World Series of Poker: Suharto busts out in 6th
By OSKAR GARCIA
Associated Press Writer
LAS VEGAS — Darus Suharto lost on a last-ditch effort to add to his short stack of chips at the World Series of Poker as the rest of the players took turns as chip leader Sunday night in their quest for the $9.15 top prize.
A 39-year-old accountant from Toronto, Suharto moved in for 8.6 million chips with an ace and eight and was called by Scott Montgomery holding an ace and a queen. Suharto was unlikely to win because chances were that neither player would match their cards to the flop and the queen was ahead.
Montgomery ended Suharto's tournament by hitting a fourth spade on the turn to make a flush. Suharto won $2.4 million for sixth place.
Four more players were to be eliminated before the final two played heads up for the no-limit Texas Hold 'em main event championship on Monday night.
Peter Eastgate, a 22-year-old professional from Odense, Denmark, became the fourth of nine players to take the chip lead on Sunday when he took a pot that included 10.5 million chips from Dennis Phillips, who began the day in the lead but struggled after dropping to eighth of nine by the first break in play.
Phillips and Eastgate played back and forth, betting and raising, until Eastgate went all-in over the top of Phillips' 7 million chip raise, prompting Phillips to fold his hand. Without showing his cards, Eastgate overtook 27-year-old Russian Ivan Demidov for the lead.
David "Chino" Rheem, the most well-known poker player coming into the final table, busted out in seventh place when Eastgate hit a pair of queens to upend the 28-year-old poker professional from a dominant hand.
"I put my heart into it and my heart is broken," a visibly upset Rheem said. "This one really hurts."
Rheem won $1,772,650 for seventh place.
Two players were eliminated in back-to-back hands, and each bust out brought higher guaranteed paydays and inched those remaining closer to poker's richest crown.
Kelly Kim, a big underdog because of his severely low chip stack coming into the final table, held out one hand longer than Craig Marquis and was rewarded with an extra $387,547.
"You play this game, you take the abuse and you give the abuse," Kim said. "I hung on as long as I could."
Marquis, a 23-year-old former college student from Arlington, Texas, lost with three sevens to Scott Montgomery, who drew a straight on the turn and river to send Marquis home in ninth.
"You got to try to win the tournament," Marquis told Kim as the first two players eliminated from the final table greeted each other away from it.
Ylon Schwartz started the day in the middle of the pack and quickly moved to the top with aggressive raises. Phillips — hoping to salvage a lousy start — doubled up through Rheem on his way back into serious contention. By the time Rheem was eliminated, Schwartz and Phillips were essentially tied in chips, an indication of the big swings in the seesaw battle for the top of the poker world.
Kim, a 31-year-old poker professional from Whittier, Calif., survived two all-in bets after watching his stack slowly whittle away at the start of the final table.
The final players at the World Series of Poker resumed play Sunday morning the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas to determine the champion at this year's no-limit Texas Hold 'em main event.
Fans waited outside the Penn & Teller Theater at the hotel as early as 2 a.m. in hopes of nabbing one of the 1,000 seats inside, a security guard said. Most were taken by friends and family of the players.
Phillips tipped his baseball cap and lifted his hands in the air to greet roughly 300 of his friends, who were flown to Las Vegas by his sponsor, gambling site PokerStars. Phillips won his $10,000 buy-in and trip for the main event in a $200 satellite tournament at Harrah's St. Louis Hotel & Casino.
Following 30 minutes of introductions — 117 days since the last hand was played — the cards hit the felt after 2007 main event champ Jerry Yang announced the famous line: "Dealer, shuffle up and deal!"
Seven players were to be eliminated Sunday, with the last two scheduled to play heads-up Monday night for the title and top payday. The nine players will split $32.7 million — the lion's share of a pool built on the $10,000 entry fees of 6,844 players who began play in July.
The pool accrued $98,179 in interest during the break, which was enough to shift some of the prizes significantly. The top prize, originally $9.12 million, gained $32,899.
The last nine players returned to the table after a break to build up interest in the event with vastly different sized chip stacks. Chips don't have monetary value, but they tell players where they stand compared with their opponents and significantly affect how they can maneuver in the game. A player who loses all his chips is eliminated.