Meet Joe Cada in Las Vegas Promo at PokerStars to End this Month

Posted by: admin  //  Category: 2009 WSOP, ACC, APT, Betting, CA, Casino, ESPN, Entertainment, Events, Fox, Fox Sports, Joe Cada, Las Vegas, Million Dollar Challenge, NAPT, Object, Online, Online Poker, Other, PLO, Playboy, Poker, Poker Players, PokerStars, PokerStars.net, Sports, Visit, WSOP, ads, alize, article, b, book, challenge, champion, cities, d, daily, eve, event, final, finals, flight, forum, hot, information, ing, ka, las vegas promo, main event, money, night, november, november-nine, players, poker stars, pokerstars.com, promotions, reviews, running, s, satellites, spa, team, vegas, wedoitallvegas, winning, world, wsop main event

PokerStars is giving poker players the opportunity to meet WSOP Champion and Team PokerStars Pro Joe Cada for free. The daily Meet Joe Cada free-to-play satellites will finalize on February 12th, and the Grand Final will take place on February 13th.

You can participate every day for free until February 12th for your chance at the Las Vegas prize package which includes:

  • Free Entry to NAPT Main Event
  • Flights from any Major U.S. Airport
  • Five-Nights Accommodations
  • A Day with Joe Cada
  • $1,000 Spending Money

The “Meet Joe Cada” satellites are currently running every day at 20:00 ET, 21:00 ET and 23:00 ET with Weekly Final seats up for grabs. The Weekly Finals take place at 18:30 ET on February 7th and 13th, with each of these awarding 18 seats to the Grand Final on February 13th at 21:00 ET.

Joe Cada rose to fame after winning $8,546,435 in the 2009 WSOP and then went on to become one of the elite members of Team PokerStars Pro. PokerStars now gives you the chance to hang out with the poker pro in one of the most exciting cities in the world, Las Vegas.

Visit PokerStars Here

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8f866cbb8cs icon4 Meet Joe Cada in Las Vegas Promo at PokerStars to End this Month

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The North American Poker Tour Debuts (The Return of PokerStars-vs.-PartyPoker?)

Posted by: admin  //  Category: *the rumble, 2009 WSOP, 2009 WSOPE, 311, APT, B.J. Nemeth, Betting, Bill Rini, CA, CES, Casino, Choice, Daniel Negreanu, EPT, ESPN, European Poker Tour, Events, Fashion, Final Table, Fox, Fox Sports En Espanol, Gambling, Inter, Jamie Gold, LIPS, Las Vegas, NAPT, News, Object, Online, Online Poker, Other, PLO, PartyGaming, PartyPoker, Phil Ivey, Poker, Poker Tips, PokerNews, PokerRoad, PokerStars, PokerStars.net, Sports, TUF, The Poker Beat, The Venetian, Tournaments, Tours, UB, UIGEA, UNC, WPT, WPTE, WSOP, World Poker Tour, YES, ads, afternoon, america, b, bahamas, battle, betfair, blogs, book, burn, cast, challenge, classic, competition, country, d, europe, event, fan, final, full tilt, gaming, gold, google, group, ing, internet, jpg, law, legislation, lines, live, main event, media, money, new, north, offer, online gambling, online gaming, party, picture, president, price, reason, recalls, return, s, spa, spring, stuff, style, team, things, thoughts, tilt, time, tour, tournament, united, vegas, venetian, world, wsope

The North American Poker Tour DebutsAm following with interest the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure play out down in Nassau. Checking in on PokerNews’ live reporting as well as the PokerStars blog for all the latest.

Sounds like over 1,500 runners sat down for the two Day Ones, a new record for the PCA. Of course, yesterday the big news coming out of the Bahamas was how the PCA is in fact the first event of the new North American Poker Tour (NAPT). The tour’s next stop will be in Las Vegas in February at the Venetian, then over to the Mohegan Sun in Connecticut in April. Oh, and it sounds like ESPN might be shooting these NAPT final tables for broadcast, a not-insignificant part of the story.

Our buddy B.J. Nemeth has written some about the new NAPT and its challenge to the World Poker Tour (for which Nemeth does live reporting). Check out Nemeth’s post “NAPT vs. WPT: The Battle for North America” for some of his thoughts on the subject. As Nemeth notes, that next NAPT event at the Venetian will directly compete with the WPT’s L.A. Poker Classic in February, so we’ll see right away how the first round of this here fight will go.

