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  #1  
Old 11-09-05, 08:42 AM
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ya, but i loved how about 15 min. later in that same episode he tried to push lederer around again and got caught when lederer had aces and danneman lost a big portion of his stack - he didnt jump on the phone and brag that time now did he
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  #2  
Old 11-09-05, 09:49 AM
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Danneman seems like a pretty cool guy. He's from MD and he calls into a local sports radio show (guys always talking poker). He had some good stories from the WSOP.

On a related note, he lives pretty close to Brian
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Old 11-09-05, 11:53 AM
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The mouth won.
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  #4  
Old 11-09-05, 12:52 PM
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Maybe he can pay off a few more markers with this second million.

Well done, Mike.
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  #5  
Old 11-09-05, 03:30 PM
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I sense a "Las Vegas Man Dies of Celebratory Binge Drinking" headline on the horizon....
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Old 11-09-05, 09:42 PM
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2005 Tournament of Champions
Caesars Palace – Las Vegas
Official Report

Final Day
No-Limit Hold’em
Number of Entries: 114
Total Prize Money: $2,000,000

Official Results:

1st – Mike “The Mouth” Matusow Las Vegas, NV $1,000,000
2nd – Hoyt Corkins Glenwood, AL $ 325,000
3rd – Phil Hellmuth, Jr. Palo Alto, CA $ 250,000
4th – Tony ‘The Lizard’ Bloom London, England $ 150,000
5th – Steve Dannenmann Severn, MD $ 100,000
6th – Grant ‘G-Money’ Lang Brookfield, CT $ 75,000
7th – David Levi Las Vegas, NV $ 50,000
8th – Keith Sexton Dayton, OH $ 25,000
9th – Brandon Adams New Orleans, LA $ 25,000


Veni, Vidi, Vici!

Mike Matusow Comes, Sees and Conquers
the 2005 Tournament of Champions at Caesars Palace Las Vegas

After a long year of many disappointments, Matusow wins electrifying final table

It was, quite simply, one of the greatest final tables of all time. It had everything – drama, tragedy, humor, passion, laughter, tears, a fight, a downfall, a comeback, and an ending no one could possibly have predicted.

It was twenty times longer than an episode of “SportsCenter”, eight times longer than the movie “Rounders”, and four times longer than a Super Bowl game. Clocking in at just over 11 hours, it was perhaps the only final table where the standing-room only crowd departed the arena feeling completely exhausted -- yet wanting, even screaming for more.

It was a final table which had nine compelling stories. The second place finisher in the Main Event at this year’s World Series of Poker (WSOP); a player who arrived at the final table as chip leader at his last big tournament, busted out a disappointing fifth; a player who has grinded out a living for ten years on the tournament trail but who has yet to earn a televised breakthrough victory; a poker megalomaniac who finished second in the Tournament of Champions (TOC) last year; a player who has enjoyed tremendous success in poker recently, but who had not won a WSOP-related event in 13 long years; a professional poker player who has yet to win a major poker tournament. although he has made it to several final tables; a player from New Orleans who barely qualified for the TOC and lost much in the devastation that was Hurricane Katrina; an Englishman who has won big events overseas, but who has yet to make it big on the American poker scene; and finally, there was a fabulously-talented, admired by some, despised by others poker pro who started off the year as far away from a table at Caesars Palace and ESPN television cameras as humanly possible. Whoever won, had a great story.

The 2005 TOC concluded in a way which will be the yardstick of all future televised tournaments. Some events, such as the World Series of Poker may be considerably bigger, but no major poker tournament has ever offered so much human drama as the three-day invitational event, which concluded late on a Tuesday night at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. Fortunately, ESPN was there to capture it all for posterity. A special three-hour telecast will air on Dec. 24 from 1-4 pm EST. Postpone the holidays and let Santa Claus wait on the delivery of presents. When the TOC airs on Christmas Eve, you won’t want to miss this one.

The nine finalists for the 2005 Tournament of Champions and starting chip-counts were:

SEAT 1: Steve Dannenmann $122,000 in chips
SEAT 2: Grant Lang $ 61,500 in chips
SEAT 3: David Levi $ 41,000 in chips
SEAT 4: Phil Hellmuth $281,500 in chips
SEAT 5: Hoyt Corkins $ 95,000 in chips
SEAT 6: Keith Sexton $ 95,500 in chips
SEAT 7: Brandon Adams $135,500 in chips
SEAT 8: Tony Bloom $130,000 in chips
SEAT 9: Mike Matusow $179,000 in chips

The final table’s opening moments began with a series of hysterical pranks. The banter made it seem more like a comedy act than a multi-million dollar poker tournament. Given the colorful cast of characters, it was hardly surprising that egoistical Phil Hellmuth would be everyone’s favorite target. It all started off when Mike Matusow joked with Hellmuth about his new line of designer sunglasses. Matusow had his own designer label and whipped out a pair of sunglasses, which will require one to use the imagination. Superimposed in the lenses was a hand, with one extended finger, tilted upward. One gets the idea.

