Chip Count
1 Carlos Alarcon Wayne, NJ 100,500

2 Juan J. Lopez Wilmington, DE 454,000

3 Alex Pawlyk New Brunswick, NJ 300,000

4 Joe Cramer Carlisle, PA 48,000

5 Howard Even Wolper Atlantic City, NJ 65,000

6 Willie A, Groom Brooklyn, NY 84,000

7 Francis Sage Morton, PA 151,000

8 Mitchell Martin Las Vegas, NV 181,000

9 Rohan Long Windsor, CT 110,000

Final table player introductions can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/B7C57

Players were eliminated in the following order:

Ninth Place: Artist Gets No Respect
Howard Evan Wolper, an artist and semi-pro poker player from Atlantic City, was the first player eliminated. He was low on chips and managed to catch A K. But Rohan Long was dealt pocket 10’s, which ended up scooping the pot after Wolper failed to improve. Wolper has earned many awards for his work in the performance arts. He has also done well in poker, with four major tournament wins within a 13 month span, including back to back wins a few years ago. He won a WSOP Circuit gold ring in 2007 at Harvey’s Lake Tahoe. Wolper pocketed $2,037 in prize money.

Eighth Place: Groom Gets Divorced
Willie A. Groom, a scenic artist from Brooklyn, NY became the second creative personality within five minutes to make an exit. He was dealt A 9 and moved all in on what became his final hand. Unfortunately, Alex Pawlyk picked up pocket 9’s and made an obligatory call with a large chip advantage. Groom failed to hit an ace or improve and thus went out with a payout totaling $3,056. Groom would be the first of three consecutive players who were eliminated by Pawlyk.

Seventh Place: Las Vegas Player Gets Ripped
Mitchell Martin, a real estate investor from Las Vegas, NV took a tough beat on his final hand of the tournament. He was dealt A 10 and moved all in after the flop came with a ten high. But Alex Pawlyk woke up in the big blind with 4 3 and managed to flop two small pair. It was the perfect trap set up, which snapped shut on Martin’s chance for victory. Martin ended up going out in seventh place, which paid $4,074. Martin previously won a major tournament called the Ultimate Poker Challenge, held in Las Vegas.

Sixth Place: Online Poker Pro Busts
Carlos Alarcon, an online poker pro from Clifton, NJ made no attempt to hide his disgusted when his pocket 7’s were cracked on the turn by the chip Pawlyk’s K 9. When the fateful K fell, Alarcon ran away from the table with his hands over his face while his friends hurled off a slew of profanities. That pretty much ended Alarcon’s night. Nevertheless, Alarcon did collect $5,093 in prize money which now puts him in excess of $400,000 in tournament winnings.

Fifth Place: Sage Takes the Fifth
Francis Sage, a 21 year old college student from Morton, PA took a terrible beat and went out in fifth place. The University of Pittsburgh senior was dealt pocket A’s and moved all in. Rohan Long called the raise with pocket Q’s and pumped his fist in jubilation when the flop came Q88, good for a full house. Sage shook his head in disbelief and failed to hit one of the two remaining A’s in the deck. That meant Sage has to settle for $6,111 on his spring break vacation.

Fourth Place: Cramer Creamed
Joe Cramer, a restaurant owner from Carlisle, PA became short stacked and moved all in on his final hand with A J. Juan J. Lopez, who held the chip lead, made the call and tabled pocket 4’s. When a 4 flopped, Lopez suddenly had a set and Cramer was left drawing dead. That meant Cramer, playing at his first WSOP Circuit final table, ended up settling for $7,130.

Third Place: Juan J. Lopez Takes Third
Juan J. Lopez, the manager of a bail bonds business from Wilmington, DE appeared to be close to winning his first major tournament. But the Cuban born part time poker player suffered a late rush of misfortune, which ultimately resulted in a third place finish. Lopez exited when he was dealt A K and moved all in after an ace flopped. But Alex Pawlyk had A 2 on the critical hand, which best Lopez when the final board showed AQ287. The two pair scooped the largest pot of the tournament, knocking Lopez to the rail. Lopez, who made it into the money in a WSOP Circuit event held at Harrah’s Atlantic City last December, received a payout totaling $9,167.

