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2007 Horseshoe Casino
Council Bluffs
World Series of Poker
(WSOP) Circuit Event
Event #7
$300 Limit Hold'em
Tournament Report
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2007 Horseshoe Council Bluffs WSOP Circuit Event Report
Tool Maker Tom Hoffman Makes It
To Winner’s Circle in $300 Limit Event
at Horseshoe Council Bluffs
PokerStars
Thomas Hoffman, a 45-year-old tool maker from Denton, Nebraska, had a
fairly easy time of it as he built up a big lead and roared ahead to a win in
the seventh event of the
WSOP Circuit Tour at Horseshoe Casino Council
Bluffs, $300 limit hold’em. This was the only limit tournament in the line-up,
and the final event before the start of the three-day, $5,000 buy-in
championship that gets underway tomorrow.

Hoffman has been playing poker for 20 years, learning by “taking expensive
lessons from the best players in Lincoln.” Normally he plays no-limit cash
games, but decided on a whim to take a short at this limit tournament. First
place tonight brought him $14,520 and a handsome gold trophy ring.

Hoffman is married with two children, has a college education and his other
hobby is classic cars.

Final table action started with 1,000-1,500 blinds and a full hour on the clock.
With 45,000 chips, 50 percent more than anyone else, John Evans was the
chip leader.  

Seats and chip counts

SEAT 1        Curt Aust      
SEAT 2        
Tom Hoffman
SEAT 3        Duane Capes
SEAT 4        Brett Everson
SEAT 5        Paul Beveridge
SEAT 6        Gary Starrett
SEAT 7        Shawn Ng
SEAT 8        John Beane
SEAT 9        John Evans

The first big action came on hand 15 when John Beane flopped a set of 7s,
only to see Duane Capes make a set of queens on the turn.

First out, five hands later, was Paul Beveridge. Holding Q-9, he had a strong
two pair when the board showed A-Q-4-9, but Duane Capes, with A-9, had
made a stronger two pair.

Beveridge, 58, is a law school graduate from Omaha who has been playing
poker for 40 years, starting out with high school friends. This is his first Circuit
event. Beveridge, who earned $896 for finishing ninth, said his poker
highlight previously was being a “bad-beat winner” at Prairie Meadows. He
enjoys golf, fishing and hunting and says his retriever will not let him leave
the house without him.

As the hour came down to the last hand, Shawn Ng looked down at pocket
kings. Slowplaying, he let Hoffman, with pocket queens, do the betting. With
a board of 10-9-2-6, Ng bet all-in blind. The last card (ugh!) was a queen,
and the bad beat left Ng in eighth place.

Ng, originally from Malaysia, now lives in Lincoln, Nebraska. This is his first
Circuit try. He has a college education, enjoys chess, and tonight picked up
$1,344 for eighth place.

On the 40th hand, limits went to 2,000 and 4,000. John Evans was the next
player to bust out. He was all in on the button with K-J and couldn’t catch up
to Curt Aust’s A-6. He finished seventh and took home $1,793 for his
efforts.    

Evans is a poker player age 43, originally from Ontario and now living in
Olathe, Kansas. He’s been playing for 10 years.

As action continued, an all-in John Beane survived when his pocket jacks
stood up to Gary Starrett’s pocket 9s.

This table started at 2 p.m., and at 4 p.m., a second final table, for the
$1,500 no-limit event, got underway simultaneously. With two final tables
playing at once, along with the Super Bowl eliciting cheers and screams from  
poker players and spectators in the adjoining bar, things got hectic, to say
the very least.

Just as the Super Bowl got underway, John Beane got tackled on the six-yard
line, with sixth paying $2,241. He was all in from the small blind with just
7c-6c, and four players who smelled blood went after him. Two dropped out,
and on the end, with a board of 8-4-2-10-A, Brett Everston, with A-8, made
the kill with two pair.  

Beane, 59, is a retiree from Omaha, Nebraska. He’s been playing poker for
2-1/2 years, and making this final table is his only real tournament
accomplishment to date. His other main hobby is golf.

By this time, Hoffman had moved up into a comfortable lead, with about
120,000 of the 232,000 chips on the table.

Blinds now went to 3,000-6,000. Duane Capes, 53, is a business owner from
Rochelle, Illinois. He went out in fifth place, which brought him $2,689. He
flopped a set of 8s, but Hoffman, holding Ks-Js, caught him by making a flush
on the river.

Capes has 35 years of poker experience under his belt, but has yet to win a
Circuit event in three tries. His other hobbies include hunting and fishing.

Moving right along, Gary Starrett was next out, and once again Hoffman did
the honors. He was down to one chip in the small blind with Q-3. Hoffman
had an 8 in his hand, flopped another one, and that’s all it took.

Starrett, 59, is a contractor from Negaunee, Michigan, who’s been playing
poker for 40 years. This is his second Circuit attempt. His biggest tournament
cash-in by far came last year when he finished 45th in the
WPT $25,0000
championship event at Bellagio’s Five-Star World Poker Classic, which paid
$58,585. He learned to play poker at home games, his other hobby is pool,
and for finishing fourth he took home $3,585.

Brett Evertsen was next to depart when he was cut down by Hoffman’s
straight. By now, Hoffman had a very big lead and seemed unstoppable.

Evertsen, 42, is self-employed and lives in Elkhorn, Nebraska. He’s been
playing for 12 years, and the high point of his poker came when he won
$9,800 for a royal flush bonus. For finishing third in this tournament he
cashed out for $4,481.

Hoffman’s final opponent was Aust, a 25-year-old accountant from Omaha.
Aust hung on for a while, once doubling up when he was all in with Q-9 and
flopped a 9 to outrun Hamilton’s K-3. But he couldn’t get close to Hamilton’s
chip total. He finally went out quietly holding 8h-4s. Hamilton was way ahead
with Jd-10c. Aust pulled ahead briefly when the flop brought 7-7-4, but his
paired 4s were beaten when a jack on the river gave Hamilton the higher
pair.

Aust learned the game of poker 10 years ago from his grandfather. This is his
first Circuit event. He enjoys golf and baseball and wants the ladies out there
to know that he’s “single, available and lonely.”

He’s also $7,618 richer after his second-place finish, so go get him, girls. He
needs a dependent for an income tax write-off now.

Report by Max Shapiro

To view a complete listing of results for Event #3 of the 2007 Horseshoe
Council Bluffs WSOP Circuit Event, click on the link below:

2007 Horseshoe Council Bluffs WSOP Circuit Results - Event #7

World Series of Poker Commissioner – Jeffrey Pollack
Director of Poker Operations for Harrah’s Entertainment – Jack Effel
World Series of Poker Circuit Tournament Director – Janis Sexton Horseshoe
Casino Council Bluffs Poker Room Manager – Gary Margetson
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