Steve Dannenmann had his own prank in store for Hellmuth. Knowing that the telecast will air on Christmas Eve, Dannenmann presented Hellmuth with a colorfully wrapped holiday gift. Hellmuth was shocked. Encouraged to open the gift by the audience, Hellmuth unwrapped his box like a 4-year-old and pulled out a doll resembling a donkey. The audience roared. Even Hellmuth cracked a smile. Ironically, the jovial spirit which characterized the Hellmuth-Dannenmann relationship early would become increasingly poisonous from that moment forward.

With cards in the air, the first big hand of the day took place when Hoyt Corkins found himself in a horrible spot. He was dealt pocket Queens against Brandon Adams’ pocket Aces. Just when it looked like Corkins would be the first casualty of the day, an angelic Queen on the turn delivered saintly salvation and Corkins went from being one step away from the rail to second place in the chip count. What a huge hand that turned out to be. The $220,000 pot put Corkins onto the heels of Hellmuth. Meanwhile, Brandon Adams was down to his last $30,000.

(continued)
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  #7  
Old 11-09-05, 09:44 PM
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9th Place – Brandon Adams arrived as a crowd favorite. The amateur player from New Orleans who lost so much in Hurricane Katrina was playing for far more meaningful reasons than just a poker championship. Adams pledged that ten percent of his tournament win would be donated to the Hurricane Katrina relief effort. It was a remarkable gesture since he and his family lost many of their possessions in the hurricane and flood. Had Adams won the TOC, it would have been the ‘feel-good’ story of the year. As it turned out, Adams could not recover from the devastating early beat. Adams collected $25,000 in prize money.

8th Place – The hand which eliminated Keith Sexton was even more cruel. He went from big dog, to big favorite, to big dog within a 45 second span. Sexton was dealt pocket Tens. Hoyt Corkins picked up pocket Queens (again). Sexton moved all-in with a re-raise before the flop. Corkins quickly called. Corkins was a definitive favorite when the flop fell with all blanks – 9-4-2. But a Ten rained down on the turn and shocked the room full of spectators. Just when it looked like Corkins would lose in the same manner where he doubled-up, the river was dealt. Wham! A Queen rocked the table and Sexton’s dreams were crushed. All Corkins could do was shake his head in disbelief and rake in a huge $305,000 pot. Keith Sexton earned $25,000 in prize money, but was clearly disappointed with the outcome.

That extraordinary hand was the first in a series of earthquakes which shook Phil Hellmuth. The 1989 world poker champion went card dead during the early stages of the final table and watched as his tall towers of chips slowly disappeared. By essentially busting the first two players, Corkins rocketed into the chip lead for the first time and surpassed the $300,000 mark. It was the first occasion since late on Day One that Phil Hellmuth was not the tournament chip leader.

7th Place – David Levi’s patience earned him an extra $25,000. Hopelessly short-stacked from the start, Levi survived two full hours and catapulted into seventh place, moving from an anticipated $25,000 in prize money up to a cash of $50,000. Levi had an opportunity to move up even higher. He moved all-in with A-Q and caught a Queen on the flop. But Mike Matusow hijacked the top pair with his pocket Aces and crushed Levi’s dream of staging a comeback. David Levi, a former pro soccer player from Israel who now plays poker full time, earned $50,000 in this freeroll. Not bad for three days of poker playing.

6th Place – An hour passed before the next elimination. Grant Lang went out on a hand that was baffling to the casual observer. But given the scenario, the hand actually serves as a demonstration of what tournament poker is like at the highest level. After not playing a big pot for a while, Lang was dealt 9-5 of diamonds in the big blind. He called a raise by Tony Bloom, sitting in late position. The flop came K-J-10, normally a fold situation for the 9-5, but Lang played his opponent and the situation, hoping (wrongly, as it turned out) that his opponent might fold a stronger hand. Lang moved all-in after Bloom bet out. He said later that he hoped Bloom had a small pair and would fold. Lang went on to say he hoped Bloom would give him credit for A-K (top pair, top kicker). Unfortunately, Lang picked the wrong time to be creative. Bloom had pocket Aces all along, and Lang’s mental gymnastics resulted in a crash and burn in sixth place. Lang, a.k.a. “G-Money” collected $75,000 for sixth place.

With that hand, Corkins still retained his chip lead with nearly $400,000. Bloom was second with $230,000. Meanwhile, Hellmuth continued to lose ground. He was down to $145,000 when play became five-handed. Then, more fireworks came.

Tony Bloom took a tough blow when he had Steve Dannenmann all-in and drawing slim. Dannenmann was dealt A-4 of hearts and tried to steal, but Bloom woke up with A-K and called. Desperate for hearts, the deck delivered. Two hearts flopped and a third heart came on the turn, giving Dannenmann new tournament life. Dannenmann flashed a big smile, looking like the cat that ate the canary. Suddenly, Dannenmann was back in the race with $185,000 in chips.