Second Place: Online Pro Alex Pawlyk Gets Disconnected
Alex Pawlyk, from New Brunswick, NJ was the runner up. He played extremely well from start to finish, but was helpless to stop his final opponent’s onslaught. Pawlyk began heads up play with nearly a 15 to 1 chip advantage, but was slowly grinded away one hand at a time until he finally was at a slight disadvantage to Long. He ended up settling for an official payout amounting to $17,926.

A fun exchange between the final two players can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/B4392

The final hand of the tournament can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/5F51D

First Place: Rohan Long Wins
Rohan Long, a Jamaican born real estate broker who now lives in Windsor, CT enjoyed the greatest roller coaster ride of any player at the final table. He was all in several times, and managed to avoid elimination via some skillful play and catching an occasional miracle card which prolonged his stay in the finale. In fact, he survived no less than eight all in situations when play was three handed and heads up, each time connecting with the cards he needed to survive. When play was heads up, Long agreed to a deal with his final adversary and ended up winning the tournament with a pair of aces.

An interview with Rohan Long moments after his victory can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/21378

The WSOP Circuit at Caesars Atlantic City continues through March 14. This year’s schedule includes 12 gold ring events, along with multiple second-chance tournaments, single table and mega satellites, in addition to cash games going around the clock inside the Caesars Poker Room. This marks the fifth straight year that Caesars Atlantic City has been a part of the WSOP Circuit. This is the seventh WSOP Circuit stop of the 2009-2010 season following previous tournaments held in Chicago, Southern Indiana, Lake Tahoe, Harrah’s Atlantic City, Tunica, and Council Bluffs.

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #6 Final Results

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Events Schedule and Results

Executive Staff, World Series of Poker Circuit – Caesars Atlantic City

Joe Domenico – Senior Vice President and General Manager
Vice President of Table Games – Fred Niceta
Public Relations Specialist – Christopher Jonic
Table Games Manager (Poker) – Thomas McDonough III
Poker Pit Manager – Jake Devries

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #5 Final Results

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

2009/2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Caesars Atlantic City
Event #5
No Limit Hold’em
Buy-In: $300 (+40)
Total Entries: 451
Total Prize Pool: $131,241
March 7-8, 2010

Final Results:

1 Alexandru Masek San Diego, CA $39,372

2 Pietro Maniscalco Mount Olive, NJ $21,130

3 Kerry Small Ventnor, NJ $10,499

4 Marc Wilson St. Clairsville, OH $9,187

5 Brian Grodofsky Merrick, NY $7,874

6 Jack Sumner St. Augustine, FL $6,562

7 Stan Kayafas Flushing, NY $5,250

8 Kevin Murray Olney, MD $3,937

9 Florentino Deleon Manila, Philippines $2,625

10 Michael Boehme $1,444

11 James Myers $1,444

12 Naoki Takiguchi $1,444

13 Nectalier Gonzalez $1,181

14 Robert Blake $1,181

15 Richard Marchese $1,181

16 Cuong Phung $919

17 Hakima Mohammad $919

18 Gregory Graham $919

19 Mark Schoonmaker $656

20 Kevin Adler $656

21 Danny Alvarez $656

22 Brian Powers $656

23 Kevin Adler $656

24 Daniele Eocarelli $656

25 Arnold Carnevale $656

26 Evan Wallack $656

27 Robert Patterson $656

28 Charles Levin $525

29 Sreenivasa Kaki $525

30 Douglas Pitchford $525

31 Lana Miller $525

32 Yun Pham $525

33 Donald Miller $525

34 James Crouse $525

35 Adam Jacoby $525

36 Chris Reslock $525

37 John Panza $394

38 Nikolas Vlahos $394

39 Ralph Vanormer $394

40 Patrick Rush $394

41 Rizziero Osso $394

42 Eunice Arias $394

43 Thomas Levy $394

44 Paul Cheung $394

45 Thomas Bassing $394

Alexandru Masek Wins WSOP Circuit Event on Spring Break

San Diego Law Student Wins Gold Ring Number Two at Caesars Atlantic City

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Event #5 Winner Alexandru Masek

Atlantic City, NJ – Alexandru Masek is making poker look too easy. He just won his second World Series of Poker Circuit gold ring within a year’s time, and has future plans to accomplish much more. Eleven months after winning his first WSOP Circuit gold ring at Harrah’s Rincon in California, Masek traveled to the East Coast for the first time and pulled off an encore. With another major tournament in Los Angeles in February added to the mix, Masek now has three major wins on his resume since March 2009, an enviable record any poker player would crave.

