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Jarl Lindholt Jorgensen $101,000 117 1 Franklin Caldwell $690,000 117 2 Joe Connor $641,000 117 3 Farzad Bonyadi $2,402,000 117 5 Dustin Woolf $968,000 117 6 Mike Matusow $2,561,000 117 7 Brad Kondracki $1,136,000 117 8 Tex Barch $2,025,000 117 9 I hope they get into it... :club:Adam Friedman $719,000 118 1 Daniel Bergsdorf $1,144,000 118 2 Steve Dannenmann $2,143,000 118 3 Steve Marx $1,042,000 118 4 Kevin Kaikko $571,000 118 5 Larry Prugh $166,000 118 6 Minh Ly $1,102,000 118 7 Nick Gibson $811,000 118 8 Anyone know of him?Andrew Black $371,000 131 1 Russell Salzer $710,000 131 2 Phil Ivey $2,027,000 131 3 Roland Israelashvici $469,000 131 4 David Richardson $501,000 131 5 Oskar Silow $720,000 131 6 Hung La $505,000 131 8 Terry Burt $1,080,000 131 9 Aaron Kanter $778,000 131 10 With his chiplead, he's gonna fckin rip this table apart

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Adam Friedman $719,000 118 1 Daniel Bergsdorf $1,144,000 118 2 Steve Dannenmann $2,143,000 118 3 Steve Marx $1,042,000 118 4 Kevin Kaikko $571,000 118 5 Larry Prugh $166,000 118 6 Minh Ly $1,102,000 118 7 Nick Gibson $811,000 118 8 Anyone know of him?
No, but Larry Prugh is the family friend I am cheering on. He's severely shortstacked. I figure he has two rounds to make his stand. *crosses fingers*..He probably has to win not one but two coinflips to get back into it tho. =(Ray
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Adam Friedman $719,000 118 1 Daniel Bergsdorf $1,144,000 118 2 Steve Dannenmann $2,143,000 118 3 Steve Marx $1,042,000 118 4 Kevin Kaikko $571,000 118 5 Larry Prugh $166,000 118 6 Minh Ly $1,102,000 118 7 Nick Gibson $811,000 118 8 Anyone know of him?
No, but Larry Prugh is the family friend I am cheering on. He's severely shortstacked. I figure he has two rounds to make his stand. *crosses fingers*..He probably has to win not one but two coinflips to get back into it tho. =(Ray
I think there is an article on cnnsi.com about friedman.....check out the campus blitz articles
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obviously, if Ivey is just trying to advance he's got the perfecttable- no one even close to a threat.however, if you are trying to win, do you think the extreme lack ofchips(and consquent tight play) might be a disadvantage later onwhen he gets switched if he cant steal enough blinds?or will stealing the blinds make up for the potential lack of any big pots?

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Andrew Black $371,000 131 1 Russell Salzer $710,000 131 2 Phil Ivey $2,027,000 131 3 Roland Israelashvici $469,000 131 4 David Richardson $501,000 131 5 Oskar Silow $720,000 131 6 Hung La $505,000 131 8 Terry Burt $1,080,000 131 9 Aaron Kanter $778,000 131 10 With his chiplead, he's gonna fckin rip this table apart
Didn't Hung La finish in the top 20 in last years tournament?
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Jarl Lindholt Jorgensen $101,000 117 1 Franklin Caldwell $690,000 117 2 Joe Connor $641,000 117 3 Farzad Bonyadi $2,402,000 117 5 Dustin Woolf $968,000 117 6 Mike Matusow $2,561,000 117 7 Brad Kondracki $1,136,000 117 8 Tex Barch $2,025,000 117 9 I hope they get into it... :club:
"Let's see...unknown donkey, unknown Sweedish donkey, Internet donkey, and Farzad Bonyadi."
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Hometown fella is making some noise: (check the freep archives for other articles about him)http://www.freep.com/features/living/poker...3e_20050713.htmBluff boosts Macomb poker player's fortunes July 13, 2005BY JOE GUY COLLIERFREE PRESS STAFF WRITERMacomb resident Larry Prugh has survived the first three rounds of the World Series of Poker's Main Event, playing his way into a field of 185 that started with more than 5,600 competitors.Prugh is guaranteed at least a $39,000 payout and is still in the hunt for a larger slice of the $53 million pot. The Main Event, played each year in Las Vegas, is one of the world's most famous poker tournaments. ESPN will broadcast the event later this year.A 56-year-old security specialist with the Detroit Arsenal, Prugh won his seat through an online tournament that cost him $16 to enter."I feel great," Prugh, obviously excited, said Tuesday by phone from Las Vegas. "I don't even know what day of the week it is."Prugh has been playing marathon matches of Texas Hold'em poker to work his way through the tourney. Taking short breaks, he played from noon Monday until 2 a.m. Tuesday to make it past the third round.The turning point came shortly after dinner when Prugh, down to $100,000 in chips, went head-to-head with an opponent who had more than $800,000 in chips.Prugh didn't have a good hand but decided to bluff. He pointed to his family in the audience, told his opponent he'd had a good time in Las Vegas and was ready to go home."I leaned forward and said, 'This is it. All in,' " Prugh said. "Let's shove these babies all in."The bluff worked. The opponent, thinking Prugh was fronting a good hand, folded. The win boosted Prugh's stack to about $180,000. He would finish the round with $372,500 in chips for 56th in the standings.Prugh was headed to another round of play Tuesday that could push his guaranteed winnings higher. The Main Event champion will be crowned this weekend and could bag more than $5 million."We're creeping into some serious money," Prugh said before heading back to play.

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Looks like Ivey drew a very good table where he's the considerable chip leader.
That's good. I want him to win the thing.
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Less than 1% of the players are left. But, what do they play down to today 27 or 18?

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