Posts Tagged ‘horseshoe council bluffs casino’

2010 WSOP Circuit Events at Horseshoe Council Bluffs – Event #18 Final Results

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

2009-2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Horseshoe Council Bluffs
Feb. 26
Event #18
No-Limit Hold’em
Buy-In: $500 + $55
Number of Entries: 153
Total Prize Money: $74,205

Final Results:

Place Name Hometown Prize

1. Timothy Morgan Pompano Beach, FL $24,045

2. Joel Wassom Dickens, IA $12,615

3. Danny Walker Omaha, NE $7,421

4. Roger Lipton Greenwood, NE $5,936

5. Bernard Morrow Grand Island, NE $4,452

6. Saad Vasquez Castle Rock, CO $3,710

7. Eric Koffman Bay City, MI $2,968

8. Lee Patitz Hastings, NE $2,226

9. Jeff Banghart Bennington, NE $1,484

10.Kyle Caslin $1,187

11.Mark Fink $1,187

12.Randy Crow $1,187

13.Cary Long $1,039

14.Doug Carli $1,039

15.Joel Merwick $1,039

16. Stanley Schrier $890

17.Joe Farb $890

18.Derek Masek $890

Despite Big Chip Lead He Agrees to Deal In Order to Get His First Title and Ring

2010 Horseshoe Council Bluffs WSOP Circuit Event #18 Winner Timothy Morgan

Council Bluffs, IA — Timothy Morgan has had a lot of cashes – 19 along with nine final tables in 2009 alone – but no wins. He came close a number of times, including a second in the Southern States Poker Championship. Tonight he got heads-up in the 18th event of the WSOP Circuit tour at Horseshoe Council Bluffs, $500 no-limit hold’em. At that point, he had better than a 2-1 chip lead, but was afraid of bubbling a win again. So he made an even-money chop in order to bring home his first title along with the diamond-and-gold trophy ring. “I did it for my wife Lisa,” he said. “She’s put up with my shenanigans for a long time.” First place paid $24,045, but he and Joel Wassom got $18,330 each for their split in this event.

Morgan, 57, is a full-time player from Pompano Beach, Florida. He used to be a commercial diver in the New England area doing salvage, bridge and underwater demolition work. He later bought a marine salvage and towing business which his wife now runs. He’s been playing poker for 20 years, seriously since the Moneymaker revolution.

This $500 event attracted 153 players. The prize pool was $74,205. The second-day final table was totally dominated by Danny Walker until the very late stages when Morgan began grinding him down, sometimes three-betting him, until he finally knocked Walker out by flopping two small pair to beat Walker’s pocket kings.

As a side note, Doug “Rico” Carli had tournament payouts the past two days, extending his world’s record for Circuit cashes to 42.

The final table began with blinds of 1,500-3,000, 15 minutes left. About four laps ahead of everyone else in chips was Walker, with 423,000.

Here were the starting chip counts:

Seat Name Chip Count

1. Danny Walker 423,000

2. Saad Vasquez 151,300

3. Lee Patitz 43,900

4. Bernard Morrow 77,400

5. Eric Koffman 102,200

6. Joel Wassom 32,200

7. Jeff Banghart 116,000

8. Roger Lipton 68,900

9. Timothy Morgan 68,900

9th place: Jeff “MrRain” Banghart was first to check out after he was all in with A-8 against Walker’s pocket 7s. A board of 4-4-8-7-K gave Walker a full house and even more chips (as if he needed them). Banghart’s nickname comes from his ownership of a lawn sprinkler company. He has so many poker accomplishments that he provided a printout of them because there wouldn’t be room on the bio sheet. Online he has more than $1.2 million in cashes, including four six-figure payouts. He has three prior Circuit final tables at Council Bluffs including a win in the opening event last year. His biggest cash ever was $237,500 for coming in 41st in the WSOP main event in 2007. The Rain Man is from Bennington, Nebraska. His finish tonight paid $1,484

8th place: Not long after, Lee Patitz, winner of the opening event here, had all his chips in with 9d-8s against Roger Lipton’s A-8 Three diamonds and an ace flopped. Patitz missed his flush draw, and Lipton’s paired ace ended his hopes for a second ring, but he cashed for $2,226. Patitz, 73, is from Hastings, Nebraska, where he works as a power plant operator. When he won his first event, he said that he was having “fun, fun, fun.” He still is, he said.

7th place: After a break, blinds were 2,000-4,000 with 400 antes. Holding pocket aces, Eric Koffman made what turned out to be a big mistake when he just limped. Walker, in the small blind, called for the additional 2,000 with 9-2 suited. A flop of k-9-9 gave him trips. He put Koffman all in, winning when a J and 10 came. Koffman, 35, is a property manager from Bay City, Michigan. He has a prior Circuit final table, cashing 7th in a $500 event at Tunica earlier this year. .

