























Matt Matros Finishes Third in World Poker Tour after Entering
Party Poker Satellite Tournament.
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Matt Matros
Finishes Third in World Poker Tour after Entering Party Poker Satellite
Tournament
Matt Matros is 26 years old and has already written his first
book about poker - but the final chapter is about to be re-written.
Matros, a graduate student in fiction writing at Sarah Lawrence College in New
York, finished third in the
World Poker Tour Championship, winning $706,903, after entering a $100
poker satellite on Party Poker.
Matros has already written The Making of a Poker Player, what he calls a "poker
narrative," to be published by Citadel Press, but clearly his experience in Las
Vegas at the WPT Championships will merit a new ending.
He played consistent and smart poker against a table of top players, only
outlasted by poker pros Martin
Deknijff of Sweden and Hassan Habib of Downey, CA.
The prepossessing young man from West Hampton has been playing poker for most of
his life, tutored by his father, also a faithful
Party Poker player. But while at Yale, getting an undergraduate
degree in math with honors, he began to seriously brush up on his poker skills,
utilizing the game theory and probabilities skills learned in the classroom,
practical skills at the poker table, and books by experts.
Since then, he has played "semi-pro" poker, earning enough money online and in
poker tournaments to finance his
entire tuition in his second year of grad school. When not going to
classes and playing poker, he is either writing a novel or acting as supervisor
to student residence advisers at the college. He will graduate in May,
2004, with a Masters in Fine Arts, and then embark on a writing career financed
by poker winnings.
It would seem that superior math and creative writing skills are not often found
in the same person, but Matros says: "There's a certain logic to story telling
and a certain logic to math. They are more alike than people realize."
However no amount of imagination would have given Matros the wildest notion that
he would end up at the final table of the
World Poker Tour Championship,
knocking out the game's top champions, ultimately to make the final six
alongside his best friend and poker mentor Russell Rosenblum of Bethesda MD, who
ended up fifth. The student outlasted the teacher.
Matros entered the Party Poker "Trip to Las
Vegas" satellite for $100, never having won more than $5,000 in any online or
bricks-and-mortar tournament. He was victorious in that tournament,
entitling him to play in a super satellite in Las Vegas at the
Bellagio, an
event that ended up being the largest super satellite in history at a land-based
casino. Winning that poker tournament, he earned a seat in the
World Poker Tour Championship,
along with 342 other players, competing for an $8.3 million prize pool.
After the second day, he started well back in the pack with $33,800 in chips.
By the third day, he was 17th, with $239,000. On the fourth day, he had
$714,000, but when it came to the final table, he had climbed all the way to
second with $3,860,000. Along the way, Matros knocked out "The Professor"
-- the legendary world champion Howard Lederer and two-time WPT tournament
winner. Ironically, it was Lederer that took him out of the
Party Poker Million II in 2003.
A gutsy player willing to courageously challenge the experienced veterans,
Matros found himself at the final table with Rosenblum beside him. "It
kills us to play against each other," he says, "but we'll never go easy or let
up."
"I still can't wrap my head around making it to the final table," he said.
"It's just a dream come true. With my best friend and poker mentor sitting
in the very seat next to me -- what are the odds of that happening? It's
just unbelievable."
Matros believes that players who learn poker online at
Party Poker have an advantage over some of the
long time veterans who may be set in their ways. "Sometimes the right hand
is not the traditional hand. Traditionally, if you have the best hand, you
raise or call and then fold if you don't. But if you learn online at sites
like Party Poker, you'll soon figure out that
it's more about the odds and the range of cards in the hand ... It's really
about your equity, not about the best or worst hand."
The World Poker Tour
consists of thirteen poker tournaments at various land based casinos and online
poker rooms, leading to the final championship poker tournament - the
World Poker Tour Championship at
Bellagio in Las Vegas, Nevada.

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