Your 2004 WSOP winner is...........

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GREG RAYMER!

ASSOCIATED PRESS

LAS VEGAS (AP) - The soft-spoken patent lawyer from Connecticut knew exactly what to do with his monstrous stack of chips at the final table of the 35th annual World Series of Poker.

Greg "Fossilman" Raymer wielded it like a Flintstones club, knocking down opponent after opponent. He saved his greatest drubbing for the end, beating David Anthony Williams in an epic showdown Friday night, seven hours after the finale began.

In head-to-head play, Raymer had a stack worth $17.1 million compared with the $8.2 million owned by Williams. On the seventh hand, Williams pushed all his chips into the pot and Raymer matched him.

When the cards cleared, both had full houses but Raymer had twos over eights, while Williams had twos over fours. Williams, a 23-year-old Dallas college student, busted out.

Raymer, 39, snagged the top prize of $5 million and Williams earned $3.5 million for his second place finish.

"I played well but I was the luckiest," Raymer said before embracing a mountain of cash that has become tradition at the conclusion of the world series.

Williams said he didn't have a choice but to press his luck in that final hand.

"I felt the chances of me having the best hand at the time were greater than coming back with that short stack," Williams explained.

Raymer had built up a stack of $8.2 million chips leading up to the final table at Binion's Horseshoe Hotel & Casino. He toppled six of his eight competitors using bruising hands that ranged from a pair of tens to three queens.

A fearless Williams knocked out the other two players, including a former World Series of Poker champion.

A field that began with 2,576 entrants May 22 was down to nine Friday afternoon. The game is No-Limit Texas Hold'Em, in which a player can risk all his chips with every draw of a card, guaranteeing high-stakes action and big losers.

The final table of the wildly popular poker tournament got underway at the downtown casino after players spent six days battling each other for a chance to be crowned poker king and take home the $5 million first-place prize.

Friday's nine-person final saw unprecedented action as players repeatedly moved in all their chips, trying to gain the upper hand.

The first to fall was Mike McClain, 39, of Lemoore, Calif. Minutes later, Mattias Andersson, a 24-year-old Swede and the only foreigner in the final, was knocked out by Raymer, whose nickname comes from his hobby of collecting fossils.

McClain and Andersson went home with $470,400 and $575,000, respectively.

It was then Williams' turn to be the poker slayer. The youngest player at the table, he used a full house to send home Matt Dean, 25, of Woodlands, Texas. One of four 20-somethings at the final table, Dean finished in seventh place with a $675,000 prize.

Raymer then went to work on Al Krux, a professional poker player from New York state, and Glenn Hughes, a 38-year-old married father of two from Scottsdale, Ariz. Krux left with $800,000, while Hughes walked away with $1.1 million.

The last to leave before a dinner break Friday was 1995 World Series of Poker Champion Dan Harrington, who earned a $1.5 million prize. Williams used an improbable second full house to take out Harrington.

Third place went to Josh Arieh, a 29-year-old professional poker player from Atlanta who banked $2.5 million. Raymer knocked him out with three queens to Arieh's pair of nines.

Both Raymer and Williams qualified playing in satellite tournaments on the Internet, picking up where last year's champ Chris Moneymaker left off. Moneymaker, who won $2.5 million in 2003, lost on the event's first day.
 

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I played well but I was the luckiest," Raymer said before embracing a mountain of cash that has become tradition at the conclusion of the world series.


there is that word again FISH MAN
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congrats greg!
 

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Dante-

LUCK no DOUBT plays a SIGNIFICANT part....but skill is still the OVERRIDING factor.
 

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The better you play the luckier you get.

A good player knows how the wait patiently through bad cards and push on good cards when she gets lucky.
 

The Great Govenor of California
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The key to winning tourneys is knowing who to attack, when and how hard. Its like fishing, you need patientence and then when you get a fish or a nibble you have to use finesse. But sometimes none of that matters and you win every hand and scoop every pot.
 

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He used to be a regular sports board poster at another site I used to frequent alot. Great job by Fossilman. He once told me he would get more serious about his poker tourney play, never thought he meant $5 million serious!
 

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It also helps when you constantly have a higher pair or kicker than your opponent. I was amazed at how often the Fossilman had the "goods" when the other players did take a stand. Anxious to see the ESPN show.

Regardless of great final table cards, it took excellent play to get into that position. Congrats Greg !
 

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You have to put yourself in a position to get lucky.

It's like in basketball when you hear someone saying someone gets a lot of lucky bounces, or a "shooter's roll"...well, that's usually because they're consistently hitting the inside of the room. The best shooters put themselves in a position to get the most good bounces.

Or a bowler that gets a lot of strikes...yeah, some are solid and knock all the pins down at once...but other times they might get that pin ricocheting off the side wall and getting those stray pins. Sure, it might be luck on a given shot, but again they're consistently hitting their mark and will get more "breaks" than less-consistent players.

OK...now I'm rambling but you get the idea. Good players have a better chance of getting lucky because they play smart.

Raymer had a lucky run, but he put himself in a position to make his own luck. Congrats to him.
 

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When you think about it Raymer went wire to wire chip count wise. After day one he was in the top 50 or so I believe and he never looked back. Hellava performance. Ya think we will be seeing more goofy glasses in the up-coming WPT tourneys from different players. You better believe it, hey maybe we should patten those lizard specs.
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wil.
 

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