2010 World Series of Poker

Event #19: $10,000 2-7 Draw Lowball Championship
Day: 1
Event Info

2010 World Series of Poker

Final Results
Winner
David Baker
Winning Hand
jx10x9x8x4x
Prize
$294,314
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$949,400
Entries
101
Level Info
Level
26
Blinds
20,000 / 40,000
Ante
10,000

All In Already

Erik Seidel raised to 300 and Nikolay Evdakov made the call from the button Erick Lindgren was in the big blind and just shipped his entire stack into the middle for about 6,000. Seidel folded and Evdakov made the call.

Lindgren stood pat and Evdakov drew one card. Lindgren then showed a {J-}{9-}{6-}{5-}{2-} and Evdakov a paired hand with the {10-}{8-}{5-}{2-}{2-}. Lindgren won the pot and doubled to about 12,000. Evdakov tossed in one of his red add-on chips and reloaded to 7,500.

Tags: Erick LindgrenErik SeidelNikolay Evdakov

I'll Take Those Right Now, Thank You

It looks as though most players are holding onto their pink "add-on" chips here at the start of play, but at least three have gone ahead and made their stacks 30,000 at the start of the first level of play -- Mike Matusow, Phil Ivey, and Mike Wattel.

No Soft Spots

As expected, we're looking at a small but stacked field today.

Among those in their seats for our first hands are John D'Agostino, Nikolay Evdakov, Shawn Sheikhan, Dario Minieri, Erick Lindgren, Chad Brown, Billy Baxter, Barry Greenstein, Phil Ivey, Tom Dwan, Erik Seidel, Todd Brunson, Daniel Alaei, Scott Seiver, Todd Brunson, Jeffrey Lisandro, John Monnette, Jon Turner, Tom Schneider, and Vladimir Schmelev.

Shuffle Up and Deal

Three pink "add-on" chips top off the players' starting stacks.
Three pink "add-on" chips top off the players' starting stacks.

The first hands are being dealt for Event No. 19. While not a "rebuy" tourney as such, players will begin today with starting stacks of 7,500 chips plus three additional "add-on" chips, each also worth 7,500. They'll be able to use those add-ons at any point during the first four one-hour levels, and if they haven't done so by then, they'll automatically receive them.

Thus each technically is given 30,000 chips here with which to play, but with an option to withhold putting all of those into play until so desired. That's a slight change from last year, when they started with 10,000 and had two 10,000 "add-ons" to use during through the end of the first three levels.

Level: 1

Blinds: 50/75

Ante: 25

Getting Close

Players are gathering -- and a lot of familiar faces among them. Looks like we'll have a small field as well, with only nine or ten tables' worth of players here at the start. Stay tuned for the start of tonight's $10,000 2-7 Draw Lowball Championship.

Lowball at High Stakes

Avoid aces. Pass on pairs. Turn away trips, shun straights, and fend off flushes. This is lowball, where worst is best. And everyone is gunning for Number One.

Welcome to Event No. 19, the $10,000 Deuce-to-Seven Draw Lowball Championship (No-Limit). Often described as an especially "pure" form of poker, 2-7 draw -- a.k.a. Kansas City lowball -- combines the gamesmanship of draw poker with the strategy of no-limit betting.

Last year Nick Schulman bested a field of 96 entrants -- including a formidable final table of Ville Wahlbeck, Steve Sung, John Juanda, Archie Karas, Vince Musso, and David Benyamine -- to take down the $279,751 first prize. The year before the event was played as a $5,000 rebuy event, with Mike "the Mouth" Matusow topping a group of 85 to claim his third WSOP bracelet.

We expect a similarly small but stacked group today, an intimate gathering of poker's elite vying for one of the Series' more coveted bracelets. Back around 5 p.m. local time for the start of Day 1!

Event #19: $10,000 2-7 Draw Lowball Championship

Day 1 Started