EVENT #35 THE CHAMPIONSHIP EVENT
NO-LIMIT HOLD'EM
Monday, May 20-24, 2002
$10,000 BUY-IN
$10,000 in chips
A MONEYTREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN
When Robert Varkonyi was an undergrad at MIT in Computer Sciences, he used
to
play a lot of penny ante poker with fellow students. "We didn't even know
about the World Series of Poker then," said fellow student J. P. Massar.
This
was twenty years ago. Massar continues about Varkonyi, "We used to play in
small tournaments at the Orleans or Union Plaza. He just kept getting
better
and better." Until today, however, Robert Varkonyi hadn't made a penny in
the
WSOP. "He tried for several years. He couldn't get in the Big One by
winning
a Super or single table," Massar said. Now, from nothing, Robert Varkonyi
is
7th all-time on the money list in one day. Amazing.
Only the infamous Phil Hellmuth, Jr. could upstage the first $2 million
winner of the most prestigious prize in poker: the 2002 World Series of
Poker
Championship held at Binion's Horseshoe in downtown Las Vegas.
"This is Robert's (Varkonyi) day, let him have 10-15 minutes to enjoy it,"
Hellmuth said to the crowd as the last hand was completed.
"Shave Phil's head," was the crowd's immediate, chanted response. The
audience was literally out for Hellmuth's scalp. All those years of being
the
famed "Pokerbrat" had culminated in a close shave for Phil.
The new World Champion, Robert Varkonyi wanted to let Phil out of the
promise
he'd made to have his head shaved if Varkonyi won. But Phil wouldn't welsh
on
the bet.
"If I don't do it the crowd will kill me," Hellmuth said. "Besides, if you
say something stupid, you should have to pay for it."
So, led by the Horseshoe's owner Becky Binion Behnen, several people
including the new Champion took turns clipping away at Phil Hellmuth. It
was
quite a sight.
"Next year, we're getting Ozzie Osbourne," Becky was overheard as saying.
That should be another zoo! But poker players worldwide will be overjoyed
to
hear that there will be a 'next year.'
This year, all the records for entries and prize money were broken. Yes
there
were more events, but 7,323 entries and $20,810,410 in total buy-ins bodes
well for the health of the World Series of Poker. The poker world still
loves
the WSOP at the Horseshoe.
But besides the circus-like sideshow, there really was a poker tournament
today. And it was an exciting Final Table that was played by the least
known
group in WSOP history.
You'd send your nickel-dime playing granny against this lineup, right? No
WSOP bracelets among them. None! Total WSOP earnings for the group: under
$450,000.
They had a whopping seven Final Tables in all WSOP events, with one second
as
the best result. Three of them had never made a penny in the Series before
today.
For those who like to complain, "Tournaments are always won by the same
people," they have to be still for a while.
Thirteen former Champions and nearly all of the 29 WSOP millionaires
entered
the 33rd $10,000 Buy-In, No-Limit Championship Event. Yet none of those
famous players even made it to the 45 who were paid. Here is the surviving
nine on Day Five. Know any of these names?
THE FINAL TABLE 1 hr 50 mins left of 2 hours. $3,000 ante. The blinds were
$8,000/$16,000
| Player | Hometown | Chip Count |
| Seat 1 | Tony D (Tam Duong) | Los Angeles CA | $ 231,000 |
| Seat 2 | Julian Gardner | Manchester, UK | $ 394,000 |
| Seat 3 | Scott Gray | Dublin, Ireland | $ 545,000 |
| Seat 4 | Ralph Perry | Las Vegas NV | $ 766,000 |
| Seat 5 | Minh Ly | Las Vegas NV | $ 614,000 |
| Seat 6 | Robert Varkonyi | Brooklyn NY | $ 640,000 |
| Seat 7 | John Shipley | Solihull, UK | $2,033,000 |
| Seat 8 | Russell Rosenblum | Bethesda MD | $ 927,000 |
| Seat 9 | Harley Hall | San Juan Capistrano CA | $ 161,000 |
The Final Table started off with a bang as the young, English wizard Julian
Gardner picked up pocket Aces on the first hand and doubled up against
Robert
Varkonyi. Robert was suddenly down to $250k in chips from $640k. No way
he's
winning this thing.
But Varkonyi had a secret stash of chips sitting next to him. These chips
temporarily belonged to the prohibitive chip leader John Shipley, but they
weren't to be John's for long.
After the first couple of hands, action subsided for about an hour, as
everyone felt each other out. During that time, the short stacks kept
winning
their hands and John Shipley was losing his. The momentum that had been so
strongly blowing toward Shipley, the night before, left John completely
today. The crowd buzzed, as a player with twice the starting chips as
anyone
else became defensive. Shipley could have bullied the table with his stack,
but curiously didn't.
It was Las Vegas pro Minh Ly that made the first move and it cost him. Ly
got
all his chips in the pot with pocket 8's against Ralph Perry (aka Rafael
Perovskin) with A K. You have to win the 'coin-toss' hands if you are going
to stay in a tournament. The 8's came up 'Tails' as a King hit the flop.
Even stranger than John Shipley's actions were the inactions of the veteran
high-stakes player 'Tony D' (Tam Duong). No one had ever seen Tony so
passive. He's a famed 'jammer' in live action games. Yet in this event, he
hardly played a hand. Maybe it was tournament inexperience or just
incredibly
lousy cards. In any case, Tony D played for 8th place by not gambling and
that's what he got. Basically Tony sat out the first two levels and was
forced to play a Q J all-in when the blinds went to $15k/$30k and the ante
at
$5,000. Robert Varkonyi had most of John Shipley's chips by then and called
with A K. Bye, Tony D. Maybe you just don't like tournaments.
