2006 Grand Casino Tunica World Series of Poker Circuit Events Event #1 $300 No Limit Hold'em Tournament Report
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Great Granny’s Bird Charm Helps Young Pro Eric Crain Win Grand Tunica Opener
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Tunica, MS -- Combine World Series action with Southern hospitality, and
what do you get? Answer: an over-capacity mob of 834 enthusiastic players
turning out for the opening event of the WSOP Circuit series’ second stop at
Grand Casino Tunica.
To accommodate the crowd, the $300 no-limit tournament started with 11-
player tables, and then 141 alternates were seated in the first hour of play.
A total of 83 places were paid, and the day before, a record 203 seats were
won in single-table satellites.
“Players are also accustomed to coming to Tunica because of the Mid-America
Poker Classic that was held here in August for many years,” noted Jack Effel,
the director of poker operations for Harrah’s Entertainment.
The winner, after a back-and-forth battle with runner-up Raymond Owens,
was Eric Crain, a 22-year-old pro from Murphysville, Illinois, who credited a
little glass bird charm given to him by his great-grandmother for bringing him
luck. He won with a “flourish” on the final hand when his 6-2 outdrew Owens’
J-8.
This is the first major cash-out in a land casino for Crain, who said his major
accomplishment until now was landing on the bubble. He has been spending
most of his poker time online, where he has won a half-million dollars in cash
games and another $100,000 in tournaments so far this year.
Play ended on day one with two tables left. The players returned at 2 p.m.
the next day, and at 3:30 the final table got underway with blinds of 6,000-
12,000, 2,000 antes and hour rounds. Seating order and chip counts were:
SEAT 1 Raymond Owens
SEAT 2 Gary Huggins
SEAT 3 Mike Wommack
SEAT 4 Jared McVay
SEAT 5 David Clark
SEAT 6 Joseph Mahan
SEAT 7 Joseph Rizo
SEAT 8 Dan Mitnick
SEAT 9 Eric Crain
SEAT 10 Mark Silvers
Crain, who said he had been “steaming” over the tables with 27 players left,
enjoyed a dominant lead with 430,000 chips, more than a third of all the
ones in play.
It took 15 minutes to lose our first player. Joseph Mahan, a postal employee,
was down to 9,000 when he moved in from the cut-off seat with K-6. Craig,
with plenty of chips to invest, called with Q-10. He paired his 10 when the
board came 9-7-5-10-A, and Mahan settled for a 10th place cash-out of
$2,670.
Next out was Savannah, Georgia retiree Mark Silvers. He took a bad beat
when his pocket queens were crushed by lowly pocket treys held by Jared
McVay, who flopped a set. Silvers collected $4,854 for eighth place.
When blinds went to 8,000-16,000, Craig had dipped to 330,000, still twice
average. On the first hand of the new level, David Clark busted. After Craig
opened for 50,000, he moved in for another 50,000 holding Ad-9d. Craig had
him dominated with A-J. Neither helped, and Clark finished eighth, worth
$7,281. Clark, from Douglasville, GA, is president of a company that does
industrial dry cleaning, notably for firefighters.
Craig had now climbed to about 570,000, though he quickly dropped 130,00
of it when his K-Q couldn’t beat Mike Wommack’s pocket 7s.
Dan Mitnick, an Atlanta attorney, was next out. Holding pocket jacks, he
called for his last 4,000 in the small blind when McVay moved in with A-10.
The board came A-4-2-Q-7, and Mitnick cashed seventh , earning $9,708.
As play progressed, Owens, down to 80,000, went on a rush, first doubling
through Wommack when his K-Q made two pair, then repeatedly picking
up the blinds and antes with all-in moves. After 16 hands, with blinds now at
10,000-20,000, he had moved into the lead with over 400,000, while Craig
was complaining about being card dead..
The gentlemanly nature of these southern players was demonstrated when
Owens, all in again, inadvertently had his cards mucked by a dealer, and
Wommack said he would allow the cards to be retrieved. It was the second
time such a mishap had befallen Owens, seated to the left of the dealer, and
he prudently began searching for a card protector.
The table got down to five when Gary Huggins, a truck driver from
Pinckeyville, Illinois, moved in with Qd-10d from the cutoff seat. McVay button-
called with A-J and caught two more jacks. Sixth place paid $12,135.
McVay, who hails from Muscle Shoals, Alabama and is a swimming pool
builder, went out fifth when he moved in under the gun for 108,000 with
Kh-9h. He got picked off by Wommack’s As-Ks when the board helped neither
player. Fifth was worth $14,562.
Then, in subsequent action, Craig regained the lead when he busted
Wommack. The ex-dealer, who now sells boat-lifting equipment, raised to
80,000 with pocket 4s and Craig moved him in with K-J. A board of A-7-6-J-Q
paired Craig’s jack, and Wommack cashed out for $16,989 in fourth place.
Now three-handed, the shortest stack by far belonged to Joseph Rizo, who
would go all in repeatedly, and manage to hang on. Craig finally put away
the electrical technician by calling with 9-6 after Rizo moved in with pocket 7s.
When a 9 flopped, Rizo could only survive by hitting another 7. He couldn’t,
and the Huntsville, Alabama native took home $19,416 for finishing third.
A rough count now showed Craig with about 900,000 to Owens’ 350,000. “It’
s going to be an all-in battle, now,” Owens predicted. They fought it out for
about a dozen hands.
Owens picked up some pots with frequent raising and made some headway.
“He was raising every single pot and got me frustrated,” Craig said later. “I
couldn’t give him credit for having hands all the time.”
Finally, when Owens, a restaurant manager from Little Rock, Arkansas, raised
yet again, to 80,000, Craig had had enough and moved in with his meager 6-
2. Owens called with J-8. Owens was still in the lead when the board showed
10-5-5-A, but then a river 6 ended the match as Owens went home with
$33,495 for his second-place finish.
Craig, who earlier had said he had been obsessing over winning a trophy
ring for the past year and a half, now slipped on the eye-catching gold and
diamond band. He caressed his great-grandmother’s lucky bird, while his
grandmother joyfully snapped his picture. The young pro, who had been an
aspiring journalist in college before turning to poker a year ago, had been
writing for school and local newspapers since he was 15, and was sports
editor of his college paper.
He began playing poker in a weekly game at school and confesses to getting
regularly beat up until he began to get fairly good at limit hold’em. His
favorite game, though, is Omaha high-low, which he likes to play online at
$1,000-$2,000 limits.
In casino tournaments, he has a seventh-place finish at the U.S. Poker
Championship out of a field of 25, and a fifth on Omaha/8 in Tulsa. At this
year’s World Series, he came up empty-handed. But, with his $63,105 win
tonight, he said he planned to pursue more tournament action in casinos.
— by Max Shapiro
Max Shapiro -- WSOP Media Director
World Series of Poker Commissioner – Jeffrey Pollack
Director of Poker Operations for Harrah’s Entertainment – Jack Effel
Harrah’s Grand Tunica Poker Room Manager – Karen Kaegin
182,000
97,000
98,000
53,500
89,500
90,000
76,000
79,500
430,000
69,000
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