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Archive for the ‘benkang’ Category


WSOP Main Event: Keep moving… on and off the tables

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

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It's not a bad way to start you're day, knowing you already made nearly $30,000 before you got out of bed, and if you managed to avoid spending that much last night after the early finish, you're still in a good place mentally, if not physically.

Team PokerStars Pro Joe Hachem arrived just as play was about to start. He passed Antonio Esfandiari for a quick hug, nodding hello to press guy and then greeted Kara Scott with a quick "good luck" peck on the cheek before taking his seat.

"It was a good day," said Hachem at the close yesterday "I had my ups and downs, I finished with double with what I started with and I'm glad to have an early night."

He looked relaxed then and looks relaxed now nearly a level in despite an early move to Thierry van den Berg's table. Within minutes of the start the all-ins were popping up everywhere with seven gone, according to the clock, within 20 minutes; each player's result radio'd in to a central desk before they were personally escorted away for processing and the pay out desk.

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Dennis Phillips,

But that's the last place you want to see today. Among those intending to keep as far away from that place as possible are Dennis Phillips and Benjamin Kang. The two Team PokerStars Pros share a table but the prognosis for each couldn't have been more different. While both arrived looking to build on their starting stacks only Phillips has pulled it off so far while Kang has toiled to avoid elimination.

"I've doubled up" said Phillips, wrapping up his first level. "It came over three or four different hands, one for about 200,000 against the guy in seat three (Joseph Cada). We both had heart flushes and caught on the river. Mine was bigger."

Main Event_Day 5_IJG_7696_IMPDI.jpg Ben Kang

Phillips' stack is now up to 825,000, a figure Team PokerStars Germany's Kang would do a lot for right now. Shorts on, sitting on his hands to keep warm against the air conditioning and sitting forward in his chair, he has the look of a man waiting for an opportunity and convinced it's about to come.

But having arrived with 250,000 he'd run face first into a full house which had taken him down to a meagre looking 80,000 almost from the start. But then suddenly things looked up, and then down again, for a single hand anyway...

All-in with [kc][jd] against the pocket tens of Dennis Phillips, Kang caught a jack on the river, doubling him up to keep him alive. He immediately celebrated this first bit of luck with a pal on the rail, only to be given a penalty for excessive celebration.

"What am I supposed to do?" asked Kang, arguing that it was hard to sit still when he just hit a jack for his tournament life. No dice from the stone faced official, so Kang endured a one hand penalty, bouncing from one foot to another a few feet away waiting to get back in. He's back up to 170,000. It remains a big ask for the German but he's still alive.


* * * * *

DOUBLE-UPS OF THE HOUR
GOOD LOSERS OF THE HOUR
OUTDRAWS OF THE HOUR
PHILLIPS OF THE HOUR

Almost simultaneously on neighbouring tables, Scott Bausmstein and Benjamin Kang (as described above) were all in, against Lou Diamond Phillips and Dennis Phillips respectively. Both all in players were in pretty poor shape: Bausmstein had [ah][5h] against LDP's [ac][kd], while Kang had [kc][jd] against Dennis Phillips' [10h][10d]. On the first table, the board ran out [3h][2d][10d][6d][4s] making a straight on the river for the dominated hand. Kang spiked a jack for his outdraw. Lou Diamond Phillips muttered, "Hell of a catch, brother. Hell of a catch," and then hammed it up for the cameras, mimicking a man who had been shot. Dennis Phillips said, with tongue firmly in cheek: "By the way, he won," as Kang went bounding away from the table.

* * * * *

QUOTE OF THE HOUR

"Can we get this over with?" -- a player holding ace-jack all-in pre-flop versus ace-queen while waiting for ESPN cameras to get ready to record his bust-out.

* * * * *

STATISTICS OF THE HOUR

Massage therapists at massage therapist stand: 5
Customers at massage therapist stand: 0
Massage therapists receiving massage from other massage therapists: 1

* * * * *

ELKY OF THE HOUR

At the break after the first level, ElkY is down to about 650,000.

* * * * *

AFFLECK OF THE HOUR

How do make sure your chip lead doesn't dwindle on a day when chip stacks are disappearing faster than the beef jerky. You do what PokerStars qualifier Matt Affleck just did.

In a four-way pot for 18,000 apiece, the flop came down [9c][6s][4d] and a player with a little more than 100,000 in his stack pushed all-in . One player folded and Affleck raised it to 500,000 total, forcing Fabian Ortiz out of the pot.

The all-in player showed [Qd][4h], no good against Affleck's [6d][7d]. That's another stack in Affleck's tower.

* * * * *

TOURNAMENT ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE HOUR

"The players who just busted on table 18 seat four... you forgot your shoes."

* * * * *

JOE GIRON PHOTO HOUR

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Team PokerStars Pro Noah Boeken catching up on some light reading

* * * * *

VIDEO BLOG OF THE HOUR


Watch WSOP 2009: Day 4 Wrap on PokerStars.tv

WSOP Main Event: In the far far reaches of the Rio

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

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Day two. No free jerky now. This is serious. Close to 3,000 players meaning every last table, every last inch of space, every dealer pulled out of retirement, is in the employ of the main event.

The sign outside the Rio pool reads "No Lifeguard on duty. No Diving." This afternoon that pool, complete with waterfalls and towels, is no more than a couple of first downs away from the dozen or so tables currently packed full of main event players in an area designated "Buzio's", after the seafood restaurant nearby. There are few benefits to this exposed playing area that straddles the main route from the casino to the Amazon Room, so the opportunity to run towards the pool and dive headlong into the deep end after a last fatal shortage of luck, seemed the only ready perk. But a lifeguard shortage put end to that.

