Tourney Updates
Down to 6 in the Bahamas
The Pokerstars Caribbean Adventure is down to the TV table, scheduled to be played today. Here's a preview of what you'll be seeing later this year on the WPT.
1. John Gale, Bushy, United Kingdom, 1,330,000
2. Alex Balandin, New City, NJ, 1,261,000
3. Michael Westerlund, Gothenburg, Sweden, 1,072,000
4. Patrick Hocking, Medford, OR, United States, 527,000
5. "Miami" John Cernuto, Las Vegas, 291,000
6. Nenad Medic, Canada, 142,000
Another Kentuckian takes top prize in Tunica
I'm now getting full updates directly from the Jack Binion World Poker Open, and the first I have to bring you certainly looks good to a Kentucky boy like me.
2005 Jack Binion World Poker Open
Horseshoe Casino Hotel and
Gold Strike Casino-Resort, Tunica, MS
Daily Report
January 10, 2005
Event #4
Limit Texas Hold’em
Buy-In: $500
Number of Entries: 628
Number of Re-Buys: 869
Prize Money: $697,527
Official Results:
1. Tony Hellmann, Louisville, KY, $201,365, plus seat in the $10,000 buy-in main event
2. Pat Heneghan, Chicago, IL, 106,238
3. Freddy Deeb, Las Vegas, NV, 55,500
4. Davood Mehrmand, Frankfort, Germany, 48,606
5. Jeremy Tinsley, Houston, TX, 34,718
6. Zeb Strawn, Charlotte, NC, 34,718
7. Darrell Strock, Dallas, TX, 27,775
8. Alan Katzen, Memphis, TN, 20,831
9. Jack Ward, Gulfport, MS, 13,887
10. Herb Kelso, Ridbelands, MS, 7,638
11. John Barch, McKinney, TX, 7,638
12. Paul Maxfield, London, England, 7,638
13. James Myers, Fayetteville, GA, 6,250
14. Steven So, Calgary, Canada, 6,250
15. Jerri Thomas, Las Vegas, NV, 6,250
16. Joe Spell, Mansfield, GA, 5,011
17. Billy Duarte, Beithoud, CO, 5,011
18. Collin Wilson, Atlanta, GA, 5,011
19. Elias Hourani, Houston, TX, 3,579
20. Greg Jensen, Matterhorn, CO, 3,579
21. Joey Vitale, Tampa, FL, 3,579
22. Dave Potter, Wildwood, MS, 3,579
23. Greg Aston, Ft. Worth, TX, 3,579
24. “King” Nick Browning, Union, OH , 3,579
25. Tony Cousineau, Daytona Beach, FL, 3,579
26. Scott Fischman, Las Vegas, NV, 3,579
27. Randy Murfin, Nixa, MS, 3,579
28. Todd Urbina, Alexandria, LA, 2,505
29. Michael Lutes, Bloomington, IN, 2,505
30. Josh Jones, Des Moines, IA, 2,505
31. George Miller, Gary, IN, 2,505
32. Dan Heimiller, Poughkipsee, NY, 2,505
33. Justin Young, Moorehead City, NC, 2,505
34. Ross Tyler, La Mesa, TX, 2,505
35. Don Mercer , Sneads Ferry, NC, 2,505
36. Men “the Master” Nguyen, Bell Gardens, CA, 2,505
Just Say No!
Kentucky Tax Accountant, Tony Hellmann Wins First Major Poker Tournament: Jack Binion World Poker Open Breaks Three-Day Attendance Record as Early Prize Pool Surges over $2.2 Million
Poker has become so big now, that playing for six figures is standard practice. The turn of a single card at any key point in a tournament can be worth $100,000, or more. Given that big time poker tournaments routinely award half-a-million dollar prize pools, there are bound to be countless thrilling moments at just about every final table – including screams, shouts, fist pumps, tears, and victory dances.
Event 4 of the Jack Binion World Poker Open had none of that. In fact, it might very well have been the most restrained final table in recent memory. There were no loud outbursts. There were no emotional victory speeches. There were no encouraging chants from the rail. There were just nine expressionless men crowded around a table, which very much looked like your average Monday night poker game – except the pots were little bit bigger. Okay – a lot bigger.
Still…. Maybe it was the cold, foggy weather outside deep in the heart of the Mississippi Delta. Maybe it was the fact that this final table, held on a Monday, immediately followed one of the busiest weekends in poker history. More than 2,500 poker players had streamed through the Gold Strike and Horseshoe Casinos in the previous two days alone, a record. Or, perhaps it was quite simply that not every final table necessarily has memorable confrontations and great strategic showdowns.
None of this should take away from Tony Hellmann’s achievement. After all, the semi-retired tax accountant from Louisville, KY who is a familiar face on the tournament trail did something extraordinary. He topped a massive field of 628 players and ultimately won $201,365 in official figures (although a deal between the two finalists was reportedly struck). Hellmann overcame numerous obstacles, including a small stack size at the start of the final table, and ultimately took first prize in the tournament.
After playing for 14 hours during the previous day, the nine finalists took their seats at the final table on Day Two. Players were eliminated in the following order:
9th Place – Jack Ward (not to be confused with another poker player with the same name from Alaska) came in second-lowest in chips, and only lasted a few hands. Ward, who has previously won poker tournaments in Los Angeles and Reno is a 55-year-old auto broker from Gulfport, MS. This marked his highest finish yet at the JBWPO. He collected $13,887 for 9th place.
8th Place – Alan Katzen finished second in the Limit Hold’em event here last year, but could do no better than 8th place this time around. He took a tough beat when he lost to a full house on the river. The retired restaurateur from Memphis received $20,831 for two days of poker playing.
7th Place – Darrell Strock, a real estate agent from Dallas, was playing in his first poker tournament ever. He beat out 621 other players, but could not knock out anyone from the final six. Strock won $27,775.
