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Poker Tournament Results

36th Annual World Series of Poker

Event #6 - WSOP No Limit Hold'em
June 7, 2005 at 12:00 PM
Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino
Tournament Schedule
Buy-In $2,500
Prize Pool $1,260,760
Entries 548
Report Available
Isaac Galazan

Isaac Galazan

Place Name Prize
1 Isaac Galazan AKA "the general" (Sunny Isles Beach, FL, USA) $315,125
2 Harry Demetriou (London, UK) $163,850
3 Tommy Grimes (Loves Park, IL, USA) $85,705
4 David Singer (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $75,625
5 Antonio Esfandiari AKA "The Magician" (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $63,020
6 Dave Barnes (London, UK) $50,415
7 Abe Almalhi (Cincinnati, OH, USA) $37,810
8 Luis Santoni (Pembroke Pines, FL, USA) $37,810
9 Delmiro Toledo AKA "Holy Toledo" (Visalia, CA, USA) $25,210
10 Andy Black (Dublin, Ireland) $25,210
11 Mel Judah (London, UK) $12,605
12 Randy Holland (Winnetka, CA, USA) $12,605
13 Alex Prendis Jr. (Miami, CA, USA) $10,085
14 Steve Zolotow (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $10,085
15 John Cermulo (USA) $10,085
16 Eli Elezra (Henderson, NV, USA) $10,085
17 John Juanda (Marina Del Rey, CA, USA) $10,085
18 Martin Green (Brighton, UK) $10,085
19 Mitchell Bushman (USA) $8,825
20 Cyndy Violette AKA "Ultra Violette ,Poker flower" (LosAngeles, CA, and scottsdale arizona, USA) $8,825
21 Lee Morgan (Garden Grove, CA, USA) $8,825
22 Ari Abramowitz (USA) $8,825
23 Robin Keston (London, UK) $8,825
24 Scott Caldwell (USA) $8,825
25 David Levi (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $7,650
26 Al "T" Ardebili (New York City, NY, USA) $7,650
27 Eddy Scharf (Cologne, Germany) $7,650
28 Keith Rittenhouse (Ostrander, OH, USA) $7,650
29 Mark Muchnik (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $7,560
30 Can Kim Hua AKA "CK" (Rosemead, CA, USA) $7,560
31 Steve Buckner (The Villages, FL, USA) $6,930
32 Bob Stupak (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $6,930
33 Phillip Hilm (Cambridge, UK) $6,930
34 Humberto Brenes (San Jose, CA, USA) $6,930
35 David Lewis (Glendale, CA, USA) $6,930
36 Eric Haber AKA "sheets" (Muttontown, NY, USA) $6,930
37 Jeffrey Lisandro AKA "Iceman" (Salerno, Italy) $6,050
38 Jason Lane (Chandler, AZ, USA) $6,050
39 Minh Ly (Temple City, CA, USA) $6,050
40 Marcello De Grosso (USA) $6,050
41 David Goodis AKA "Devil" (Delray Beach, FL, USA) $6,050
42 Zack Sanders AKA "The Bag" (Boulder, CO, USA) $6,050
43 John Kabbaj (London, UK) $5,295
44 Robert Haney (Dewitt, MI, USA) $5,295
45 David Daneshgar (Westlake Village, CA, USA) $5,295
46 Samad Rashid AKA "Sam" (Brandon, FL, USA) $5,295
47 Peter Lawson (Sandy, UT, USA) $5,295
48 Charles Pacheo (USA) $5,295
49 Steve Reitzfeld (Culver City, CA, USA) $5,040
50 Ron Turner (Exeter, CA, USA) $5,040
51 Michael Fiorito (Henderson, NV, USA) $5,040
52 Arnie Toler (Gilbert, WV, USA) $5,040
53 Shahram "Sean" Sheikhan (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $5,040
54 James Boyd (Martinsburg, WV, USA) $5,040
55 Joe Leibman (Fort Atkinson, WI, USA) $5,040
56 Glyn Banks AKA "Rachet" (Smithville, TN, USA) $5,040
57 Kevin Patterson (Wheeling, IL, USA) $5,040
58 Adam Naglich (Las Vegas, NV, USA) $5,040
59 Randy McKay (Chicago, IL, USA) $5,040
60 Jorge Arias (Caracas, Venezuela) $5,040
61 Joe Ward (USA) $4,410
62 Benjamin Johnson (Brooklyn, NY, USA) $4,410
63 Tim Whaley (Atlanta, GA, USA) $4,410
64 Stephen Bartlett (Livonia, MI, USA) $4,410
65 Dolph Arnold (Houston, TX, USA) $4,410
66 David Hedley (Long Beach, CA, USA) $4,410

Tournament Report

Galazan Wins Shootout:

Isaac "the General" Galazan wins inaugural WSOP "Shootout" championship, earns victory in first-ever tournament of its kind.

