Poker Wsop 2013 Final Table

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Jul 16, 2013 LAS VEGAS — Youth and online skills dominated as the final table of World Series of Poker was set, but it was an experienced grinder who carried the day. As Monday night bled into Tuesday.

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The 2013 World Series of Poker was the 44th annual World Series of Poker (WSOP). It was held at the Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino in Paradise, Nevada between May 29-July 15, 2013. There was 62 bracelet events, culminating in the $10,000 No Limit Hold'em Main Event beginning on July 6. Elected to the Poker Hall of Fame: This denotes a bracelet winner. The first number is the number of bracelets won in the 2013 WSOP. The second number is the total number of bracelets won. Piccioli earned a bracelet at the 2013 WSOP Asia Pacific series and comes into the final table with some serious momentum. After spending most of Day 7 around the bottom of the chip counts, Piccioli won several big pots down the stretch, including a flip to basically eliminate his good friend Michael Ruane. The 2013 World Series of Poker main event has reached a final table after seven days of grueling action for the final nine grinders. At around 3 a.m. Local time in Las Vegas on Tuesday, an official.

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Following part 1, here are the remaining four players which make up the 2013 November Nine:
Sylvain Loosli (19.6m): The 26 year old Frenchman may have just $3,198 in tournament cashes to his name, but that is because he is a self-dubbed “online poker cash game specialist” who plays at levels of up to $25/$50. He is also the first French player to make the Main Event final table since Antoine Saout finished 3rd ($3,479,670) in 2009, a record Loosli is determined to surpass, explaining:
“I’m very proud to represent my country. I will do my best to prove that French players can be as good as American ones..[For the next four months] I’m planning on going on vacation and playing more live tournaments to keep improving my [live reads], plus work with some coaches.”
Michiel Brummelhuis (11.2m): The 32 year-old Dutch pro is the first player from his country to reach a WSOP Main Event final table and with a minimum cash of $733,224 already locked-up also claims Holland’s biggest ever WSOP cash. As well as live results which include victory in 2008 at the €1k Master Classics of Poker for €68,310, Brummelhuis has enjoyed great success online, with his biggest score coming after taking down a $1k WCOOP event on PokerStars for $144k.
According to Remko Rinkema from PokerListings: “He’s one of the nicest, most well-respected tournament players and down-to-earth players I’ve ever had the chance to cover. He’s been winning online tournaments since 2007 and was always good friends with Lex Veldhuis.”
Mark Newhouse (7.3m): The 28 year-old has over $2 million in tournament cashes and became a high profile young gun from the post-Moneymaker era after winning the 2006 WPT Borgata Poker Open for $1.5 million. Unfortunately, soon after Newhouse said he fell off the rail, explaining: “[I] sort of lost my mind and set it on fire. After the win, I moved into the Commerce, and I made a lot of very poor decisions over the next couple of years.”
However, since then Newhouse said he has got his game back on track and in 2011 he finished 82nd in the Main Event for $47,107. Newhouse is now looking forward to November’s final table, and commented: “Anyone who knows me and who plays poker with me on a regular basis knows I’m not a patient person, but there’s so much on the line, you just have to do it sometimes.”
David Benefield (6.3m): The 27 year-old Texan is a well-regarded high stakes poker pro and instructor with $633,243 in live earnings to go with his over $5 million in winnings playing online. Recently, Benefield branched out from poker to study Chinese and Political Studies, and has also been active in Macau’s Big Game. He will also have to use all his considerable poker skills if he is to overcome being the short stack at November’s final table.
The November Nine will return to the Rio on November 4th and 5th, with the payout structure as follows:
1. $8,359,531
2. $5,173,170
3. $3,727,023
4. $2,791,982
5. $2,106,526
6. $1,600,792
7. $1,225,224
8. $944,593
9. $733,224