But it's a seat, and that means you're still in contention, which on day 2b is good enough. Among the most notable players here is Team PokerStars Germany's Ben Kang, who becomes even more noticeable when he stands up. The six-foot-plus ShootingStar sits at a table of the anonymous kind ready to start the day with a stack measuring 91,850 which should prove sturdy to last until that coveted table change.

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Benjamin Kang - photo taken on day 1d


Like the kids table at Christmas, put together from old garden furniture, a chair from the attic and a makeshift bench created from garage boxes lugged inside by Dad, players seated in the Rio card room today are the forgotten bunch, set away from where the main action is and told not to get ketchup on their shirts. Kids may be seen and not heard but these guys aren't even seen. Not unless you take a ten minute walk (time doesn't include rests) back up the Rio corridors, past Buzios, past the Sports book and into the far corner of the casino.

These players truly are the frontiersmen, cast out to find new World Series territory and plant the Main Event flag armed with nothing more than the chips they have with them from day one. Isolated and alone they've been left to fend for themselves. But what doesn't eliminate them only makes them stronger.

There are benefits of course. You're guaranteed front place in the buffet queue and a "get me out of here" taxi is just around the corner, as is, as one player quipped, a taxi back to the Amazon Room. It's by no means a lawless frontier, but three feet away, across the temporary barricade, is a place you can smoke.

This is where Team PokerStars Pro Noah Boeken starts his day, ready for a run on day three with 94,175. There's only half a rail, no clock, a permanent tingle-ding-aling noise from the one cent Diamond Supreme slot machines, and a few people on the rail waiting for a cash table to open.

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Noah Boeken on day 1d - he wears the same hoodie today though


Boeken took the first pot uncontested when play finally began and a couple more before I had to call time and set off back to the Amazon Room before it got dark.


* * * * *

QUOTE OF THE HOUR

"I'm going to get blinded down. Every hand takes 15 minutes." --Maria Mayrinck on a very slow secondary ESPN feature table.

* * * * *

SPONSORSHIP OF THE HOUR

Kids seem to be getting sponsorship earlier and earlier. Spotted in the hallways of the Rio--a very pregnant woman with an online poker patch firmly affixed to her baby bump.

* * * * *

JFK ASSASSINATION, MAN-ON-THE-MOON, REMEMBER WHERE YOU WERE WHEN IT HAPPENED MOMENT OF THE HOUR

"It will be one of the largest green-chip colour-ups in history!" -- Tournament director Jack Effel in his introductory speech to day 2b.

* * * * *

JOHNNY LODDEN OF THE HOUR

"I was all in on the flop, drawing dead. As usual."

* * * * *

NON-ELIMINATIONS OF THE HOUR

Despite vulturing* Vanessa Rousso and Victor Ramdin for the first two orbits, there was no carcass to pick over. Rousso doubled up with tens against eights on the third hand, and Ramdin ground his short stack up to about 15,000, before losing a big chunk on the following hand. The player in the cut off opened to 1,500, Ramdin reraised to 4,650 on the button. Call. The flop came [3c][8c][ah] which both players checked. The turn was [5h] and after his opponent checked, Ramdin bet 4,200. Call. The river was [2d] and Ramdin's opponent tossed in four orange 5,000 chips, asking Ramdin to call all in. Ramdin declined after a long dwell and was left with about 5,000. (Note: until that last hand, this segment was due to be called "SHORT-STACK MANAGEMENT MASTERCLASS OF THE HOUR"

* * * * *

*DEFINITION OF THE HOUR

vulture (vb) -- practice adopted by poker reporters of standing beside short-stacked players in the hope that their elimination generates copy for blogs. (Example usage: "I vultured him for eight hands and he never once got his chips in.")

* * * * *

ELIMINATIONS OF THE HOUR

The German Team Pro Sebastian Ruthenberg is no more. Isabelle Mercier joins him on the rail, her pocket jacks beaten by kings.

* * * * *

JOE GIRON'S PHOTO HOUR

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Dealer Deb Stillman un-bags Victor Ramdin's chips at the start of play

WSOP Event #10: Ben Kang bites the desert dust

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

wsop2009_thn.gifBenjamin Kang is possibly the tallest player anywhere in the Rio today. Taller even than Hevad Khan - and he's a bit of a giant himself. But while Khan has a high tower of chips in the $2,500 Pot Limit Hold'em/Omaha, Kang found himelf short.... and now out.

The Team PokerStars Germany Pro had been in confident mood when we caught up with him a short while before his fateful end....

"Pot limit Omaha is my game," he said. "So in this event I tend to play a lot of the Omaha hands because that's where I feel I have an edge, and then I tend to play much fewer Hold'em hands.

"For example in this event, I think I must have busted ten players on the Omaha rounds, but not in Hold'em."

benkangheplo.jpgBenjamin Kang

That was all well and good, but now the German is stalking the rail. Where did it all go wrong?

"Well I lost a huge pot when I had trips with an ace kicker and the guy made a full house on the turn. That left me short, down to about six big blinds, and I'm in the blinds so I push with A-3-5-7 suited, but the guy next to me calls with A-Q-Q-J and hits an ace and a jack on the flop. And that was that!"

Kang, who has more than $400,000 in tournament cashes to his name, will not add to that today, busting as he did about 20 places short of the money.

Still in this event, however, are Team PokerStars Pros ElkY, looking strong on 80,000, Daniel Negreanu on 55,000, Greg Raymer on 31,000 and Hevad Khan - currently second in chips with 144,000. We're looking good for another batch of PokerStars cashes.

danielelky.jpgDaniel Negreanu and ElkY share the felt

STOP PRESS: Greg Raymer is wandering out of the tournament room, and there are no chips at his seat. In fact, someone else is sitting there already. The Fossilman is out.