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Entertainment Provider Menan Saydam Wins Harrahs AC #6 after 97 Hands at Final Table
The sixth tournament of the WSOP Circuit tour at Harrah's Resort
His final opponent was Josh Briskis, who arrived at the final table as chip leader. He held it all the way until early in heads-up play when Saydam flopped a set, taking athe lead which he then held until the end.
Saydam, who now lives in
Tonight, apart from a couple of moves, he said he played solidly until he got heads-up, then began pushing his final opponent around by moving in with hands like 4-2. He also had high praise for the way the tournament was run, and said the dealers at the final table were "fantastic."
This event drew 346 players who created a prize pool of $173,000. The 27 players remaining on day one got to the final nine after Dimitrios Haskaris went out. He moved in with K-Q and had two callers. A flop of 6-5-3 gave Brikis, who had 7-4 in the small blind, a straight, and the final table was set. Brikis led with 827,000 chips while at the other end was Ray "Sage" Williams, near the cloth with 7,000 after losing more than 100,000 in the prior hand when his A-Q fell to Frank Randazzo's A-K.
There was one minute left at level 17, and a hand later blinds went to 10,000-20,000 with 3,000 antes.
Here were the starting chip counts:
Seat 1. Pat Williams 7,000
Seat 2 . Emmanuel Jannes 147,000
Seat 3. Michael Nessim 210,000
Seat 4. Frank Randazzo 267,000
Seat 5. Robert Castoire 560,000
Seat 6. David Zeitlin 335,000
Seat 7. Josh Brikis 827,000
Seat 8. Michael Demeza 132,000
Seat 9. Menan Saydam 306,000
Starting action was unbelievably furious and deadly, with five players left by the roadside in just 20 minutes! And, if it weren't for two big draw-outs, seven players would have departed in 25 minutes.
Here's how it happened. Not surprisingly, Williams was first to go. He was all in from the big blind on the second deal with a mere J-2 against A-K and couldn't hit anything. Ninth paid him $3,460. Williams, 50, from
Two hands later, Michael "News" Demeza, a pro from
Immediately after, Emmanuel "Manny" Jannes, holding Ah-2h, committed his last 140,000 chips and was looked up by David Zeitlin with A-Q. The board came 4-10-5-9-7 and Jannes finished seventh, worth $6,920. Ten minutes, and three players gone. Jannes, 36, is a manager from
There was now a very long lull as it took all of six minutes to lose the next player. This time it was Randazzo. He moved in for 180,000 with A-Q, losing to Robert Castoire's pocket jacks when the board showed 9-2-10-7-5. Sixth paid $8,650. Randazzo, 38, is from
Michael Nessim looked like he would quickly be the next player out. He had Ah-2c, and fell behind to Zeitlin's Ks-Qs when the flop came 7s-Qc-3c. But then two running clubs gave Nessim a flush and saved him. On the next hand, the flop showed 8-7-6 and Brikis, holding 8-6 and making two pair, moved in. Zeitlin's A-9 gave him an open-end straight draw and he called with his last chips. An 8 turned to fill Brikis, and that did it for Zeitlin, who cashed fifth for $10,380. That's five players gone in 20 minuites.
Zeitlin was a 35-tear-old attorney from
A made-for-TV hand came down a few deals later. Brikis opened for 60,000 with pocket queens, Saydam moved in for 280,000 with pocket kings. Brikis called and moved in front by flopping a set of ladies. Then justice was served and the better starting hand won as Saydam caught a king on the turn and remained alive.
A few hands later Brikis raised 100,000 pre-flop and Robert Castiore, with Q-9, called. The flop came 5-5-3. Brikis bet a relatively modest 150,000 and Castiore, thinking it was a safe flop, tried an all-in move, raising about 250,000 more. "Nice call," he said as Brikis called his raise. It was pretty much a no-brainer because Brikis had pocket kings. Two babies on the turn and river made no difference, and Castiore was out in fourth place, paying $12,110. Castiore, 52, is a ship’s officer from
Only a few beats later our seventh player departed. A flop of 3-4-8 gave Nessim, holding 5-2, an open-end straight draw and he went all in against Saydam who had 8-6 for a pair of 8s. Nessim missed his draw when a king and then a queen were dealt, and he went out third, paying $13,840. Nessim, 42, is an investor from
Only 45 minutes had passed, but there was a long way yet to go. The players took an extra break and returned with Brikis holding a better than 2-1 chip lead. Ten minutes later, the turnaround hand was dealt. Brikis raised, Saydam came over the top for 200,000 more, and Brikis popped it for another 200,000. The flop came 8-3-10. Brikis moved in with with A-J, and Saydam, who had flopped a set of 8s, called for his last 440,000. Brikis was dead to a runner-runner straight which didn't come, and Saydam took over the lead with about 1.7 million chips to a million for Brikis.
As play went on, Brikis dropped down to about 400,000 at one point before recovering somewhat. The level ended, and blinds were now 15,000-30,000 with 4,000 antes.
It would be an understatement to say that play now tightened. The entire hour level went by with not a single all-in call. The players returned from break to blinds of 20,000-40,000 and 5,000 antes. Saydam still led with about 2 million chips to 760,000 for Brikis.
Brikis dipped down very low before doubling through twice, once when his pocket queens won when Saydam missed his straight draw, then again when he flopped a king to his K-8 to outrun Saydam's pocket 6s. Still, he never could close the gap. On the final hand, with 13 minutes left in the level, he pushed in for 445,000 holding Kd-5d, a big underdog to Saydam's Ks-Js. Saydam flopped a royal flush draw when the cards came As-Qs-Ah, but settled for a simple nut flush when a 3s arrived on the river. For finishing second, Brikis cashed for $27,680.
Brikis is a 28-year-old pro from
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