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2012 WSOP Main Event

Greg Merson Wins 2012 WSOP Main Event, Player of the Year Title


Greg Merson–first “pro” Main Event winner since Carlos Mortensen?

So does this count as the first “pro” to win the Main Event in poker’s modern era?

Poker pro Greg Merson has won the 2012 WSOP Main Event, defeating Jesse Sylvia heads-up for the title.

For the win, Merson banks $8,531,853. Sylvia earns $5,295,149 for second.

The win also secures 2012 WSOP Player of the Year honors for Merson. Phil Hellmuth had the lead, and Merson could only take it over by winning the Main Event.

Which he did.

Additionally, Merson’s win keeps the streak of 497 consecutive years going that someone has won two bracelets during the WSOP. Merson won over a milli in the No Limit Hold’em Six Max event just prior to the Main Event.

Jake Balsiger came in third for $3,799,073.

Get a full recap of the event here.

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Greg Merson Leads 2012 WSOP Main Event Final Table; Sylvia, Balsiger Remain


The final table played out as expected on Monday. Will Merson finish it off?

And then there were three.

The 2012 WSOP Main Event final table out the way many people expected on Monday night. Most pro’s pros expected Greg Merson to chip up and take the lead. He did, ending play as the big stack with 88,350,000.

The chip leader at the start of play, Jesse Sylvia, avoided any Phillip Hilm-ish disasters and built his stack to 62,750,000.

And the kid everyone thought could make a run, Jake Balsiger, made a run, ending play at 46,875,000.

With that out of the way, here are the 12 STORYLINES WE’RE WATCHING FOR TONIGHT:

  • Phil Ivey showed up briefly, as much as he could be bothered, to root on Greg Merson on Monday. However, Michael Phelps, who was rumored to be in Merson’s cheering section, did not. Now that Merson is the chip leader with three left, will Phelps show?
  • Can Merson finish the drill, win the tournament, dethrone current leader Phil Hellmuth and capture 2012 WSOP Player of the Year honors?
  • What exactly is it about Jesse Sylvia that you people don’t like? We received many texts throughout the night to the effect of, “Not sure what it is but I don’t like Sylvia…” Anyone?
  • Why does Jake Balsiger make us think of this?
  • On that note, will Jake Balsiger do what we’d do if WE WENT TO ASU AND WERE 21 YEARS OLD AND A MULTI-MILLIONAIRE AT THE FINAL TABLE AND FLY IN THE HOTTEST SORORITY ON CAMPUS AND THREE WAY KISS MULTIPLE MEMBERS AFTER WINNING EVERY HAND. Seriously, why is he not doing this? He’d be an insta-legend. Get your shit together, Jakey.
  • Semi-related/less exciting, can Jake Balsiger become the youngest person to ever win the Main Event title?
  • Will whoever is the marketing genius at Ivey Poker who made the most illegible patch in the history of patches just get a thick black permanent marker, a piece of paper, write “IVEY POKER” in all caps and duct tape it onto Merson? Because that would look better than the patch he was wearing last night. Superman couldn’t read that shit.
  • Will Dennis Phillips be sitting in the front row on stage again for no apparent reason other than to mug for a little extra camera time?
  • Will Robert Salaburu come back and do media interviews, or be the only November Niner since Phil Ivey to entirely skip it?
  • Will Ty Stewart randomly invent a new rule like this was an episode of Bachelor Pad and insert Elisabeth Hille or Gaelle Baumann as a “wild card” at the final table?
  • On that note, with Hurricane Sandy either knocking out power or galvanizing people’s viewing attention, what will the rating be for last night’s broadcast?
  • Will PokerPROductions get it together and smooth out some of the sloppiness of the broadcast?

And that’s it for now. Final table is on ESPN prime time again tonight.

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2012 WSOP Octo-Nine: Good, Bad, Meh for Poker


A who’s who of who.

It’s that time of year again! Time to crank out the annual Good, Bad, Meh for Poker list.

Usually, we drop the list the day after the WSOP Main Event table is set. However, this year there were a few factors that delayed our publishing: 1) none of the Entities were at the Main Event (business reasons) after the Day 1′s, so we didn’t get to see any of the guys, 2) we’ve never heard of any of the the Octo-Niners before, so 3) we needed to watch some TV and talk to other players, media, and industry types to get a feel.

And oh yeah, also, a big #4: after the two hot girls were eliminated in 11th and 10th place, everyone else was dead to us anyway. Seriously wtf. Worst. Beat. Ever.

During the poker boom years, the WSOP final table has been like a Rush concert: completely lacking vaginas. Getting just one female (especially a hot one, which miraculously both were) at this year’s final table would’ve transformed the buzz factor for the event by x1000. Getting two? Holy shit. The final table would’ve been as talked about as the Bachelor Pad 3 finale.

