Dao
Bac Wins $1,000 Buy-in Limit S.H.O.E. Bracelet
"Bac
read a book on meditation to keep him calm during the tournament"
The winner of the $1,000 buy-in Limit S.H.O.E. championship
was Dao Bac, from Garden Grove, CA. He is a 51-year-old professional
poker player. This was his first victory ever at the World Series
of Poker.
Bac was born in Vietnam. He arrived in the United States in 1989.
He is married and has two children.
During much of the tournament, Bac read from a leather-bound book
when he was not involved in a hand. Bac is a practicing Buddhist.
He read from a book on prayer and meditation, he said “to
keep him calm during the tournament.” Whatever was written
in the book must have worked, as Bac remained cool throughout the
three-day event and eventually collected $157,975 in prize money.
Bac is the first Vietnamese poker player to win a gold bracelet
at this year’s World Series. Vietnamese-born poker players
have enjoyed perhaps the highest per capita WSOP wins and earnings
of any nationality. However, this year has been a relative drought
for the nation that produced the likes of Men Nguyen, David Pham,
Tony Ma, and others.
This was Bac’s ninth tournament entry this year. He had yet
to cash until this moment. Bac did manage to cash twice last year,
with winnings totaling just $5,000. Since 1990, Bac has been playing
mostly cash games at casinos around San Diego and Los Angeles. He
played $3-6 hold’em for many years and gradually became good
enough to move up to middle-limit games. Bac has won major tournaments
elsewhere and has multiple cashes.
Bac was cheered on by a large entourage, which included family
and friends. When asked about his plans to celebrate, he said he
will go out to a nice dinner later in the evening. He will give
the gold bracelet to his wife, Hanh Nguyen.
The tournament attracted 730 entries. S.H.O.E. is a rotation of
poker which includes four games – Seven-Card Stud, Limit Hold’em,
Omaha High-Low, and Stud Eight-or-Better. It has been part of the
WSOP menu intermittently for the last decade. It was originally
a marketing-driven initiative when the WSOP was played at what was
formally Binion’s Horseshoe in downtown Las Vegas. In fact,
a H.O.R.S.E. event routinely preceded the S.H.O.E. tournament, thus
making for the duo of events which spelled out “Horseshoe.”
by Nolan Dalla
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