INTERNET PARTICIPATION COULD HAVE ADDED 4 000 MORE
PLAYERS TO WSOP MAIN EVENT
13 July 2007
More players equals more excitement and bigger
prizes...but not in this year's main event
With the recent release of World Series of Poker main
event statistics there has been wide speculation both in
Las Vegas and the US media generally on the impact that
excluding WSOP registrations flowing from Internet poker
tournaments may have had.
Following the passage of the Unlawful Internet Gambling
Enforcement Act, which forbids financial transactions
with online gambling sites, late last year WSOP
organisers Harrah's decided to exclude winners of
sponsored Internet poker seats from registration. This
did not stop online poker rooms from running tournaments
with WSOP packages as prizes, but winners had to make
their own private arrangements to enter, creating
hassles and reducing registrations.
According to WSOP figures, the main event now underway
has drawn 6 358 entrants, down about 27 percent from
last year's record turnout of 8 773. And last year's top
prize of $12 million for the winner puts this year's
predicted $8.25 million from a still impressive
prize-pool of $59.7 million in the shade.
The Las Vegas Sun reports that poker experts are
speculating that at least 4 000 more players would have
signed up for the WSOP Main Event were it not for the
restrictions on Internet entries. This would have sent
the total registrations into record five-figure
territory.
"As it was," the newspaper comments, "the culprit for
the drop-off was the Unlawful Internet Gambling
Enforcement Act of 2006, which made it more cumbersome
for Americans to move money to and from online gambling
sites and prompted some online poker rooms to pull out
of the U.S. market.
"It also changed the dynamics of how players who won a
World Series of Poker entry online - an estimated 55
percent of last year's field was generated by Internet
qualifiers - actually registered for the tournament."
The Sun goes on to explain how Internet satellites and
WSOP seat registrations were previously organised in a
smooth, speedy and professional manner directly by the
online poker rooms, ending with the pertinent comment
that following the ban, poker rooms now award the winner
with the value of the prize package direct, leaving him
or her to make their own WSOP arrangements.
The newspaper hits the nail on the head when it remarks:
"Consider what that means to the guy in Dubuque, Iowa,
who won a World Series main event satellite online. He
has to inform his wife that he's going to take $12 000
in cash, leave her with the kids in the middle of the
summer and disappear to Las Vegas for a couple of weeks.
Tough sell, huh?"
Nevertheless, viewed in its totality, the World Series
of Poker this year drew a record 54 288 registrants for
a total prize pool of more than $159 million. It
included the single busiest day in World Series history,
when 3 151 players competed in a $1 500 hold 'em
tournament on June 30 - a record for a non-main event.
And this year 621 players will be in the money bubble
for at least $20 320 each, thanks to a "flatter" payout
scale that awards more prize money to players finishing
farther down the main event list.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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