2006 World Series of Poker

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2006 World Series of Poker

The 2006 World Series of Poker (WSOP) began on June 25, 2006, with satellite events, with regular play commencing on June 26 with the annual Casino Employee event and the Tournament of Champions held on June 28 and 29. Forty more events, in various disciplines including Omaha, seven-card stud and razz, plus ladies' and senior tournaments, led up to the 10,000 US$ no-limit Texas hold 'em main event starting July 28 and running through the final table on August 10.

Quick Facts Location, Dates ...
2006 World Series of Poker
LocationRio All-Suite Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada
DatesJune 26 – August 10
Champion
Jamie Gold
 2005
2007 
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Thumb
The 2006 WSOP Championship bracelet

All events were held at the Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, which marked the first time that a casino other than Binion's Horseshoe (now "Binion's") hosted the final table of the main event. Six days reserved for the first two rounds of play for the main event were established by Harrah's Entertainment, which has run the annual event since its purchase from the Binion family in 2004.

The first prize in the main event was $12 million (US$), at that time the richest prize for the winner of any sports or television event in history. The top 12 players became millionaires.[1] The record prize was surpassed at the 2012 WSOP, when the winner of the $1 million buy-in Big One for One Drop, Antonio Esfandiari, received a first-place prize of $18.3 million.[2]

The 2006 World Series featured a much-anticipated HORSE tournament with a $50,000 buy-in, the highest ever for a single WSOP event.[3]

Humberto Brenes, Phil Hellmuth, Chris Ferguson, and Alex Jacob tied for the most cashes during the WSOP, with eight each. Jeff Madsen, who won two events and made two other final tables (finishing 3rd both times), was named the 2006 WSOP Player of the Year (POTY).[4] He barely edged Hellmuth, who also made four final tables.

Events

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Perspective

There were 45 total events in the 2006 WSOP. Phil Hellmuth tied for the career bracelet lead with Doyle Brunson and Johnny Chan when he won his tenth career bracelet.[5]

