Enough with the waiting, it is time to shuffle up and deal.
After a four-month hiatus, final table play of the 2009 world series of poker is set to resume at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Penn & Teller Theater at Las Vegas' Rio Hotel & Casino.
Here is a preview of things to watch for:
The lineup: Chip leader Darvin Moon will occupy Seat 1 with $58.9 million in (rounded) chips, followed by James Akenhead ($6.8 million), Phil Ivey (9.75), Kevin Schaffel (12.4), Steven Begleiter (29.89), Eric Buchman (34.8), Joe Cada (13.2), Antoine Saout (9.5) and Jeff Shulman (19.6) in clockwise seat assignments around the table.
Where the action stands: Players will be welcomed with minutes to play in Level 33 of the tournament structure with blinds of 120K/240K and a 30K ante, leaving everybody outside of Akenhead reasonably well stacked.
Odds favorite: Bookmakers back the big stack, which is why Moon is the favorite with 2-1 odds despite his clear amateur status. The Maryland logger has never played a hand of online poker and qualified for the tournament by winning a $130 satellite in West Virginia.
Gamblers looking for value may eye former Bears Stearns executive Begleiter, who despite entering play with the third-largest stack has 11-2 listed odds.
Fan favorite: Ask any professional whom they fear most, and the answer is consistently the same — Ivey. No Main Event since its numbers entered the thousands has had a player of Ivey's star power run this deep.
Yeah, former champion Dan Harrington's back-to-back final tables in 2002 and 2003 were impressive, but he doesn't have legendary stories of $10 million single-day wins or 72-hour playing sessions without sleep bantered about like Ivey does.
But does Ivey have enough chips to make a run and play creatively?
Watch out for: Shulman and his stack of nearly 20 million, which is dangerous enough to chop the chip-leader in half or send five others to the rail. This is Shulman's second Main Event final table in 10 years, but he'll be more prepared this time around. Shulman hired Phil Hellmuth, arguably the best tournament player in poker, to coach him in the months leading to Saturday.
Shulman is also riding a bit of a family rush. His father, Barry, recently won Europe's World Series of Poker Main Event.
Money talks: The $8.5 million check to the winner will be the third-largest award in tournament poker history. Second-place money is $5.2 million, with payouts trickling all the way down to $1.25 million for ninth. Every player at the table received that money when play was halted in July.
Tune in time: ESPN will air a two-hour telecast of the action on Tuesday at 8 p.m., mere hours after the champion has been crowned. In response to criticism of last year's broadcast, expect to see more than two heads-up hands played for the championship.
Predictions: Moon will play quiet and ride his starting stack to the final three. Ivey will be brilliant but will flame out in the middle. Shulman will be photographed in front of the cash at the end.
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