based on an article that appeared in the Associated Press By KIMBERLY PIERCEALL and DAN MICHALSKI,
LAS VEGAS (AP) — It was Joe McKeehen all the way as he never gave up his lead in the World Series of Poker championship event. Joe took home a cool $7.68 million Tuesday night as the undisputed champion of the World Series of Poker.
The crowd watched in anticipation as 25-year-old McKeehen won the match when his ace-10 improved to a pair of tens on the flop, giving him a victory in a face-off with Joshua Beckley of New Jersey who went all-in with a pair of fours.
McKeehen took and held a dominate lead in poker chips coming into the final game. He was in that position for the entire three-day event.
“I thought it was the Joe Show,” said ESPN analyst and poker pro Antonio Esfandiari who commented about McKeehen’s nearly perfect poker playing during the World Series of Poker. “He played great, he ran great, and you can’t overcome that combination. He did exactly what he needed to do to not give up the chip lead ever,” he said.
As he usually is, McKeehen characteristically took his win in stride.
When asked if he had any plans for his $7.68 million, he simply said, “Not yet.”
“It was just my days for three days in a row,” he said of the ease holding his lead and eventually winning.
No limit Texas Hold ’em involves each player getting two cards unseen by the rest of the table and five community cards, the first three on the “flop,” the fourth on the “turn,” the fifth on the “river,” with betting between each.
The championship got its start in 1970 with an invite-only event at Benny Binion’s Las Vegas casino where the men gathered around the table initially chose the winner and has grown to a global contest that attracts thousands of poker players each year.
World Series of Poker tournament events began in May and continued for 51 days with 68 events, culminating with the annual Main Event. It’s a grueling multi-day poker marathon that whittled down the competition from 6,420 entries at $10,000 each to nine players, all already guaranteed at least $1 million each.
Before coming back to the poker stage Sunday, McKeehen held 63.1 million chips, a lot more than twice as many as the man in second place. By the end of Monday, he had more than 128 million chips, more than three times as much as the man nearest him.
Players eliminated before Tuesday night’s three-person matchup, in order, were 26-year-old Patrick Chan of New York, 25-year-old Federico Butteroni of Italy, 72-year-old Pierre Neuville of Belgium, 23-year-old Tom Cannuli of New Jersey, 37-year-old Ofer Svi Stern and 27-year-old Max Steinberg.
McKeehen sent home six of the nine final players in showdowns over the three days including 61-year-old Neil Blumenfield who went home with $3.4 million in third place when his pair of two’s couldn’t out-do McKeehen’s pair of queens.
“I’m not happy with how I played today, but obviously it was a great run. If you had asked me four months ago about finishing third, I would have been very excited about that,” Blumenfield said. The former tech executive from San Francisco who started a company and sold it to Intuit in 2013 said he’s done with the software business. He was laid off in between early World Series of Poker events during the summer and the Main Event’s start which had him weighing the $10,000 entry, at first.
“There’s actually a lot of similarities between startup software and poker. In both cases only the top 10 percent cash, and among that 10 percent only the top one or two really make any money at all,” he said.
His departure left McKeehen facing Beckley.
The two played on — sitting between stacks of cash and a prized, pricey, World Series of Poker bracelet encrusted with diamonds and rubies — until McKeehen claimed the final victory, landing a lucky second 10.
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Michalski is a freelancer reporting from Las Vegas.
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