WSOP 2008
After playing ten-handed for three hours, Dean Hamrick moved all in for his last 3.4 million and Craig Marquis made the call, potentially setting up the final bustout of Day 7. Hamrick showed A
J
and needed some help against the Q
Q
of Marquis.
The board revealed K
T
3
T
K
, sending Hamrick out in tenth place with $591,869 and finally providing the poker world with its 2008 World Series of Poker Main Event final table. Here’s what we’ll be waiting for come November 11th:
Scott “r_a_y” Montgomery
Dennis Phillips
Craig Marquis
Ylon Schwartz
Darus Suharto
David “Chino” Rheem
Ivan Demidov
Kelly Kim
Peter Eastgate
Each of the final nine will leave the Rio with $900,670 (ninth place money) and have the chance to play for $9,119,517 when they return from their 117-day break in the fall. With that, we at pocketfiveslive.com would like to thank everyone that followed our coverage this summer and look forward to seeing you again soon!
Tags: Craig Marquis, Dean Hamrick, r_a_y, Scott Montgomery, WSOP Main Event, WSOP Main Event Day 7 Related Posts:- July 16, 2008 -- So Long, Farewell
- July 15, 2008 -- Hoor_a_y!
- July 15, 2008 -- P5ers Collide, Klodnicki Sent Home in 12th
- July 14, 2008 -- Montgomery Making Moves, Crowe Flies Away
Scott “r_a_y” Montgomery’s relentless aggression throughout the final two days of the Main Event has rewarded him with a trip to the final table. The remaining 10 players have been seated and play has begun and will conclude when the final nine are decided.
With the field at 11 players, a reeling Joe Bishop moved in for his last 2.4 million from under the gun and David Rheem called in the big blind. Rheem asked him, “Do you have a pair?” and Bishop shook his head as he showed A
3
and was in a race against Rheem’s 2
2
. The flop was interesting to say the least; A
5
3
gave Bishop top two pair but Rheem picked up a gutshot straight draw. His rail began chanting and even the other players at the table began pulling for Rheem as Bishop watched from a distance. The Q
on the turn was no help to Rheem, but an outburst of emotion poured over the back of the Amazon Room when the 4
peeled off on the river, giving Rheem his straight and eliminating Bishop in 11th place.
Meanwhile at the featured table, Montgomery was in the middle of a colossal pot himself. Chip leader Dennis Phillips raised to 500K with blinds at 100K/200K and Montgomery reraised to 2.2 million. Phillips made the call and the two saw a J
T
6
flop. Phillips check-called a bet of 1.5 million from Montgomery. The K
came on the turn and again Phillips check-called, this time a bet of 2 million. Phillips checked again when the 9
fell on the river and Montgomery bet 4 million. Dennis went into thought and eventually called but watched Montgomery flip over A
T
for an ace-high flush. The pot increased Scott’s stack to over 20 million, pulling him close to the chip lead as the tables combined into one.
We’ll be here with updates until we lose one more player so stay tuned to follow the progress of Scott Montgomery here at P5sLive!
Tags: David Rheem, Dennis Phillips, Joe Bishop, r_a_y, Scott Montgomery, WSOP Main Event, WSOP Main Event Day 7 Related Posts:- July 14, 2008 -- Railbirds Getting a Little Rambunctious
- July 16, 2008 -- So Long, Farewell
- July 15, 2008 -- November Nine Set!
- July 15, 2008 -- P5ers Collide, Klodnicki Sent Home in 12th
Chris “SLOPPYKLOD” Klodnicki’s time at the ESPN featured table didn’t last long. Not even an hour after being moved from the secondary table, Klodnicki and Scott “r_a_y” Montgomery banged heads for a pot worth 9 million chips.
With the blinds at 80K/160K and a 20K ante, Dennis Phillips limped from early position and Montgomery rasied to 600K. Klodnicki called from the big blind, Phillips folded, and the two players saw a flop of A
Q
Q
. Klodnicki checked, Montgomery led out for 1 million, and Klodnicki moved all in for his last 4 million. Scott called and the entire room waited in angst for the players to turn up their cards:
Klodnicki: J
T
Montgomery: Q
J
Klodnicki flopped a royal flush draw but trailed the trip queens of Montgomery. The turn brought the J
, leaving Klodnicki with just one out in the deck. The miracle didn’t come, however, as the 4
came on the river and Klodnicki was eliminated in 12th place for $591,869. Despite being by far the biggest payday Klodnicki’s ever won, he felt more like he missed out on nine million than won 591k in the wake of his Main Event exit.
“I had such a good shot at it,” Klodnicki lamented minutes after his bustout. “I’m not really up to celebrate right now, maybe tomorrow night.”
Given Klodnicki’s online and live tournament results, Klodnicki stood to benefit even more than just the jump in money as players advance to the final table. If he could have made it to the final nine, Klodnicki could have been the top player that companies and online poker rooms would have enticed with endorsement offers considering his impressive resume.
Now he’s only left to wonder what would have been.
The players have gone on a 20 minute break. Montgomery has catapulted to fifth overall in chips with 12.8 million. The chip leader is Dennis Phillips with 23 million.
