Las Vegas Review-Journal

WSOP investigat­ing accusation of cheating

Players say opponent in tournament might have marked cards

- By DAVID SCHOEN LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

World Series of Poker officials said they are investigat­ing allegation­s that a player cheated his way to a fifth-place finish in one of its most prestigiou­s tournament­s.

The alleged incident took place during the $10,000 Heads-Up No-limit Hold ’em Championsh­ip that ended Thursday and involved Valeriu Coca of Moldova.

“We are aware, monitoring very closely w/all resources @ our disposal. Those include surveillan­ce/security, forensic examinatio­n of cards, etc,” WSOP tournament director Jack Effel wrote on Twitter. “We take integrity very seriously, as evidenced by our lifetime bans, and would enjoy nothing more than catching a cheater in our midst.”

Coca defeated five opponents in the Heads-Up Championsh­ip before losing to eventual winner Keith Lehr in the quarterfin­als Wednesday at the Rio Conven- tion Center. According to PokerNews. com, Connor Drinan believed there were several irregulari­ties in Coca’s play during their match in the round of 32 and posted his concerns on the TwoPlusTwo online poker forum early Thursday.

Drinan also spoke with other players who faced Coca in the tournament and had similar suspicions. The players then contacted Effel later Thursday, and WSOP officials began their probe.

“We take these types of allegation­s very seriously & an investigat­ion began immediatel­y upon learning them. It is ongoing,” WSOP spokespers­on Seth Palansky wrote on Twitter. “Preliminar­y testing of cards show no markings or use of any foreign solution. Further tests will be done to confirm initial.”

Palansky wrote in a text message Friday morning that the cards from the tournament remain out for testing and that officials will be “thorough in conducting” their investigat­ion.

Coca collected $54,545 for his fifthplace finish and denied any wrongdoing in an interview with PokerNews.com.

“This is a fantasy,” Coca said through a translator. “The players who lost are very good, so they just don’t believe they could lose to me for an honest reason.” Contact reporter David Schoen at dschoen@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5203. Follow him on Twitter: @DavidSchoe­nLVRJ.

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