2008 World Series of Poker Europe

Event 2 - £2,500 H.O.R.S.E.
Day: 1
Event Info

2008 World Series of Poker Europe

Final Results
Winner
Prize
£76,999
Event Info
Buy-in
£2,500
Prize Pool
£275,000
Entries
110
Level Info
Level
20
Blinds
0 / 0
Ante
0

2008 World Series of Poker Europe: £2,500 H.O.R.S.E. - Day 1

While the final table of the £1,500 No Limit Hold'em event plays out here, you'll find updates, chip counts, photos and videos from Day 1 of the £2,500 H.O.R.S.E. event right here.

Play is scheduled to begin at 2:00 p.m. local time (9:00 a.m. EST) and, pending all goes as planned, should carry into the early hours of tomorrow.

Stay tuned for all the latest -- we're live from the Casino at the Empire in Leicester Square in just a few moments!

Ready-Made Rail

Spectators will have a lot to watch when the HORSE tournament kicks off in about 20 minutes. On one side of the rail, the £1,500 Final, and on the other some fairly snuggly packed tables which will be chock-full of well-known players. Doyle Brunson, for example, was already spotted treading between them, and although our TV screens say there are fewer than 70 players, I expect the first level or so will see numbers rise. With 90 minute levels of limit poker, they are going to get a lot of cards for their money.

Nice table...

Norwegian legend walked past me towards table before saying, "Hmmm, nice table!" as he sat down between Max Pescatori and John Juanda with Chad Brown and Doyle Brunson. Table of Doom?

Level: 1

Blinds: 0/0

Ante: 0

Shuffle Up and Deal

Tournament Director Steve Frezer has given the dealers the command to shuffle up and deal, though several seats remain vacant around the room. The game will change every eight hands, progressing through the acronym H.O.R.S.E., which stands for Hold'em, Omaha 8, Razz, Seven Card Stud and Seven Stud 8.

First Blood To Norway

Hold'em:

Doyle Brunson raises to 200 and Thor Hansen calls from the small blind. The flop is {9-Spades} {5-Clubs} {J-Diamonds} and Hansen check-calls Brunson's 100 bet. Both then check the {9-Diamonds} turn and the {3-Hearts} river where Hansen's {A-Diamonds} {Q-Diamonds} is good.

Meanwhile Jean-Robert Bellande has just sat down on this table where no value appears.

Tags: Thor Hansen

Players Take Their Seats, Take Their Time

Although the official Shuffle Up and Deal has been announced without fuss, a lot of the tables are still filling, the players filling their Player Release forms, moving tables when they are in the wrong seat (happens more often than you'd think). It's a who's who of players we've seen on TV, heard commentating, or noticed never leave the house un-logoed. A selection:

On one table - Erick Lindgren, Mickey Wernick, Joe Beevers, Daniel Negreanu, Bruno Fitoussi, Barry Greenstein, in that seat order. Crikey, That's actually the table nearest me - I could actually reach out an arm and knock over any of their stacks from where I am sitting. That would, of course, violate our professional code.

Back to the players (linked players sharing a table)
Stephen Pearce, Allen Cunningham
Richard Gryko, Torstein Iversen, Paul Jackson
Jan Sjavik, Andreas Hoivold, Jeff Madsen
Andy Bloch
Doyle Brunson, Max Pescatori, John Juanda, Thor Hansen, Chad Brown
Gary Jones
Greg Howard
Woody Deck
David Benyamine

Basically all of the 70-odd runners seem to be instantly recognizable - it's a small field in which to try to bag a bracelet, but a star-studded one.

A Gus Hansen Hand...

Omaha 8:

On the river of a {5-Diamonds} {K-Hearts} {4-Hearts} {3-Clubs} {A-Clubs} board, John Juanda bets 200, Doyle Brunson gives him a wry smile before folding while Max Pescatori squeezes his cards before sighing, "Oh go on then," and making the call. Juanda flips {J-Hearts} {8-Clubs} {7-Hearts} {6-Clubs} saying, "I've got a Gus Hansen sort of hand." Pescatori mucks and Juanda's nut straight is good for the high with his 7-6-4-3-A also good for the low.

Tags: John Juanda

The Dealer Gets Chips Too?

The dealer's in the H.O.R.S.E. tournament have each been provided with an undersized stack of eight yellow chips, designed to help them keep track of how many hands of each game have been played.

The chips are kept on their left side and moved one at a time to the right after each hand. Once all eight chips have moved to the right side, the stack is reset on the left and the game changed.