World Series of Poker: Day 1A Observations

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  • A comparatively small field (1400ish) turned out for the first of four Day One flights. Speculation on just what that means for the total 2008 Main Event can wait a couple of days; I would point out this is Thursday with a big weekend in front of us and tomorrow is the Fourth of July here in the States. But just a couple of days will tell all we need to know.
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  • There is a 25 table Mega Satellite ($1060) going on across the hall which will produce another two dozen players for the Main Event. I spotted Kenna James and Steve Dannenmann playing for a cheap seat. Another Mega goes off at 9 PM tonight. Two more tomorrow and two more Saturday.
  • .

  • Michael Craig and Dave "Devilfish" Ulliott were involved in four hands heads up in just the first hour of play. Michael dragged all four of those pots. Methinks the Devilfish will be after Michael the rest of the day. Maureen Feduniak is also at this table and I expect her to stay away from the boyz squabble, unless she can stack one of them.
  • .

  • I spotted one of my personal favorite players today, Dale Pinchot, he has been active though, we just have missed each other. He has two cashes in the Series this summer to go along with his two from last year.
  • .

  • I have been catching up with many of the dealers I know from past WSOP summers and have heard some interesting stories about this WSOP and the overall dealer climate in Las Vegas. I will save those for a "dealers only" article later on in the Main Event.
  • World Series of Poker: Day 1A: 2008 vs. 2007

    ao7A lot of people seemed surprised that today (Day 1A) "only" had as many entrants as last year. Seems like a pretty good number for a Thursday and one full table ahead of last year.

    2008 Main Event Day 1A: 1297 entrants
    2007 Main Event Day 1A: 1287 entrants

    World Series of Poker: and Now It Begins

    meAnd now it begins......

    Fifty-One bracelets have been handed out; two more are ready to be presented today; the Player of the Year has been determined, congratulations to Erick Lindgren; the Ante Up for Africa event goes off today. Then, finally, we get to the Main Event and we answer most of the questions everyone has waited for.

    Will we have more entries than last year?

    Will the professionals somehow continue their dominance they have shown thru 53 preliminary events?

    Will it all run as smooth as the tournaments have run so far? By the way, nice job to the WSOP staff this was truly a nicely run Series so far. Minor mistakes, quick fixes and overall solid and uniform floor decisions. Kudos to Tournament Director Jack Effel and his WSOP floor staff.

    Another great move comes later this week, when the WSOP Media event is brought back with substantial prizes given to the favorite charities of the final table participants. A great solution to that on again off again event.

    Then tomorrow we reach the 2008 World Series of Poker $10,000 No Limit Hold'em Main Event. Four Day One flights, two Day Two flights and five more days to play down to the "November Nine" or the "Fall Final". Then all the WSOP eggs go into that ESPN/November basket and we all wait, watch, hope and pray. No matter who you favor in that mass of poker humanity, say a little prayer that at least one or two "names" make it to the final nine. Nothing could be better for poker than to see Scotty, Mike, Phil, Phil, Erick, Jennifer, Antonio, Gus, Daniel, Joe, Johnny** or heaven help us Doyle! make the final table.

    It all starts tomorrow.

    **Dewey, Cyndy, Bill, Gavin, Carlos, Chris, Doug, Liz, David, Tony, Lyle, Barry, Berry, Huck, Patrik, David, the other Phil and the other Phil, Greg, Layne, Chad, Isabelle, Todd, Freddy, T.J., Michael, Mike again, Ted, Gabe, Andy, Howard, John, John, John or John, Lee, Annie, Eli, Hoyt, Andy or even Jerry.

    World Series of Poker: Week Five Comparison

    ao7A short week five to compare as we are now on the threshold of the Main Event. Fifty-three events are in the books or about to be and here are the numbers:

    53 Preliminary Events:

    25 events had increased entries
    15 events had decreased entries
    12 events were new tournaments or increased buy-ins
    1 tie

    Here are the week four comparisons:

    2008 Event #48
    $2,000 No Limit Hold'em
    Number of Entrants: 2,319
    2007 Entries: 2,038
    (Big increase)

    2008 Event #49
    $1,500 No Limit Hold'em
    Number of Entrants: 2,718
    2007 Entries: 3,151
    (down over 400 from the old record, but the event was capped so it had no chance of hitting 3,000)

    2008 Event #50
    $10,000 Pot Limit Omaha
    Number of Entrants: 381
    2007 Entries: 314
    (a strong increase for a $10K event)

    2008 Event #51
    $1,500 H.O.R.S.E.
    Number of Entrants: 803
    2007 Entries: 730
    (this was a $1,000 S.H.O.E. event last summer)

    2008 Event #52
    $1,500 No Limit Hold'em
    Number of Entrants: 2,693
    2007 Entries: new event
    (an added 7th $1,500 NLHE event)

    2008 Event #53
    $1,500 Limit Hold'em Shootout
    Number of Entrants: 823
    2007 Entries: capped at 720
    (the cap was raised this year, so we’ll call this an “other”)

    Next, I will be watching the four Day Ones of the Main Event to see where those numbers go.

