Super Satellites4/17 to 4/21/98

Early Super Satellites

by Mike Paulle

Prior to the start of the 1998 World Series of Poker, our intrepid correspondent, Mike Paulle, compiled these chronicles of the nightly Super Satellites. We archive them here for posterity.
SS #1 4/17/98
SS #2 4/18/98
SS #3 4/19/98
SS #4 4/20/98
SS #5 4/21/98

THE 1998 WORLD SERIES OF POKER BEGINS

THREE CHIPS AND A CHAIR

The World Series of Poker got off to a rousing start Friday night at 8:40 P.M. in the Pavillion of Binion's Horseshoe Casino with it's first Super Satellite. All Super Satellites in the WSOP are No-Limit. There will be one held every evening until the final event--The $10,000 No-Limit Championship that will crown the new World Champion for 1998.

**One table satellite had been running continuously since 10:00 A.M. Friday morning all with $220 buy-ins. The winner of the satellite received $2,000 in tournament chips (to be used in any event of the WSOP, or sold at the winner's discretion) and $100 in cash.**

54 players entered this first Super Satellite paying $220 for $200 in chips. Levels were raised every 20 minutes starting with $5/10 blinds. Rebuys were unlimited for the first three levels--one hour. There were 49 rebuys of $200 each that bought $200 in chips for a total prize pool of $20,600.

That allowed for nine players, the entire final table, to be paid cash with one entry of $10,000 into the Championship Event.

The prize breakdown was as follows:

1st One $10,000 entry and $300 in cash
2nd Eight $500 tounament chips (see above) and $160 in cash
3rd Four tounament chips and $390
4th Two chips and $300
5th One chip and $280
6th $670
7th $470
8th $370
9th $260

Keep all this in mind, you'll be quizzed later.

Some of the notable players who entered this first SS were:

Russ Hamilton--former World Champion ($1,000,000 and his weight in silver) "Miami" John Cernuto--winner of last year's $2,000 No-Limit Hold 'em ($259,150) Lewis Asmo--winner of last year's $3,000 Limit Hold 'em ($231,600) Jack McClelland--the most famous Tournament Director in the history of poker Brent Carter An Tran Dave Cunkelton O'Neil Longson and Bob Walker--5th in last year's Championship event ($161,120)

Of this esteemed group only Bob Walker was to make the final table.

At this point I'd like to say that Danny Newman DIDN'T make the final table. Not because I don't like him. I do. But because I'm tired of typing his name EVERY DAY.

If I told you Danny didn't make the final table I'd be lying.

At around 11 P.M. the final table formed with the following players, chip counts and home towns.

Seat 1--Richard Tatalovich$2,100Scottsdale, AZ
Seat 2--John Richman$2,400New York, NY
Seat 3--Jim Waltenburg$2,400Rochester, WA
Seat 4--Danny Newman$2,100Brighton, England
Seat 5--Grant Smith$600Las Vegas
Seat 6--Bob Walker$5,000Las Vegas
Seat 7--Burt Boutin$900Las Vegas
Seat 8--Mike Pancer$2,000San Diego, CA
Seat 9--Steve Rydel$2,500Stoke-on-Trent, England

The blinds were $100/200 as the final table began.

As the chip pygmy, Grant Smith couldn't wait long.

Grant went all-in with pocket 8's, only to see Danny Newman turn over pocket 9's. Grant Smith finished ninth.

In a "heartbreaker", Richard Tatalovich first was elated to see a third heart fall on the river in his all-in hand versus John Richman. Richard had an 8/4 of hearts. Then John showed Richard his hand, QJ of hearts. Richard Tatalovich went Ta-Ta.

Danny Newman was running short of chips, so he tried to buy some with an A/3. Mike Pancer had a Boston Tea Party planned with his pocket Kings and said goodbye to Merry Ole England when no ace fell. Danny finished seventh.

Jim Waltenburg thought he could make it two in a row for the US vs England with pocket 8's. Steve Rydel thought 'one all' sounded better with his pocket 10's. Jim finished 6th.

Rydel tried to press it, however, with a call 'all-in' of chip leader Bob Walker's large bet. Steve's A/J of spade received no help from the board and lost to Bob's pocket 9's.

Now there were foreplayers...I mean four players left.

With the blinds now at $300/600 there was neither time enough nor money to wait for a premium hand.

John Richman thought that K/9 off looked pretty good against Bob Walker's blind. John, who is co-owner of the Mayfair Club--a cardroom in New York City, should have known better than go up against such a huge stack.

Walker put John all-in with a K/J off. A King hit the turn and Bob's jack offed John for fourth place.

Quiz time! I told you it was coming.

Who had the second LEAST chips when the final table started? NO PEEKING!!

Burt Boutin was ticketed for oblivion with only $900. He scraped his way past six players with middle pair after middle pair holding up.

