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2010 WSOP Main Event

This Week in Poker with Tiffany Michelle, Maria Ho + WSOP Debate at 4/7PM


Tiffany Michelle and Maria Ho are back on This Week in Poker.

Reminder to tune into This Week in Poker today at 4pm PT/7pm ET here.

We’ve also set up a new This Week in Poker page on WCP, where you can live chat during the show here.

On today’s show: Tiffany Michelle and Maria Ho join us in studio and perform a song live (for real). We’ll also have what could very well evolve into a “spirited discussion” about 2010 WSOP Main Event champ Jonathan Duhamel‘s place in the poker landscape, as well as things the World Series could do to improve its TV broadcasts next year.

The show will end with another PokerVT strategy session, this time featuring pro Jason Somerville.

Tune back in at 4pm PT/7pm ET here or here.

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Jonathan Duhamel Wins 2010 WSOP Main Event


Jonathan Duhamel celebrates winning the 2010 WSOP Main Event

Jonathan Duhamel celebrates winning the 2010 WSOP Main Event (worldseriesofpoker.com)

In the youngest heads-up match in World Series of Poker history, Jonathan Duhamel, 23, has defeated John Racener, 24, for the 2010 WSOP Main Event title.

For the win, Jonathan Duhamel banks $8,944,310. Racener collects $5,545,955.

After the final hand, the French Canadians in the crowd celebrated like African Americans did after the O.J. verdict. However, it’s about 5,000 times less irritating than Salty Joe Hachem‘s victory celebration.

Watch the ESPN final table broadcast on Tuesday at 10pm ET.

Photo dump from tonight’s heads-up play:

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2010 WSOP Main Event Heads-Up Preview: Duhamel vs. Racener


jwoww snooki

Read below to find out what JWoww and Snooki have to do with a John Racener win being 'Good for Poker'

At 8pm PT on Monday night, Jonathan Duhamel will face John Racener for the 2010 WSOP Main Event title.

Duhamel will take a massive 6-1 chip lead to heads-up play (188,950,000 to 30,750,000).

Like every year (or just last year, whatever), we’ll take a look at a few big questions going into this likely unepic heads-up battle.

Are Duhamel and Racener Most Deserving to Be Here?

Last year, the mass consensus was that Antoine Saout (and to a lesser degree, while he was still in it, Phil Ivey) outplayed everyone at the final table. Everyone believed Joe Cada had luckboxed his way to heads-up play (including Cada). While Darvin Moon definitely got some lucky breaks, he didn’t necessarily do anything undeserving of making the final two.

This year–it’s really tough to say.

At times, Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi and Joseph “Subiime” Cheong were clearly outplaying everyone. But both made some highly questionable decisions which ultimately led to their demise. Jason Senti played well enough to come from behind as uber-short-stack to a seventh place finish, but he needed a major river suck-out on Cheong to get there.

Anyway, Duhamel started final table play as big stack. Then went to short-stack. Some questions his A-9 all-in call vs. Grinder’s 3-3, but take that out and he made some smart plays, and it’s hard to argue place in the final two.

Same goes Racener. He needed an A-Q suck-out vs. A-K to save his tournament life, but otherwise, he kept grinding away until making it heads-up.

Is Duhamel Really Bad For Poker, Guys?

Here are all of the reasons why a Duhamel win would be bad for poker:

1. This.
2. This.
3. This.
4. This.
5. And without a doubt, most especially this.

Plus, it’s no lock that Duhamel is a permanent presence on the circuit after the win. While this is GREAT for Duhamel, it’s bad for the poker economy.

Is Racener Really Good for Poker?

Consider these factors:

1. He’s not French Canadian.
2. He’s American.
3. He’s a guy who wants to be the ambassador/face of poker.
4. He’d rep well on all of the talk shows, etc.
5. He makes a good case for the poker skill game argument and would be the first “pro” winner since Carlos Mortensen in 2001.
6. He always reps well for the tournament grinders, setting the stage for a near sure-fire lock Dwyte Pilgrim victory next year.
7. Good chance he’d start banging J-Woww or Snooki.
8. And unlike Duhamel, Racener’s money will definitely recirculate back into the poker community.

And that’s about it for now. Check back for coverage starting around 8pm PT of the final table happenings.

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Jonathan Duhamel vs. John Racener Heads-Up for 2010 WSOP Main Event Title


Only one of these two made the 2010 WSOP Main Event final table...and it wasn't The Grinder.

After a long night with many unexpected blow-ups, Jonathan Duhamel will play John Racener heads-ups on Monday night for the 2010 WSOP Main Event title.

Duhamel started final table play as the chip leader, but saw his stack hacked down throughout much of early play. After briefly becoming short-stack, Duhamel grinded his way back up, eventually becoming the massive chip leader in a pot vs. Joseph Cheong. The pivotal hand and largest in WSOP history saw Duhamel’s Q-Q withstand an untimely blow-up/misread shove of Cheong’s A-7. From there, Subiime’s stack went up in smoke, and Duhamel found himself sitting with over 100,000,000 chips.

When play reboots on Monday at 8pm, the 23 year-old Duhamel will have a massive chip lead, bringing 188,950,000 to the table. The 24 year-old John Racener will have 30,750,000.

First place will pay $8,944,310. Second earns $5,545,955.

For his third place finish, Cheong banks $4,130,049, or about 33,000 ounces of weed–and not the dank stuff, but the good sticky shit.

Filippo Candio finished fourth for $3,092,545. Sadly, we’ll be denied reactions from his fans like this one, made after one of his double-ups.

And after ascending to the chip lead with five remaining, Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi made some unpatented mistakes, flaming out in fifth for $2,332,992. The cash does move him ahead of Scotty Nguyen into sixth place on the all-time career tournament money winner’s list.

For full 2010 WSOP Main Event final table payouts, go  here.

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John Dolan Was Kind of Disappointing


Seemed like a lot of people thought John Dolan had a good shot at winning the 2010 WSOP Main Event. Solid player. Big stack. Not prone to big mistakes and blow-ups.

John Dolan was just eliminated in sixth place ($1,772,959).

That leaves only two more Full Tilt patch guys remaining (Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi and Joseph “Subiime” Cheong).

Speaking of the aforementioned Subiime and Grinder, they are the two chip leaders right now, with 61M and 56M, respectively.

Only five remain but still a ways to go…the big question now, will Subiime’s chip lead go up in smoke?

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