    Week Four Comparison
    Week Three Comparison
    Week Two Comparison
    Week One Comparison

    World Series of Poker: the Scotty Nguyen Syndrome

    profFirst and foremost, congratulations to Scotty Nguyen for taking down the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. and being the first player to hold the Chip Reese trophy. Scotty has an amazing track record over nearly 20 years of playing poker. His record, of course, includes the 1998 World Series of Poker main event championship and tournament earnings approaching Ten Million Dollars. Now Scotty adds to his legend, taking down the most prestigious tournament in professional poker.

    But like so many great careers there is a dark side to Scotty's, one episode of which took place last summer at the 2007 WSOP main event. With twelve players remaining in the hunt for the final table nine, Scotty Nguyen was the chipleader and, as we all know, he did not make the final table. That crash and burn troubled Scotty for many months and will probably never be forgotten in poker lore.

    Fast forward to this summer, the very next World Series of Poker main event and add to the mixture: the delayed final table. Combine these two events and I offered to you the "Scotty Nguyen Syndrome".

    Syndrome: a predictable, characteristic pattern of behavior, action, etc., that tends to occur under certain circumstances

    I don't know when it will hit and it will not affect all players at the same moment but somewhere around 18 players or 27 players; maybe even as high as 36 or even 45 players for some, it will appear. This is not just the World Series of Poker Final Table, no this is the "November Nine", the "Fall Final".

    And as sure as it will be 108 degrees in Las Vegas, each an every player who survives to Day Six on July 13th and certainly to Day Seven on July 14th, each of those players will experience the "Scotty Nguyen Syndrome".

    To get that close to four months of publicity and interviews and endorsements and fame and potential fortune and who knows what else... The "SNS" is going to massively effect play whenever it sets in. Players will get tight, really tight; decisions will take longer, a lot longer; tempers will shorten, in some cases really, really shorten; table talk, hand winning celebrations and anything resembling angle shooting will be scrutinized, analyzed and penalized? Floor decisions will be magnified out of all proportion, imagine giving a player a two round penalty on the bubble!

    The final table bubble itself will be much bigger, extending out to at least 27 players. The media coverage will be more intense and more critical than ever before. And the players...? Well the players will not be themselves because they will be playing under the influence of the "Scotty Nguyen Syndrome".

    Rumor has it that Corona will lessen but not alleviate the symptoms of the syndrome but there is a rebound effect if you excede a twelve pak in less than two full tournament levels. Perhaps Harrah's should supply extra massage staff for the final four tables or just rig cold showers above the tables like they do in hazardous material labs. And people say poker is not a sport.....

    World Series of Poker: the Calm Before the Storm

    stormWe are in the final week before the 2008 World Series of Poker main event. There is still a lot of "preliminary" action going on at the Rio; action that should not be overlooked as we all get our over/under bets in for the big show.

    The $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. tournament hits Day Four today with 24 survivors including: Doyle Brunson, Phil Ivey, Daniel Negreanu, Scotty Nguyen, Erick Lindgren and the eventual winner.

    There are two final tables today: Event #47 a six-handed Hold'em event and Event #48 Seven Card Stud that will have to play down from 13 to a champion today. Event #48 is a $2,000 Hold'em event entering Day Two today; they stopped play late last night as the players hit the money at 198th place. So everyone who goes out today walks away with cash.

    The big event today is the noon start of another $1,500 No Limit Hold'em tournament. Last year this event (Saturday before the Main Event) broke all existing records for non-Main Event registrations. That record has already been broken this year back on May 31st. All eyes will be on the registration count today, as anticipation is high for another record turnout.

    Sunday will bring us the final $10,000 Championship event prior to the Main Event. Expect a heavy European contingent for Event #50 Pot Limit Omaha. Late on Sunday, Event #51 $1,500 H.O.R.S.E. will go off at 5 PM.

    Monday brings the 7th and final $1,500 NLHE tournament; speculation is mixed on what a Monday start will mean for these usually big registration events. With two of these low buy-in events the final weekend before the Main Event, it is anyone's guess how many players have come in to town to take a double-shot at a WSOP bracelet.

