Traverse City Record-Eagle

Michigan

November 10, 2009

21-year-old from Mich. is poker champion

LAS VEGAS (AP) -- A 21-year-old Michigan poker professional who chose cards over college won the World Series of Poker main event in Las Vegas early Tuesday, winning $8.55 million and becoming the youngest player to win the tournament in its 40-year history.

Joe Cada of Shelby Township, Mich., turned over a pair of nines early after 46-year old Darvin Moon called his all-in wager with a suited queen-jack, setting up an about-even race for most of the chips on the table.

But a board of two sevens, a king, an eight and a deuce didn't connect with either player's cards and gave Cada the win.

"I ran really well and I never really thought this was possible," Cada said. "It was one of those dreams and I'm thankful it came true."

The hand abruptly ended a final table that saw Moon, a logger from western Maryland, bounce back to a dominant chip lead after being down 2-1 in chips to start the night.

"I knew if I could catch, I got him," Moon said of the final hand. "I just took a shot."

Cada broke a record for the tournament's youngest winner set last year by Peter Eastgate of Denmark. Cada is 340 days younger than Eastgate.

The record was previously held for two decades by 11-time gold bracelet winner Phil Hellmuth, who posed for pictures with Cada after the win.

He also posed with his mother, Ann Cada, a dealer at MotorCity Casino Hotel in downtown Detroit.

"My baby," Ann Cada said as she approached her son with cameras snapping.

When asked what's next for him after reaching the pinnacle for poker so early in his career, Cada said: "To win it back-to-back."

Moon and Cada traded the lead several times in 88 hands spanning nearly three hours of play, with one 20-minute break.

Moon erased Cada's lead in 12 hands, revealing a pair of queens during a showdown to rake in a pot worth millions of chips. Cada shook his head after he lost and briefly stood up from the table, walking over and chatting with two of his supporters.

After some chip-shifting, Cada was ahead by less than 4 million chips after 52 hands, with 194.8 million chips in play.

But Moon stormed to nearly a 100 million-chip lead after the break, visibly frustrating Cada and leaning on him to make tougher decisions.

Fortunes changed when Moon pounced on a board with two 10s, a nine and a five to put Cada's entire tournament at risk. After a sip of bottled water and several minutes of thinking, Cada called the bet and flipped over a nine for a pair.

Moon held a straight draw but didn't hit his hand on the river, giving the lead back to Cada and drawing roars from the crowd.

"I should have went all-in on the flop. He made a phenomenal call," Moon said. "That's why he's the champion."

Moon won $5.18 million for second place.

"I only play good when my back's against the wall," said Cada, who was nearly ousted from the tournament on Saturday when he held about 1 percent of the chips in play after 123 hands.

The players traded chips atop a table with a stack of cash and a gold bracelet on its felt, and in front of nearly 1,500 screaming fans in a capacity crowd at the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino.

Their tug-of-war ended an epic tournament that began with 6,494 players in July.

After a 115-day break, Cada and Moon endured more than 14 1/2 hours through 276 hands at the final table on Saturday and early Sunday, when they outlasted seven others to make it to heads-up play.

Unlike Cada, who said he regularly plays about a dozen tournaments at a time online or three at a time in heads-up cash games, Moon hasn't played a single hand of online poker. He doesn't even own a computer or have an e-mail address.

Text Only
  • State abortion proposals await votes

    Rallied by the approval last fall of a state law banning so-called "partial birth" abortion, Michigan abortion opponents are pushing for more in 2012 — from a "Choose Life" fundraising license plate to a ban on abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

    Continued ...
    Feb 12, 2012 7:14 am 2 Photos
  • U-M requests security review

    University of Michigan officials said they have ordered an outside review of campus security in the wake of a botched response to child pornography found on a medical resident's computer flash drive.

    Continued ...
    Feb 12, 2012 7:14 am
  • Region in brief: 02/12/2012

    New state park opens near Alpena; Weather causes crashes statewide; GVSU to base charters in Detroit; and more.

    Continued ...
    Feb 12, 2012 7:14 am
  • Detroit Symphony claims record with webcast

    The Detroit Symphony Orchestra said Saturday its latest "Live from Orchestra Hall" webcast drew the largest audience of any live online performance by a U.S. symphonic group.

    Continued ...
    Feb 12, 2012 7:14 am
  • Inmates moved after crane collapse

    Western Michigan authorities said they have transferred about 175 inmates from Kent County jail in Grand Rapids following a crane collapse that damaged a large part of the complex.

    Continued ...
    Feb 12, 2012 7:14 am
  • February 11, 2012
  • Detroit-area author Zaslow killed in car accident

    Best-selling author Jeffrey Zaslow was killed in Antrim County on Friday when he lost control of his car on a snowy road after promoting his latest book in northern Michigan.

    Continued ...
    Feb 11, 2012 7:14 am
  • Pot law may see ballot

    A state appeals court said Friday that Detroit officials and a judge in 2010 illegally blocked voters from considering whether to ease penalties for marijuana possession, a ruling that could pave the way for the measure getting on the ballot this year.

    Continued ...
    Feb 11, 2012 7:14 am
  • February 10, 2012
  • Public safety gets a boost in budget

    Michigan's depleted law enforcement ranks would get a financial boost with a budget plan laid out Thursday by Gov. Rick Snyder, an attempt to start reversing steady declines in officer numbers over the past decade.

    Continued ...
    Feb 10, 2012 7:24 am 1 Photo
  • Gov. ties extra school cash to learning

    Gov. Snyder said Thursday that Michigan should capitalize on its brightest economic outlook in a decade by opening its checkbook to school districts — but only those that can show their students actually are learning from year to year.

    Continued ...
    Feb 10, 2012 7:24 am 1 Photo
  • Details of Gov. Snyder's budget plan

    Highlights of Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder's $48.2 billion budget proposal for the fiscal year that starts in October.

    Continued ...
    Feb 10, 2012 7:24 am
  • Nice, snowy day for a ... bike ride?

    You're not much of a skier, and snowmobiling isn't your idea of fun either. Is there any other reason to take a winter trip to the cold, snowy Upper Peninsula? Actually, there are many.

    Continued ...
    Feb 10, 2012 7:24 am 1 Photo
  • February 9, 2012
  • It's official: Wings, Leafs at Big House

    Next year's Winter Classic could set an attendance record when the Detroit Red Wings will face the Toronto Maple Leafs.

    Continued ...
    Updated Feb 9, 2012 2:24 pm
  • Ford execs to retire

    Ford says two top executives who helped lead its comeback are retiring.

    Continued ...
    Feb 9, 2012 9:37 am 1 Photo
  • Asset limit hits families

    The 2010 Buick Enclave parked in her garage kept Michigan resident Renee Moore from getting food stamps for two months last year, even though her family's income had dropped to below the poverty level.

    Continued ...
    Feb 9, 2012 7:24 am 1 Photo
  • Moroun puts up white flag in bridge flap

    Hoping to keep two executives out of jail, the company that controls the Ambassador Bridge said Wednesday it will comply with a judge's order to complete construction of a major project.

    Continued ...
    Feb 9, 2012 7:24 am