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World Series of Poker Europe 2010

Event #2: £5,250 Pot-Limit Omaha
Day: 3
Event Info

World Series of Poker Europe 2010

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
62
Prize
£159,514
Event Info
Buy-in
£5,000
Prize Pool
£600,000
Entries
120
Level Info
Level
24
Blinds
15,000 / 30,000
Ante
0

Madsen Fights Further

Jeff Madsen has further increased his stack since that little encounter with John Racener and is now at around 350,000, the whole increase courtesy of Jeffrey Lisandro.

Lisandro raised, but gave it up to a pot-sized reraise from Madsen.

Then a couple hands later, they found themselves in the blinds and looking down at a {5-Clubs}{4-Diamonds}{9-Diamonds} flop. Lisandro led out 24,000 and Madsen called. They saw a {9-Spades} turn and this time Lisandro opted to check, before folding to a 41,000 bet from Madsen.

Lisandro remains the chip leader on 530,000 after that but his margin over Joe Serock has shrunk. It's still anyone's game.

Tags: Jeff MadsenJeffrey Lisandro

Tann's the Man

Willie Tann - legend
Willie Tann - legend

By the by, since the elimination of Karl Mahrenholz in sixth place, we are now able to declare Willie Tann the most successful player of this WSOPE so far!

Our reasoning is as follows:

Tann is one of only two people who made the finals of both the six-max event and this here PLO-in-progress, the other one being Chris Bjorin. Bjorin finished third in the six-max and ninth in the PLO, producing an average of sixth place. Tann came sixth in the six-max, so in order to better Bjorin's average results he would have to finish at least fifth in this one. Which he has now achieved. Congratulations, Mr. Tann!

Tann is admittedly one of our shorter stacks right now, but is still in with a shot at winning his second bracelet. It's been a good week for the "Dice Man" - and, we suspect, the table games at the Empire...

Tags: Willie Tann

Madsen Makes His Move

Jeff Madsen: his producer says 'ship it.'
Jeff Madsen: his producer says 'ship it.'

Building back from a short stack isn't easy, but Jeff Madsen's returned over 250k after a few choice hands went his way without showdown. The biggest of these pots went his way on a {K-Clubs} {A-Hearts}{Q-Spades} flop when big blind caller John Racener led out for 44k, only to pass instantly when Madsen on the button moved all in, after a minute or so's silent thinking.

For the rest of the hands this level, it's 50/50 whether they even get to a flop, with the table seeing more walks than a hyperactive whippet.

Tags: Jeff Madsen

Level: 20

Blinds: 6,000/12,000

Ante: 0

Karl Mahrenholz Eliminated in 6th Place (£30,192)

Karl Mahrenholz - 6th place
Karl Mahrenholz - 6th place

Joe Serock, resplendent in some rather fetching blue plastic rimmed sunglasses, opened for 28,000. Serock had no reason to be blue, though - he would soon find himself in a rather nice position.

In the big blind, Karl Mahrenholz - the tallest man in the room, now our official shortie, chip-wise - reraised the pot, or 74,000. He had 40,000 left behind. Serock disappeared into the tank for a little while, and when he emerged he made the call.

The flop came down {3-Diamonds}{4-Clubs}{j-Diamonds} and with the very minimum of fuss Mahrenholz went all in and Serock called, to the soundtrack of encouraging words from Mahrenholz' friends at the rail (Paul Parker must be the most devoted railer on earth - he must have been at every WSOP/E final table involving a British player for the last couple years at least. But we digress).

Mahrenholz: {a-Diamonds}{a-Clubs}{3-Hearts}{4-Spades} for aces that had turned into two pair, threes and fours
Serock: {9-Spades}{9-Diamonds}{10-Diamonds}{j-Spades} for a pair of jacks and a flush draw

Turn: {9-Hearts} making Serock trips, and leaving Mahrenholz in need of one of the two remaining aces

River: not an ace, but the {8-Clubs}

With that, Mahrenholz fell into the consoling arms of fellow Hit Squadders James Akenhead and the Chattha brothers at the rail. Serock meanwhile is now second in chips, on 465,000.

Tags: Joe SerockKarl Mahrenholz

Lisandro Widens Gap

As you can see from these revised counts early huge-stack-wielder Jeff Madsen has really sunk to become the second-shortest stack after Karl Mahrenholz, who's stuck between Lisandro (active and accumulating continually this level) and Madsen himself. Mahrenholz has been quiet while the big stacks make it 24k to go every hand; the only time he raised recently (28k) he instapassed to a threebet from button Joe Serock (only marginally less quiet than he is).

Lisandro's most recent 50k came from Madsen when he called his raise preflop and then check-raised a {2-Spades} {8-Spades} {7-Hearts} flop bringing Madsen's hand into the muck faster than the dealer could announce, "Raise."