Now he had some chips and the $10,000 seat in his sights.

Unfortunately for Burt, there was someone at the table with a lot more chips. Bob Walker.

Burt went all-in with yet another middle pair, 9's. Big stack called with J/5 of hearts and caught a Jack on the flop. That ended Burt Boutin's terrific run at the final table. As disappointed as Burt was, instead of receiving the $370 that eighth place got he pulled down four tournament chips worth $2,000 and $390 in cash for third place. "I just want to win one of these, sometime," Burt said. "It's hard." someone else said.

Quiz #2

Who can remember the title of this article?

That's right class. THREE CHIPS AND A CHAIR. Very good!

We are now head-up, if you can call it that.

There is $20,600 in $500 chips on the table as we race for the $100 chips. After the countdown, there is only one $100 chip to race. Mike Pancer has it so he is chipped up.

It seems trivial at the time to go from three chips to four. Bob Walker has all the rest of the $500 chips, 37 of them. We are all waiting for the execution of Mike Pancer so we can go home.

"Stay the execution," says the Poker Governor. Mike gets a reprieve. Temporary we think. How nice for him. He'll get one more meal before getting juiced by Bob Walker.

The blinds are now $500/$1,000. Mike Pancer can only barely make the blinds.

He goes all-in with Kh, Qc. Bob calls with J/8 of diamonds.

In the hand of the night, with all the railbirds and the satellite staff watching. The flops comes with a Jack. All of us think "It's Over". Mike is starting to pack up his things. The turn comes a King. Now Mike is overjoyed, he'll have eight chips instead of four. The river comes a Jack. Bob throws up his hands, what a card! Mike Pancer is flabbergast. What a bad beat!

We all start to turn away from the table when Mike the dealer starts to yell.

"He has a flush. He has a flush." Pointing to Pancer's King of hearts, we see for the first time that there are four hearts on the board. No one saw it but the dealer. Not either player, the staff or the railbirds.

What a roller-coaster ride that was. Bob Walker is still shaking his head over it, several hands later.

But it's no problem. Bob still has a five-to-one chip lead and the blinds are killing Mike Pancer.

Desparate, Mike makes a bluff. He goes all-in. Bob calls. Mike is forced to turn over a J/2 offsuit.

Bob says, "Oh, I caught you jazzing around, huh?" Mike says, "I only saw the Jack. I didn't look at the other card.

Bob had turned over a Ks/5c.

The Poker Governor "jazzes" a duece on the river for the only pair. Mike Pancer now has 16 chips. Maybe there will be no execution after all.

A few hand later, Walker visible shaken calls an all-in by Pancer. Mike has 10's Bob has J/9. "I need a straight," Bob says. Two queens and a nine appear. Queens and 10's over Queens and nines.

Now Mike has the chip lead and Bob is the one who makes a move. He goes all-in with an Ac5s. Mike calls with the hand that has run throughout the final table, pocket 9's.

It's over for real this time, only it's Mike Pancer who pulls the handle on Bob Walker in a night that Bob will never forget as long as he plays poker.

The night he lost a seat in the Championship event to THREE CHIPS AND A CHAIR.


WSOP Super Satellite #2 Saturday 4/18/98

GAMBLERS ANONYMOUS

I'll be quick.

Not as quick as today's entrants into the second Super Satellite at the WSOP, but quick. These players came to GAMBLE. They saw few hands they didn't like ALOT. So much so that they felt compelled to shove in ALL their chips as fast as they could.

"It depends on the players." Patty Hughes, Super Satellite Director, was talking about the time it talks to run a No-Limit tournament.

Yesterday, 54 players and 49 rebuys took over four hours. With the final table running an hour and a half.

Today, 89 players and 80 rebuys took less than three hours. The final table was through in 20 minutes flat.

The nine men who made the final table would be enthusiastically welcomed back at any house of ill-repute. We're talking quick!

**The entry fee for the Super is $220. That buys $200 in chips. Rebuys, unlimited for the first hour, are another $200 and gets the buyer $200 more in chips. There is a $ for $ double rebuy at the end of the hour. Blinds go up every 20 minutes and they start at $5/10**

By the end of the rebuy period there were $33,600 in chips in play. That was enough to pay nine places in the following amounts:

1st An entry into the Championship event and $300 in cash. ($10,300 in value)
2nd The same 3rd 10 tournament chips with a value of $500 each plus $520 ($5,520)
4th 6 chips and $170 ($3,170)
5th 3 chips and $160 ($1,660)
6th 1 chip and $470 ($970)
7th 1 chip and $280 ($780)
8th 1 chip and $120 ($620)
9th $480

**Tournament chips can be sold or used to play in any WSOP event. Entries into the Championship event MUST be used by the player who won them. They cannot be sold or given away**

Some of the notables who played in this evening Super Satellite were:

Mel Judah 3rd in last year's Championship ($371,000) and winner of the $5,000 7-Card Stud event (176,000) Barbara Enright Women's All-Time Leader ($350,960) and only woman ever to make the final table in the Championship Mike Sexton An Tran Marsha Waggoner Jack McClelland Jesse Jones Pat Callahan Dave Cunkelton

None of these esteemed players made the final table.