Masek is a 25 year old college student. He is currently attending law school at the University of San Diego. Masek came to the WSOP Circuit event being held at Caesars Atlantic City during his Spring Break. While his peers populated the beaches and bars of Florida and elsewhere, Masek chose to pursue his poker passion instead and profited to the tune of nearly 40 grand. Not too many college kids in Daytona Beach can claim they pocketed enough money to pay tuition in just a week’s vacation.

Masek won the $340 buy in No-Limit Hold’em tournament and collected the top cash prize, which officially totaled $39,372. He was also presented with his second gold ring, which is the ultimate token of achievement given out to all tournament champions who win WSOP Circuit events held around the country. Masek’s previous victory took place in a $230 No-Limit Hold’em event held at Rincon. This was his fifth time to cash in a WSOP Circuit tournament.

This marked the fifth of 12 WSOP Circuit events on this year’s Caesars schedule. The two-day tournament attracted 451 entrants. Most of the field was eliminated on day one, which clocked in at 14 hours. Four tables of survivors returned for day two which played until a deal was reached when play became five handed. The top 45 finishers divided up prize money from a $131,241 prize pool.

Final table play began on a Monday night and was held inside the Palladium Arena at Caesars. The only previous WSOP Circuit winner among the final nine was Alexandru Masek. Masek arrived as the chip leader and was in a comfortable position throughout the competition. The low blinds (5,000-10,000) and average chip stack of nearly 300,000 from the start gave competitors plenty of play. The nine finalists and their starting chip counts were as follows:

Seat Player Hometown Chip Count

1 Jun DeLeon Joppa, Philippines 211,000

2 Alexandru Masek San Diego, CA 503,000

3 Pete Maniscalco Mount Olive, NJ 491,000

4 Marc Wilson St. Clairsville, OH 194,000

5 Stan Kayafas Flushing, NY 87,000

6 Kevin J. Murray Olney, MD 372,000

7 Kerry Small Ventnor, NJ 103,000

8 Brian Grodofsky Merrick, NY 424,000

9 Jack “Yellow Jacket” Sumner St. Augustine, FL 300,000

Final table player introductions can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/FB0E6

Players were eliminated in the following order:

Ninth Place: DeLeon Exits Early
Jun DeLeon, who is originally from The Philippines, went out quickly. He took pocket J’s up against K Q suited and lost his entire stack when his opponent made a spade flush. DeLeon had to settle for a payout totaling $2,625.

Eighth Place: Murray Dances Away
Kevin J. Murray, a professional poker player from Olney, MD took two wicked bad beats at the final table and lasted just 20 minutes. Murray’s fateful hand occurred when he was dealt A A and raised all in pre flop. He got a call from an opponent who held J J. When a J flopped, an exasperated Murray stood up, rolled his eyes, and staggered away from the table in disbelief. Murray, who has won several online tournaments, added $3,937 to his poker bankroll.

Seventh Place: Stan the Man
Stan Kayafas, a contractor from Flushing NY was playing in his first poker tournament ever. He managed to make it all the way to seventh place. Kayafas was severely short stacked during most of day two. In fact, he began the day with only a few blinds yet managed to move well into the money and made it to the final table. Kayafas’ good fortune finally ran out when he tried to make a move with a subpar hand, which was called by an opponent who made two pair. Kayafas could certainly be proud of his performance in his first and only live tournament, worth $5,250 in prize money.