6th place: After several all-ins and survivals, another player exited. This time it was Saad Vasquez, who went in with K-J and couldn’t catch Walker’s A-2 after the board came Q-10-4-8-A. Sixth paid $3,710. Vasqez is from Castle Rock, Colorado, where he owns an unusual business: a medical marijuana dispensary.

Walker, meanwhile, had knocked out three of the first four players and had now amassed about 450,000 chips, close to half of all those on the table.

5th place: With blinds of 3,000-6,000 and 500 antes, an unstoppable Walker continued his massacre. His next victim was Bernard Morrow, who moved in for 40,000 with K-Q, well ahead of Walker’s Kh-10h. No problem. Walker promptly made a flush on a flop of 9h-7h-5h, and we were down to four. Morrow, 58, is a 58-year-old government worker from Grand Island, Nebraska. This final table is his best yet. Fifth place paid $4,452.

Walker went after the next all-in player, and again was behind with A-7 to Joel Wassom’s A-J. The best Walker could manage this time was a chop when the board came 4-10-A-K-4. Was Walker slipping? Maybe. On the next hand he challenged an all-in Roger Lipton, again behind with 6c-3c to Lipton’s A-6. He was about to knock Lipton out with two pair, 6s and 3s, when the board showed 4-3-8-6. But he let Lipton get away when a river 4 gave his opponent 6s and 4s. Shame on you, Danny.

4th place: Perhaps Walker had now given up knocking out players, because he let Morgan do the next job. Roger Lipton was all in with Ac-10c and Morgan had Ah-Qh. A board of Jc-5h-7h-Kc gave both players flush draws. Morgan got there when a 2h gave him the flush and Lipton left in fourth place, paying $5,936. Lipton, 36, from Greenwood, Nebraska, owns a trucking company. This is his first final table here.

3rd place: Three-handed, Walker still led, but by now not nearly as much, and after losing a couple of pots to Morgan, dropped back into second place behind him. Soon after we had another confrontation between the two players. When the flop came Q-8-6, Walker bet 55,000, Morgan made it 120,000 to go and Walker, with pocket kings, moved in. Morgan turned up 8c-6c for two pair, and won after a jack and deuce came. Finishing a disappointing third, Walker settled for $7,421. Walker is a 25-year-old gambler from Omaha. His cashes include a win and a second in Circuit events here, three final tables at the L.A. Poker Classic, and a 30th in a $1,500 7-card razz event at the WSOP.

2nd place: Despite being well in front, with about 800,000 chips to around 350,000 for Wassom, Morgan agreed to the chop and first-place honors. Wassom, 40, is from Dickens, Iowa, where he is a security/safety director.

2010 Horseshoe Council Bluffs WSOP Circuit Event #18 Final Results

2010 Horseshoe Council Bluffs WSOP Circuit Events Schedule and Results

– Max Shapiro

Director of Poker Operations for Harrah’s Entertainment – Jack Effel
Horseshoe Council Bluffs Poker Room Manager – Gary Margetson
Tournament Director – Kevin Ferguson

2010 Horseshoe Council Bluffs WSOP Circuit – Event #19 Final Results

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

2009-2010 World Series of Poker Circuit
Horseshoe Council Bluffs
Feb. 26
Event #19
Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo
Buy-In: $200 + $35
Number of Entries: 63
Total Prize Money: $12,222

Final Results:

Place Name Hometown Prize

1. Curt Timperley Battle Creek, NE $4,400

2. Glen Walston Bedford, IA $2,444

3. Ronald Grandgeorge Papillion, NE $1,344

4. Joe Miklas Crescent, IA $978

5. Jack Spencer Bedford, Iowa $856

6. Doug Dickenson Kansas City, MO $733

7. Lawrence Berg Las Vegas, NV $611

8. Jim McGill Carter Lake, IA $489

9. Dave Schenk Hiawatha, IA $367

Truck Driver Curt Timperley Hauls in Win No. 2, Pot-Limit Omaha Hi-Lo

It’s His Fourth Cash and Third Final Table So Far at Council Bluffs Circuit

2010 Horseshoe Council Bluffs WSOP Circuit Event #19 Winner Curt Timperley

Council Bluffs, IA — “I’m hot. I can’t ever remember running this good for this long,”
Curt Timperley remarked after winning his second event at the WSOP Circuit tour at Horseshoe Council Bluffs, $200 pot-limit Omaha hi-lo. The win in event 19 paid $4,400.

Earlier he won a $200 no-limit tourney. And he has two other cashes as well, one being a third in Omaha hi-lo! Not bad for someone whose past tournament cashes were limited to small local buy-in events.

