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scottcookwsopphoto #830   2009 WSOP #88   Seen & Heard #25   Scott Cooks Got Something

It took my favorite field correspondent, David Lappin, to keep me up to date on Scott Cook’s run for the November Nine. Lappin, as I’ve already told you, is part of Dublin Bellybusters (the mouth part, I imagine), a community of first-class people and excellent players. Scott Cook is part of that group and also the founder of BadBeatsPoker.net, another online community with which I’ve had the pleasure of interacting. More important for the moment, Scott has over 3 million chips going into Day Seven, which puts him just north of the middle of the pack.

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A lot of people noticed that Bobby Baldwin cashed in the Main Event, finishing 352nd, worth $29,911. Not that he needs the money or it was a particularly titanic performance. From a start on the floor of the Golden Nugget working for Steve Wynn not long after Baldwin won the Main Event in 1978, he has become one of the most experienced, most successful, and most wealthy casino executives in town.

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[This is, essentially, a continuation of my notes from the $2,500 Razz, which started in "Buzios or Razz?"]

Of course, we all know now that I made it through Day 2 of the Razz, made the final table on Day 3, and finished runner-up to Jeffrey Lisandro. I’ve written and will soon post my observations about Jeffrey’s historic third bracelet of the Series.

Day 2 was eventful for many reasons. As I described in a blog written while it was happening, Miami John Cernuto put a scare in us all. I’m pleased to inform you, by the way, that Miami John  recovered sufficiently to play the Main Event, busting out, unfortunately, during Day 3.

There were plenty of interesting Razz hands to discuss.

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Day Five was pretty bizarro at the Main Event. They started with 407 players at noon, and then 100 players busted while they were still in the first level of play. Phil Ivey went on a roller coaster in which he lost a million of his 1.2 million in chips during the first level, then got them back by the end of the day. Jordan Morgan, likewise, finished the day pretty much where he started. Fabrice Soulier picked up a lot of chips and leads the Full Tilt contingent with over 1.6 million, but that’s still more than 3 million off the lead with 186 to play.

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Jordan Morgan is near the top of the leaderboard with just over 400 players remaining. And is Phil Ivey a piece of work or what? His name is now near the top of the chip counts. I don’t know what the odds are of him winning it, but I bet he knows.

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I have a great deal of respect for Jeffrey Pollack and I made him earn it. When Harrah’s hired him in the fall of 2005 to be Commissioner of the World Series of Poker, he was taking over (in slow motion) for Gary Thompson, who had convinced Harrah’s to buy Binion’s Horseshoe in April 2004 for the purpose of acquiring the World Series.

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The Main Event started more than a week ago and it took four days to play the initial session. Now, as they approach the money, the remaining players fit comfortably in a portion of the Amazon Room. Out of 6,494 starters and three sessions apiece, 789 players remaining, of which 648 will be paid. This is who’s left:

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Everything is about to change. The World Series is no longer a melange of noon events, 5 PM events, Day 2s, final tables, and satellites. Nor is there the crazy crackle of energy at the start of the Main Event, where even the most hopeless punter can dream. Tomorrow, Friday, the Amazon Room will fill for the last time, as the final 2,044 players all assemble in one place – okay, two places early in the day.

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[This is a resumption of my accounts of the strange things I observed - and sometimes did - on June 22, the day that started with the Senior Championship at noon and didn't end until I finished Day 1 of the Razz at 3 AM on the 23rd.]

I busted out of the Senior Championship at 4:35 PM. I was torn between taking another shot at a single-table satellite, entering the $2,500 Razz, and making a dinner appointment with my author friends Tony Holden and Des Wilson. Based on how I’ve been playing, it normally would have been an easy call to blow off poker and have dinner with friends, except Des insisted on dinner at Buzios. As I told Des, and as I have told you several times – and as I have told Des that I have told you several times – Buzios is my least favorite restaurant in Las Vegas if not the entire world.

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Full Tilt has been offering, as far back at least as 2006, $10 million to any player on the site who wins an entry to the Main Event and then wins the World Championship. I’ve had people tell me, “Oh, that’s an illusion. They pay you out over, like, ten years.” I don’t care if they pay me out over ten MILLION years. That’s a lot of fuckin’ money.

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