Sixth Place: “Yellow Jacket” Gets Stung
Jack “Yellow Jacket” Sumner, an IT consultant from St. Augustine, FL was tortured most of the day by A Q. Sumner later said that he was dealt the marginal hand a dozen times at the final table, losing far more chips with the hand than he gained. Sumner lost most of his stack about midway into the finale when he moved all in with A Q pre flop and ran into pocket A’s. A short time later, Sumner was dealt A Q again, moved all in, and was called by an opponent with pocket 9’s. The pocket pair held up, which was the final stinger for “Yellow Jacket.” The Georgia Tech graduate, who now has two WSOP cashes and two WSOP Circuit cashes, collected $6,562.

Fifth Place: Grodofsky Takes the Fifth
After a deal was made between the final five players, Brian Grodofsky, a business analyst from Merrick, NY took fifth place and $7,874.

Fourth Place: Wilson Fourth
Marc Wilson, a factory worker from St. Clairsville, OH took fourth place and $9,187.

Third Place: Small Comes Up Big
Kerry Small, a real estate appraiser from nearby Ventnor, NJ was the third place finisher, worth $10,499.

Second Place: Big Brown is Runner Up
Pete Maniscalco, a UPS driver from Mount Olive, NJ drove away with second place prize money totaling $21,130. He previously took second place in another WSOP Circuit event.

First Place: Masek’s Second Victory
Alexandru Masek, from San Diego, CA earned his second WSOP Circuit gold ring. The law school student began playing poker in 2003. He has future plans to play in many major poker tournaments, including the WSOP in Las Vegas.

An interview with Alexandru Masek near tableside just moments after his win can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/58DFE

The WSOP Circuit at Caesars Atlantic City continues through March 14. This year’s schedule includes 12 gold ring events, along with multiple second-chance tournaments, single table and mega satellites, in addition to cash games going around the clock inside the Caesars Poker Room. This marks the fifth straight year that Caesars Atlantic City has been a part of the WSOP Circuit. This is the seventh WSOP Circuit stop of the 2009-2010 season following previous tournaments held in Chicago, Southern Indiana, Lake Tahoe, Harrah’s Atlantic City, Tunica, and Council Bluffs.

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #5 Final Results

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Events Schedule and Events

Executive Staff, World Series of Poker Circuit – Caesars Atlantic City

Joe Domenico – Senior Vice President and General Manager
Vice President of Table Games – Fred Niceta
Public Relations Specialist – Christopher Jonic
Table Games Manager (Poker) – Thomas McDonough III
Poker Pit Manager – Jake Devries

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #4 Final Results

Monday, March 8th, 2010

2009/2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Caesars Atlantic City
Event #4
No Limit Hold’em
Buy-In: $600 (+60)
Total Entries: 392
Total Prize Pool: $190,120
March 6-7, 2010

Final Results:

1 John Hubiak Taylor, PA $58,937

2 William Daloisi Staten Island, NY $30,419

3 Joseph Siracusa Stony Point, NY $15,210

4 John W. Jones Fredericksburg, VA $13,308

5 Dennis Summers Charlottesville, VA $11,407

6 Mike Graybill Roanoke, VA $9,506

7 Michael Katz East Brunswick, NJ $7,605

8 Alan Sansone Clifton, NJ $5,704

9 Julian Manolio Maywood, NJ $3,802

10 John D’Anselmi Clarksburg, WV $2,281

11 Justin Bonita $2,281

12 Robert Infanzon $2,281

13 Ta Wey $1,901

14 Ronald Pento $1,901

15 Damon Sita $1,901

16 Salman Jaddi $1,521

17 John Russo $1,521

18 Dong Zhou $1,521

19 Yat Cheng $1,141

20 David Nixon $1,141

21 Harold Schmidt $1,141

22 Peter Karagiannis $1,141

23 David Kyi $1,141

24 Ian Searing $1,141

25 Scott Correll $1,141

26 Yousef Suleiman $1,141

27 Brian Hong $1,141

28 Marilyn Matthew $760

29 Sazan Lusha $760

30 Allan Proske $760

31 Bill Varga $760

32 Howard Wolper $760

33 Joseph Brooks $760

34 Paul Mattioda $760

35 Emilio Burgos $760

36 Frank Bonacci $760

John Hubiak Wins WSOP Circuit Event and $58,937 Top Prize

ICU Trauma Nurse from Pennsylvania Wins First Gold Ring at Caesars Atlantic City

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Event #4 Winner John Hubiak

Atlantic City, NJ – Some professions make poker seem rather unimportant, by comparison. Matters of war and peace and life and death put the game in its proper perspective that for as exciting as poker might be at times, it pales in contrast to life’s greatest challenges.

