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		<title>Man, 21,  wins $8,550,000 in  World Series of Poker</title>
		<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2009/11/michigan-man-wins-8550000-in-world-series.htm</link>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Man, 21,  wins $8,550,000 in  World Series of Poker</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2009/11/michigan-man-wins-8550000-in-world-series.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Tue, 10 Nov 2009 14:08:54 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>4:36 a.m. Nov. 10, 2009<br /><br />Updated: 7:27 a.m.<br /><br />Joe Cada poses after winning the 2009 World Series of Poker at the Rio Hotel Casino today in Las Vegas. (ISAAC BREKKEN/Associated Press)<br /><br />Michigan ace wins World Series of Poker -- and $8.55 million<br /><br />ASSOCIATED PRESS<br /><br />Joe Cada of Shelby Township won the World Series of Poker main event in Las Vegas early today, winning $8.55 million and becoming the youngest player to win the tournament in its 40-year history<br /><br />The 21-year-old Michigan poker professional who chose cards over college, turned over a pair of nines early after 46-year old Darvin Moon called his all-in wager with a suited queen-jack, setting up an about-even race for most of the chips on the table.<br /><br />But a board of two sevens, a king, an eight and a deuce didn t connect with either player s cards and gave Cada the win.<br /><br />I ran really well and I never really thought this was possible, Cada said. It was one of those dreams and I m thankful it came true.<br /><br />The hand abruptly ended a final table that saw Moon, a logger from western Maryland, bounce back to a dominant chip lead after being down 2-1 in chips to start the night.<br /><br />I knew if I could catch, I got him, Moon said of the final hand. I just took a shot.<br /><br />Cada broke a record for the tournament s youngest winner set last year by Peter Eastgate of Denmark. Cada is 340 days younger than Eastgate.<br /><br />The record was previously held for two decades by 11-time gold bracelet winner<br /><br />Phil Hellmuth, who posed for pictures with Cada after the win.<br /><br />He also posed with his mother, Ann Cada, a dealer at MotorCity Casino Hotel in downtown Detroit.<br /><br />My baby, Ann Cada said as she approached her son with cameras snapping.<br /><br />When asked what s next for him after reaching the pinnacle for poker so early in his career, Cada said: To win it back-to-back.<br /><br />Moon and Cada traded the lead several times in 88 hands spanning nearly three hours of play, with one 20-minute break.<br /><br />Moon erased Cada s lead in 12 hands, revealing a pair of queens during a showdown to rake in a pot worth millions of chips. Cada shook his head after he lost and briefly stood up from the table, walking over and chatting with two of his supporters.<br /><br />After some chip-shifting, Cada was ahead by less than 4 million chips after 52 hands, with 194.8 million chips in play.<br /><br />But Moon stormed to nearly a 100 million-chip lead after the break, visibly frustrating Cada and leaning on him to make tougher decisions.<br /><br />Fortunes changed when Moon pounced on a board with two 10s, a nine and a five to put Cada s entire tournament at risk. After a sip of bottled water and several minutes of thinking, Cada called the bet and flipped over a nine for a pair.<br /><br />Moon held a straight draw but didn t hit his hand on the river, giving the lead back to Cada and drawing roars from the crowd.<br /><br />I should have went all-in on the flop. He made a phenomenal call, Moon said. That s why he s the champion.<br /><br />Moon won $5.18 million for second place.<br /><br />I only play good when my back s against the wall, said Cada, who was nearly ousted from the tournament on Saturday when he held about 1 percent of the chips in play after 123 hands.<br /><br />The players traded chips atop a table with a stack of cash and a gold bracelet on its felt, and in front of nearly 1,500 screaming fans in a capacity crowd at the Rio All-Suite Hotel Casino.<br /><br />Their tug-of-war ended an epic tournament that began with 6,494 players in July.<br /><br />After a 115-day break, Cada and Moon endured more than 14 1/2 hours through 276 hands at the final table on Saturday and early Sunday, when they outlasted seven others to make it to heads-up play.<br /><br />Unlike Cada, who said he regularly plays about a dozen tournaments at a time online or three at a time in heads-up cash games, Moon hasn t played a single hand of online poker. He doesn t even own a computer or have an e-mail address.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2009/11/michigan-man-wins-8550000-in-world-series.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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