UltimatePokerForum.com
Ultimate PokerReviewsWPTWSOPArticles
2007 Caesars Atlantic City
World Series of Poker
(WSOP) Circuit Event
Event #2
$500 Buy-in No Limit Hold'em
Tournament Report
UltimatePokerForum.com
The Ultimate Poker Site
Spade
2007 Caesars Atlantic City WSOP Circuit Event Report
It’s “Jerry” Chan, Not “Johnny”
Brooklyn College Student Survives Bad
Beat-Filled Final Table
PokerStars
Second event of WSOP Circuit series draws yet another
big field, pays out over a quarter million in prize money

Atlantic City, NJ (March 7, 2007) – The majesty of poker is that almost any
player can be king for a day.  There are days when everything just seems to
go right.  The good cards come.  The flops bear gifts.  Every decision seems
to be correct.  Some players refer to this phenomenon as “the zone.”

No one will confuse Jerry Chan with a two-time world poker champion and
ten-time
World Series of Poker gold bracelet winner.  But for a 48-hour
period, Jerry Chan – a 23-year-old college student from Brooklyn, NY -- played
every bit as well his poker icon namesake.  He was….and there is no other
way to describe it….in “the zone.”  Mr. Chan won $76,200 in a masterful
performance at the most recent World Series of Poker Circuit event held at
Caesars Atlantic City.  Whether playing at a full table, short-handed, or
heads-up, Mr. Chan always seems to have the correct read on his opponents
and made the optimal strategic decision.  Such discipline was rewarded with
Mr. Chan’s first-ever tournament victory.

The $500 buy-in no-limit hold’em tournament (Event #2) attracted 508
players and took place on the day following the second-largest
WSOP Circuit
event in history (1,106 registered players).  The tournament was played over
two days.  After 499 players were eliminated during the initial 15 hours, nine
survivors returned for the final table on day two.  Jerry Chan started with the
chip lead, a position he held most of the way in an exciting, and some would
say nerve-racking final table.  Jose Torres ranked a close second.  Seating
positions and chip counts began as follows:

Seat 1:        
Ryan Blankenship
Seat 2:        Jerry Chan
Seat 3:        Carl Restifo
Seat 4:        Bobby Roberts
Seat 5:        Brian Murphy
Seat 6:        Jose Torres
Seat 7:        Shane Keller
Seat 8:        Rick Austin
Seat 9:        Perry McGinnis

Blinds started at 10,000-20,000 with a 2,000 ante.  The shortest-stack at the
final table belonged to Brian Murphy.  He had enough chips to play about
three orbits.  However, it took just three hands to eliminate the poker player
from New Castle, DE.  Mr. Murphy was dealt pocket eights and moved all-in.  
Jerry Chan called the 100,000 raise holding K-Q and caught a queen on the
turn to eliminate the first player.  Brian Murphy, who works as an accountant,
entered $5,080 into his poker ledger for ninth place.

A few hands later, Shane Keller lost most of his chips.  He moved all-in after
flopping second pair (a pair of tens).  However, Perry McGinnis held an ace in
his hand and flopped an ace which stood up as the higher pair.  Down to just
a few chips, two hands later Mr. Keller’s hopes were finally extinguished.  
Shane Keller, a firefighter from Baltimore, MD burned out as the eighth-place
finisher.  He collected $7,620.  This was his first-ever final table appearance
in a poker tournament.

The final table was an absolute nightmare for Jose Torres, who arrived as the
hottest tournament player of the final nine.  Second in chips during the early
stages of the finale, Mr. Torres took a brutally wicked beat when he had
Perry McGinnis covered holding A-Q versus his opponent’s A-10.  Just when it
looked like Mr. Torres would bust out a player and seize the chip lead for the
first time, a 10 crashed down on the river demolishing Mr. Torres stack and
suspending his hopes of victory.  That catapulted Mr. McGinnis up into second
place (temporarily) and left Mr. Torres with about 180,000 in his stack.  It was
the beginning of the end for the poker player who won $300,000 in the last
year playing tournaments.

Four hands later, Mr. Torres was dealt pocket sevens.  But “seven” turned
out to be an unlucky number for the Floridian.  He raised all-in and was called
by Rick Austin holding pocket kings.  The royal pair held up, which meant Mr.
Torres was forced to make the much-dreaded shuffle from the final table, into
the casino, and on to valet parking.  Jose Torres, a 37-year-old business
owner and semi-pro poker player, cashed 15 times in major tournaments last
year.  He has also cashed at the WSOP in Las Vegas five times.  Mr. Torres
added $10,160 to his poker bankroll for a less-than-satisfying seventh place.

After the early fireworks, play got more conservative for the next hour.  In
fact, it took another 40 hands for the next player to go bust.  During that
period, Ryan Blankenship was subjected to opposite ends of the emotional
spectrum.  He lost much of his stack holding A-7 versus Jerry Chan’s A-A.  But
just a few hands later, the tables were reversed and it was Mr. Blankenship’s
pocket aces which seized back most of those chips which had been lost.  
Back up to a respectable 200,000, Blankenship was dealt yet another
premium hand with J-J.  He moved all-in.  Bobby Roberts called holding 8-8.  
Holding an on overpair, it appeared that Mr. Blankenship might double up
again and climb higher up the money ladder.  But an eight on the river
(creating a set of eights for Mr. Roberts) dealt the North Carolinian a fatal
blow and put him out in sixth place.  Ryan Blankenship, who has finished in
the money previously on the WSOP Circuit, collected $12,700 in prize money.