Nemeth also alludes in his post to the purchase of World Poker Tour Enterprises by PartyGaming from last year, which reminds me that I had wanted to write a little something on that story again here.

I wrote a couple of those “top ten” lists at the end of 2009 — one compiling the top stories of the year and another listing the top moments of the decade. Such lists are more difficult to pull together than they appear, especially if one is trying to rank the items against one another in some fashion. They’re certainly fun, though, as debate starters. Hell, I immediately felt like challenging my own choices as soon as I made them.

There were at least a couple of stories from 2009 I had considered including in my “Top Poker Stories of 2009” list but ended up leaving out. One was Daniel Negreanu having passed Jamie Gold as the all-time tournament money winner, thanks to the Canadian’s runner-up finish at the 2009 WSOPE Main Event. (Phil Ivey would pass Gold as well following his seventh-place finish at the WSOP.)

Another story I had in the list for a while but then ultimately dropped was the one regarding the purchase of World Poker Tour Enterprises by PartyGaming back in late August 2009. I know several others kept this one in their top ten stories lists for 2009, but I ended up deciding that for the average poker player or fan it hadn’t really registered all that much. I could certainly see, though, how some might view this “insider”-type story as having real some importance down the road.

The news of Party’s purchase of WPTE came not long after we’d heard a story that WPTE had been sold to a group called Gamynia Limited (for $9.075 million). Then Peerless Media Ltd., a division of PartyGaming, came along with a better offer and was able to buy the WPT for $12.3 million. Steve Lipscomb, WPTE’s President and CEO, noted at the time how he looked forward to PartyGaming being able “to provide a strong vehicle for the WPT brand to continue its global expansion and return to online gaming.”

I did write a little something about the purchase here at the time, noting both the relatively small price tag and how it seemed kind of interesting how the fate of poker no longer seemed all that closely tied to the livelihood of the WPT. Such wouldn’t have been the case just a couple of years before, but in 2009, with the European Poker Tour and a host of other tours thriving all over the globe, the fortunes of the fading WPT just didn’t seem as crucial, big picture-wise.

The reason why the purchase — which includes Party getting the WPT branding rights — is viewed by some as a potentially big story is tied to the possibility that the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 could get either overturned or pushed out by new legislation to license and regulate online gambling in the United States. It is thought that by purchasing the WPT brand, PartyPoker will have themselves a handy “vehicle” with which to reenter the U.S. market.

Seems like a lot has to happen, though, for that sequence ever to play out in quite that way. Someone who knows a lot more about these things than I do, Bill Rini, offered some thoughts on the story as well back in August. Rini outlines some of the difficulties Party might face when it comes to returning to the U.S., with or without the WPT brand as a kind of protective shield. Not at all a sure thing, it seems, but perhaps we’ll see.

The North American Poker TourGoing back to Nemeth’s post, the new NAPT — sponsored by PokerStars — now means we have kind of a “PartyPoker-vs.-PokerStars” thing happening again here in the U.S. in the form of these competing tours. Kind of recalls what our little world of online poker was like when I first started this blog in the spring of 2006, back when Party & Stars were the big dogs in the U.S. (with Full Tilt just starting to yap at their heels). Will be very interesting to watch how it all plays out, and, of course, what effect the UIGEA getting overturned and/or bumped by new legislation could have on the competition.

If you’re interested in more on this “insider”-type stuff, I’d suggest listening to some of our fave industry insiders over on The Poker Beat, who return this afternoon (I believe) with a new episode.

27238395 3519770529728311802?l=hardboiledpoker.blogspot The North American Poker Tour Debuts (The Return of PokerStars vs. PartyPoker?)

 The North American Poker Tour Debuts (The Return of PokerStars vs. PartyPoker?)