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Jeffrey Lisandro au
Jeffrey Lisandro
580,000
145,000
145,000
WSOP 6X Winner
Profile photo of Joe Serock us
Joe Serock
345,000
45,000
45,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of John Racener us
John Racener
320,000
-30,000
-30,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Full Tilt
Profile photo of Willie Tann gb
Willie Tann
230,000
80,000
80,000
WSOP 1X Winner
Profile photo of Jeff Madsen us
Jeff Madsen
170,000
-130,000
-130,000
WSOP 4X Winner
Full Tilt
Profile photo of Karl Mahrenholz gb
Karl Mahrenholz
115,000
-55,000
-55,000

Felipe Ramos Eliminated in 7th Place (£23,478)

Felipe Ramos - 7th place
Felipe Ramos - 7th place

Felipe Ramos was the shortest stack coming back from the break, and in a trio of unpleasant experiences, that stack has been reduced to zero.

Hand 1

Ramos raised to 27,000 under the gun and Willie Tann - who if you remember was responsible for most of the damage to Ramos' stack before dinner - called in the cutoff. Ramos had only 50,000 behind, but that didn't stop him check-folding to a pot-sized bet from Tann on the {5-Clubs}{9-Clubs}{j-Clubs} flop.

Hand 2

Next hand, John Racener (mid position) and Jeff Madsen (small blind) both limped in. Ramos resignedly checked his big blind, and they saw a flop.

In fact they saw a turn and a river too - they checked it down and the board read {5-Spades}{7-Spades}{k-Diamonds}{5-Hearts}{2-Diamonds} by the end of it. Racener turned over {j-Clubs}{8-Diamonds}{q-Clubs}{q-Spades}, the other two mucked, and Ramos' stack was now 40,000.

Hand 3

Ramos' head and stack alike sank a little further towards the felt with each of these hands, and we couldn't see his face at all when he potted from the small blind - it had folded around to him, and he duly stuck in 30,000, with 10,000 left behind.

Joe Serock tanked up for a while before calling; the rest of the chips went in on the flop.

Ramos: {2-Hearts}{10-Diamonds}{8-Hearts}{8-Spades}
Serock: {j-Diamonds}{9-Clubs}{5-Spades}{q-Hearts}

Board: {9-Diamonds}{q-Spades}{5-Hearts}{a-Hearts}{q-Diamonds}

Ramos had flopped a gutshot draw, but Serock had flopped two pair which filled up on the river for good measure.

Now we are six, as the poet said.

Tags: Felipe Ramos

Triple for Tann

Jeff Madsen, pondering into his Tshirt
Jeff Madsen, pondering into his Tshirt

Well, three double-ups so far today, and the third one propels him up to a comfortable 230k or so! Maybe it's the support from the rail (he's definitely got a lot of well-wishers in this London crowd) but he's holding where he needs to and drawing when that's necessary.

After two hands in which Madsen and Racener traded some more chips taking turns raising and calling each other, Madsen took the initiative on the third and this time lost Racener's interest in the small blind, but picked up a caller for his 24k in the big blind in the form of Willie Tann.

The flop: {9-Clubs} {2-Hearts} {7-Hearts}. Check to Madsen who bet 39k. Tann counted this amount out, then looked at his stack and announced, "All in," called immediately. Tann showed a set with his {7-Spades} {7-Diamonds} {K-Diamonds} {9-Spades} vs. Madsen's nut flush and straight draws {A-Hearts} {J-Hearts} {Q-Diamonds} {9-Diamonds}. The turn and river bricked ({8-Clubs} {5-Spades}) and a 100k dent appears in Madsen's chip towers.

Tags: Willie TannJeff Madsen

Madsen & Racener Swap Stacks

Jeff Madsen
Jeff Madsen

John Racener opened for 24,000 and Jeff Madsen (by the by, things are getting easier for the announcers now that there are only two Jeffs in the field rather than three) called in the big blind.

Madsen checked the {2-Hearts}{4-Clubs}{a-Hearts} flop and called a 35,000 bet from Racener before both players checked the {q-Diamonds} turn. The river was a second ace, the {a-Diamonds} this time, and Madsen now paused, chewing on the collar of his T-shirt, before betting out 62,000.

Racener tanked up, completely motionless. He briefly started to riffle some chips but soon slowed back into stillness once more, as though he'd suddenly thought the riffling might give something away. Eventually he folded, and with 280,000 remaining he has been knocked off the second spot in the chip counts. Madsen moved into that spot instead - on 370,000.

Tags: Jeff MadsenJohn Racener

Level: 19

Blinds: 5,000/10,000

Ante: 0

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