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2001 World Series of Poker

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2001 World Series of Poker
LocationBinion's Horseshoe, Las Vegas, Nevada
DatesApril 20 – May 19
Champion
Ecuador Carlos Mortensen
← 2000
2002 →

The 2001 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binion's Horseshoe.

Preliminary events

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Event Winner Prize Runner-up
$500 Casino Employees Limit Hold'em Travis Jonas (1/1) $40,200 Jae Kim
$2,000 Limit Hold'em Nani Dollison (1/2) $441,440 John Pires
$1,500 Omaha Hi-Lo Split 8 or better Chris Ferguson (1/3) $164,735 Men Nguyen (0/4)
$1,500 Seven-card stud Adam Roberts (1/1) $146,430 Sal Dimicelli
$2,000 No Limit Hold'em Phil Hellmuth (1/7) $316,550 T. J. Cloutier (0/4)
$1,500 Limit Omaha Eddy Scharf (1/1) $83,810 Michael Davis
$1,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo Split 8 or better Barry Shulman (1/1) $123,820 Dan Heimiller
$1,500 Pot Limit Omaha w/Rebuys Galen Kester (1/1) $167,035 Dave Ulliott (0/1)
$2,000 S.H.O.E. David Pham (1/1) $140,455 Skip Wilson
$3,000 Limit Hold'em Jim Lester (1/1) $233,490 Alex Brenes
$2,500 Seven Card Stud Paul Darden (1/1) $147,440 Tom Franklin (0/1)
$2,000 Pot Limit Hold'em Burt Boutin (1/1) $193,800 Dave Ulliott (0/1)
$1,500 Razz Berry Johnston (1/5) $83,810 Mike Wattel (0/1)
$2,500 Pot Limit Omaha w/Rebuys Scotty Nguyen (1/3) $178,480 Jim Lester (0/1)
$2,500 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo Split 8 or better Rich Korbin (1/1) $159,080 Alex Papachatzakis
$1,500 Ace to Five Draw Lowball Cliff Yamagawa (1/1) $73,915 David Danheiser
$2,500 Omaha Hi-Lo Split 8 or better Bob Slezak (1/1) $173,625 Tony Ma (0/2)
$5,000 No Limit Deuce to Seven Draw w/Rebuys Howard Lederer (1/2) $165,870 Freddy Deeb (0/1)
$1,000 Seniors' No Limit Hold'em Jay Heimowitz (1/6) $115,430 Garry Pollak
$3,000 Pot Limit Hold'em Steve Zolotow (1/2) $243,335 Mike Magee
$5,000 Seven Card Stud Allen Cunningham (1/1) $201,760 Michael Danino
$3,000 No Limit Hold'em Erik Seidel (1/5) $411,300 Johnny Chan (0/6)
$5,000 Omaha Hi-Lo Split 8 or better Scotty Nguyen (1/2) $207,580 Phil Hellmuth (0/7)
$5,000 Limit Hold'em Hemish Shah (1/1) $312,340 Tony Duong
$1,000 Ladies' Limit Hold'em/Seven Card Stud Nani Dollison (2/3) $41,130 Patty Gallagher

Main Event

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There were 613 entrants to the main event.[1][2] Each paid $10,000 to enter, with the top 45 players finishing in the money. It was the largest poker tournament ever played in a non-online casino at the time. The 2001 Main Event was the first tournament in history to pay out at least $1,000,000 to two players. Phil Hellmuth made the final table and looked to become a two-time Main Event champion, but fell short in fifth place.

Final table

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Name Number of chips
(percentage of total)
WSOP
Bracelets*
WSOP
Cashes*
WSOP
Earnings*
Germany Henry Nowakowski 1,076,000 (17.6%) 0 0 0
Ecuador Carlos Mortensen 873,000 (14.2%) 0 1 $22,575
United States Phil Hellmuth 859,000 (14.0%) 7 31 $2,561,145
United States Mike Matusow 767,000 (12.5%) 1 5 $380,220
United States Phil Gordon 681,000 (11.1%) 0 2 $8,000
United States Stan Schrier 672,000 (11.0%) 0 0 0
United States Dewey Tomko 467,000 (7.6%) 3 27 $816,729
United States Steve Riehle 407,000 (6.6%) 0 0 0
United States John Inashima 328,000 (5.4%) 0 3 $22,128

*Career statistics prior to the beginning of the 2001 Main Event.

Final table results

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Place Name Prize
1st Carlos Mortensen (1/1) $1,500,000
2nd Dewey Tomko (0/3) $1,098,925
3rd Stan Schrier $699,315
4th Phil Gordon $399,610
5th Phil Hellmuth (0/7) $303,705
6th Mike Matusow (0/1) $239,765
7th Henry Nowakowski $179,825
8th Steve Riehle $119,885
9th John Inashima $91,190

In The Money Finishes

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NB: This list is restricted to In The Money finishers with an existing Wikipedia entry.

Place Name Prize
11th Daniel Negreanu (0/1) $63,940
20th Kevin Song (0/1) $39,960
23rd Jim Bechtel (0/1) $39,960
24th Alex Brenes $39,960
26th John Esposito (0/1) $39,960
27th Allen Cunningham (0/1) $39,960
29th Mike Sexton (0/1) $30,000
30th Chris Bjorin (0/2) $30,000
33rd Barny Boatman $30,000
37th Billy Baxter (0/6) $20,000
42nd Bill Gazes $20,000
44th David Pham (0/1) $20,000

References

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  1. ^ Wenzel, John (2019-05-24). "The Unknown Who Almost Beat the World Series' Toughest Final Table". PokerNews. Retrieved 2024-11-12.
  2. ^ Chaffin, Sean (2017-06-17). "The Hand I'll Never Forget: Daniel Negreanu's WSOP Main Event Misstep". PokerNews. Retrieved 2024-11-12.
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