Driving around the Midwest, the grocery warehouse truck driver frequently checks the action at casinos along his route. He splits his poker time between tournaments and live games, and is able to pack in about 50 tournaments a year..

This tourney had 63 players and a $12,333 prize pool. When we got to the final nine, Doug Dickenson had a slight lead over Lawrence Berg, 75,000 to 72,000.

Here were the starting chip counts:

Seat Name Chip Count

1.Curt Timperley 57,000

2. Jim McGill 11,500

3. Glen Walston 50,000

4. Joe Miklas 33,500

5. Doug Dickenson 75,000

6. Ronald Grandgeorge 7,500

7. Lawrence Berg 72,000

8. Dave Schenk 10,000

9. Jack Spencer 38,000

Final table play commenced with blinds of 1,000-2,000 and 24 minutes left.

9th place: Dave Schenk was all in with A-3-J-K against Berg with J-2-4-6. Neither player managed a low when the board came A-3-3-6-9, but Berg settled for deuces full, leaving Schenk in ninth place, worth $367. Schenk, 47, is a youth worker from Hiawatha, Iowa.

8th place: With blinds at 1,500-3,000, Jim McGill found himself all in from the big blind, with a nondescript 10-6-5-5. Doug Dickenson had A-3-7-9 with two spades, and when three spades came on a board of 9-4-4-Q-J, McGill left with $489 for eighth. McGill, describing his occupation as a “bar drinker,” is 57, from Carter Lake, Iowa, and this is his first live final table..

7th place: Blinds were now 2,000-4,000. Suddenly, two players with two big hands built a very big pot. Berg had A-A-2-5 and Timperley A-A-9-7. Pre-flop, Timperley bet the pot, Berg re-potted it and went all in, and Timperley called.. The board came K-7-8, giving Timperley a pair of 7s and Berg a draw to a nut low. Then two 9s gave Timperley 9s-full while Berg missed his low draw. Timperley had him covered and moved into a big lead as Berg, a 32-year-old Las Vegas poker dealer, cashed seventh for $611.

6th place: Next to go out was Dickenson. He had A-4-9-Q and a flop of K-2-3 gave him draws to a nut low and a heart flush. At the same time, Timperley, holding K-K-3-Q, flopped a set of cowboys. Dickenson missed low when two paints came, and he took home $733 for sixth. Dickenson, making back-to-back final tables, is a 68-year-old CPA from Kansas City, Missouri,

5th place: With blinds of 2,500-5,000, Jack Spencer was in the big blind and he was left with a single 1,000 chip when his J-10-8-4 went nowhere. He stayed alive for a few hands by twice making a set of fours to take half of four-way pots. All in again from the big blind, he had all four players going after him. When the board came Q-Q-5,Glen Walston bet out, and Spencer, with K-9-8-2, knew he was dead. The other two players folded, Walston turned up A-Q-J-7 for trip queens, and Spencer, a 54-year old farmer from Bedford, Iowa, went out after two more 5s didn’t help.

4th place: The next player went out after a set-over set flop.”Grocery” Joe Miklas had pocket deuces and flopped the lower set when the board showed Q-2-9. Timperley had pocket queens and the grocery man was now dead to a fourth deuce. Instead, two more 9s came, and Miklas cashed fourth for $978. Miklas, 55, is a small business owner from Crescent, Iowa.

3rd place: Hanging on with a single 500 chip, Ronald Grandgeorge committed it from the big blind. After his two opponents checked down a board of 2-6-2-7-7, Timperley turned up A-2-3-Q for a nut low and three deuces and Grandgeorge, with 3-4-8-6 went out with $1,344 for third. Grandgeorge, 53, is retired from the U.S. Air Force. He earlier finished eighth in pot-limit Omaha event..

The two finalists, Timperley and Walston, started their match-up fairly even in chips. As play went on, blinds moved up to 4,000-8,000. Timperley soon moved into the lead and steadily kept increasing it. On the final hand the board showed 2s-Qc-3c-9d-8c. Walston had 8d-3h-7h-Qh for two pair and no low. Holding Jc-8h-7d-8c, Timperley scooped with a flush. For second, Walston, a 60-year-old farmer from Bedford, Iowa, took home $2,444.

2010 Horseshoe Council Bluffs WSOP Circuit – Event #19 Final Results

2010 Horseshoe Council Bluffs WSOP Circuit Events Schedule and Results

– Max Shapiro

Director of Poker Operations for Harrah’s Entertainment – Jack Effel
Horseshoe Council Bluffs Poker Room Manager – Gary Margetson
Tournament Director – Kevin Ferguson

2009 WSOP Circuit – Horseshoe Council Bluffs Casino – Event #11 Official Results

Friday, February 20th, 2009

2008-2009 World Series of Poker Circuit
Horseshoe Casino Council Bluffs
Event #11
Feb. 18-19
Limit Hold’em
Buy-In: $300 + $45
Number of Entries: 46
Total Prize Money: $13,386

Payouts:

1. Kelly Vande Mheen Sioux City, IA $6,033
2. Michael Schwarcz Chicago, IL $3,347
3. Brent Carter Oak Park, IL $2,008
4. Khanh Nguyen Omaha, NE $1,339
5. James Tolbert Norman, OK $669
.