No one knows this better than John Hubiak. He is a 29 year old nurse who works in the intensive care unit of a trauma center. To say Hubiak works in a stressful environment on a daily basis would be an understatement. Indeed, the part-time poker player and full time medical professional from Taylor, PA often has the lives of strangers in his hands. His split second decisions can sometimes mean the difference between life and death.

Hubiak brought that depth of worldly experience and broader perspective to the poker table, and based on the most recent tournament results from the World Series of Poker Circuit at Caesars Atlantic City, it served him quite well. Hubiak won the $340 buy in No-Limit Hold’em tournament here and collected the top cash prize totaling $58,937. He was also presented with the coveted gold ring, which is the ultimate token of achievement given out to all tournament champions who win WSOP Circuit events held around the country.

This was the fourth of 12 WSOP Circuit events on this year’s Caesars schedule. The tournament attracted 392 entrants. Most of the field was eliminated on day one, which clocked in at 14 hours. Five tables of battle-tested survivors returned for day two and played another lengthy session, which lasted another 13 hours. The top 36 finishers divided prize money from a $190,120 prize pool. Among those who finished in the money was former gold ring winner Yat Cheng, who won this year’s inaugural Event 1, which completed just a few days ago. He came in 19th.

Final table play began on a Sunday night inside the Palladium Arena at Caesars and ended at 1 am. The only previous WSOP Circuit winner among the final nine was Julian Manolio, who won a gold ring at Harrah’s Atlantic City two years ago. Alan Sansome, the table’s senior citizen at 70, arrived as chip leader. But all the players were within striking distance of victory, which made this finale an unpredictable affair. The low blinds (5,000-10,000) and average stack of nearly 300,000 in chips at the start of play meant all players at the table had time to wait it out for the best possible advantage. Play was cautious in the early going. The nine finalists and their starting chip counts were as follows:

Seat Player Hometown Chip Count

1 Michael “Katman” Katz East Brunswick, NJ 180,000

2 John W. Jones Fredericksburg, VA 327,000

3 William Daloisi Staten Island, NY 351,000

4 Juilian Manolio Maywood, NJ 384,000

5 Dennis Summers Charlottesville, VA 305,000

6 Alan Sansome Clifton, NJ 400,000

7 Mike Grayhill Roanoke, VA 340,000

8 John Hubiak Taylor, PA 324,000

9 Joseph A. Siracusa Stony Point, NY 395,000

Final table player introductions can be seen here: http://www.twitvid.com/EA2B0

Players were eliminated in the following order:

Ninth Place: No Second Ring for Manolio
Julian Manolio, from Maywood, NJ failed to capture his second WSOP Circuit gold ring this time, pushing all in on a bluff, but striking out on what became his final hand. He wad dealt 6 5 suited and made his fateful move, but ran into A Q. An A came on the flop, which all but ended Manolio’s chances of doubling up. Manolio’s cut of the prize pool amounted to $3,802.

Eighth Place: Early Chip Leader Busts
Alan Sansone became the second early chip leader within two days to bust out prematurely. Following in the footsteps of the previous event where the chip leader was the first player out, Sansone lost much of his stack and then finally exited with Q J which ran up against A J. The dominant hand won, leaving the corporate administrator from Clifton, NJ out in eighth place with $5,704.

Seventh Place: Katz Runs Out of Lives
Michael “Katman” Katz, a real estate appraiser from East Brunswick, NJ was eliminated when he moved all in with A 10, which lost to pocket 7’s. Katzman received $7,605. This was Katz’s first time to cash in a major poker tournament.