More information #, Date ...
# Date Event Entries Winner Prize Runner-up Results
1 June 26, 2006 $500 Casino Employees No Limit Hold'em 1,232 Chris Gros (1/1) $127,616 Bryan Devonshire Results
2 June 27, 2006 $1,500 No Limit Hold'em 2,776 Brandon Cantu (1/1) $757,839 Phong Ly Results
3 June 28, 2006 $1,500 Pot Limit Hold'em 1,102 Rafe Furst (1/1) $345,984 Rocky Enciso Results
4 June 29, 2006 $1,500 Limit Hold'em 1,068 Kianoush Abolfathi (1/1) $335,289 Eric Buchman Results
5 June 30, 2006 $2,500 No Limit Hold'em Short Handed 6/Table 824 Dutch Boyd (1/1) $475,712 Joe Hachem (0/1) Results
6 July 1, 2006 $2,000 No Limit Hold'em 1,919 Mark Vos (1/1) $803,274 Nam Le Results
7 July 2, 2006 $3,000 Limit Hold'em 415 Bill Chen (1/1) $343,618 Yueqi Zhu Results
8 July 3, 2006 $2,000 Omaha Hi-Lo (8 or better) 670 Jack Zwerner (1/1) $341,426 Rusty Mandap Results
9 July 4, 2006 $5,000 No Limit Hold'em 622 Jeff Cabanillas (1/1) $818,546 Phil Hellmuth (0/9) Results
10 July 5, 2006 $1,500 Seven-card stud 478 David Williams (1/1) $163,118 John Hoang Results
11 July 6, 2006 $1,500 Limit Hold'em 701 Bob Chalmers (1/1) $258,344 Tam Ho Results
12 July 6, 2006 $5,000 Omaha Hi-Lo (8 or better) 265 Sam Farha (1/2) $398,560 Phil Ivey (0/5) Results
13 July 7, 2006 $2,500 Limit Hold'em 1,290 Max Pescatori (1/1) $682,389 Anthony Reategui Results
14 July 8, 2006 $1,000 No Limit Hold'em w/multiple rebuys 752 Allen Cunningham (1/4) $625,830 David Rheem Results
15 July 9, 2006 $1,000 Ladies No Limit Hold'em 1,128 Mary Jones Meyer (1/1) $236,094 Shawnee Barton Results
16 July 9, 2006 $10,000 Pot Limit Omaha 218 Lee Watkinson (1/1) $655,746 Mike Guttman Results
17 July 10, 2006 $1,000 No Limit Hold'em 2,891 Jon Friedberg (1/1) $526,185 John Phan Results
18 July 11, 2006 $2,000 Pot Limit Hold'em 590 Eric Kesselman (1/1) $311,403 Hyon Kim Results
19 July 12, 2006 $1,000 No Limit Hold'em Seniors 1,184 Clare Miller (1/1) $247,814 Mike Nargi Results
20 July 12, 2006 $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. 143 Chip Reese (1/3) $1,716,000 Andy Bloch Results
21 July 13, 2006 $2,500 No Limit Hold'em Short Handed 6/Table 740 Bill Chen (2/2) $442,511 Nath Pizzolatto Results
22 July 14, 2006 $2,000 No Limit Hold'em 1,579 Jeff Madsen (1/1) $660,948 Paul Sheng Results
23 July 15, 2006 $3,000 Limit Hold'em 341 Ian Johns (1/1) $291,755 Jerrod Ankenman Results
24 July 15, 2006 $3,000 Omaha Hi-Lo (8 or better) 352 Scott Clements (1/1) $301,175 Thor Hansen (0/2) Results
25 July 16, 2006 $2,000 No Limit Hold'em Shootout 600 David Pham (1/2) $240,222 Charlie Sewell Results
26A July 17, 2006 $1,500 Pot Limit Omaha 526 Ralph Perry (1/1) $207,817 George Abdallah Results
26B July 17, 2006 $1,500 Pot Limit Omaha w/rebuys 158 Eric Froehlich (1/2) $299,675 Sherkhan Farnood Results
27 July 18, 2006 $1,500 No Limit Hold'em 2,126 Mats Rahmn (1/1) $655,141 Richard Toth Results
28 July 19, 2006 $5,000 Seven-Card Stud 183 Benjamin Lin (1/1) $256,620 Shawn Sheikhan Results
29 July 19, 2006 $2,500 Pot Limit Hold'em 562 John Gale (1/1) $374,849 Maros Lechman Results
30 July 20, 2006 $5,000 No Limit Hold'em Short Handed 6/Table 507 Jeff Madsen (2/2) $643,381 Erick Lindgren Results
31 July 21, 2006 $2,000 No Limit Hold'em 2,050 Justin Scott (1/1) $842,262 Freddy Rouhani Results
32 July 22, 2006 $5,000 Pot Limit Hold'em 378 Jason Lester (1/1) $550,746 Alan Sass Results
33 July 22, 2006 $1,500 Razz 409 James Richburg (1/1) $139,576 Carlos Mortensen (0/2) Results
34 July 23, 2006 $1,000 No Limit Hold'em w/multiple rebuys 754 Phil Hellmuth (1/10) $631,863 Juha Helppi Results
35 July 24, 2006 $1,000 Seven Card Stud High-Low 8/OB 788 Pat Poels (1/2) $172,091 Greg Dinkin Results
36 July 24, 2006 $1,500 Limit Hold'em Shootout 524 Victoriano Perches (1/1) $157,338 Arnold Spee Results
37 July 25, 2006 $1,500 No Limit Hold'em 2,803 James Gorham (1/1) $765,226 Osman Kibar Results
38 July 25, 2006 $5,000 No-Limit 2–7 Draw Lowball w/rebuys 81 Daniel Alaei (1/1) $430,698 David Williams (0/1) Results
39 July 28, 2006 $10,000 No Limit Hold'em Championship 8,773 Jamie Gold (1/1) $12,000,000 Paul Wasicka Results
40 August 3, 2006 $1,000 No-Limit Hold'em 1,100 Praz Bansi (1/1) $230,209 Anh Lu Results
41 August 5, 2006 $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em 1,007 Paul Kobel (1/1) $316,144 Tyler Andrews Results
42 August 6, 2006 $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em 352 Jim Mitchell (1/1) $153,173 Stuart Fox Results
43 August 7, 2006 $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em 420 Kevin Nathan (1/1) $171,987 J. C. Tran Results
44 August 8, 2006 $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em 481 Kevin Cover (1/1) $196,968 Joe Brandenburg Results
45 August 9, 2006 $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em 494 Anders Henriksson (1/1) $202,291 Maureen Feduniak Results
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Main Event

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Perspective

The 2006 Main Event (event #39) remains the largest tournament in poker history by prize pool with a total prize pool of $82,512,162.[6] The tournament, like every WSOP Main Event, is a $10,000 No-Limit Texas Hold'em event. Due to the 8,773-player field, there were four separate starting days (1A-1D), each playing down to 800 people. They were later combined into one other set of separate days (2A and 2B) before becoming one whole group. The field was whittled down to 9 players on August 8, and Jamie Gold was crowned World Champion on August 10. The final table of the "Main Event" was offered live on Pay-Per-View, but unlike ESPN telecasts, viewers at home could not see the hole cards of the players unless the player turned their cards over.

