COMMERCIAL START FOR WSOP MAIN EVENT (Update)
10 July 2009
But it's going to be a thriller, for sure!
The usual stimulating razzmatazz attendant on the start
of the first day of the World Series of Poker Main Event
was somewhat lacking this year, which was a pity seeing
as it is the 40th Anniversary of the biggest poker show
on the planet.
This year's chief sponsor is the
Jack Links Beef Jerky company, which laid on it's
Sasquatch to give the hallowed "Shuffle Up and Deal"
call that triggers this exciting grand finale to a great
experience.
Sasquatch is a hairy, ape-like
creature associated with the brand and prominent in it's
advertising, so using it gave the occasion an overly
commercial note and considerably less glamour and glitz
than was the case in past years when there were Vegas
showgirls, marching bands and great entertainment, in
our view.
Nevertheless, the excitement was
palpable in the vast Amazon Room at the Rio in Las Vegas
as the first 1 116 players (down on last year's 1 297)
took their seats, the dealers took their places and WSOP
organising officials Jeffrey Pollack and Jack Effel
welcomed players, went through the basics and handed
over to Sasquatch to make the call and get the cards in
the air.
The Main Event is, as always, a massive
occasion requiring expert and precise organisation;
there are four Day Ones scheduled, each with 3 000 seats
available and carrying a buy-in of $10 000.
Friday noon saw the start of Day 1A, and on Saturday,
Sunday and Monday Day 1B, 1C and 1D will follow. Each
day except Day 1 is scheduled for 5 blind levels, with
each level lasting 120 minutes.
The first Day Two
(Day 2A), will seat the surviving players from Day 1A
and B, and starts at noon on July 7th.
The second
Day Two (Day 2B) will see the surviving players from Day
1C and D combine for their second 10-hour session. After
Day 2B completes, all players still with chips have one
day off.
Day 3 sees all the survivors to that
stage together for the first time, playing five levels
of poker a day in something of an endurance test all the
way through to Day 8. And Day 8 finishes only when the
field has played down to the nine-player final table.
Pre-2008 this was the most exciting stage of the
tourney as observers watched the nine battle it out for
the multi-million dollar first prize, each assured of
winning at least a million for just making the final
table. However, last year the occasion was dislocated to
ensure maximum television impact, with the final nine
players being required to reassemble later in the year
to play out the finale.
Whether readers think
that is a good idea or not is apparently incidental,
because the coverage is what counts, and the format is
to be repeated again this year.
The final table
will take place at some point between November 7th and
10th, concluding only when a new World Champion has
survived it and picks up the cash and the most coveted
poker winner's bracelet in the world.
This year,
players will receive a bigger starting chip stack of 30
000 compared to last year's 20 000, and the field will
only play four two-hour levels on Day 1.
Observers will be keen to assess the state of the
industry based on the number of players who enter this
year's Main Event, but they will have to wait for the
final numbers until the end of the four Day Ones,
because late registrations are possible in this period.
Last year's Main Event drew a field of 6 844
players, generating a prize pool worth $64 333 600 and a
bank account booster of a first prize, claimed by
youthful Danish player Peter Eastgate, of $9 152 416 .
But it wasn't the biggest WSOP Main Event in history -
that honour goes to the pre-UIGEA 2006 occasion when
Jamie Gold won $12 million by besting a field of more
than 8 700 competitors.
The passage of the
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act appeared to
have a dampening effect in subsequent years; in 2007
dentist Jerry Yang saw off a field of 6 357 players to
collect the main prize of $8.25 million - he's back this
year to try for a reprise btw.
Minutes after the
cards were dealt on Day 1 the first elimination caught
the imagination of the media, which reported on the
departure of one Raphael Zimmerman (27) from Oneonta,
New York, who basked in the spotlights after his
aggressive play on a straight draw ran into three queens
after the first three community cards were dealt.
Zimmerman hit his straight on the turn, but his opponent
hit a full house on the river to end Zimmerman's
tournament.
"Next year, I'm going to be last
out," Zimmerman, who said he regularly plays cash games
with $50 and $100 blinds, told USA Today.
The
Main Event is always a good place to celebrity spot, and
this year the glitterati on the first day inluded
regulars Jason Alexander of 'Seinfeld' fame and Brad
Garret from 'Everyone Loves Raymond', both accomplished
poker players. Another regular spotted was rapper Nelly,
along with actress and poker star Jennifer Tilly, whilst
the poker ace sector was well represented by Andy Bloch,
Mike Sexton, Dewey Tomko, Allen Cunningham, Dennis
Phillips, Roland De Wolfe, Jerry Yang, Beth Shak,
Jean-Robert Bellande, Jason Mercier, Vitaly Lunkin, Greg
Mueller, Keven "Stammdog" Stammen, Jordan Smith and the
former Aussie cricket legend Shane Warne.
Spotted
regaling fellow players with interesting baseball
anecdotes was the amiable former Dodgers pitcher Orel
Hershiser.
On Sunday, online gambling's white
knight - House Financial Services Committee chairman and
pro-online gambling legalisation politician Barney
Franks - will be in town and open to questions from
accredited journalists, reports the Poker Players
Alliance. There can be few more worthy celebs than
Franks to make any 'Shuffle Up and Deal' call, and he
will be launching the Main Event action on Sunday.
"Chairman Frank has been online poker's greatest
advocate in Congress, sponsoring legislation to license
and regulate the game (H.R. 2267) as well as delay
implementation of the UIGEA," trumpeted a PPA press
release.
Other events catching the media eye
included an unfortunate incident that saw player Thang
Luu removed from the Rio (and reportedly jailed for the
night) after a dealer was taken to hospital with a
broken finger. During the preliminary tourneys Luu had
distinguished himself by winning his second World Series
of Poker bracelet in the very same event he won his
first bracelet last year - and finished second in the
year before that. He won $263 135 in the event, which he
may need for legal fees.
When InfoPowa went to
press just after 10.30pm Vegas time, Day 1 had just
ended, with some surprising big names already busted out
that included John Phan, Jan Von Halle, Davidi Kitai,
Nick Frangos, Freddy Deeb, Matt Glantz, Mark Vos, Pieter
de Korver, Isaac Haxton, David Grey, Steve Billirakis,
Allen Cunningham, and Andy Bloch.
Redmond Lee
appeared to be heading the Day 1 pack on 134 275, chased
by Jason Riesenberg (93 650), celeb player Jason
Alexander (89 575), Lex Veldhuis (84 000), and Eli
Elezra (83 375).
The forthcoming days should see
more of the glitz and glam that was lacking on Day 1A,
judging by Twitter comments from the always high profile
Phil Hellmuth. The 'Poker Brat' claims that he plans to
make a big splash of his entrance on Sunday, promising a
Caesar-like triumph "with 100 models, 11 muses with body
paint (for his 11 bracelets), a chariot with two horses
and a drummer dropping rose petals.”
It's
probably not an idle boast - Hellmuth has in the past
staged grand entrances as an army general, with jeeps
and models in camouflage representing each bracelet.
Before that he crashed a racing car in an empty car
park!
Great reading to get into the Main Event
spirit this weekend can be found at
http://www.cardplayer.com/poker-news/7126-2009-wsop-the-10-best-performances-of-the-summer
, where the respected Card Player magazine takes an
inspiring snapshot of the 10 Best Performances of the
Summer during this year's fortieth World Series of
Poker.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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