Poker News & Strategies

Swedish player wins World Poker Tour Championship

Fri, 30 Apr 2004 Send page to friend Bookmark page Smaller font Larger font Printer friendly

New poker prize records were set this week at major championships.

Swedish player Martin Dekenijff won the biggest-money event in poker history this week, collecting $2.7 million when he captured the World Poker Tour Championship at the Bellagio resort on the Las Vegas Strip.

Dekenijff's pair of 10s beat the Ace-high hand held by Downey, Calif., player Hasan Habib in the $8.34 million prize-pool, no-limit Texas hold'em event.

The Stockholm resident's win passed the $2.5 million prize collected by 2003 World Series of Poker championship event winner Chris Moneymaker. The top slot will likely be short-lived, as this year's WSOP champion is expected to collect at least $3 million.

The tournament was held in Bellagio's Fontana Bar, a move MGM MIRAGE executives said was intended to provide spectacular images for the event's tape-delayed broadcast on the Travel Channel. One taped sequence had the Lake Bellagio fountains perform to the WPT TV show's music theme while the camera shot looked across the lake and through the wide open doors of the Fontana Bar, to the tournament's final table.

Habib collected $1.3 million for his second-place finish. Bronxville, N.Y., native Matt Matros took third place and $706,903. Las Vegas resident Richard Grijalva finished fourth, collecting $457,408; Maryland's Russell Rosenblum was fifth, getting $332,660; and Reno's Steve Brecher finished in sixth place, winning $232,862.

Meanwhile, at Binion's Horseshoe not a single Nevada player made it to the final table of the World Series of Poker's first open-to-the-public event, the $2,000 buy-in no-limit Texas hold'em tourney that took place last weekend.

London's James Vogl conquered the 834-player field, winning $400,000 and beating a nine-person final table that included five Californians.

Las Vegas got some redemption in the next event, the $1,500 buy-in Seven-card Stud tourney that concluded last Sunday night, as Bellagio cash-game specialist Ted Forrest won $111,440 to beat the event's 258-player field.

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