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Hard-Boiled Poker 2009 Year in Review (3 of 3)

Posted by: admin  //  Category: *the rumble, 2009 WSOP, 2009 WSOP Main Event, 2009 WSOPE, 2009 Year in Review, 2010 WSOP, 2010 WSOP Schedule, 311, Ask, Barry Greenstein, Barry Shulman, Betting, Billy Kopp, Bloggers, CA, CES, CardRunners, Casino, Cheating Scandal, Cher, Comeback, Confessions, Cowboys Full, Daniel Negreanu, Doyle Brunson, EPT, ESPN, Entertainment, Events, FilmChaw, Final Table, Fox, FullTilt, Gambling, Gambling Sites, Harrah’s, Hove, Inter, Isildur1, James McManus, Jeff Shulman, Joe Sebok, John Cage, Jordan Smith, Million Dollar Challenge, NFL, New Year, News, Object, Olly, Online, Online Poker, Other, PEAT, PLO, Patrik Antonius, Phil Gordon, Phil Hellmuth, Phil Ivey, Poker, Poker Hall of Fame, Poker Players, Poker Tips, Poker2Nite, PokerNews, PokerStars, Roland de Wolfe, Scott Huff, Shopping, Sports, St. Augustine, Tactic, Television, The Godfather of Poker, The Invention of Lying, The Seventh Seal, The World Series, Tobias Reinkemeier, Tommy Angelo, Twitter, UB, UIGEA, UNC, UltimateBet, Victoria, Victoria Coren, Visit, WCOOP, WSOP, WSOP Schedule, YES, ads, america, auto, b, balloon boy, barcelona, betfair, biggest, blogs, book, books, burn, business, cast, challenge, champion, championship, cheating, d, days, december, europe, event, final, full tilt, game, gaming, gold, google, green, heads-up, hellmuth, history, hot, house, iMEGA, ing, internet, interview, jordan, jpg, kentucky, law, life, main event, marvel, match, media, movies, nato, new, november, november-nine, october, offer, online gambling, people, person, players, poker books, poll, railing, reading, running, s, schedule, stack sizes, style, tennis, texas, thanksgiving, things, thoughts, tilt, time, upcoming, vegas, wbo, winners, world, world series of poker, writing, wsop main event, wsope, wtf

We are almost there. The last day of the year. How are things stacking up for you, in terms of your win/loss total for 2009? Don’t do anything silly today to try and manipulate it into something you like better.

Me? I might play a little today, but I have a lot of other writing to do, including finishing this here recap. Following Part 1 (Jan.-Apr.) and Part 2 (May-Aug.), here’s the rest of the story:

September

I Get Up, I Get DownIn UIGEA news, a lawsuit brought by the Interactive Media Entertainment and Gaming Association (iMEGA) that challenged the law’s constitutionality was dismissed. This story was strangely spun by many (in particular, iMEGA) as good news because in rejecting the case the 3rd Circuit District Court made reference to the fact that individual states get to say what is and what is not unlawful internet gambling.

Fact was, this distinction had been noted in the UIGEA all along (i.e., this new case didn’t really change anything on that front), something I pointed out in “iMEGA Suit Claiming Unconstitutionality of UIGEA Dismissed.”

During the first part of September I was occupied with helping cover PokerStars’ World Championship of Online Poker (WCOOP), and so there were a few posts this month reporting various happenings there. In the last one of those posts, I was inspired to comment on the repeat successes of guys like Daniel “djk123” Kelly, Bertrand “ElkY” Grospellier, and Yevgeniy “Jovial Gent” Timoshenko in “PokerStars WCOOP Concludes: It’s a Skill Game, Jo.”

Was watching the U.S. Open in there, too, and in “Matching Up Poker and Tennis” I attempt to draw an analogy that addresses the old luck-vs.-skill debate in poker. “The Poker Hall of Fame: Will Anyone Be Worthy?” notes how the new voting procedure appeared to guarantee that either no one or just one person would get in this year. And “When Winners Lose, and Losers Win” relates the story of that wild hand at EPT Barcelona between Tobias Reinkemeier and Roland de Wolfe in which de Wolfe mucked a winner.

As far as my own play was going, I was running good in August and early September, partly evidenced by “Shovels, Clovers, Valentines, and Squares” in which I tell about flopping a straight flush. Then hit a bad patch, some details of which I shared in “I Get Up, I Get Down.” I also see that I began and ended the month with a couple of posts about stack sizes in PLO: “Topping Off” and “Don’t Want No Short People ’Round Here?”

