| BODOG 
                                  PRESS RELEASES
 For 
                                  Immediate Release July 10, 2006  LAS 
                                  VEGAS - Team Bodog pro David Williams, 
                                  the 26-year-old Texan who rocketed into stardom 
                                  two years ago with his memorable runner-up finish 
                                  at the 2004 World Series of Poker, has captured 
                                  his first bracelet in poker's showcase event. 
                                  Williams bested a field of 478 players to take 
                                  the top prize in Event No. 10 of the 2006 World 
                                  Series of Poker, the $1,500 Seven-Card Stud 
                                  tournament. He earned $163,118 for the wín. 
                                 "This is the greatest 
                                  day of my life," Williams said. "I 
                                  came so close to winning a bracelet in 2004 
                                  in the Main Event, and I've been thinking about 
                                  this moment ever since. It's even better than 
                                  I expected."  "David continues to 
                                  prove he's one of the best poker players in 
                                  the world, and I'm sure this is just the first 
                                  of many more WSOP bracelets he'll wín 
                                  over his career," said Calvin Ayre, Bodog.com's 
                                  Founder and CEO. "To have a title this 
                                  early in this year's WSOP is exciting for all 
                                  members of Team Bodog, and we're anticipating 
                                  many more victories."  On his way to victory, 
                                  Williams faced a final table filled with some 
                                  of poker's most decorated and seasoned tournament 
                                  pros, including poker legend Johnny Chan, who 
                                  was gunning for his 11th WSOP bracelet, and 
                                  "Miami" John Cernuto, a three-time 
                                  WSOP winner. Also among the final eight were 
                                  Jack Duncan, a 2002 world champion in Pot Limit 
                                  Omaha, and John Hoang, an experienced tournament 
                                  ace.  Williams, though, quickly 
                                  took command at the final table on Friday with 
                                  aggressive play against the veterans, gaining 
                                  the chip lead early and never looking back. 
                                  He eventually found himself heads-up against 
                                  Hoang for the title with a sizable chip advantage, 
                                  and after a little more than two-and-a-half 
                                  hours of heads-up play, Hoang was severely shortstacked 
                                  and forced to go all-in on 5th street with an 
                                  ace high. Williams, with just a pair of fours, 
                                  called and the small pair proved to be all he 
                                  needed for the wín and career first bracelet. 
                                 Williams has now won a 
                                  total of $3,670,823 in three WSOP appearances, 
                                  earning him the distinction of being the youngest 
                                  player on the World Series of Poker's "Top 
                                  Ten" All-Time Money List. Williams ranks 
                                  seventh on the list just behind poker greats 
                                  Phil Hellmuth and T.J. Cloutier. Fellow Team 
                                  Bodog member Josh Arieh, who has won two WSOP 
                                  bracelets, is ninth on the list with $3,188,590 
                                  in earnings.  With his Seven-Card Stud 
                                  wín, numerous final table appearances 
                                  in Texas Hold'em events and a first-place finish 
                                  in H.O.R.S.E. this past May at the World Series 
                                  of Poker Circuit in Las Vegas, Williams has 
                                  established himself as one of the top all-around 
                                  poker players in the world. In just the past 
                                  two years, the Team Bodog phenom has earned 
                                  more than $5 million in tournament winnings. 
                                 Joining Williams 
                                  and Arieh on Team Bodog for this year's World 
                                  Series of Poker is the latest member of Bodog's 
                                  pro team, Evelyn Ng. More than 500 other players 
                                  who qualified through online satellite qualifiers 
                                  at Bodog.com are competing for Team Bodog. Two 
                                  online qualifiers from Team Bodog have already 
                                  made a final table this year - Thomas Hunt of 
                                  Las Vegas finished fourth in the $2,000 No-Limit 
                                  Hold'em ($160,659) and David Solomon of Austin 
                                  , Texas , finished sixth in $2,500 Short Handed 
                                  No-Limit ($68,277). The WSOP started on June 
                                  25 and runs through Aug. 10. Check out https://www.bodog.com/poker/ 
                                  for the complete Bodog.com Poker experience. 
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