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Farmer Harvests a Gold Ring

This now marks the sixth consecutive year Harrah’s Rincon has hosted a WSOP Circuit stop. This year’s 12-event series began with a $200 (+30) buy-in No Limit Hold’em tournament, which was played over two days on March 18-19. The tournament attracted 599 entrants, which created a prize pool totaling $116,206. Most of the field was eliminated on Day One, which clocked in at 14 hours. Four tables of survivors returned for Day Two which played for another 12 hours, when the last hand was dealt out at 2:00 am.
The tournament winner was Chris Farmer, a 25-year-old semi-pro poker player from San Diego, CA. He collected $24,415 in prize money. He was also presented with his first gold ring, which is the ultimate token of achievement given out to all tournament champions of WSOP Circuit events held around the country. This was his first time to cash in a WSOP Circuit tournament. He has cashed and won other events, but this was his biggest in a live tournament.
But at least three other players – including the eventual winner, Chris Farmer -- were all within striking distance, making the Final Table a wide open competition. The low blinds (6,000-12,000) and average chip stack amounting to roughly 350,000 at the start allowed plenty of play. The nine finalists and their starting chip counts were as follows:
| Seat | Player | Hometown | Chip Count |
| 1 | R. Westover | San Diego, CA | 418,000 |
| 2 | Rod "Big Dog" Dingler | Temecula, CA | 820,000 |
| 3 | Ron Segni | El Cajon, CA | 427,000 |
| 4 | Chris Farmer | San Diego, CA | 418,000 |
| 5 | Tim Omohundro | Encinitas, CA | 236,000 |
| 6 | George Rutherford | Woodland Hills, CA | 730,000 |
| 7 | Phil Denadel | Escondido, CA | 731,000 |
| 8 | Jerry Simon | Temecula, CA | 199,000 |
| 9 | Chris McGrath | Media, PA | 654,000 |
The same hand which eliminated Alan Marks also busted out Jerry Simon. The retired Air Force veteran who now lives in nearby Temecula, CA pocketed $2,010 for his ninth place. Simon has cashed numerous times in major poker tournaments elsewhere, including five in-the-money finishes at the WSOP in Las Vegas.
Phil Denadel, a retiree from nearby Escondido, CA was the eighth place finisher. On his final hand of the tournament, he lost a race, holding
Tim Omohundro, a project manager from Encinitas, CA took a tough beat on his final hand when he took
George Rutherford, an office worker from Woodland Hills, CA was the sixth place finisher. He was low on chips and survived a few all-ins before finally succumbing to a bigger stack. Rutherford was dealt As Jd on his final hand, versus Ron Segni’s
Chris McGrath, from Media, PA was in decent chip position much of the way, but finally went card dead late and busted out on a bad beat. McGrath was dealt
Ron Segni, a general contractor from El Cajon, CA made a bold move on his final hand. He tried to steal a round of blinds and antes holding
Ryan Westover, a stay-at-home-dad from San Diego, finished in third place. Three-handed action lasted two full hours before Westover finally went out with
Rod "Big Dog" Dingler came close to victory several times. He held the chip lead during most of the Final Table play and had his opponent all in and covered four times, losing on each occasion. Had Dingler managed to catch just one card at a key moment, he would have won. Instead, Dingler was never able to close out the victory. One of many turning points came when Chris Farmer rivered a full house, which proved to be the decisive hand of the tournament.
Chris Farmer, a 25-year-old semi-pro poker player from San Diego won his first WSOP Circuit gold ring and $24,415.