The new blind level finally brought action. We'd sat for four hours as only
one player left. Now there was a parade to the exit.
Next, shockingly, was John Shipley. How could someone with over $2 million
in
chips finish 7th? By a series of really bad plays, that's how. The bad play
that stands out most is the key play of the entire Final Table. Robert
Varkonyi had rebuilt his stack from the first hand disaster to Julian
Gardner. He was on the button and raised all-in with pocket Jacks. John
Shipley lost the chip lead to Varkonyi (who would never give it up) and any
chance at a significant payday by calling all-in with A J in the small
blind.
That hand alone cost Shipley nearly one million dollars in chips. He was
never a factor again. A half hour later Shipley shipped out when his
nemesis
Varkonyi called John's all-in pair of 7's with an A 10. Of course, an Ace
hit
the board.
The Internet favorite, Russ Rosenblum, hit the skids in 5th. He will have
nightmares about the J 6 of Diamonds as long as he lives. After playing
brilliantly for five days, for some unimaginable reason, Russ Rosenblum
tries
to steal the blinds from the button by going all-in with his J 6 of
Diamonds.
A simple raise couldn't have been enough? If you get a play back you dump
it,
right? Well, Julian Gardner found pocket Aces in his big blind and had no
trouble calling all-in. Now Russ had only $92k and was out the next hand
with
A 8 against A K to Scott Gray.
Throughout the day the chants of "Harley, Harley" were heard each time
Harley
Hall won another all-in. Ninth in chips to start, Hall became the crowd
favorite with his survival techniques. Harley's luck finally ran out when
his
all-in A 2 from the small blind found Julian Gardner's K 7 in the big. The
young wizard Gardner should have a thunderbolt on his forehead. Julian
conjured up running sevens on Harley.
There was no stopping Robert Varkonyi. First he had half the chips on the
table, then two thirds, then at the end, all of them. Why? Because Robert
had
the 'Ultimate Weapon.' Varkonyi had Q 10!!! Gasp!!! Not, Q 10!!!
Yes, only Robert V. had the greatest hand in poker. This hand not only won
Varkonyi $2 million dollars, it cost Phil Hellmuth his hair. It was the Q
10
(suited) that took nearly all of Phil's chips on Day Three and prompted the
hair-shaving boast. Now the hand took Scott Gray out in 4th. Gray only had
a
former great hand for Chris Ferguson, A 9. Sure, two Queens flopped for
Varkonyi. When you are runnin' fantastic, that's what happens.
For simplicity probably, Rafael Perovskin changed his poker name to Ralph
Perry. With either name, Ralph can play. But not when you run up against
someone as hot as Robert Varkonyi. When Ralph went all-in with pocket
Jacks,
Varkonyi had the second best hand in poker to Q 10. He had pocket Aces in
the
big blind. Now there were two.
Heads up, Varkonyi the MIT Computer Sciences graduate, had a 4-1 chip lead
on
the school-of-hard-knocks graduate Julian Gardner. Julian's wizard powers
finally were no match when faced with the awesome Q 10. When the flop came
Q
4 4 with two clubs, Julian went all-in. He had the J 8 of Clubs. Forget
about
it! Robert Varkonyi can play Q 10 in his sleep and win. Robert flopped a
Queen. In a bizarre finish to a great tournament, a Club magically appeared
on the river. Gardner's still alive!
NO! It's the 10 of Clubs! Robert Varkonyi has a full house, 10's full of
Queens. How fitting.
This was indeed Robert Varkonyi's day. But forever Robert will be known in
poker not as the first $2 Million Dollar Man, or the player who won the
first
'World Champion's' bracelet. This is a platinum and diamond bejeweled
beauty
valued at "in excess of $10,000." He'll always be known as the guy who
put a
close shave on Phil Hellmuth.
Official Money Winners
1. Robert Varkonyi $2,000,000
2. Julian Gardner $1,100,000
3. Ralph Perry $ 550,000
4. Scott Gray $ 281,480
5. Harley Hall $ 195,000
6. Russell Rosenblum $ 150,000
7. John Shipley $ 125,000
8. Tony D (Tam Duong) $ 100,000
9. Minh Ly $ 85,000
10th-12th received $70,000
Don Barton (Pahrump NV), Amir Nasseri (Henderson NV), Owen Mullan (Ireland)
13th-15th received $60,000
Martin de Knijff (Sweden), Yosh Nankano (Las Vegas NV), James Neely (Land
O'Lakes FL)
16th-18th received $50,000
Bernard Ko (Sunnyvale CA), Sigi Stockington (Austria), David Rubin (Mill
Valley CA)
19th-27th received $40,000
Mike Fetter (Long Beach CA), Stephen Wilsdon (England), Jack Fox (Reno NV),
Dave Crunkleton, (Las Vegas NV), Phil Ivey (Atlantic City NJ), Minh Nguyen
(Bell Gardens CA), Lamar Wilkinson (Pacheco CA), Kurt Paseka (Bayside NY),
Ray January (Vancouver WA)
28th-36th received $30,000
Luan Phu (San Jose CA), Sam Whitt (Lima OH), Rameen Sai (Ireland), Scott
Amos
(Carrollton OH), Steve Melton (Noble OK), Eric Holum (Las Vegas NV), Ross
Boatman (England), Randy Holland (Orange CA), Tom Schneider (Phoenix AZ)
37th-45th received $20,000
Hertzel Zalewski (Houston TX), Doug Booth (Bowling Green KY), Jason 'Kid
Wonder' Lane (Chandler AZ), Brian Haveson (Newton PA), Greg Alston (Walnut
Creek CA), David Sklansky (Las Vegas NV), Dan Heimiller (Livonia MI),
Tristan
McDonald (England), Peter Giordano (Liverpool NY)