    Tuesday brings us the now traditional $1,500 Limit Hold'em Shootout Event #53. Followed by the Ante Up for Africa Charity event on Wednesday.

    Finally, the beginning of the end and the arrival of the storm. On Thursday the Main Event will kick off four Day Ones with Day 1A. Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday will each launch a separate Day One, as the march to the November Final Table begins.

    World Series of Poker: Week Four Comparison

    ao5Through 47 events here is how the '08 Series is standing up to the '07 Series:

    47 Events to Date:

    23 events have increased entries
    15 events have decreased
    8 events were new tournaments or increased buy-ins
    1 tie

    Here are the week four comparisons:

    2008 Event #38
    $2,000 Pot Limit Hold'em
    Number of Entrants: 605
    2007 Entries: 599
    (up a few still counts as UP!)

    2008 Event #39
    $1,500 No Limit Hold'em
    Number of Entrants: 2,720
    2007 Entries: 2,778
    (down a few still counts as DOWN!)

    2008 Event #40
    $2,500 Deuce to Seven Triple Draw Lowball
    Number of Entrants: 238
    2007 Entries: 290
    (last year this was a $1,000 event with rebuys, not a good comparison)

    2008 Event #41
    $1,500 Mixed Hold'em
    Number of Entrants: 731
    2007 Entries: 620
    (5 PM event with a nice increase)

    2008 Event #42
    $1,000 Seniors No Limit Hold'em
    Number of Entrants: 2,217
    2007 Entries: 1,882
    (many more seniors)

    2008 Event #43
    $1,500 Pot Limit Omaha 8 or better
    Number of Entrants: 720
    2007 Entries: 687
    (another increase)

    2008 Event #44
    $1,000 No Limit Hold'em w/rebuys
    Number of Entrants: 879 w/ 2,508
    2007 Entries: 1,048 w/ 2,336 rebuys
    (many less players, many more rebuys)

    2008 Event #45
    $50,000 H.O.R.S.E.
    Number of Entrants: 148
    2007 Entries: 148
    (a flat out tie!)

    2008 Event #46
    $5,000 No Limit Hold'em 6-handed
    Number of Entrants: 805
    2007 Entries: 728
    (11% increase)

    2008 Event #47
    $1,500 Seven Card Stud 8 or better
    Number of Entrants: 544
    2007 Entries: 668
    ($1,000 buy-in in 2007)

    Week Three Comparison
    Week Two Comparison
    Week One Comparison

    World Series of Poker: the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. Championship

    horse6Day One of the $50,000 Hold'em, Omaha 8, Razz, Stud, Stud 8 tournament is in the books. Event #45 of the 2008 World Series of Poker is the fifty thousand dollar World Championship H.O.R.S.E. tournament, which is perhaps even more anticipated than the main event starting next week. The 50K HORSE is a very unique event at the World Series of Poker, here are some random observations from Day One.

  • Exactly 148 players started last year's $50K H.O.R.S.E. and the same number of runners turned out this year. The over/unders bets year-to-year were a push. Although the betting lines this year were for many more players, I pushed my year over year bet but cleaned up on the pros who were so sure the numbers would reach 175 or even 200, silly rabbits.
  • Only eight players busted on Day One and I would venture to wager all of these eight got bad beat more than once. The event is simply too deep stacked with 100,000 starting chips for any professional to play loose. Phil Hellmuth is out, so are David Williams and Amnon Filippi. Three players managed to double their stacks to over 200,000 but remember this is a five day event for a reason.
  • One entire quarter of the main tournament room is being used for the eighteen tables of the H.O.R.S.E. event. There is a lot of rail space for spectators and at least three meters between each table. Lots of room for players to wander about and chat; plenty of room for media. The accommodations for this event are superior to any tournament I have ever covered.
  • Payouts will be similar to last year, with the top sixteen being paid. I find it very interesting that the top professionals playing this event consider a "deep run" in this event to be not just "in the money" but making it to the last four tables or the top 32. A clear recognition by the players of how truly elite this field is.
  • The early buzz on media row was about the number of new faces we collectively did not recognize and the players who are playing the $50K H.O.R.S.E. for the first time and those players who played last year but are taking a fifty thousand dollar pass this year. Missing from the field '08 over '07:
  • Gavin Smith
    Josh Arieh
    Mark Vos
    Darrell Dicken
    Tuan Le
    Kirk Morrison
    John Phan
    Carlos Mortensen
    Erik Seidel (he has an Omaha final table today)

    and the ladies contingent is way down this year, missing from last year:
    Kristy Gazes
    Jerri Thomas
    Maureen Feduniak
    Cyndy Violette