Along with the usual $10,000 chip stacks, a new feature to the WSOP was the "All-In" button. Tournament directors have informed the participants that the coin could be used in lieu of pushing all of one's chips into the pot.

The beige $50,000 chips that were used in 2005 were not used in 2006. Instead, tangerine and yellow $25,000 chips, in the design of the current $25 chips, were used. And for the first time in World Series of Poker History, a $100,000 chip was introduced on day 7. The chips were mint green with black edge spots in the design of the current yellow/black $1,000 chip. The 2006 WSOP Main Event remained as the largest Main Event in terms of entries and first-place prize until the 2023 WSOP Main Event.[7][8]

Final table

More information Name, Number of chips (percentage of total) ...
Name Number of chips
(percentage of total)
WSOP
Bracelets*
WSOP
Cashes*
WSOP
Earnings*
United States Jamie Gold 25,650,000 (28.5%) 0 0 0
United States Allen Cunningham 17,770,000 (19.7%) 4 28 $2,371,769
United States Richard Lee 11,820,000 (13.1%) 0 0 0
Sweden Erik Friberg 9,605,000 (10.7%) 0 0 0
United States Paul Wasicka 7,970,000 (8.8%) 0 2 $64,437
United States Doug Kim 6,770,000 (7.5%) 0 0 0
United States Rhett Butler 4,815,000 (5.3%) 0 0 0
United States Michael Binger 3,140,000 (3.5%) 0 1 $101,570
United States Dan Nassif 2,600,000 (2.9%) 0 0 0
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*Career statistics prior to the beginning of the 2006 Main Event.

Final table results

More information Place, Name ...
Place Name Prize
1stJamie Gold$12,000,000
2ndPaul Wasicka$6,102,499
3rdMichael Binger$4,123,310
4thAllen Cunningham$3,628,513
5thRhett Butler$3,216,182
6thRichard Lee$2,803,851
7thDouglas Kim$2,391,520
8thErik Friberg$1,979,189
9thDan Nassif$1,566,858
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Other high finishes

NB: This list is restricted to top 100 finishers with an existing Wikipedia entry.

More information Place, Name ...
Place Name Prize
10th Fred Goldberg $1,154,527
13th William Thorson $907,128
17th Jeff Lisandro $659,730
18th David Einhorn $659,730
20th Prahlad Friedman $494,797
24th Eric Lynch $494,797
29th Mitch Schock $329,865
36th Humberto Brenes $329,865
88th Annie Duke $51,129
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Performance of past World Champions

Trivia

Controversy

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Event 5

When play resumed during day 2 of this event, a table with players, Daniel Negreanu, Gavin Smith, and Kathy Liebert were given extra chips after tournament officials had misplaced Mirza Nagji's chips in the wrong seat. Unknowingly, the rest of the players assumed that this stack was someone else's who was late and blinded off the stack. Eventually a player noticed that the stack was Mirza Nagji's chips, who by that time had been given replacement chips. Players estimate that out of the extra 120,000 in chips that were put into play, around 10,000–11,000 in chips had already been blinded off from the empty stack.[46][47][48]

Event 20

Many poker players who entered into the HORSE event discovered that the cards they were playing with were marked or easily markable. Andy Bloch was assessed a 10‑minute penalty for crumpling a card when a dealer refused to replace the deck after the new deck that came in was rife with markings. When asked for comment, WSOP Commissioner Jeffrey Pollack said, "I hadn't heard anything about the cards being marked until today. I am looking into getting more fresh setups and I am definitely working on solving the problem."[48][49]

Event 25

During Event 25, the $2,000 NL Hold 'em Shootout, the structure was changed mid-tournament from a full table into a 6-handed table event. Harry Demetriou, who had been playing in the event, objected to the change in format citing that a shootout should be 9, 10 or 11 handed, yelling about the unfair change in structure. Harry was eventually ejected from the tournament and was later refunded his money.[50] Daniel Negreanu missed the event completely because he assumed that the event would be a full table and he would be able to come into the tournament a little bit later after sleeping in. However, by the time he showed up David Singer had won his table after blinding off Negreanu's stack.[51]

See also

References

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