September also saw the Kahnawake Gaming Commission issue its so-called “final decision” on the UB insider cheating scandal, which I talked some about in “Final Decision on UltimateBet: None of My Business.” And, as you’ll recall, soon after came “The Sebok Surprise” in which the well-liked pro signed on with the beleaguered site.

October

The balloon we thought was carrying a boyThe month began with the conclusion of the World Series of Poker Europe Main Event, in which Barry Shulman enjoyed a couple of fortunate hands against Daniel Negreanu heads up to take it down. Talk about that some in “End of Story: 2009 WSOPE Main Event Concludes.”

Then our attention gradually turned toward Vegas and the upcoming conclusion of the WSOP Main Event. On October 7 I noted there was just “One Month Left to Hype the November Nine.” I think Harrah’s, ESPN, et al. ended up doing okay during those next few weeks to get us all (and others) interested in the sucker come November. Case in point, a week later in “That’s the Way We Do It” I admit how I was starting really to get into the ESPN broadcasts of the Main Event. And near the end of October I was marveling with everyone else at that hand in which Phil Ivey mistakenly mucked his flush, giving Jordan Smith an undeserved pot in “Not Exactly Ivey League.”

These posts from October all have self-explanatory titles, I think: “PokerStars Million Dollar Challenge Debuts,” “The Poker Hall of Fame: Sexton Selected,” and “Kentucky Still Hoping to Be Master of Your Domains.” Well, maybe I should explain that last one. Had to do with the still-ongoing appeal of the appeal, now being considered by Kentucky’s Supreme Court, in that case regarding the commonwealth’s desire to block or seize domains hosting online gambling sites.

Then there are some posts in there with titles that definitely need explainin’. “Playing As If Your Life Depended On It” made references to both Tommy Angelo and The Seventh Seal. “Up, Up, and Away!” concerns our friend “balloon boy” (remember him?). And “Call and Response” does a little theorizin’ about the significance of blogs, Twitter, and how we use this here interweb to relate to each other.

Early in the month I made it to the movies to see a decent comedy called The Invention of Lying. I reviewed that one over on Film Chaw, then wrote about it here, too, in “First, the Invention of Lying; then, the Invention of Poker.” That post caused me to evoke James McManus’ new book (which I was reading at the time), Cowboys Full: The Story of Poker. I’d eventually review it here in “A Good Read: McManus Tells the Story of Poker.” Soon I’d additionally get the chance to review Cowboys Full more formally over on the Betfair site, where I’d also interview McManus.

November

First half of November was all about the WSOP Main Event final table. In “Post-Production is 20/20” I talked some more about Ivey’s mistake versus Jordan Smith, including sharing Barry Greenstein’s thoughts on the matter. Then in “Kopp Busted!” I talked about seeing ESPN’s coverage of another crazy hand, the one in which Billy Kopp lost it all to Darvin Moon with just a dozen players left.

Then we finally got there. In “2009 November Nine Just Hours Away… Time for Special Tactics!” I talked a bit about Phil Hellmuth saying he’d coached Jeff Shulman to employ a “special tactic” to “shock the world.” Then I gave an overview of the nine players at the final table in “2009 WSOP Main Event Final Table: Welcome Back, November Nine.”

Discussed that bizarro Hand No. 90 in which Darvin Moon made the big bluff then folded for next-to-nothing to Steve Begleiter in “Moon Begs the Question… WTF?” Wrote about the heads-up match a bit in “Comeback Kid Cada 2009 WSOP Main Event Champ,” then a few days later offered “Kudos to Cada: WSOP Champ on Letterman.” A final November Nine post, “Looking Back: 2009 WSOP November Nine on ESPN,” includes a list of the 32 (of 364) final table hands that made it into the two-and-a-half hour long ESPN broadcast.

You’ll recall it was just a few days later we learned “Pollack Moves On, WSOP Commish Seat Open.” Harrah’s still hasn’t filled that seat, and toward the end of the month I asked “Does the WSOP Need a Commish?”

Let’s see… the weird-ass juxtaposition of the month award goes to the post “The Sklansky Minute and John Cage’s Indeterminacy.” (See that one for yourself, if yr curious.) And “$1,356,946.50” relates how I happened to have been railing Isidur1 and Patrik Antonius when I saw them play the biggest pot in online poker history.

