If Only My WSOP Coverage Were This Thorough
Very listy week … Below are the final results from the Pokerati Invitational — 1st-50th — for everyone, with links to their various poker-related accomplishments.
I think poker is fun. Perhaps there should be another tournament somewhere, someday …
2006 Pokerati Invitational
NLHE
$120 (w/ single $100 rebuy; no add-ons)
1. Tom Schneider (Phoenix) — $2,600
2. Karridy Askenasy — $1,600
3. Gina Torres — $1,000
4. Steve Carter — $620
5. Greg Miles — $420 (no link … but Greg won the 2005 Fiend Invitational Hold’em shootout and took 2nd in the FI Omaha tourney)
6. Bob Haney — $300
7. Jon Knauf — $200
8. Zach Ballenger — $120
9. David Perry
final table
10. Chris Como
11. Torrey Schoel
12. Scott Fawcett
13. Steve Eaton
14. Pat Mulry
15. Jeremy Kraybill (Austin)
16. Joe Capasso
17. Eric Pfeifle
18. Isaac Do
19. Don Jones
20. Eric White
21. Adam Schacter (Houston)
22. Ryan Bowles
23. Frank Vawter
24. Shane Keller
25. Eric Celeste
26. Tiny B
27. Brad Erwin
28. Adam McGill
29. Matt Sommer
30. Paul Tagg
31. Michael Zientz
32. Tim Bolin
33. Rick Boss
34. Earl Beauvais
35. B. Armendariz
36. Ray Sadler
37. Gary Cohen
38. Sang Yoo
39. David Leonard
40. Paul Barrett
41. Ed Mayhall
42. Dan Ballenger
43. Aaron Mattox
44. Randy Brown
45. Scott Chaffin
46. Pat Johnson
47. Don Gooch
48. Tim Rogers
49. Michael Thum
50. Mike Simmons
Pokerati — Texas hold’em blog — semi-live at the WSOP » Blog Archive » Tom Schneider in the Hizzouse says:
July 26th, 2006 at 9:36am
[…] LAS VEGAS–Defending Pokerati Invitational champion Tom Schneider will be fighting for a bracelet today, as he has made the final table of the $1,500 NLH Shootout. The six remaining players have all won two sit-n-gos in a row. After level 1 it looked like some big names might find their way to the featured table … Andy Bloch, Howard Lederer, Mike Caro, John Phan, and Eric “E-fro” Froelich all won their first leg … but none of them could do it twice. Tom did, and he was the last to qualify, as he faced off against a kid who even when severely outchipped played great poker and just wouldn’t go away. […]