  • And finally, here are the top sixteen from last year:
  • 1. Freddy Deeb
    2. Bruno Fitoussi
    3. John Hanson
    4. Amnon Filippi
    5. Kenny Tran
    6. David Singer
    7. Barry Greenstein
    8. Thor Hansen
    9. Gabe Kaplan
    10. Dewey Tomko
    11. Mark Gregorich
    12. Stephen Wolff
    13. Tim Phan
    14. Greg Raymer
    15. Chris Reslock
    16. Mike Matusow

    World Series of Poker: the Most Entertaining Day of the Year

    horseFor poker fans on site and the media, today is the best day of the World Series of Poker. I wonder about the thoughts behind today's schedule as far as player comfort but the who cares today will be fun.

    At noon there is the second of the $1,000 No Limit Hold'em w/ rebuys event. As you probably know the professionals play these rebuy events very differently than the amateurs. The pros will show up with the cash for 20 or more rebuys and they play the early rounds to get money out on the table. Building a big stack can only be accomplished at an "action table", so the pros create action. In the early rebuy rounds you will see two things over and over: first, there will be lots of all-ins pre-flop and even more players pushing on the flop; second, you will see a lot of shell-shocked amateurs with one or two rebuys in their pocket being run down by the pros ready to indiscriminately gamble it up.

    This is a fun two hours of rebuy poker madness, well maybe not so much fun for those spendthrift rookies with only a single rebuy. And today's event will be even more wild since about 150 or so of the top players will be throwing even more chips around because if they can't build a monster stack than they would rather bust out early because they have another appointment later this afternoon.

    You see at 5 PM today, the premiere event of the World Series of Poker is schedule. With apologies to the crusty, olde Main Event; the real superstar of the show is the five day $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. tournament that begins later today. Last year 148 runners put up the $50K to prove who was the best in the world or at least the best for those five days. Freddy Deeb took down the prize last year. The speculation is rampant around how many players will put up the big buy-in this year but you can be sure of a spectacle well worth watching.

    ESPN is back after four weeks to capture all the familiar faces for the big H.O.R.S.E. event, if you are anywhere near Las Vegas, this is the day to be at the Rio. Rebuy mania at noon and the big event scheduled at five, which means probably six or so; you can't rush the run for the newly created Chip Reese trophy.

    World Series of Poker: the $1500 No Limit Hold’em Events

    card56The size of the World Series of Poker has grown dramatically over the past decade. In 1999, the entire Series was 16 events. In 2002, for the first time, there were more than thirty separate tournaments. In both 2007 and 2008 the WSOP has offered 55 bracelet events. With the "poker boom" has come some conflicts between the desires of the professional players for a more diverse (non-Hold'em) schedule with higher buy-ins and the attempt to make the World Series truly open to all players. The focus of this "low end" diversity has become the $1500 No Limit Hold'em tournaments.

    In 2007, there were six $1,500 No Limit Hold'em tournaments, which amounted to about one every Saturday. In 2008, there are seven of these events. But has the increase in "small buy-in" events worked for the WSOP. And, yes we notice, that $1,500 is not what most poker players on the planet consider "small", but that is fodder for another post.

    Five of the seven $1,500 NLHE events have been played this year and to date the numbers compared to last year are up about 700 players in total. Perhaps more significantly, we are talking about events that have drawn in excess of 2300 players for each start. The only other WSOP events over 1,000 players this year have been the two $2,000 NLHE tournaments and the $1,000 Seniors event.

    If we go back to 2006, we can find three such events, actually two with another at only a $1,000 buy-in. These events were the largest draws outside of the main event back in '06 with an average of over 2,500 entrants. In 2005, just one "low buy-in" NLHE event drew 2305 players. Two eight hundred players $1,500 No Limit tournaments were run in 2004 and 531 players played in the only event in 2003. The boom at the WSOP has at least partially been fueled by the $1,500 events.

    It is clear that the WSOP scheduling is balancing the desires of the professionals with the populist demand for more low buy-in events. On the 2008 WSOP schedule a full 21 of the 55 events are $1,500 buy-ins across the full range of poker games and almost unanimously these events are matching or exceeding last summer's registration numbers.

    So when the final numbers are in on the 2008 World Series of Poker, expect two themes to emerge:
    -the professionals are winning a bunch of bracelets;
    -lots and lots of the average poker players are still coming to Las Vegas to play the $1,500 events and the same shiny gold bracelets.

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