Then, it was Bloom who caught a big hand, doubling up against Hoyt Corkins. Bloom moved all-in after the flop came A-10-2 (all spades). Bloom had K-Q, with the Queen of spades. Corkins thought for a while, then called holding J-10, with the Jack of spades. Bloom was facing elimination, and then caught a lifesaving Jack on the river which completed a straight. Corkins two pair hit the muck and Bloom was back in the game. That marked Corkins’ first serious setback at the final table.

At a final table with so much at stake, and with so many combustible personalities, an explosion was foreseeable. What wasn’t expected was who would light the fuse. Bothered by Phil Hellmuth’s constant toying with his chips, and not stacking them in a conventional manner which allowed them to be easily counted by opponents, Steve Dannenmann had enough and insisted that Hellmuth cease his covert chip activities. Hellmuth refused. That brought about a barrage of insults that made for great television, but which certainly detracted from the jovial spirit which had characterized the final table up to that point.

“I don’t understand why you can’t stack your chips like everyone else,” the normally reserved Dannenmann declared. “You are disrespecting the game.”

Still, Hellmuth refused to comply.

“I’m here playing as an amateur, and I know I’m up against professionals,” Dannenmann said. “You above everyone else should know the rules…..you sell all those books and products. But you aren’t a professional – you’re a punk!”

Coming from Matusow, the insult might have been expected. But delivered by the normally soft-spoken Dannenmann, the words stung the crowd like diving into a wasps’ nest. Half of the audience had their mouths open in disbelief. The other half were bent over in hysterical laughter. Unfortunately, the casualty of the verbal barrage would ultimately be Steve Dannenmann himself. He lost two critical pots, which destroyed what might have one of poker’s greatest soap operas.

Dannenmann’s first blow was one for the ages. Mike Matusow, who chatted incessantly throughout the initial stages of the final table, became decreasingly vocal as his stack-size dwindled. Unable to needle his favorite target (Hellmuth), Matusow was silenced when he was all-in with A-K against Steve Dannenmann’s pocket Jacks. By the fourth card, Matusow was in serious trouble. The Jacks were best, but four hearts were on the table, including Matusow’s Ace of hearts. Desperate for an Ace, King, or heart, he leapt into the air, fists raised, when a heart tumbled down on the river. Matusow spiked his flush and the standing room only crowd went wild. As it turned out, that would be a huge hand. Even more ironic was the fact that at last year’s WSOP final table in the Main Event, Dannenmann eliminated Matusow when he caught runner-runner hearts. Payback time.

5th Place – Steve Dannenmann’s misery continued. He tried to make a move at the pot with A-10 after the flop came Q-J-3. On a semi-bluff, Dannenmann moved all-in and Mike Matusow quickly called with K-Q. The top pair held up. Dannenmann was out. Steve Dannenmann, a self-described amateur poker player who is “the fourth best poker player in his weekly poker game (quoting him from the 2005 World Series of Poker),” finished in fifth place and collected $100,000.

The real story is what took place in the post-elimination interview. With ESPN cameras rolling, Dannenmann blasted Phil Hellmuth. “We don’t need players like that in the sport,” Dannenmann said, raising a few eyebrows. Adding insult to injury, Dannenmann stated unequivocally, “Mike Matusow is the best player I have ever played with.” As they say, war and poker create very strange bedfellows.

4th Place – Tony Bloom was blinded down to his last $100,000 in chips. He made a fateful call when he took K-8 up against Phil Hellmuth’s A-Q. Both players flopped a pair, but Hellmuth’s pair of Queens topped Bloom’s Eights. Bloom wilted. Tony ‘The Lizard’ Bloom, one of Europe’s most dynamic young stars, slithered away in fourth place and collected $150,000.

It was interesting that the three players who had dominated the Tournament of Champions from Day One ended up as the final trio of combatants. Hellmuth and Matusow had the chip lead during most of the tournament. Meanwhile, Hoyt Corkins (third after Day One to Hellmuth who was first, and Matusow who was second) vacillated up and down in the chip count before catching lightning early at the final table and stealing the chip-lead away from the two chatterboxes.

The next hand appeared mind boggling at first glance. But upon closer inspection, it revealed the strategic complexity of tournament poker. Corkins, dealt 5-4 suited, made a seemingly inexplicable play when he re-raised enough to put Matusow’s all-in before the flop. Matusow had A-6 and called. The Ace-high held up and Corkins had just given Matusow renewed confidence and $150,000 in chips. Corkins would later explain that he thought Matusow was weak and would not play a big pot with a marginal hand. “My re-raise was just big enough to possibly make Mike lay down the hand,” Corkins explained. “Even if Mike had two overcards like I believed and decided to call, I was still not that much of a dog and had (correct) pot odds.”

(continued)
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