In flop games the blinds are 2,000-4,000 and in stud games the ante is 1,000 and the bring-in is 1,000. Betting limits are 4,000-8,000 and there are 27 minutes remaining in this level.
Chris “Jesus” Ferguson is hands down the most credentialed player at this final table, and is one of the most successful tournament players of all time. He has five WSOP bracelets including winning the 2000 Main Event Championship after beating T.J. Cloutier heads up.
He has also won bracelets in $2,500 7 Card Stud (2000), $1,500 Omaha 8 (2001), $2,000 Omaha 8 (2003), and $2,000 1/2 Limit Hold'em - 1/2 Seven Card Stud (2003). Ferguson has made 27 final tables at the WSOP including today. He is currently 20th on the all-time money winner list, and is also a champion ballroom dancer, and can slice through carrots with the pitch of a card.
Alex Kravchenko is a businessman from Moscow. He’s currently the most successful tournament player to hail from the country of Russia. Kravchecko is having an amazing year. He made three final tables at the 2007 WSOP in Las Vegas including the $5,000 HORSE event and the Main Event Championship where he finished in 4th place despite being shortstacked for most of the final two days of play. He also won his first bracelet in the $1,500 Omaha 8 event. This is his fourth appearance at a WSOP final table this year.
Yuval Bronshtein is a newcomer to the tournament circuit. He has two previous cashes in WSOP events. He made the final table of the $2,000 Pot Limit Hold'em event. Yuval Bronshtein was among the chipleaders during the first two days of this event. He took over the lead at one point on Day 2 when he took down a big pot from Barny Boatman. His best game is Razz and he’s primarily an online player.
Not as well known as some of his tablemates but you may know him from the online tables as Buzzer. Bihl is a legend of the Betfair poker rooms and has written a number of very insightful strategy articles on poker. Bihl is sponsored by Betfair and is in confident mood:
“It’s not the easiest field I will ever face but I’m so happy to get this far in a field of 105 of the best players in the world, “said Buzzer. “I think I have every chance now. A few key pots and I could be the first WSOP Europe bracelet winner.”
Kirk Morrison is one of the true characters of the game. Always a smiling face at the table, Morrison consistently has a “glass half full” approach to not only his poker, but also his life. Morrison had his first WSOP cash in 1994 with a final table finish in the $1500 Limit Holdem event, running 3rd for $72,300. He then went on to have a series of cashes in and around Los Angeles and Las Vegas, before winning his first WSOP Bracelet in 1998 in the $1500 Seven Card Stud event.
Seeking a quieter lifestyle, Morrison moved to New Zealand, where he systematically dominated the Australasian Poker scene with a series of final table finishes and several local titles. Morrison made a return to the US in 2006, finishing 36th in the Bay 101 Shooting Star event ($20,000) and 10th in the $1000 Seven Card Stud Hi Lo event at the WSOP ($7,888).
His return to form has come this year, after a run of success on the WPT and WSOP circuits. He has cashed four times in the WPT this year, including a second place finish in the WPT Championship ($2,011,135). He cashed 5 times at this years WSOP, including a 56th place finish in the Main Event ($154,194).
Joe ‘The Elegance’ Beevers is one part of the Hendon Mob and first came to the public's attention in the groundbreaking TV series Late Night Poker. Joe has $1,135,935 in tournament winnings alone and is 20th on the all time English players money list. Joe's most recent title was 888.com Poker Nations Cup in Cardiff last year. Amazingly, this is only the second time he has played tournament H.O.R.S.E. after playing it online for the first time last week where he came 3rd out of 25. Joe has the hometown crowd on his side and will be desperate to add WSOP gold to the Hendon Mob's trophy shelf.
Gary ‘The Choirboy’ Jones is probably best known to the Worldwide Poker Community for going very deep in the 2004 WSOP Main Event, finishing 17th ($175,000). In the UK, he is a known not only as a fierce poker player live and online, but also as a commentator on a number of televised poker productions.
Gary has vowed never to fly again, and has dyed his hair bright green, in the hopes of raising awareness for climate change. Gary and his shiny green haircuit put on a master class yesterday, before losing his chip lead to Yuval Bronshtein late on in the day. Jones will be looking to add to his $500,000 in tournament winnings today, and a bracelet would be nice, too.