When the final table formed at 11:05 P.M. these were the players, their chip counts and hometowns.

Seat 1John Saer$2,400Phoenix, AZ(An RGPer, by the
way)
Seat 2Tom Stinson$2,400Houston, TX
Seat 3Rick Young$1,200Las Vegas, NV
Seat 4Eric Shapiro$4,900Boulder, CO
Seat 5David Kim$7,200Atherton, CA
Seat 6Bob Walker$2,600Las Vegas, NV(A repeater from
yesterday)
Seat 7Andrew Black$4,500Belfast, N. Ireland
Seat 8Brent Carter$2,800Oak Park, IL
Seat 9David Tagg$7,600Idaho Falls, ID(Chip leader)

With the blinds at $300/600 only four of the nine players had enough chips to wait for premium hands. These guys wouldn't have waited anyway. They played like they all had cabs waiting outside with the meter running.

Tom Stinson made the first move. When a King hit the flop, he went all-in with K/10 of diamonds. Bob Walker happily called with just enough chips to cover Tom. Bob's slow-played pocket Kings looked like a lock. When a straight or flush failed to materialize for Stinson he left with 9th place.

Brent Carter was short stacked and thought he could buy the big blind's chips with pocket 5's. David Tagg had other ideas. He was chip leader and no one was taking his blind. Tagg turned over an A/Q off. Brent said when seeing David's hand, "I guess I do have a chance." He did...until the river when an Ace fell. Carter took 8th.

Andrew Black had chips. He didn't have to go all-in with an A/10 but he did. Bob Walker now had chips. He didn't have to call with pocket 5's but HE did.

Walker, who yesterday blew a 10 to 1 chip lead head up to lose a Championship seat to Mike Pancer was undetered today. To Bob's credit, he seemed unfazed by yesterday's events as he rammed and jammed with the rest of the Gamblers Anonymous crew.

Maybe as payback to Bob for his positive spirit, the Poker Governor that took the seat away from Bob yesterday gave him something back today.

In the hand of the final table, with Andrew Black's A/10 and Bob Walker's 5's turned up, the flop came A 8 4.

You know what happens next, although "It Never Happens To You." The turn is a 3...and the river is a 2.

Perfect Perfect. A gut shot wheel on the river. And Andrew Black's mood fits his name. It's enough to make a guy go out an shoot a Catholic. Andrew Black is 7th.

Bob Walker is now chip leader and feeling lucky.

John Saer, on the other hand, is desparate. After waiting patiently for a hand he could bet, he's forced all-in by the big blind. His J/3 of spades is no match for Bob Walker's A/Q when an Ace flops. Saer is 6th. (Thanks for mentioning that you read my reports on RGP, John.)

David Tagg who came to the final table as chip leader and has seen his lead go to Bob Walker wants the lead back.

Rick Young gives him an opportunity.

Rick, with the smallest stack at the beginning of the final table, had worked it up to respectability. Also he's seen his money increase as the Gamblers Anonymous meeting started to break up. If guys kept leaving at this rate, he might get a seat at the Big Dance!

"I looked down at my hand and I really liked it," Rick said afterward. Rick went all-in with about $3,000 in chips. The only caller was David Tagg. $3,000 was about half of David's chips.

Rick turned over AA. David turned over J/10 off. No contest, right? The books says this is an 86% winning hand head up. Well, I guess the Poker Governor can't read.

The flop comes J 9 2 tri-suited. No problem! Aces versus Jacks with two cards left.

Big Problem for Rick Young. The turn is a 10 and the river is a Jack for a little knife twisting overkill. Rick Young now isn't so young. He leaves wondering what he did wrong and in 5th place.

Eric Shapiro came late to the Super. "I had to win a (one table) satellite," he said as he walked into the Pavillion where the other 88 players had already started. With the $2,000 in his hand and gamble in his heart, he fit in right away.

Eric had seen his chips decrease drastically at the final table, however, and needed some quickly. He'd had to lay down a hand previously when David Kim came over the top of him and he only had $2,500 left.

When David Tagg made a big bet, Eric pondered his hand for some time, then called all-in. He couldn't been too happy when Tagg flipped over a pair of 9's. It made his Q/9 of spades look like they were drawing a little thin. David said Tagg your out, Eric when nothing of help came on the board.

Eric Shapiro was 4th. He'd completed a parlay on his original investment of $220 in a one table satellite into $3,170.

