2009 WSOP Main Event - The Final Table

November Nine Final Table
Day: 2
Event Info

2009 WSOP Main Event - The Final Table

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
99
Prize
$8,547,042
Event Info
Buy-in
$10,000
Prize Pool
$27,220,989
Entries
9
Level Info
Level
42
Blinds
1,000,000 / 2,000,000
Ante
300,000

Heads Up for Poker Immortality

Here it is, ladies and gentlemen. The final battle for the 2009 World Series of Poker Main Event bracelet, the tallest podium on which a poker player can stand. At precisely 10:00pm-or-so Las Vegas time, Joe Cada and Darvin Moon will face each other one-on-one for a place in poker history as the World Champion of No-Limit Hold'em.

The two finalists were just part of a nine-man slugfest that unfolded on Saturday night and into Sunday morning's twilight. Moon was the big stack going in, but he couldn't hold his ground for long as the table reeled him back into the middle of the pack. But Moon recovered well and is still left standing after seven others have fallen by the wayside. Despite his persistence, the quiet amateur has received widespread criticism for the way he's played at this final table, with one hand against Steve Begleiter standing out as particularly peculiar.

Begs had three-bet Moon before the flop, and the two men saw the dealer spread out rags. Moon check-raised Begs to 15 million and Begleiter moved all in for 21 million total. With more than 44 million chips heaped in the middle of the table, Moon tanked and talked and laid his hand down, and the enormous pot Begleiter dragged vaulted him up ahead of Moon and into second place.

And then Moon committed the Cardinal Sin of poker. He knocked out Phil Ivey, and he did it with an astounding three-outer. Ivey was stepping softly through the first few levels of play as he took his time and felt out the table. He would finally find {A-Clubs} {K-Spades} and all-in action from Moon's inferior {A-Diamonds} {Q-Spades}, looking to pull in a very dangerous double up. The entire room was awestruck as the {Q-Diamonds} appeared in the door, though, and Ivey was unable to hold Big Slick to stay alive. His exit in seventh place cleared a lot of spectators out of the theater and pitted those who stayed against the Maryland logger.

For Cada, it was quite a nerve-racking day of poker. He entered the day in the middle of the pack, but he would find his stack dwindling in the middle stages of the evening. Part of his slide was thanks to Moon and a big pot the two men played on hand #53. A pot of about 15 million was pushed to Moon when he made aces up, and Cada slipped to the short stack with under 7 million. A couple hours later, he would plummet all the way to 2.275 million after doubling up Jeff Shulman. But Cada battled back valiantly. A flip with Ivey doubled him back out of the danger zone, and he eventually worked back close to 11 million. Then the madness started.

Cada got the rest of his stack all in with {3-Clubs} {3-Hearts} against Shulman's {J-Clubs} {J-Diamonds}. A three flopped and Cada fell into the arms of his railbirds with a miraculous double. Just a few hands later, Moon inexplicably four-bet Cada all in preflop with {K-Spades} {9-Clubs}, and Cada snap-called with {A-Diamonds} {A-Hearts} for another double up! Just as the sun was coming up over the desert, Cada earned his final double up of the day in a massive pot with Antoine Saout with just three players left. In the first hand back from a break, Cada got more than 35 million in with {2-Clubs} {2-Spades}. Saout instantly called with {Q-Hearts} {Q-Spades}, and he was looking to knock off Cada once and for all. But Cada would not fall. Another miraculous two-outer saved him from extinction and moved him into the chip lead.

Saout would fade out a few hands later, and it was Cada dealing the death blow with ace-king. Saout's pocket eights could not fade a river {K-Clubs}, and Saout watched as Moon and Cada were mobbed by family, friends, and media.

Both men have had to endure several lifetimes worth of scrutiny and attention this week. For Cada, it seems that he's got the poker world rooting for him. Despite not putting up a good case for poker as a skill-based game, Cada has won over the fans with his humility and his relatable experiences.

But you also get the feeling that people would be rooting for whoever was playing against Darvin Moon. The unsponsored, self-employed laborer from the backcountry says he's done playing poker after this tournament. Most young grinders can't fathom turning down a fat sponsorship check, but Moon says he's not taking. In an interview with the Washington Post, he said, "These guys want me to sign for a year and say: 'You've gotta do this, you've gotta do that.' You become their" property. (Moon actually used a more forceful word that rhymes with "rich.")"

So here we are. It's the logger from Maryland against the self-admitted "B" student from Michigan for eight-and-a-half million dollars.

How do they feel about playing against each other? "They say he's some kind of specialist online," says Moon. "But I'm not online to watch." Cada thinks it's going to be a long match, and seems to be wary of his opponent's play. "Darvin mixes up his game a lot. He played really tight four months ago."

The two men could not be less similar to each other, but both have bested long odds and gotten unimaginably lucky to be here. Cada will be the betting favorite with the skill advantage and a two-to-one lead going in. But as Phil Ivey will tell you, luck has been an important ingredient at this final table. Sometime tonight or tomorrow morning, one of them will step into poker immortality as the 2009 Main Event Champion!

Tags: Darvin MoonJoe Cada