Sixth Place: Graybill Takes Bad Beat
Mike Graybill, a mortgage analyst from Roanoke, VA went bankrupt in what can only be described as an unusual bad beat. Graybill started his final hand with pocket 6’s and moved all in. He was called by an opponent holding A K, who barely had Graybill covered. Although neither an A nor a K fell on the board, the final sequence of cards showed two pair, 10’s and 9’s, which meant the A played as the fifth card. Graybill’s pocket 6’s bit the dust, thus putting the Virginian out on sixth place with $9,506.

Fifth Place: Sun Sets on Summers
Dennis Summers, from Charlottesville, VA went out in fifth place. He had a healthy sized stack late in the tournament but got trapped holding A J against A Q, which predictably lost. An ace flopped, but Summers couldn’t overcome his kicker problems. Although he had previously won other events held in Atlantic City, Summers had to settle for a middle of the pack finish a this final table, which paid $11,407.

Fourth Place: Keeping up with the Jones’
John W. Jones, a senior business analyst from Fredericksburg, VA was short stacked late in the tournament and made a bold move on what became his final hand. Jones was dealt A Q. After the flop gave him a gutshot straight draw, Jones decided he did not have enough chips to passively wait around for a better situation and decided instead to move all in on a semi-bluff. His adversary, John Hubiak, thought long and hard about his decision, then finally agreed to call with K 9, which amounted to top pair with a marginal kicker. “Good call,” Jones announced who subsequently failed to improve. Jones ended up with $13,308. An interesting side note is that Jones is a highly-accomplished juggler. In fact, he holds a number of world records juggling.

Key Moment: Daloisi Takes Worst Beat of the Night
William Daloisi dominated much of the action during the late stages of the tournament. However, Daloisi lost most of his chips on a brutal beat. The key hand of the tournament came when Daloisi was dealt pocket Q’s and he moved all in pre flop. John Hubiak mysteriously called with what most would say was a questionable hand in the situation, tabling K Q suited. However, Hubiak received some divine inspiration when he ended up making a diamond flush on the critical hand. That gave him the chip lead and put Daloisi on life support. Hubiak later explained his call by saying he misread his opponent’s strength in the situation, but added, “Even if I guessed wrong, I still figured that I had outs. So, I was comfortable making the call.” The outs got there, which essentially gave Hubiak the victory just moments later.

Third Place: Logger Gets Cut
Joseph A. Siracusa, a 31 year old logger from Stony Point, NY, ended up in third place. He was eliminated when he flopped a pair of Q’s, when the initial board showed Q77. After moving all in, John Hubiak instantly called and showed a 7, which was good for trips. Siracusa did not improve and ended up taking home $15,210 in prize money. Siracusa noted that he and his wife are expected a baby boy soon, so the cash prize comes at a good time.

Second Place: William Daloisi Agrees to Second Place
William Daloisi, a semi-pro poker player from Staten Island, NY leapfrogged into second place when the two far larger stacks went to battle, with Hubiak coming out on top. Once third place was decided, Daloisi agreed to a deal and accepted a second place finish. This was the second time Daloisi has cashed in a WSOP Circuit event. He officially pocketed $30,419.

First Place: Hubiak Wins
John Hubiak agreed to a deal and took first place. He officially collected $58,937 plus his WSOP Circuit gold ring. This also marked Hubiak’s first major tournament victory.

An interview with John Hubiak at tableside moments after his win can be seen here:

http://www.twitvid.com/D9B51

The WSOP Circuit at Caesars Atlantic City continues through March 14. This year’s schedule includes 12 gold ring events, along with multiple second-chance tournaments, single table and mega satellites, in addition to cash games going around the clock inside the Caesars Poker Room. This marks the fifth straight year that Caesars Atlantic City has been a part of the WSOP Circuit. This is the seventh WSOP Circuit stop of the 2009-2010 season following previous tournaments held in Chicago, Southern Indiana, Lake Tahoe, Harrah’s Atlantic City, Tunica, and Council Bluffs.

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit – Event #4 Final Results

2010 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Events Schedule and Results

Executive Staff, World Series of Poker Circuit – Caesars Atlantic City

Joe Domenico – Senior Vice President and General Manager
Vice President of Table Games – Fred Niceta
Public Relations Specialist – Christopher Jonic
Table Games Manager (Poker) – Thomas McDonough III
Poker Pit Manager – Jake Devries