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The Chip Board Archive 07

World Series of Poker Event #31!

My friend Mike Paulle has given me permission to post his daily reports for each event of the World Series of Poker this year to the ChipBoard! Below is his report on Event #31. Andy - Las Vegas

WORLD SERIES OF POKER 2002

EVENT #31 1/2 HOLD'EM--1/2 SEVEN CARD STUD
Friday, May 17, 2002
$2,000 BUY-IN
$2,000 in chips

THE NINTH TIME'S A CHARM

Only a handful of players have made as many Final Tables in the last few years
as our winner today, but none of those elite have had such difficulty winning a
bracelet.

There were 144 entrants in the $2,000 Buy-In, Half Hold'em, Half Stud for a
total prize pool of $270,720. Two tables were paid, a total of 16 players.

To setup the Final Table Friday night, Jeff Pierce started with split 5's and
made 5's full. Jim Athanas started with split A's and made Aces up. Eight half
awake--half asleep players got to go to bed.

THE FINAL TABLE: 38 mins left of 90. The game is Stud. $300 ante, $600
bring-in. Playing $2k/$4k.

Player Hometown Chip Count

Seat 1 Paul McKinney Princeton WV $31,600
Seat 2 Jeff Pierce Las Vegas NV $21,900
Seat 3 Ram Vaswani London, UK $43,400
Seat 4 Max Stern San Jose, Costa Rica $13,700
Seat 5 Tony Criniti Southampton PA $65,500
Seat 6 Dan Heimiller Livonia MI $51,800
Seat 7 Alan Boston Las Vegas NV $47,300
Seat 8 Don Zewin Las Vegas NV $12,800

With the ever-present chomped, unlit cigar in his mouth, Paul McKinney was
first to leave this one. He didn't have enough chips to ignore split 9's even
while seeing a raise from a Queen door card. Paul was all-in on 5th St and made
10's and 9's on the river. No good. The Queen was a pair and another pair came
on the river for Queens up.

Don Zewin was 3rd in the Championship Final several years ago. He doesn't play
in many events so his success ratio is still high. But Don couldn't find a hand
today and went all-in from the big blind for his last two chips without looking
at his hand. "I might chicken out, if I look." The only equity Zewin would get
was with the big blind hand. Don turned over K 4, which was dominated in 7th
place by Alan Boston's K 9.

Dr. Max Stern isn't having any trouble getting to a Final Table, but reaching
the big bucks has proved difficult. The retired Pediatrician still has a
child's enthusiasm for the game, even after repeated disappointments. He is a
prime example of the power of perseverance. But Max does get frustrated, just
as we all do. Unlike most of us, however, Dr. Stern's frustration is most
commonly displayed after he's 'in the money.' Max pounded the table when Jeff
Pierce showed him pocket Aces. Stern had gone all-in for his case money with A
J. Bye, Doc; we'll probably be seeing you back here again soon.

'Boston' is a poker name for Alan. He has so many Final Table appearances; they
had to be added up from the three different names he's cashed under. Generally
regarded as a Stud specialist, he's actually a College Basketball handicapping
specialist with a book written about him called "The Odds." Odds were that Alan
wasn't going any higher than 5th with the cards he was getting. On fumes when
the game changed back to Stud, Boston couldn't do beans with Ace high against
Tony Criniti's pair of 4's.

Another guy who couldn't Pierce the big money was Jeff Pierce. Jeff was so hot
from the start; you had to wonder if he'd peaked too early. That seemed to be
the case as Dan Heimiller and Ram Vaswani chipped away at Jeff's stack on every
hand. Like Alan Boston, Jeff Pierce is considered a Stud specialist. Maybe
Jeff's expertise got him into trouble in his last hand. It's obvious to
everyone watching, so it must be doubly obvious to Pierce that Ram Vaswani
bluffs a lot. Pierce went all-in for $15k with a pair of sevens against Ram's
Ace showing. Jeff was a mutt on this hand as Ram really did have Aces. Vaswani,
the English golden boy of the moment, made Aces up to Pierce Jeff's dream of
another bracelet in 4th.

The statisticians tell us that it is just as likely for a starting chip leader
to finish 2nd or 3rd as it is to finish 1st. That certainly seems to be the
case at most Final Tables, as it's uncommon to have a wire-to-wire victor. Tony
Criniti was no exception to prove the rule. Chip leaders often lose their
aggressiveness. The defensive posture is deadly when the levels are increasing.
Here, the aggressive players were Ram Vaswani and Dan Heimiller. Tony Criniti
would get involved in a hand and have to lay it down to surge betting by
either. All-in three-handed, Criniti would have been back in the race if he'd
won this hand. Tony had J 7 on the button and flopped second pair. He went
all-in when a Jack hit the turn. Ram Vaswani flopped up and down with his 8 5.
It was all down for Tony Criniti in 3rd when one of Ram's eight outs rivered to
give Vaswani an 8 high straight.

Heads up, Dan Heimiller had a slight chip lead. It didn't seem possible that
Dan would be able to stand up to the withering heat that Ram Vaswani supplies.
But in the first few hands, Heimiller not only was the aggressor, he showed Ram
a bluff! Normally that would be like showing a bull a red flag, but not today.
Vaswani was never able to take the aggressive stance away from Heimiller. In
heads up play, whoever bets the most often usually wins. It's so hard to make a
hand, bluffing is mandatory. Heimiller closed Vaswani out with a Jack on the
turn with his J 7 for a pair to crack Ram's all-in A 8.

It was Final Table veteran Dan Heimiller that played brilliantly. After chronic
bouts of frustration and self-doubt, a player that had made an amazing nine
Final Tables in the last few years finally broke through to get his
well-deserved bracelet. Dan Heimiller will never be the same player again. He
is now a champion and will probably continue to play like one. His game is that
strong.

Official Money Winners
1. Dan Heimiller $108,300
2. Ram Vaswani 54,140
3. Tony Criniti 27,100
4. Jeff Pierce 16,240
5. Alan Boston 13,540
6. Max Stern 10,820
7. Don Zewin 8,120
8. Paul McKinney 5,420

9th-12th received $4,060
James Athanas, Danny Qutami, Vince Calvino, Peter Brownstein

13th-16th received $2,700
Mel Judah, Paul Sherr, Tom Franklin, Alan Nugent


Copyright 2022 David Spragg