WSOP 2007 Main Event Final Table Set
- WSOP 2007 Main Event Final Table - Day 7
Make sure you go to the bottom of this Post and make a selection choosing who you think will survive the Final Table land minds and become the WSOP 2007 Main Event Champion.
Final Table for the WSOP 2007 Main Event begins Tuesday July 17th at Noon Vegas time and play will continue until the Texas Hole ‘Em World Champion is crowned. Final Table payouts are:
- 1st - $8,250,000
- 2nd - $4,840,981
- 3rd - $3,048,025
- 4th - $1,852,721
- 5th - $1,255,069
- 6th - $956,243
- 7th - $705,229
- 8th - $585,699
- 9th - $525,934
Seating assignments and chip counts provided by Poker News
Go to Just Poker Talk to see how the Final Table Survivors made it through Day 6.
Final Table Seats and Chip Counts
Seat 1 - Raymond Rahme - 16.32 million
Seat 2 - Alex Kravchenko - 6.57 million
Seat 3 - Lee Childs - 13.24 million
Seat 4 - Jerry Yang - 8.45 million
Seat 5 - Lee Watkinson - 9.925 million
Seat 6 - Tuan Lam - 21.315 million
Seat 7 - Philip Hilm - 22.07 million
Seat 8 - Jon Kalmar - 20.32 million
Seat 9 - Hevad ‘Rain’ Khan - 9.205 million
- Players that just missed being part of the WSOP 2007 Main Event Final Table are:
- 10th - Steven Garfinkel - $476,929
- 11th - Scottie Nguyen WSOP 1998 Main Event Champion - $476,929
- 12th - Ray Henson - $476,929
- 13th - William Spadea - 429,114
- 14th - David Tran - 429,114
- 15th - Bob Slezak - 429,114
Just Poker Talk Poll: Make your selection to win the WSOP 2007 Main Event from the 9 still alive at the Final Table.
WSOP, WSOP Main Event, Final Table, Tuan Lam, Jon Kalmar, Philip Hilm, Lee Childs, Lee Watkinson, Raymond Rahme, Hevad ‘Rain’ Khan, Steven Karfinkel, Alex Kravchenko, Scottie Nguyen, Steve Garfinkel, Ray Henson, William Spadea, David Tran, Day 7, Bob Slezak


July 17th, 2007 at 10:51 am
I took Lee Watkinson because looks like he was the only name I could pronounce…..would have liked to see Scotty win it but he was out 11th…..
July 17th, 2007 at 12:38 pm
With blinds and antes already huge, I’m thinking a good run of cards is going to be more a determining factor than ever before.
Look out for Lam or Hilm, who have a ton of chips and are aggressive
July 17th, 2007 at 7:08 pm
It looks like Yang has a huge lead. Did anybody buy the pay per view? Do they use the pocket cameras, or are you just watching without knowing what the players hold?