Ok maybe not that much…but close.

Anyway…we probably can kill some of the drama by saying there’s a whole lotta meh here. However, as always, a few caveats with the list: if somebody falls into the “Bad for Poker” category, this does not mean he is actually a bad guy. And vice versa. For example, many could argue that Dennis Phillips was “Good for Poker,” but that doesn’t necessarily make him a good guy (That’s right! Still taking Dennis Phillips shots after all these years!).

With that in mind, here is the 2012 WSOP Main Event Good, Bad, Meh for Poker list.

GOOD FOR POKER

We’re eternally optimists, in that we’re positive we’ll eventually be optimistic about something. So let’s start with the good.

As the watermark indicates, photo courtesy of BLUFF.

Greg Merson – Hey! Another 24 year-old anonymous looking college drop-out poker kid! There’s a new story!

Merson’s story actually has the most variance. Could be really good, could end up really bad. Because we’re optimistic today, we’ll throw him in the “good” category (although we considered netting him out at “meh,” as you’ll see).

On the plus side: Merson is a 2012 bracelet winner; he’s played by most accounts more hands of poker than anyone in the world the past few years; and his friend Michael Phelps–he of an Olympic record math math math 497 gold medals–has pledged to sweat him at the final table.

On the downside (potentially): Merson is a recovering drug addict.

If Merson doesn’t allow the momentary brief burst of fame go to his head like so many delusional assholes in this industry have before him, his story of redemption–how poker saved his life–has some real teeth to it.

If he slips, not good times for anyone involved.

We’re holding out hope for the positive. Merson falls into good…for now. Read more about Merson here.

Jeremy Ausmus - Thirty-three year-old pro Jeremy Ausmus, who cashed 9 times (jack-high!) this summer, has the most compelling, media friendly backstory of any Octo-9′er: he has a baby due the week of the final table.

[click to continue…]

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Odds To Win 2012 WSOP Main Event Final Table


Odds of Jesse Sylvia winning WSOP ME final table: 3/1. Odds of us posting new Candace Swanepoel pics: 1/10000.

As betting on poker becomes more and more prevalent, we expect Vegas and off-shores to take a lot more action on this year’s WSOP Main Event final table…

…if the public had actually heard of anyone playing in it.

Regardless, here are the odds to win the 2012 WSOP Main Event final table. No real shockers. The past few years, “name pros” like Phil Ivey, Michael Mizrachi, and Ben Lamb received more “favorite” skewed odds. This year, most of Jesse Sylvia‘s action is going to come from his cousins, aunts, and uncles.

Jesse Sylvia (43,875,000) - 3/1
Andras Koroknai (29,375,000) - 9/2
Greg Merson (28,725,000) - 5/1
Russell Thomas (24,800,000) - 6/1
Michael Esposito (16,260,000) - 9/1
Steven Gee (16,860,000) - 9/1
Jake Balsiger (13,115,000) - 10/1
Robert Salaburu (15,155,000) - 10/1
Jeremy Ausmus (9,805,000) - 11/1

For what it’s worth, and it ain’t worth much, we like Koroknai (9/2) and Merson (5/1).

* Odds provided by Bovada.LV

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2012 WSOP Main Event Final Table Set: Baumann, Hille Just Miss


Sausage fest.

The 2012 WSOP Main Event has its Octo-NineTM.

The final table may be the least star-studded since 2008. That could’ve changed had both of the women who went deep, Gaelle Baumann, a woman, and Elisabeth Hille, a woman, hung on to make it. Both ended up with the deepest runs (and biggest cashes) a woman has ever scored in the Main Event.

Hille, from Norway, was knocked out in 11th for $590,442. Baumann, from France, went out in 10th for $590,442.

That leaves us with a womanless, mostly American final table.

Leading the final table is Jesse Sylvia, a 26 year-old poker pro from Las Vegas, with 43,875,000. Sylvia has about $24,000 in previous live tournament cashes.

The two biggest “pro” names to make the Octo-Nine are Andras Koroknai and Greg Merson, who are stacked second and third, respectively. Koroknai, a 30 year-old from Hungary, has 29,375,000. He won the 2010 WPT LA Poker Classic for over $1.7M. Koroknai is the only foreign-born player in the field.

Merson, a 25 year-old from Maryland, took down WSOP Event #57 this year ($10,000 NLH Six Handed) for over $1M.

Bringing up the rear as short-stack is Jacob Balsiger, a 21 year-old college senior from ASU. Stacked at 13,115,000, if he were to win, he’d eclipse Joe Cada as the youngest all-time Main Event champ.

Get full chip counts and player breakdowns here.

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