The bad beats continued.  Bobby Roberts found out the hard way -- what
goes around comes around.  A few hands after busting out the previous
player, Mr. Roberts was dealt A-K versus Rick Austin’s A-Q.  With such a
dominant hand, it appeared to be a perfect scenario for Mr. Roberts to add
another 250,000 to his stack.  But poker outcomes are impossible to predict
and a queen on the flop added yet another horrifying chapter to the tale of
final table bad beats.  Mr. Roberts failed to improve by catching a king, which
resulted in a fifth-place for the player from Virginia.  Bobby Roberts, who
finished sixth in a major tournament in Mississippi a few months ago, moved
one place higher this time – good for $15,240.    

Down to four players, Carl Restifo was the shortest stack.  But he doubled up
twice, making Perry McGinnis the next potential target of elimination.  Another
bad beat nearly came when Mr. McGinnis moved all-in holding K-6 (obviously
trying to steal the blinds pre-flop).  He was called by Rick Austin, with K-Q.  A
six flopped, giving Mr. McGinnis a pair.  But a queen on the turn turned the
tables yet again, and Mr. McGinnis’s tournament engine finally ran out of gas.  
The Director of Transportation from Georgia drove away with $17,780 for
fourth place.  This was his first-ever final table appearance.

Next, all eyes were on Carl Restifo who must have felt like Poland prior to the
start of World War II.  With Jerry Chan bordering on his right and Rick Austin
on immediate his left – both with over a million in chips -- Mr. Restifo was left
abandoned to struggle and survive with slightly more than 100,000.  The
attempt to fight proved valiant but futile.  On his final hand of the tournament
Mr. Restifo was dealt 4-4.  He moved all-in and was called and covered by Mr.
Austin, holding 5-5.  The higher pair held up and Carl Restifo was history.  Mr.
Restifo, a securities trader from New Rochelle, NY, cashed for $20,320 as the
third-place finisher.             

When play went heads-up, Jerry Chan had a slight chip advantage – with
1,375,000 to 1,180,000 for Rick Austin.  At that point, something seemed to
possess Mr. Chan.  Perhaps it was his mental focus or an insatiable desire to
win, but whatever the motivation Mr. Chan dominated the closing stages of
the finale in a manner reminiscent of the poker greats, such as Brunson,
Hellmuth, and Chan.  Like an alley cat toying with its prey, Mr. Chan’s chip
lead was never seriously threatened during the final hour of play.  Simply put,
he made mice of men.

This is not to say that Rick Austin did not play well himself.  On any other
night and perhaps against any other opponent, Mr. Austin might have
prevailed.  But the night, the glory, the victory, and ultimately the WSOP
Circuit gold ring presented to each event winner belonged to Jerry Chan.
It took Mr. Chan about 20 hands of one-on-one play to build up the
considerable stack advantage which set the stage for the last hand of the
tournament.  With blinds and antes escalating, Mr. Austin moved all-in with A-
5.  Mr. Chan had plenty of chips and called holding 9-8.  On a night when the
best hand rarely held up in heads-up situations, it was no surprise that the
underdog hand would bark and bite the mathematically-superior cards.  The
final board showed a J-10-8-2-2 giving Mr. Chan a pair of eights and a well-
deserved victory.     

The runner up was Rick Austin, from Lansdale, PA.  He is a 49-year-old retail
store owner who has been married for 30 years.  He also has two grown
children.  Mr. Austin came to the final table with a number of impressive
tournament cashes on his resume, including a win at the Borgata Casino last
year and 18th place finish in the WSOP Circuit main event, held at Harrah’s
Atlantic City in December 2006.  Second place in this event paid $40,894.

The newest poker champion is Jerry Chan.  He has never won a tournament
before and is relatively new to the poker scene.  Mr. Chan is a college
student currently studying business as Brooklyn College in New York.  His
cash prize amounted to $76,200 for the win.

Report by Nolan Dalla – World Series of Poker Media Director

To view the complete results for Event #2 of the 2007 Caesars Atlantic
City WSOP Circuit Event, click on the link below:

2007 WSOP Circuit Caesars Atlantic City - Event #2 Results

Executive Staff, World Series of Poker Circuit – Caesars Atlantic City
Vice President of Table Games – Fred Niceta
Director of Table Games – Paul A. Natello
Table Games Manager (Poker) – Thomas McDonough III
Poker Pit Manager – Jake Devries
188,000
492,000
440,000
336,000
110,000
412,000
192,000
171,000
115,000
Ultimate Poker Forum Home
Online Poker Room Reviews
Poker Strategy Articles
Poker Discussion Forum
WSOP Articles
World Series of Poker
WSOP Circuit Events
2006 WSOP Results
Poker Odds Calculator
Free Poker Room
Private Tournaments
Freeroll Tournaments
World Poker Tour
WPT Articles
Online Poker Tools
Ultimate Poker Store
WPT Television Schedule
WPT Season 5 Results
WPT Season 4 Results
WPT Season 3 Results
WPT Season 2 Results
WPT Season 1 Results
Poker Supplies
Daniel Negreanu's Blog
Poker RSS Feeds
Poker Books
Poker Chips
Poker Tables
Poker Tournament Blog
Tom Sangenito's Blog
WSOP Articles Blog
General Poker Information
WSOP Gallery of Champions
WSOP History
Poker Articles
Site Map
Contact Us
Poker & Casino Links
Poker Advertising
Link Exchange
About Us
Site Directory
Home WSOP WSOP Circuit WSOP Articles WPT WPT Articles Reviews Poker Tools Poker Articles
RSS Feeds Forum Site Map Links Contact Us Poker Supplies Advertise Link Exchange