57TH ANNUAL WORLD SERIES OF POKER

News

2007 WSOP - Event 51 ($1,000 SHOE) Final Results

Jul 04 2007 05:01 PM EST

Event #51
Limit S.H.O.E.
Buy-In: $1,000
Number of Entries: 730
Total Prize Money: $664,300
Date of Tournament: July 1-3, 2007

Click here to view the official results.

Tournament Notes:

  • The winner of the Limit S.H.O.E. championship was Dao Bac, from Garden Grove, CA. He is a 51-year-old professional poker player. This was his first victory ever at the World Series of Poker.
  • Bac was born in Vietnam. He arrived in the United States in 1989. He is married and has two children.
  • During much of the tournament, Bac read from a leather-bound book when he was not involved in a hand. Bac is a practicing Buddhist. He read from a book on prayer and meditation, he said “to keep him calm during the tournament.” Whatever was written in the book must have worked, as Bac remained cool throughout the three-day event and eventually collected $157,975 in prize money.
  • Bac is the first Vietnamese poker player to win a gold bracelet at this year’s World Series. Vietnamese-born poker players have enjoyed perhaps the highest per capita WSOP wins and earnings of any nationality. However, this year has been a relative drought for the nation that produced the likes of Men Nguyen, David Pham, Tony Ma, and others.
  • This was Bac’s ninth tournament entry this year. He had yet to cash until this moment. Bac did cash twice last year, with winnings totaling just $5,000. Since 1990, Bac has been playing mostly cash games at casinos around San Diego and Los Angeles. He played $3-6 hold’em for many years and gradually became good enough to move up to middle-limit games. Bac has won major tournaments elsewhere and has multiple cashes.
  • Bac was cheered on by a large entourage, which included family and friends. When asked about his plans to celebrate, he said he will go out to a nice dinner later in the evening. He will give the gold bracelet to his wife, Hanh Nguyen.
  • S.H.O.E. is a rotation of poker which includes four games – Seven-Card Stud, Limit Hold’em, Omaha High-Low, and Stud Eight-or-Better. It has been part of the WSOP menu intermittently for the last decade. It was originally a marketing-driven initiative when the WSOP was played at what was formally Binion’s Horseshoe in downtown Las Vegas. In fact, a H.O.R.S.E. event routinely preceded the S.H.O.E. tournament, thus making for the duo of events which spelled out “Horseshoe.”
  • Poker writer Michael Craig made his second final table appearance this year. He ended up going out in 7th place. Craig is the author of two books, “The Professor, the Baker, and the Suicide King,” as well as “The Full Tilt Poker Strategy Guide – Tournament Edition.”
  • Two-time WSOP gold bracelet winner Pat Poels was the 9th-place finisher. The Mesa, AZ poker player’s bid for win number three came up short. Had he won, Poels would have won gold bracelets in each of the last three years.
  • Other former WSOP event winners from the past who cashed included Diego Cordovez (24th), Doug Saab (36th), and Erik Seidel (66th).



  • © 2026 Bracelet IP Limited. WSOP is a registered trademark used under license by Bracelet IP Limited.
    Unauthorized use is prohibited.

    If you've ever watched the World Series of Poker and thought that could be me, you're not alone. Since 1970, the WSOP has been the place where that dream lives. Most people know the summer series in Las Vegas, where the $10,000 Main Event turns ordinary players into legends. But the WSOP calendar has grown well beyond that. WSOP Europe and WSOP Paradise now bring bracelet competition to international destinations, and dozens of Circuit events run year-round for players who want serious competition closer to home. Whether you're grinding a Circuit stop or taking your shot at the Main Event, the hardware means something. Winning a gold bracelet or Circuit ring is more than just a trophy. It's a permanent record that you are a champion. For players in Nevada, New Jersey, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, WSOP Online has become something worth paying attention to. It's the only platform in the US where you can win a poker tournament for official WSOP gold bracelets without leaving home! The WSOP also offers deposit limits and self-exclusion tools because the best poker rooms have always known that keeping poker players healthy keeps the game healthy. From your first Circuit event to a final table in Las Vegas, WSOP is still where you go to prove something.