Now there were three. But really there was one. One who didn't get a seat. The other two would. Who would the seatless one be?

Coming to the final table, David Kim was only $400 behind David Tagg for the chip lead. But he'd taken a few beats and was well in third place behing Tagg and Bob Walker. All the six players that had been knocked out so far, were eliminated by one or the other of these two GA members and they had the chips to prove it.

The action had been so fast and furious, David Kim barely had had a chance to bet.

Now with about $3,000 left, Kim called a big bet by David Tagg.

Kim turned over A/J of diamonds, David Tagg a pair of 6's. Completing the game of musical chairs to conclude the Gamblers Anonymous meeting, David Kim was Tagged out and left richer but seatless when no assistance arrived on the board.

The name David Tagg and that of a vindicated Bob Walker joined Mike Pancer (yesterday's winner) as entrants in the Championship Event.


WSOP Super Satellite #3 Sunday 4/19/98

CLIMBING THE LADDER

Every day the tension builds, we are another day closer to the Championship event. Who will be the new World Champion?

Well, you have to be in it to win it. And that's what the Super Satellites do, they get players into the Championship event sometimes for as little as $220. Supers give those players a shot at $1,000,000 and the coveted title. What a deal! What a parlay! What a heartbreak!

For every player that gets a seat there are dozens who don't. Later I'm going to tell you about one of the toughest beats you'll ever hear of. Did it cost the player a chance at the title? It surely cost him a chance to play on. We'll never know what would have happened if he could have seen just ONE MORE HAND.

Every night we climb the ladder in the WSOP Super Satellites. Friday one seat was given away, Saturday two seats, tonight three seats were handed out. And each night over ten thousand in cash is dispensed.

These speed ball mini-tournament are less like a crapshoot than they are Russian Roulette.

You've got to "Push and Pray". As we will see, no one has enough chips at the final table to wait for a seat to fall in their lap.

Friday 54 players and 49 rebuys took over four hours. With the final table running an hour and a half.

Saturday 89 players and 80 rebuys took less than three hours. The final table was through in 20 minutes flat.

Tonight the eight men and finally a woman who made the final table returned to the more cautious, deliberate style that characterized the first Super. Or as cautious and deliberate as you can be when the blinds nearly double every twenty minutes.

There were 101 entrants and 105 rebuys Sunday night, the most yet. There are more people getting into town every day from all over the world, as we'll see from the makeup of the final table. More players, more money, more excitement, more drama.

And in case you've forgotten:

**The entry fee for the Super is $220. That buys $200 in chips. Rebuys, unlimited for the first hour, are another $200 and gets the buyer $200 more in chips. There is a $ for $ double rebuy at the end of the hour. Blinds go up every 20 minutes and they start at $5/10**

By the end of the rebuy period there were $41,200 in chips in play. That was enough to pay nine places in the following amounts:

1st An entry into the Championship event and $300 in cash. ($10,300 in value)
2nd The same
3rd The same
4th 8 chips and $480 ($4,480)
5th 4 chips and $570 ($2,570)
6th 2 chips and $340 ($1,340)
7th 1 chip and $290 ($790)
8th 1 chip and $120 ($620)
9th $500

**Tournament chips can be sold or used to play in any WSOP event. Entries into the Championship event MUST be used by the player who won them. They cannot be sold or given away**

Some of the notables who played in this evening's Super Satellite were:

Tom McEvoy Former World Champion and winner of $189,152 in last year's WSOP
Brad Daughtery Former World Champion and 14th on the All-Time Money list
Mel Judah 3rd in last year's Championship ($371,000) and winner of the $5,000 7-Card Stud event (176,000)
Max Stern Two time winner last year. The $2,500 7-Card Stud ($117,000) and the $3,000 No-Limit Hold 'em ($237,615)
Maria Stern Winner of the $1,500 7-Card Stud ($140,708) and 4th on women''s list
Deane Stonier Winner of the $3,000 Omaha Hi-Lo ($145,200)
Louis Asmo Winner of the $3,000 Limit Hold 'em ($231,600)
John Cernuto Winner of the $2,000 No-Limit Hold 'em ($259,150)
Ron Stanley 4th in the Championship event ($212,000)
John Bonetti 10th on the All-Time list
An Tran
Marsha Waggoner
Jack McClelland
Jesse Jones
Dave Cunkelton
Howard Lederer
O'Neil Longson

How tough are these Super Satellites? None of these esteemed players made the final table.

When the final table formed at 11:55 P.M. these were the players, their chip counts and hometowns.