6th Place – Zeb Strawn had a tough task on Day Two, as he arrived with the lowest stack of the final nine. Outchipped by over 10 to 1 to the leader at all times, Strawn scratched and clawed his way into a 6th-place finish. The 35-year-old self-employed poker player from Charlotte, NC received $34,718.
5th Place – If there was a tragic figure at this final table, it was without a doubt, Jeremy Tinsley. He was certainly one of the two odds-on favorites to win the finale (along with tournament pro Freddy Deeb). But Tinsley suffered some horrendous bad beats that destroyed his chance to become a three-time JBWPO champion. Tinsley, who has won the Pot-Limit Omaha event twice in years past, took his worst beat with A-Q versus A-J in an ‘all in’ situation for his opponent. When a Jack flopped, Tinsley had lost over half of his stack. After a few more beats and a bad run of cards, Tinsley – a poker pro from Houston – exited a disappointing 5th, worth $41,662.
4th Place – Davood Mehrmand was certainly the most animated and unusual player at the final table. The Iranian-born businessman-turned poker player hummed songs and talked to himself throughout the close of the tournament. But his psychological ploys failed to bring the decisive moment needed by Mehrmand to win the tournament. Mehrmand took an awful beat on the final hand with A-6 versus A-5 and was ‘all in.” When a Five rained down on the river, Mehrmand was no longer singing. The colorful poker personality who now lives in Frankfurt, Germany and is also an accomplished backgammon player, received 4th place prize money of $48,606.
3rd Place – Well-known Las Vegas poker player Freddy Deeb came to the final table up 2 to 1 over everyone else, and must have liked his situation – holding chips against his two final adversaries -- Tony Hellmann and Pat Heneghan. But by this stage, the blinds were so high that the last thing any player could do was play passively. By this time, Hellmann had seized the chip lead and it took only a few pots to wipe out what was left of Deeb’s stack. Deeb has now played every year at the JBWPO and added $55,550 to his lifetime earnings in this tournament.
The last two players reportedly cut a deal and then played on. Tony Hellmann enjoyed a 3 to 1 chip lead at the start and never relinquished. At one point, Pat Heneghan staged a brief comeback, spiking a Ten on the river to make a pair against Hellmann’s two overcards. But Hellmann ended the night holding Q-2 versus Heneghan’s 10-7. The final board showed A-K-Q-9-6 giving Hellmann a pair of Queens.
Pat Heneghan, a 52-year-old retired employee from the City of Chicago, had won major tournaments previously – including events at The Orleans and online tournaments. He was officially paid $106,238 for his second-place finish.
At the conclusion of the tournament, as several bystanders were leaving the tournament area, Hellmann did what was unquestionably the most interesting thing at the final table. He took out a small badge and clipped it on his shirt pocket. Written on the badge was the word “YES” with a large red streak stripped across the letters. In other words -- “NO!”
When asked what the badge meant, Hellmann smiled and said: “I wear this because if people try to borrow money from me, I can just point to the word and keep quiet. I really have trouble saying ‘no’ to people, so this might be a warning to everyone that I don’t lend money.”
Who would have expected such shrewd financial prudence….from a tax accountant?
Final Table Started at: 4:05 pm CST
Final Table Ended at: 7:35 pm CST
Report by Nolan Dalla – JBWPO Media Director
Tournament Director – David Eglseder
Co-Tournament Director (Horseshoe) – Ken Lambert, Jr.
Co-Tournament Director (Gold Strike) – Robert McGovern
WSOP Circuit - Atlantic City
Event #3
No-Limit Texas Hold’em
Buy-In: $1,000 + $70
Number of Entries: 254
Prize Money: $254,000
Official Results:
1. Daniel Beers, Canal Fulton, OH, $81,280.
2. Sal Simeone, Florham Park, N.J., $44,704.
3. Sang Y. Tae, Leonia, N.J., $22,860.
4. Neal Gersony, Rocky Hill, CT., $17,780.
5. Michael Candido, Flourtown, Pa,. $15,240.
6. Stephan Frame, Cape May, N.J., $12,700.
7. S.J. Giambrone, Staten Island, N.Y, $10,160.
8. Scott Neuman, Lakehurst, N.J., $7,620.
9. Patrick Kelly, New Hope, Pa., $5,080.
10. Joe Commisso, Maple Shade, N.J., $3,048.
11. Edward Siegel, Lake Worth, Fla., $3,048.
12. Ernest Campbell, Kew Gardens, N.Y., $3,048.
13. Marc J. Grossman, Gladwyne, Pa., $2,540.
14. Christopher L. Richardson, Herndon,Va., $2,540.
15. Gil Elbaz, Neponsit, N.Y., $2,540.
16. Alfred Muncey, Lusby, MD, $2,032.
17. Luca Pagano, Preganzio, Italy, $2,032.
18. Stephen Delvecchio, Baltimore, Md., $2,032.
19. Andrew Weinstein, Alexandria, Va., $1,524.
20. Vernon Martin, Severna Park, Md., $1,524.
21. Daniel Zajac, Downingtown, Pa., $1,524.
22. Michael V. Santoro, EHT, N.J., $1,524.
23. Glenn Cooney, Tampa Fla., $1,524.
24. Gary Lewis, Schwenksville, Pa., $1,524.
25. Paul Lombardo, Absecon, N.J., $1,524.
26. Vincent Napolitano, Williston Park, N.Y., $1,524.
27. William W. Johnson, Jackson, OH, $1,524.
Final Table Started at: 4:00 p.m. EST
Final Table Ended at: 5:45 p.m. EST
Tournament Report by Nolan Dalla
Tournament Directors – Ken Lambert and Johnny Grooms






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