Tags: Chris Klodnicki, r_a_y, Scott Montgomery, SLOPPYKLOD, WSOP Main Event, WSOP Main Event Day 7 Related Posts:- July 14, 2008 -- Montgomery Making Moves, Crowe Flies Away
- July 14, 2008 -- A Little Less Estrogen in the Room…
- July 14, 2008 -- Railbirds Getting a Little Rambunctious
- July 14, 2008 -- Two Tables Remain…
Main Event final table run like last summer when Lee Watkinson, Scotty Nguyen, and Ray Henson were battling it out, there are a few players left that are far from unknowns.
David “Chino” Rheem (pictured left) is no stranger to the bright lights of a WSOP final table. Rheem took a commanding chip lead into WSOP Event #4 this summer in the 5k Mixed Hold-em final table and ended up finishing in fifth place for 93k. Rheem was up against a stacked final table with eventual winner Erick Lindgren, Justin “zeejustin” Bonomo, Howard Lederer, Andrew “good2cu” Robl, David Williams, and Isaac “luvthewnba” Haxton.
Rheem’s best WSOP moment was in 2006 when he lost a heads-up duel that aired on ESPN when he finished runner up to Allen Cunningham, cashing for 326k. Rheem had to navigate through another tough final table lineup to get to heads-up play with Alex Jacob, Andy Bloch, Tim Phan, Tom Franklin, Steve Wong, and John Hoang.
If Rheem doesn’t finish strong tonight, it won’t be from a lack of mentors.Rheem’s poker gallery standing nearly ten feet away reads like a who’s who of the poker world with the Mizrachi brothers, J.C. Tran, Theo Tran, Nam Le, Steve Sung, Greg “FBT” Mueller and Marcel Luske. After nearly every key hand Rheem plays, he walks over and rehashes it with his poker braintrust.
Chris “SLOPPYKLOD” Klodnicki has the distinct advantage having an incredibly impressive poker resume but probably remaining anonymous to most of his competition he faces.
Klodnicki is the No. 43rd ranked player on the Pocketfives leaderboard with three cashes over 40k the past six months. If Klodnick is able to make the final table in the Main Event, it won’t be his first final WSOP final table. Klodnicki finished runner-up to Barry Greenstein in WSOP Event #46 in Razz, cashing for 97k. Klodnicki also cashed in WSOP Event #36, cashing for 5k in 89th place.
Tags: chino, Chris Klodnicki, David Rheem, SLOPPYKLOD, WSOP Main Event, WSOP Main Event Day 7 Related Posts:- July 14, 2008 -- Railbirds Getting a Little Rambunctious
- July 15, 2008 -- P5ers Collide, Klodnicki Sent Home in 12th
- July 14, 2008 -- Montgomery Making Moves, Crowe Flies Away
- July 14, 2008 -- A Little Less Estrogen in the Room…
Scott “r_a_y” Montgomery has been on the move during the last level before the dinner break. In one hand Montgomery (pictured left) limped in from under the gun and Gert Andersen limped in as well before Dennis Phillips raised to 350K from the big blind. Mongomery made the call and Andersen folded. The flop came out A
9
3
and Phillips bet out 500K only to have Montgomery raise to 1.2 million. Phillips then re-raised to 3.5 million and (as if that weren’t enough) Montgomery moved all in for 6.7 million. Phillips finally conceded the hand and Montgomery took the huge pot and increased his stack to 15 million.
In another hand, Nicholas Sliwinski raised to 300K and Montgomery called to see the flop come Q
7
5
. Both players checked and the 8
fell on the turn. The both checked again and saw the A
come on the river. In keeping with the hand’s flow, both players checked yet again and Montgomery showed a surprisingly strong A
Q
for top two pair to take the hand. We can only imagine that he was trying to induce a bluff from Sliwinski but he still scooped up a few more chips in the hand.
Right before the break began Montgomery lost a little ground and dropped back down to 12.45 million but he is still near the top of the chip counts in 3rd place.
Owen “ocrowe” Crowe’s final table dreams have come to an end. Ivan Demidov raised to 330K from under the gun and both Chino Rheem and Joe Bishop called. Crowe (pictured right) then moved all in from the button for 1.84 million and Demidov made the call. Rheem and Bishop both folded and Crowe was in a classic race situation with his 9
9
against Demidov’s A
Q
. The flop came J
J
T
and gave Demidov even more outs. The Q
on the turn put Demidov in the lead but gave Crowe an open-ended straight draw. The 2
on the river was no help to Crowe and he was eliminated in 15th place good for a payday of $463,201. Congrats to Owen for his amazing finish!
Overall the play has tightened up considerably as the final table draws near. With only five eliminations to go until the final table is set, all the players can see the finish line in the distance.
Tags: Chris Klodnicki, ocrowe, Owen Crowe, r_a_y, Scott Montgomery, SLOPPYKLOD, WSOP Main Event, WSOP Main Event Day 7 Related Posts:
- July 14, 2008 -- A Little Less Estrogen in the Room…
- July 14, 2008 -- Railbirds Getting a Little Rambunctious
- July 14, 2008 -- Two Tables Remain…
- July 14, 2008 -- WSOP Main Event Day 7 Gallery