Seat 1Joe Baumgartner$5,200Austin, TX
Seat 2Barbara Enright$4,600San Diego, CA
Seat 3Martin Comer$8,900Sydney, Australia(Chip
Leader)
Seat 4Bob Walker$2,800Las Vegas (Third straight
final table)
Seat 5Iain Paterson$2,200Blackwell, England
Seat 6Steve Rydel$6,200Stoke-on-Trent, England
Seat 7Kevin McBride$4,200Las Vegas, NV
Seat 8Vic Kramer$1,400Sydney, Australia
Seat 9Brent Carter$5,700Oak Park, IL

Soon after the start the blinds went to $300/600.

In an attempt to get some chips, Bob Walker did something very strange for him. He made a move from the small blind on a raiser, without a pair. Walker had already won a seat the night before and this may have made him play a little looser. Bob surprised us by turning over A/2 off. Joe Baumgartner showed a pair of 5's. Two Jacks came on the flop and Walker walked in 9th place. Had he won another seat, he could have sold it for $10,000.

Now for the torturous beat I mentioned before.

At 12:15 the blinds went up to $500/1,000. This is when the $100 chips are raced off. Can you guess what happened?

Iain Paterson, a very quiet young man from England who grew up in Canada, failed to realize where the clock was and what the rules were. Had he known both, he would have been all-in on the hand prior to the race off. Why? Because he had only four $100 chips left.

As the cards were flipped out to each place, the Ace of Clubs fell on Iain's stack of four chips. With 18 chips in the race, he could more than quadruple his stack if his high card held up, Maybe it was best he didn't know the time or the rule? Maybe it was best that he didn't go all-in on the last hand?

No Waiting! The Ace of Hearts fell next on Steve Rydel's chips and Iain Paterson was raced out of the tournament.

"I feel awful about this," said Patty Hughes, Super Satellite Director. "It doesn't happen very often, but it is the rule." A player can be raced off and out of a Super Satellite.

Why wasn't there an an annoucement? "I feel awful about this too. But we can't announce every rule," Rudy Lotief said, "it's the player's responsibility to know the rules."

How tough a beat is that? Iain Paterson picked up the Ace of Clubs and flipped it at the dealer in disgust. His sole consolation 8th place and $620.

Martin Comer was chip leader by a substantial margin when the final table formed. A half hour later he had still failed to win a hand. Once losing to Steve Rydel's K/8 when an eight hit the river as the only pair. Martin's A/9 was good up until then and would have put Rydel out of the tournament.

Another twenty minutes passed without a win and the former chip leader was all-in for the big blind. For once there were callers and no raisers. Three players called Martin. Kevin McBride, Joe Baumgartner and needing only one chip as the small blind, Barbara Enright. I don't have to tell you who won the hand and put Martin Comer the Goner out of the tournament.

You've seen it all too often. There were no bets to the river. "First pair over wins." Barbara Enright turned over a K/3 off to show her pair of 3's. Martin Comer came all the way from Australia for this? His Q/10 off was no good. He went from the penthouse to the outhouse in less than an hour.

Brent Carter had already won a seat to the Championship event at a tournament in the Commerce Club in California. But who couldn't use another $10,000? For the second straight day, Brent made the final table. And this is a guy who insists to me that he isn't playing well! At my best, I don't play as well as Brent isn't.

Chips were running low and blinds were running high when Brent tried to buy the big blind with an A/8 off. Joe Baumgartner called all-in.

In a scene that shouldn't be played out with a reporter present, Joe turned over a pair of threes. "Ooh, weak!" Brent said. "Yeah, weak." I said as Joe had just enough strength to drag in nearly all of Brent's chips.

Earlier, when Barbara Enright had the big blind and Brent looked like he was going to raise...then folded, Barbara showed him her A/9 and said. "Good thing you didn't try anything Brent, cause I was coming after you."

Brent responded, "If I would have raised I would have been able to beat those."

Barbara said, "Oh, yeah? I remember when you raised my blind with Q/5 off."

When was that?

Barbara, "Upstairs at the Four Queens."

Brent, "That was FOUR YEARS AGO!"

This interchange was followed by a couple of Enright laydowns when Brent raised prompting a joking "collusion" response from one of the players.

Barbara, "I don't want to bust him? He's my buddy?"

Brent, making a mechanical sound, "That's the sound of a lie detector going off."

Sorry to go on so long about these two, but they are very funny together. And it sets up Brent's departure from the final table.

With his last five chips, Brent raises all-in with a pair of sevens. It's Barbara Enright who can't wait to get her stack all-in to seal the fate of her "Buddy". Barbara has Queens. So long, Buddy, you're 6th.

Kevin McBride is as nice a guy as you'll ever meet. And if you come to the Horseshoe and make a bet at the sport's book you might meet him. That's where he works.

Kevin may have been put a tilt by a very funny scene right out of Mike Caro's "Book of Tells" Video. He and Vic Kramer were alone in a hand. When a second 5 his the river, Kevin checked. Vic Kramer literally lurched for his chips to bet, knocking them over and some off the table onto the floor.

