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Rest Day For WSOP Nine

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发表于 2007-7-18 06:11 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
A look at the nine poker players who play for poker's biggest prize this Tuesday

The survivors of the last ten days of elimination poker that have involved 6 358 hopefuls, are preparing for the climax of the $10 000 buy-in main event - the final table for the 2007 World Series of Poker. The nine players who will compete Tuesday have a rest day today (Monday) before battle is joined.

At risk is a main prize of $8,25 million - substantially less that last year's $12 million but nevertheless impressive and worth fighting for. But every one of the nine survivors from that main event starting field will be well rewarded for their skills and good fortune, as the following list of runner up prizes illustrates:

2nd - $4 840 981
3rd - $3 048 025
4th - $1 852 721
5th - $1 255 069
6th - $956 243
7th - $705 229
8th - $585 934
9th - $525 934

The chip leader going into the big game at noon on Tuesday, Las Vegas time is Philip Hilm, a Dane making a living playing poker online in England who holds over 23 million chips.

Here are the final tablers:

Philip Hilm - chip count $23 070 000

In 2003 Hilm was selling coffee machines when he was introduced to the world of poker by a friend. He read, practiced and finally played online to perfect his game and was soon earning useful income from the game. This led to him becoming a professional player who prefers heads-up cash games online, but travels to play in live events around the world.

Successes in the live poker milieu include two cashes in European Poker Tour events: a fourth place finish at the Scandinavian Open in 2006 and 15th place at the Grand Final in Monte Carlo in 2007. He also has a cash in the 2005 World Series in the $2 500 Short-Handed No-Limit Hold'em event.

The star player and captain of the Poker Stars.com Polish team in 2006, he played in the World Cup of Poker and led his team to victory ahead of Team U.S.A. and Canada.

Tuan Lam - chip count $21 290 000

Middle aged Toronto poker pro Tuan Lam represents the online poker site Poker Stars.com and was born in Vietnam, immigrating to Canada at the age of 19 during the war.

He learned to play poker from friends and is respected as a savvy and highly professional online poker player with a penchant for high-limit cash games. This is his third year at the World Series of Poker, where he has previously had one cash in 2005 and another in 2006. This is the deepest he has gone so far in the main event, and it will be his biggest tournament cash so far no matter where he finishes.

Lam took second place in the six-handed no-limit hold'em event in the 2005 PokerStars World Championship of Online Poker for $55 000, according to the PokerStars Blog.

Jon Kalmar - chip count $20 220 000

The World Series of Poker attracts player from all over the planet, and Kalmar is one of many British entrants this year. He is now the sole survivor from that country, where he hails from Chorley in Lancashire.

Two years ago, the 34-year-old married man was an IT consultant who discovered poker, found he has the temperament and skill to play well and changed his career to become a professional player, describing himself as "a poker geek."

He's enjoyed a number of cashes in live and online events, the most significant hitherto being in the 2005 Main Event where he made 82nd place to win $91 950. He also achieved a 10th place finish in the 2005 European Poker Tour Irish Winter Festival of Poker. His 2007 WSOP effort was unremarkable prior to the main event, and he was on the brink of returning early to the UK when he decided that the charge to change his flight was better spent entering a satellite tournament for the main event. His luck turned, he won a seat in the main event and he has successfully fought his way through to the final table and the big money.

Raymond Rahme - chip count $16 000 000

This affable 62 year old South African is another Poker Stars.com player who has a strong and voluble contingent of supporters livening up the rail action when he plays.

A "semi-retired" entrepreneur from Johannesburg, he has only been playing No-Limit Hold'em for two years. Before that, he was a lifelong and accomplished Seven-Card Stud player.

At 62, Rahme is the oldest participant at the final table, and he also has the privilege of being the first African to appear at a WSOP Main Event final table.

He won his entry into the tournament via the All Africa Poker Championship, where he placed fourth, and part of his prize was a travel package to Las Vegas and a seat in the Main Event. He had the distinction of defining this year's final table by eliminating the 10th player.

Lee Childs - $13 320 000

Lee Childs (35) was formerly a software engineer in Reston, Virginia, but has pursued a career in poker as a preference, and is something of an unknown quantity -  one of three players at the main event final table with no live poker history in the Hendon Mob database. His performance thus far shows a clear flair for the game, and his specialty is online multi-table tournaments. 2007 is his first appearance at the World Series.

Childs' father has been a great supporter throughout the tournament, encouraging him from the rail and he is having a remarkably first main event appearance that will earn him a solid paycheck.

Lee Watkinson - chip count $9 975 000

Despite the relatively short stack at this table, easy going forty year old Lee Watkinson from Cheney, Washington is one of the only two previous WSOP bracelet holders at the final table, and his capabilities in poker and math are widely respected. Besides poker, he is interested in animal rights and runs his own business.

He holds a degree from Washington State in economics and has made savvy investments in businesses such as a record company and clothing group, and leisure pursuits include wrestling and surfing. He shares an ambition with his wife to rescue as many simians used for research, movies, or other purposes as possible and eventually build an animal sanctuary.

Hevad Khan - chip count $9 205 000

Probably the most exuberant and visible player in this year's main event is Internet poker phenomenon Hevad "Rain" Khan from Poughkeepsie, N.Y. His loud celebratory yells and jigs when he has scored a victory have made him the centre of attraction, but behind the public persona is a shrewd and capable brain that (Internet legend has it) can successfully play up to 28 tables at once in the fast lane world of online poker.

Khan plays in Poker Stars.com colours and the legend is that his Internet play was so rapid, large and accurate that he had at one stage to prove to Poker Stars management that he was not a bot! He has claimed to have videotaped himself playing up to 43 tables online.

Khan had already cashed in one preliminary event this year, making it to 41st place in the $1 500 No-Limit Hold'em event. He also made the final table of an event at the The four day, $10 000 buy in World Poker Tour Bellagio Cup III during his stay in Vegas.

Jerry Yang - chip count $8 500 000

Temecula, California-based psychologist Jerry Yang (39) is one of the short-stacks coming into the final table on Tuesday.

Born in Laos, Lang moved to the United States, achieved a Masters Degree in health psychology and now lives in California with his wife and six children, with a career in psychology and social work.

He won his way into the Main Event via a $225 satellite at the Pechanga Resort and Casino and has pledged 10 percent of his winnings from the Main Event to the Make-A-Wish Foundation, Feed the Children and the Ronald McDonald House.

Alex Kravchenko - chip count $6 570 000

Alex Kravchenko hails from Moscow and is the sole Russian at the final table this year. He has enjoyed a successful eight-year poker career in addition to owning and controlling his own business interests.

Kravchenko has had cashes in World Poker Tour and other key events all over the world, and cashed twice during the 2006 World Series of Poker, improving on that with an impressive five WSOP cashes this year. One of those is a bracelet win in the $1 500 Omaha Hi-Lo Split Eight-or-Better event, making him the first Russian World Series of Poker event bracelet winner.
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