WSOP November Nine Swiftly Down To November Two
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The heart of almost every type of poker player was represented at this years WSOP final table. Although it took 123 days to get to the final table, the last two were decided in merely 17.5 hours.
There were 6,494 players that came to battle, but only two remain, Darvin Moon, chip leader for most of the tournament, and Joseph Cada, potentially the youngest player to ever win a WSOP bracelet. Last night when the day ended play, Moon sat the underdog for the first time with only $58,850,000 (which is where he started the day) and Cada holding an impressive and commanding lead with 135,950,000.
What happened to the other 7 final table players? The day started with taking 6 hands before anyone finally saw a flop, once the ice had broken, it play as usual. Many surprising pushes of all-ins, but it was James Akenhead who was the first casualty being eliminated in 9th place and quickly following was, Kevin Schaffel in 8th.
For the next few hours it seemed like the Phil Ivey show, with him chipping up on nearly almost hand, but as quickly as it came, it went and Ivey was eliminated in 7th place. Following the fan favorite was Steve Begleiter, who started with a nice stack this tournament, but he was out in the 6th place. Moon was taking some beats loosing same of his stack, Cada was getting stronger, and Saout seemed to moving along too, taking out Jeff Shulman in 5th place.
The four left, Antoine Saout (88M), Darvin Moon (54M), Joseph Cada (42M), and Eric Buchman (9M) came after the largest pot of the tournament, when Saout destroyed Buchman, leaving him with little to work with. This then ending his tournament dreams a few hands later, Buchman out in 4th place.
Saout holding the lead going into a break, but when things came back, there was no holding back, Cada and Saout were ready to battle it out, while Moon sat quietly back, thankful that he was out of the hand and hoping just one more may be eliminated. However, Cada only doubled and Saout was left crippled and defeated. So defeated, he ended up being knocked by the young stud a few hands later, leaving in 3rd place.
Which bring us to the final two, Moon and Cada. Who will prevail? Today, they will break, but then resume on Monday night, November 9th, 2009. Will the young gun stand up against the tournament long chip leader? Or perhaps Moon will regain strength and teach this boy a lesson? We will see as they play for $8,546,435!