Poker is a fascinating game for many reasons, not the least of which are the seemingly contradictory objectives and strategies required to win. If asked, What is the ultimate objective of every single poker hand? -the expected answer would be, To win the pot. Accordingly, one is led to believe that the player who wins the most pots at a poker table would be the biggest winner. Furthermore, one might assume that the player who wins the most pots at a final table normally wins the tournament.

To the contrary, this is not the case. The player who wins the most pots is not necessarily the biggest winner. The player might even be a loser. Winning many pots comes at a price. At that price is -- more often than not -losing more pots than anyone else at the table.

Ultimately, the objective is to win the pots that really matter. And no pot matters more than the final pot of the night. Isaac "the General" Galazan won far fewer pots than his heads-up rival, Harry Demetrion. In fact, Demetrion won more than twice as many pots as anyone else at the final table. But it was Galazan who won the pots that mattered most, resulting in his first World Series of Poker gold bracelet, and a first-place payout of $315,125.

This was the first WSOP "Shootout" in history. Influenced by the public demand wanting a competition that tests short-handed play, tables in "Shootouts" are six (not nine) handed. This means that blinds orbit around the table more quickly. Furthermore, it is even more critical to know your opponents in six-handed play. In short, a "Shootout" is quite a different game than standard, full-table no-limit hold"em.

There were 548 entries in this inaugural event -each paying $2,500 to enter. The total prize pool amounted $1,260,400 -the fourth of six events that have exceeded $1 million. The final table composition included one former gold bracelet winner (Antonio "the Magician" Esfandiari), and one player who made it to the final table of the championship event two years ago (David Singer). The chip leader was Harry Demetrion:

THE FINAL TABLE:

Seat 1: David Barnes 148,000
Seat 2: David Singer 122,500
Seat 3: Tommy Grimes 278,000
Seat 4: Harry Demetrion 453,500
Seat 5: Isaac Galazan 285,000
Seat 6: Antonio Esfandiari 86,000

Players were eliminated as follows:

6th Place -David Barnes went out just a few minutes after the final table started. His A-J was topped by fellow-countryman Demetrion"s pocket 10s. Barnes, who is a security consultant from London, England, has enjoyed phenomenal poker success in Europe. He won a European poker championship in 2003 and won a British championship that same year. However the best he could do was 6th place in this event, which paid $50,415.

5th Place -Demetrion"s dominance continued as next, he knocked out Antonio Esfandiari. "The Magician" couldn"t pull off any magical finishes at this final table, and he disappeared in 5th place, with $63,020 in prize money. On his final hand, Esfandiari had K-J against Demetrion"s pocket 8s, and failed to hit one of his overcards.

4th Place -Again, it was Demetrion who put the finishing touches on one of his opponents. David Singer, a Brooklyn-born poker pro who specializes mostly in high-limit seven-card stud, was dealt pocket 9s. He lost when Demetrion had A-4 and flopped an ace. Singer sang a sad song, ending up with $75,625 for 4th place.

3rd Place -Tommy Grimes has made it to numerous final tables in his distinguished poker career. But the Houston gambler (mostly poker and sports betting) has yet to win a WSOP gold bracelet. Grimes got close in this tournament, but ended up busting out third, good for $85,705.

2nd Place -Heads-up play began with Demetrion holding a marginal chip lead, which he increased slowly. Then, Galazan won a few key spots, and seized the chip lead 10 minutes into the duel. A few minutes later, the final hand of the tournament came out of nowhere. Galazan was dealt Q-9 and moved "all in" hoping to steal. Galazan had K-J and called, leaving the result in the left hand of the dealer. The final board showed all blanks, 8-5-4-5-2, which meant Galazan"s king played as the high card.

Runner up Harry Demetrion was gravely disappointed he failed to win. He could take solace in knowing his total payout amounted to $163,850. But by the look on Demetrion"s face, you"d have thought he busted out on the bubble. To some, winning is everything.

1st Place -Isaac Galazan is a 34-year-old nightclub owner. He has two homes -one in Miami and the other in Bangkok, Thailand. His win in this event amounted to $315,125.

The lesson here it that what you see is not always what you get. Reality is all a matter of perspective. Harry Demetrion won far more pots than anyone else at the final table, but it was a player nicknamed "the General" who ended up putting on a commanding performance.

Official Report by Nolan Dalla -World Series of Poker Media Director

World Series of Poker Circuit Director of Operations -Ken Lambert
World Series of Poker Tournament Director -John Grooms
Rio Poker Room Manager -Michael Matts
Rio Poker Tournament Director -Robert Daily

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