As the month concluded, we American online poker players were all fretting about the upcoming December 1 deadline for enforcement of the UIGEA. I wrote “The Door is Closing: Hoping for UIGEA Delay,” then the next day (Thanksgiving) got to say “Thankful, I Am” as we’d heard that indeed there’d be a six-month postponement of the deadline.

December

Full Tilt: Admit OneMonth began with that House hearing on online gambling, discussed in “Talking Online Poker: House Hearing Today.” Then everybody put the subject on hold. ’Cos, you know, there was shopping to do. Oh, and that health care thing.

Read a couple more poker books near year’s end, both autobiographies. I’d review Doyle Brunson’s The Godfather of Poker over at Betfair, but also wrote a piece here — “Doyle Brunson’s Confessions” — in which I talked about how the book reminded me more than once of St. Augustine’s autobiography. (Not saying Doyle’s a saint, haha!) I also wrote here a “Poker Book Review: Victoria Coren’s For Richer, For Poorer: A Love Affair With Poker” — a funny, even “literary” book I’d think should appeal to any poker player who likes good storytelling.

Opined a bit on Scott Huff and Joe Sebok’s new Fox Sports show in “Poker2Nite Brings Poker to the World.” The post “Speaking of Poker: What You Can and Cannot Say, Part II” is also about their show, revisiting an old topic regarding the conflict between online poker sponsorships and television.

Mid-month saw the “2010 WSOP Schedule Announced,” inspiring a bit of photshopping (see below). In much less significant news, I finally got response to my repeated requests to UltimateBet which I related in “The Rest of the Story (UB Hand Histories).”

Of course, the big poker story in December was the ongoing Isildur1 saga, and I wrote about it a few times here.

“Out of This World: The Isildur1 Saga Continues” discusses Patrik Antonius’s interview with Phil Gordon about the mystery man while also pointing to some other stories then swirling about. In “Loving Life, Defying Death” I talked about railing Isildur1 a bit while also referring back to Doyle Brunson’s book (and the weird, repeated joke of some railbirds prematurely announcing Texas Dolly’s death). “Digging for Gold (Mining Isildur1)” took up the new controversy regarding the CardRunners guys’ collecting info about the sneaky Swede. Then came PokerNews’ interview with Isildur1 in which revealed he planned to pursue a “formal complaint.” I suggested “Grab Your Popcorn (Isildur1 v. Full Tilt).”

2010: The Year We Make ContactSo that’s what’s been happenin’ here. No telling at the moment what 2010 will be like for yr humble gumshoe, but I imagine continuing to scribble away here will most definitely be part of the plan.

Big thanks again to everyone for coming around here and for all of the nice feedback. Be sure and make contact again in 2010. Have a safe and happy new year, all!

27238395 6916223982231127735?l=hardboiledpoker.blogspot Hard Boiled Poker 2009 Year in Review (3 of 3)

 Hard Boiled Poker 2009 Year in Review (3 of 3)

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NBC’s Poker After Dark Season 6 returns on January 4th

Posted by: admin  //  Category: 2009 WSOP, Alabama, Andy Bloch, Articles, Bonus, CA, CES, Casino, Dan Henderson, Doyle Brunson, Entertainment, Erick Lindgren, FullTilt, FullTiltPoker, Gambling, Games, Germany, Golden Nugget Hotel, High Stakes Poker, Hotels, Jean-Robert Bellande, Joe Sebok, Las Vegas, Mike Matusow, Mixed Martial Arts, NBC, News, Object, Online, Other, PEAT, PLO, Patrik Antonius, Phil Gordon, Phil Hellmuth, Phil Laak, Poker, Poker Hall of Fame, Poker News, Poker Players, Poker Tips, Tom Dwan, Tournaments, UNC, WSOP, Williams, absolut, ads, article, australia, b, biggest, book, bracelet, bracelet winner, charity, d, dates, days, durrrr, episodes, event, fan, forum, full tilt, full tilt poker, fulltiltpoker.com, game, gold, golden nugget, gus hansen, hellmuth, hot, hotel, information, ing, line up, match, new, october, odds, odds to win, past, players, poker after dark, poker shows, qualifiers, race, randy couture, remaining, return, reviews, s, schedule, season, spa, tilt, time, vegas, wedoitallvegas, winners, world, world series of poker

