2007 WSOP Main Event: The Final
Table
Seat
1: Jon Kalmar
Hometown: Chorley, Lancashire, United Kingdom
Chip Count: 20,320,000
Jon Kalmar is a 34-year-old professional poker player, who plays
mostly in clubs located in the north and the Midlands region of
England. He is married with one child. Among his prior accomplishments,
Kalmar was once the lead singer in a punk rock band. Before entering
this year's world championship, Kalmar admitted to enduring a "terrible"
run of bad fortune at this year's World Series of Poker. He failed
to cash a single time in the preliminary tournaments. But everything
changed the night before the main event began. Dejected, Kalmar
tried to switch his airline ticket and return home early. But he
was told the cost to change his departure from Las Vegas back to
England would be about $600. So instead, Kalmar decided to enter
the last mega-satellite at the Rio just before the start of the
main event. He ended up winning a $10,000 seat. And now, here he
is at the final table ten days later – third among the chip
leaders.
Seat
2: Lee Childs
Hometown: Reston, VA
Chip Count: 13,240,000
Lee Childs is a 35-year-old aspiring poker professional from suburban
Washington, DC. He is married with no children. Childs holds a BBA
in computer information systems from James Madison University, in
Virginia. Just two months ago, he voluntarily took some time off
from a high-tech position with a firm affiliated with the National
Geographic Society. He worked on "The JASON Project,"
which is an educational foundation for students dedicated to scientific
expeditions and research founded by the person who first located
the Titantic. Childs has been on his own for a few months –
and is pursuing one of his dreams which is to play in the World
Series of Poker. He says that he would not be here without the love
of his incredible wife, dad, and all the support of his family and
friends. His is currently fifth in the chip count.
Seat
3: Philip Hilm
Hometown: Cambridge, England
Chip Count: 22,070,000
Philip Hilm is the chip leader coming into the final table of the
2007 World Series of Poker. He is a 31-year-old online poker pro.
Hilm is a native of Denmark, but currently lives in England. Family
is very important to Hilm. He spent two years living in Poland to
get to know his mother's side of the family before moving on to
England. Ten years ago, Hilm earned a degree in economics from the
Copenhagen Business School. He formed a company with 12 employees,
but eventually went bankrupt. Just four years ago, Hilm was at his
lowest point – selling coffee machines at grocery stores to
make Christmas money so he could buy presents for his family. Then,
Hilm discovered poker on the Internet. Before long, he was earning
enough money to make a decent living. And now, he is the largest
stack at the final table of the main event.
Seat
4: Jerry Yang
Hometown: Temecula, CA
Chip Count: 8,459,000
Jerry Yang is a 39-year-old psychologist and social worker from
southern California. He holds a Masters Degree in health psychology.
Yang was born in Laos. He is married and has six children. Yang
started playing poker only two years ago. He won a seat into the
main event via a satellite held at the Pechanga Resort and Casino
in Temecula, CA. His total investment in this event is $225. The
socially-conscious Yang is determined to give something back to
charity. He is pledging 10 percent of his winnings from this tournament
to three different charities – the Make-A-Wish Foundation,
Feed the Children, and the Ronald McDonald House.
Seat
5: Raymond Rahme
Hometown: Johannesburg, South Africa
Chip Count: 16,320,000
Raymond Rahme is the first person ever to appear at the final table
of the main event from the continent of Africa . At age 62, he is
also the senior participant at the final table. He is married to
his wife Teresa, and together they have six children. Prior to his
retirement, Rahme owned and operated a bed and breakfast inn. Although
he played stud for three decades, Rahme has only been playing the
game of hold'em for about two years. Yet, Rahme has already enjoyed
significant tournament success. He's taken first and second place
at major events held in South Africa. He also took fourth place
in the "All Africa Poker Championship" recently, which
was the largest poker tournament ever held in Africa. As part of
his prize, he received a travel package to Las Vegas and an entry
into the 2007 main event. And now, he is ranked fourth in the chip
count at the start of the final table.
Seat
6: Tuan Lam
Hometown: Mississauga, Ontario ( Canada)
Chip Count: 21,315,000
Tuan Lam was born in Vietnam on New Years Day in 1966, during the
war. He eventually immigrated to Canada at the age of 19. He now
lives in the Toronto area where he plays poker professionally. Prior
to turning pro, Lam worked as a general laborer for a metal company.
Then, he learned how to play poker from friends and has made it
all the way to the final table of the 2007 main event. This is his
third year to attend the WSOP. His prior cashes were 46th place
in an event last year and 78th place in a WSOP tournament held in
2005. He is married with two children. Lam arrives at the final
table ranked second in the chip count.
Seat
7: Alex Kravchenko
Hometown: Moscow, Russia
Chip Count: 6,570,000
Alex Kravchenko is a 36-year-old businessman originally from Archangel,
USSR. He has been playing poker for about eight years. He is married
and has two children. Kravchenko became the first Russian citizen
in history to win a WSOP gold bracelet when he was victorious in
the $1,500 buy-in Omaha High-Low championship at this year's WSOP
– in what was the largest Omaha High-Low field in history.
Russian immigrants have won previously at the World Series. But
Kravchenko's victory was clearly a milestone. Kravechenko has an
impressive history of poker tournament wins in Europe. He won the
Austrian Masters Pot-Limit Championship in 2001. He also won the
Russian Pot-Limit Championship held that same year. His also won
a Limit Hold'em title at the Helsinki Frezeout in 2002. He has cashed
over 30 times in what is becoming an illustrious poker career.
This is Kravchenko's fifth time to cash at the WSOP in 2007. Kravchnko
faces the biggest challenge of any player in the finale, as the
lowest stack at the table.
Seat
8: Lee Watkinson
Hometown: Cheney, WA
Chip Count: 9,925,000
Lee Watkinson is a 40-year-old poker pro, businessman, and animal
rights activist from Cheney, WA. He is one of only two players at
the final table who currently owns a WSOP gold bracelet. In 2006,
Watkinson won the Pot-Limit Omaha World Championship. He owns a
few businesses as well, including a record company and a clothing
line - which were started exclusively with his poker winnings. The
Washington State native holds a degree in economics, which perhaps
explains why Watkinson is so astute as an investor and poker professional.
Yet, often when he is interviewed Watkinson is quick to shift everyone's
attention to a greater, more humanitarian purpose. Watkins and his
fiancé Timmi DeRosa share a commitment to rescuing and retiring
captive chimpanzees, many of which have been used in everything
from movies to research laboratories.
Watkinson and DeRosa told about how chimpanzees are not as useful
as they become older and are commonly discarded. So a few years
ago, the couple made a commitment to rescue as many creatures as
possible and eventually build an animal sanctuary. "All the
animals need our help," Watkinson says. "But we really
try to focus on the chimpanzees." But -- when it comes to poker,
Watkinson is not monkeying around. He arrives seventh in the chip
count.
Seat
9: Hevad Khan
Hometown: Poughkeepsie, NY
Chip Count: 9,205,000
Hevad "Rain" Khan is a 22-year-old professional poker
originally from Poughkeepsie, NY. He attended college at the State
University of New York-Albany. He has since moved around the country,
living in both the San Francisco bay area, and Las Vegas. Khan's
claim to fame before arriving at this final table was his extraordinary
ability to play multiple poker games simultaneously. In what can
only be described as a prodigal Bobby Fischer-like capability, Khan
has played in as many as 43 poker games all at once on his home
computer. Today, he must play in just one poker game – the
biggest and most glamorous event in the world for the world championship.
Khan arrives eighth in the chip count at the start of the final
table.
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