Suited Connectors Suit Kelly Vande Mheen Fine as He Wins Circuit #11, Limit Hold’em

Kelly Vande Mheen 2009 WSOP Circuit Horseshoe Council Bluffs Event #11 Winner

Council Bluffs, IA–Kelly Vande Mheen, a 46-year-old small business owner selling licensed sports merchandise, was the winner of the 11th event at Horseshoe Council Bluffs, $300 limit hold’em, in a wire-to-wire victory. He came to the final table with a very big lead and went steadily up after that.

He credited his unusual style of play for his win. He says he likes to raise with small suited connectors in limit hold’em because if he connects, he can’t be put on a hand, and if an ace or king comes, players will be afraid that he now has a big hand. This strategy is especially effective when he has a big stack, he added, as happened in this event. The win brought him $6,033 and a nice trophy, but far short of his one major cash-out when he won $96,000 for a fifth in a WSOP 6-handed no-limit event. He also has a final table in a second-chance event at the WSOP, but no other major cashes.

Vande Mheen, who’s been playing seriously since 2006, describes his style as selective-aggressive, but says he also depends on getting lucky. He was also playing simultaneously in the event #12, a $500 no-limit ring tournament that started an hour before the limit final table began, and he quickly went back to his game, where he was being blinded off.

Only five players were in the money in this event, and second-day play resumed with blinds of 2,000-4,000 and 4,000-8,000 limits, 16 minutes left. Starting with a very big lead with 125,000 chips more than twice as much anyone else, was Vande Mheen.

Here were the starting chip counts:

Seat 1. James Tolbert 54,000
Seat 2. Kelly Vande Mheen 125,000
Seat 3. Michael Schwarcz 26,000
Seat 4. Khanh Nguyen 30,000
Seat 5. Brent Carter 42,000

First out was James Tolbert, all in for his last 4,000 with Q-10. He got called by Khanh Nguyen and then Brent Carter. When the board came 4-7-2-A, Nguyen, holding 5-3, had a wheel, and Tolbert, finishing fifth, was paid $669. Tolbert is a 27-year-old pro from Norman, Oklahoma who before that was a medical equipment/hardware rep for spine surgery. His biggest cash in live tournaments was $30,000 in a $1,000 Venetian Deep Stack event.

Next out was a short-stacked Nguyen, all in with A-2 on a flop of 9-10-3. He had calls from Vande Mheen and Michael Schwarcz. When an 8 tuned it gave Schwarcz, holding 7-6, an inside straight, and Nguyen left with $1,339 for fourth. Nguyen, 46, originally from Vietnam, now lives in Omaha where he is a small business owner. He’s been playing 12 years and has a third in a Circuit event two years ago.

Brent, Carter, meanwhile, making his second final table in a row, had been playing short-chipped for a long time and hanging on. He finally went all in for the last time, holding A-Q and three-betting a flop of Q-J-5. He was in bad shape because Vande Mheen had a set of jacks, and then, for good measure, made quads. (“I didn’t need it, just showing off,” he said.) Third paid $2,008. Carter, 60, formerly a harness race driver, is from Oak Park, Illinois and has been playing professionally for 25 years. He has won over $3 million in tournaments, and his scores of cashes include 48 at the WSOP (with bracelets in Omaha and no-limit hold’em), along with 11 Omaha final tables. He finished third in the WSOP main event, cashing for $302,750, his biggest payday ever.

Heads-up, Vande Mheen enjoyed a big lead, and the match did not last long. On the final hand, Schwarcz was all in with 10-9 to K-6 for Vande Mheen. The board came 4-4-K-Q-10, and the paired king was more than enough to give Vande Mheen the win.

Schwarcz, who played tonight with lots of patience, is a podiatrist from Chicago. His wife was at the sidelines cheering him on. -

-Max Shapiro

Vande Mheen, 46, is a small business owner from Omaha who’s been playing since high school. In 2007 he won $96,000 for a fifth in a the WSOP.

World Series of Poker Commissioner: Jeffrey Pollack
Director of Poker Operations for Harrah’s Entertainment: Jack Effel
Horseshoe Casino Council Bluffs Poker Room Managers: Gary Margetsen
Horseshoe Casino Council Bluffs Tournament Director: Janis Sexton