Looking on the floor in order to find every chip, Vic piled them back on the table and then dumped all of them forward for a raise all-in. This show of enthusiasm for a second five on the river so unnerved poor Kevin that he threw away his overpair, 8's. That would have been the end of the story, but Vic couldn't resist. He had to show Kevin his no pair, no flush K/Jc.

Kevin never really recovered. When he called Steve Rydel's K/2 small blind raise all-in with a 9/8 he got to see the flop of 2 6 Q and then K K for massive overkill and 5th place.

Now there was only one more player to eliminate as three seats were being given out. We'd already seen Vic Kramer's longtime poker playing friend from Sydney, Australia--Martin Comer lose a chip lead and finish 7th.

All there was left to destroy a perfectly good evening for another Sydneyite who'd come 10,000 miles to play here, was for Vic Kramer--a citizen of the former British Penal Colony--to be knocked out of the tournament in 4th place, one short of the goal, by someone from England.

That's, of course, what happened. As the Poker God loves a good laugh.

All-in for the big blind, Vic's A/2 lost to Steve Rydel's A/9.

And you can put a shrimp on the barbie, mate, this one's over.


WSOP Super Satellite #4 Sunday 4/20/98

DON'T LOOK AT YOUR CARDS!!!

Tonight, they've quit playing games.

The huge first event is tomorrow, the $2,000 Limit Hold 'em. There's talk that it might sell out at 600 entrants. That would mean a prize poll of $1.2 million and a first place payout of over $400,000. Only first and second in the Championship event pays more.

In the single table satellite area, they've run over 110 table today. Giant money is flowing back and forth in the high stakes area of the Pavillion, next to where the Super Satellite is held. (See Lee Jones' excellent report on RGP)

There are so many high stakes games that the Super Satellite is restricted to 13 tables. 20 alternates are put in during the course of the first hour as people bust out. Someone said as they walked out of the Pavillion, "I don't have to see the money, I can smell it." This is the World Series of Poker. This the Poker Center of the Universe. Be HERE or Be QU..uh, CRAZY.

157 buy-ins, 156 rebuys. $62,400 in prize money. Five seats to the Championship event given out and over $10,000 in cash.

The action will be limited at the final table because once four players are eliminated, the Super Satellite stops.

Friday 54 players and 49 rebuys took over four hours. With the final table running an hour and a half.

Saturday 89 players and 80 rebuys took less than three hours. The final table was through in 20 minutes flat.

Sunday, 101 players and 105 rebuys took over four hours with the final table taking an hour.

And in case you've forgotten:

**The entry fee for the Super is $220. That buys $200 in chips. Rebuys, unlimited for the first hour, are another $200 and gets the buyer $200 more in chips. There is a $ for $ double rebuy at the end of the hour. Blinds go up every 20 minutes and they start at $5/10**

1st An entry into the Championship event and $450 in cash. ($10,450 in value)
2nd The same
3rd The same
4th The same
5th The Same
6th 9 chips and $490 ($4,990)
7th 5 chips and $480 ($2,980)
8th 2 chips and $490 ($1,490)
9th 1 chip and $390 ($890)

**Tournament chips can be sold or used to play in any WSOP event. Entries into the Championship event MUST be used by the player who won them. They cannot be sold or given away**

Some of the notables who played in this evening's Super Satellite were:

Tom McEvoy Former World Champion and winner of $189,152 in last year's WSOP
Kevin Song Winner of the $2,000 Limit Hold 'em ($397,120)
Mel Judah 3rd in last year's Championship ($371,000) and winner of the $5,000 7- Card Stud event (176,000)
Max Stern Two time winner last year. The $2,500 7-Card Stud ($117,000) and the $3,000 No-Limit Hold 'em ($237,615)
Maria Stern Winner of the $1,500 7-Card Stud ($140,708) and 4th on women''s list
Deane Stonier Winner of the $3,000 Omaha Hi-Lo ($145,200)
Louis Asmo Winner of the $3,000 Limit Hold 'em ($231,600)
Chris Bjorin Winner of the $1,500 Pot Limit Omaha ($169,200)
Barbara Enright All-Time Women's money leader ($350,960)
Bob Stupak Founder of The Stratosphere Casino
Men Nguyen 18th on the All-Time money list
Mike Sexton

How tough are these Super Satellites? None of these esteemed players made the final table.

When the final table formed at 12:25 P.M. these were the players, their chip counts and hometowns.