NBC’s Poker After Dark will be back on January 4th for a new season featuring thirteen new players and a mixture of regulars from previous seasons.Poker After Dark season 6, recorded in October 2009 at the Golden Nugget Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, will air thirteen new episodes, seven in the traditional six-handed winner-take-all freezeout format and six in cash games. Ali Nejad will return to Poker After Dark to provide commentary, while the popular and beautiful Leeann Tweeden will returns for her third season as the show’s host. Season 6 will kick off on January 4th, in its regular 2:05 a.m timeslot on NBC. The remaining dates will be determined and announced in the following days.

Here’s a preview of some of the matches and the players taking part in each match in the order they will be aired:

Commentators III: Howard Lederer, Gabe Kaplan, Joe Sebok, Ali Nejad, Mark Gregorich, and Kara Scott.

Nicknames:
Norway’s  Annette “The Huntress” Obrestad, Mike “The Mouth” Matusow, Antonio “The Magician” Esfandiari, Erick “E-Dog” Lindgren, Phil “The Unabomber” Laak, and Phil “The Poker Brat” Hellmuth.

Cash game ($50,000 minimum buy-in): Brandon Adams, Todd Brunson, Chris Ferguson, Mike Matusow, Antonio Esfandiari, and Phil Hellmuth.

My Favorite Pro: Online amateur qualifiers Craig Ivey from Australia and James Ashby from Alabama, special Full Tilt Poker qualifier professional Jens Voertmann from Germany, along with the 2009 Howard Lederer Charity Event winner professional Steve Bartlett from Michigan, plus World Series of Poker bracelet winners Phil Hellmuth and Chris Ferguson.

He Said, She Said: Erica Schoenberg, Jean-Robert Bellande, David Grey, Karina Jett, Mike Matusow, and Annie Duke.

Cash game ($100,000 minimum buy-in): Phil Hellmuth, Eli Elezra, Doyle Brunson, Tom Dwan, Gus Hansen, and Phil Laak.

Lonesome Shark: Erick Lindgren, James Akenhead, Antonio Esfandiari, Mike Matusow, David Williams, and Brad Booth.

Mixed Martial Arts: Bruce Buffer, Patrik Antonius, Dan Henderson, Randy Couture, Howard Lederer, and Erick Lindgren.

Cash game ($150,000 minimum buy-in): Tom “Durrrr” Dwan, Patrik Antonius, David Peat, Eli Elezra, Gabe Kaplan, and Alan Meltzer.

Charity in Mind: Phil Gordon, Chris Ferguson, Jennifer Harman, Howard Lederer, Andy Bloch, and Annie Duke.

Full Tilt Poker

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6ba01eab1f468x607 150x19 NBC’s Poker After Dark Season 6 returns on January 4th

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Daniel Alaei Wins Doyle Brunson Five Diamond World Poker Classic

Posted by: admin  //  Category: 2009 WSOP, CA, Casino, Doyle Brunson, Las Vegas, Las Vegas Poker News, Object, Online, Online Poker, Other, PLO, Poker, Scotty Nguyen, The Championship, UNC, WPT, WSOP, World Poker Tour, ads, alaei, b, bellagio, book, bracelet, champion, championship, classic, customer, d, doylesroom, doylesroom.com, event, field, heads-up, hot, ing, jpg, main event, night, offer, players, qualifiers, race, s, tour, tournament, vegas, winning, world, wsop main event

photo by flipchip • lasvegasvegas.com
Five Diamond World Poker Classic
Daniel Alaei walked away with $1.4 million after winning the Doyle Brunson Five Diamond World Poker Classic at the Bellagio in Las Vegas

Daniel Christopher Alaei outlasted a poker pro rich field of 328 players to claim his first World Poker Tour title. The high-stakes poker player has won two WSOP bracelets, 2006 and 2009. His best WSOP Main Event finish was 25th in 2007.

The tournament got down to heads-up with Daniel Alaei facing Josh Arieh for the championship, but it was all Alaei on this night. Daniel Alaei received $1,428,430 while Josh Arieh left with $952,290. WSOP Main Event champion Scotty Nguyen finished 5th and pocketed $249,976 for his efforts.

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