Seat 1Bob Thompson$4,400Las Vegas, NV
Seat 2Bill Gazes$9,300Rialto, CA
Seat 3Paul Hoenke$8,000Minden, LA
Seat 4Dennis Waterman$1,000Montclair, CA
Seat 5Frank Hernandez$6,400San Jose, CA
Seat 6Jason Mubarak$4,000Columbus, OH
Seat 7Rusty London$5,000Las Vegas, NV
Seat 8John Bonetti$6,000Houston, TX
Seat 9Eric Shapiro$18,900Boulder, CO(Chip Leader)

With five seats locked up for the survivors, our attention turns to the second to last table. Here, if you lose, you go home empty-handed. Someone from this table will have beaten 147 out of 157 players and will have had the honor of paying an average of $420 to do it.

This is a death struggle. The short stacks get up after every hand to see where they stand. Is someone shorter than me? Do they have to go through the blinds before me? Can I get through the blinds without playing a hand? Please God, put someone else out quick!

The last one out before the money is the most humiliating position in a tournament. It's especially so when getting to the final table even short-stacked could win you $1,000,000.

One by one the short stacks are picked off, now there are two left. No one wants to play a hand unless they have to.

Kathy Kolberg has to. Earlier, in an attempt to get some breathing room, Kathy made a bet that was about half her stack. Frank Hernandez came over the top and Kathy threw her hand away. A friend of hers told me the hand was A/Q off.

Now she was desparate. Dennis Waterman had $500 more in chips and was farther from the blinds. She went all-in. The giant stack at the table, Eric Shapiro, called. His Q/9 off caught a straight knocking Kathy out and allowing Dennis Waterman to breathe for the first time in about a half hour.

The final table was set. Everyone was in the money.

Soon after the start the blinds went to $500/1,000.

Dennis Waterman fell into the 'just happy to be here' catagory. During the break before the final table formed, he asked Patty Hughes what 9th place paid. Hopefully, Dennis wasn't in too deep and the $890 for 9th place made him some money, 'cause 9th place was what he got.

Going all-in with K/?, he didn't show us as he was suppossed to at the final table, Dennis was called by the ubiquitous Mr Shapiro. Eric showed AA, Dennis headed for the door.

Three left to go.

When your stack is only 2-3 times the big blind, you usually have to go with any decent hand.

As John Bonetti said, "Short-handed, ya gotta bet any ace, except when you don't."

Thanks John, for this advice from an expert.

Well, Jason Mubarak went all-in with his Ace. Unfortunately for him Bill Gazes had one also. Besides alot of chips, Gazes had a King with his Ace. Jason only had a nine with his. Jason hit the rail in 8th.

Now there were two.

Renowned Tournament Director, Bob Thompson had played in every Super and this was his first final table. He'd been nursing a short stack for hours, only barely missing being eliminated in 10th or 11th place.

Earlier, he had raised Bill Gazes' big blind with 6 of his 10 chips. Gazes didn't hesitate to come over the top. After several minutes of thought, Bob showed Bill a pair of 4's and threw them in the muck.

He didn't know at the time that those 4's were the last chance he had.

A few minutes later, Thompson threw in his last four chips. Bill Gazes again was the caller. Thompson had A/Q, Gazes had 10/7 off. So what comes? Q 8 6 then 5 9. Gazes hits a gut shot straight on the river to give Thompson 7th place.

Now there is only one left to eliminate.

Surly the one safe seat would be Eric Shapiro's. As I was counting his chips during the break he returned. "Jeez, Eric, you have twice as many chips as anyone else!" I said to him. "Yeah," he said, "I just have to stay out of everyone's way."

Sometimes the aggressiveness and luck that a player has coming to the final table can hurt him once he gets there. That was the case for Eric Shapiro.

The whole final table took only 25 minutes. If Eric had gone on a long potty break, or had a late dinner or called his girlfriend in Colorado, he'd have a seat in the Championship event. Just DON'T LOOK AT YOUR CARDS!!

With all those chips, there was no one who was going to bust Eric Shapiro toniught, only he himself could do it. And he did.

After making some poor "investments" as he was to call them later. And playing almost every hand, Eric made what seemed to be the right play. He called John Bonetti all-in with pocket Aces.

"You got me. You got me," John said as Eric turned over the Aces. "I can't beat ya." The flop comes rags. We still haven't seen John's hand.

A six fell on the turn. "I CAN'T BEAT YOU UNLESS A SIX COMES," John bellows.

"THREE SIXES!!!" John now flips over his pair of sixes.

"They call me the KILLER OF ACES." John is yelling now as only Bonetti can.

Shapiro now has only two chips. It's unbelievible that he has squandered such a stack in such a short time.

He recovers twice all-in to have ten chips left when the last hand is played. Rather than waiting for the other short stack, Rusty London to go through the blinds first, Eric goes all-in for a third time.

He shows a K/J off. Frank Hernandez who called from the big blind turned over an A/9. When an Ace flops, the five seats in the Championship event are finalized.

They are:

Bill Gazes
Paul Hoenke
Frank Hernandez
Rusty London
and John Bonetti.

Sometimes it pays not to look at your cards.


WSOP Super Satellite #5 Tuesday 4/21/98

This will be my last report on RGP until the World Series is over. I've committed my mind, body and soul to Tom Sims and Chuck Weinstock at ConJelCo for the duration of the Series.

Please join us as we give you the most indepth reporting that has ever been done on the World Series of Poker either on the Web or anywhere else.

We will finish our coverage of the first event of WSOP 98, tomorrow night. You'll be able to read it Thursday morning on the ConJelCo.com site. If you've never been to ConJelCo, any search engine like Yahoo.com will be able to find it for you or you can just search for "Poker".

Please let us know how we are doing. Feedback, positive or negative, is helpful.

Next I have to apologize to the friends and family of both Bill Gazes and of Allen Cunningham. I mistook on of these gentlemen for the other last night and credited Bill Gazes with winning the $10,000 seat in the Super Satellite, when in fact it was Allen Cunningham who won it..

Again, my profuse apologies. If you saw these two guys, you'd understand how I confused them. Well, maybe if you saw them separately you'd understand. Standing next to each other, they don't look that much alike. Mea Culpa.

To stay current with the Super Satellites as they happen, I'm going to give you a truncated version of the one that was held this evening. Henchforth, all Super Satellite coverage will be incorporated into the daily WSOP event report.

It's been fun writing these and I really appreciate all the encouragment I've received from you. It's meant alot to me that you would take the time to tell me how you felt about the coverage.

Again, tomorrow night's report on Super Satellite #6 will be available along with the full story of Event #1 of the WSOP on ConJelCo.com. Please join us there.

SAY IT AIN'T SO

Even with 100 players still alive in the first event of the WSOP in the next room, 152 players showed up for tonight's Super Satellite. They were in a spending mood too, taking 162 rebuys out of their pockets.

The $62,800 that was generated was enough to pay five Championship event entries plus over $10,000 in cash.

If you've been reading these reports all along you know that the seats must be taken by their winners.

Tonight, there were plenty of famous names but no previous winners at the final table.

Places 1-5 received a Championship enrty and $460
6th 10 tournament chips and $130 ($5,130)
7th 5 tournament chips and $450 ($2,950)
8th 2 chips and $530 ($1,530)
9th 1 chip and $390 ($890)

Say it ain't so, Kathy.

With 10 players left, short-stacked and beautiful Kathy Kohlberg (my last sexual innuendo joke) the daughter of former world champion Jack Keller, had to go all-in with the best hand she could find.

She turned over an A/J. Big blind Tony Ma called with K/9 off. Not one but two Kings came on board to break Kathy's heart.

For the second straight day, Kathy Kohlberg beat all but nine players. Those nine players, each day, were all in the money and she wasn't...again.

She has played brilliantly for two days and not only has nothing to show for it. But has had to face the ultimate frustration of being the last one eliminated TWICE.

She's done this without rancor, yelling or whining. Simply a shrug of the shoulders. This is a very lovely and classy lady.

The following was the final table with chip counts and hometowns:

Seat 1J C Pearson$7,500Nashville, TN
Seat 2John Morgan$8,000Wolverton, England
Seat 3Dave Cunkelton$6,000Las Vegas, NV
Seat 4Tommy DeLoach$4,500Augusta, GA
Seat 5Tony Ma$17,000LA, CA
Seat 6Claud Sigmon$1,500Biloxi, MS
Seat 7Ron Weaver$2,000Ocaenside, CA
Seat 8Casey Kastle$7,000Las Vegas, NV
Seat 9Men Nguyen$10,000LA, CA

Ron Weaver had to make a move. He saw an A/Q off and went all-in. JC Pearson who had been the most aggressive player at the table called him.

JC had 9's. The flop favored Ron with a Queen. And just as he was starting to think it would hold up a Nine came on the river. Ron took 9th. (Probably a message there)

Claud Sigmon was all-in for the big blind a little later. Tony Ma who had almost half the chips on the table could call any bet with any hand.

This any hand was pretty any, 9/7 off. When one of those damn Nines came on that damn river again, Claud threw his hand away and finished 8th.

Dave Cunkelton had played in every Super Satellite and this was his first final table. When he got here his cards went dead. Having to do something, he raised the big blind all-in with a pocket pair of 5's.

This time Tony Ma had a real hand. KK. Dave left cursing the fates. Kings in the big blind. What's aguy to do to win one of these things?

Tommy DeLoach had put up a valiant struggle. All-in three times, he'd won the first two. Finally, forced into it one more time, his luck ran out. His Q/8 couldn't stand up to Tony Ma's (that man again) A/10 when both an Ace and a Ten flopped.

The seat winner were:

JC Pearson
John Morgan
Tony Ma
Casey Kastle
and Men Nguyen

See you all at ConJelCo.com tomorrow. Thanks for listening.

Mike Paulle


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