WSOP FEVER
8 June 2007
Players and railbirds gather in Vegas for the
biggest spectacle in global poker
Poker fever will rule for the 47 days of World Series of
Poker that started at the beginning of this (June) month
and will culminate next in the Main Event, where a
buy-in of $10 000 gives entrants a chance to compete
against thousands, including the world's best, to win
huge amounts of hard cash from the richest prize-pool in
sport.
For many it's not just about the money, but the respect
that goes with earning a winner's bracelet in one of the
55 different competitions that make up the tournament
schedule. Crafted by the luxury Swiss watchmaker Corum,
this year's bracelets are said to be the most elegant
and expensive in the tournament's 38-year history.
Organised by Harrahs at the Rio All-Suite Hotel and
Casino in the world's gambling capital, the tournament
is described without fear of contradiction by its
director Jeffrey Pollack as "...the best schedule and
widest range of events in the tournament's storied
history."
ESPN will again provide live pay-per-view coverage of
the Main Event Final Table this year, enabling poker
fans to watch the action unfold in real time.
"We're very excited that for the first time ever, every
ESPN telecast will be in high definition on ESPN HD,"
Pollack announced. ESPN will document play with 40
cameras, up from 26 last year, and its telecasts will
include four additional hours coverage of the $10 000
buy-in Main Event and four additional hours of the $50
000 buy-in HORSE championship. ESPN's coverage of the
2007 WSOP will begin July 10 and continue for two hours
each Tuesday night.
This time around, poker fans will be able to watch
tape-delayed hole-card coverage of final-table play for
10 other bracelet events and get real-time chip-count
and results updates for all events on
www.worldseriesofpoker.com, thanks to a new digital
publishing alliance with Bluff Media, which will also
provide radio coverage of WSOP events every day on
Sirius Satellite Radio, as well as on selected
terrestrial radio outlets.
Players will start with tournament chips equal to twice
the buy-in for each event, and blind levels will
increase at a pace designed to make for maximum
entertainment and excitement. When and if competitors do
make the money bubble, most will receive a higher
percentage of the prize pools this year due to changes
designed that make the payout structures more positive
for the greatest number of players.
Charity arrangements this year include a VIP Lounge for
players who make a tax-deductible $1 000 contribution to
the Nevada Cancer Institute, the Official Community
Relations partner of the WSOP. Benefits for lounge
members include food, beverages, entertainment options
and special parking privileges. WSOP will also host a
truly star-studded "Ante Up for Africa" tournament on
July 5 (see previous InfoPowa reports) Hollywood
celebrities and top poker professionals will play,
raising public awareness and financial help for victims
of the humanitarian crisis in Darfur, Sudan.
"Our promise each year is to do better than we did the
year before," says Pollack. "This will be the best World
Series of Poker ever, and I'm confident that our
players, fans, and sponsors will experience a new level
of outstanding customer service."
Fears that new registration rules may diminish interest
in the WSOP were to some measure allayed by initial
signups for the first events, which started on June 1.
Long lines of impatient players waited to register
before the official list of entrants for the $5 000
Mixed Game event was set at 452. With the half-'n-half
event (which is split between limit and no-limit Hold'em)
the railbirds in the Amazon Room at the Rio were
provided with entertaining and even educational poker.
There was some argument over the acceptability of new
and much hyped "Poker Peek" playing cards which clearly
were not popular, and were withdrawn to be replaced by
conventional KEM cards after a few hours of play.
The high-priced buy-in for the event seemed to appeal to
many of poker's aces. Gus 'The Great Dane' Hansen and
Phil Hellmuth were two big names in a field that
included former World Champions Doyle Brunson, Johnny
Chan, Chris Moneymaker, Greg Raymer, Daniel Negreanu,
Andy Black, Phil Ivey and T. J. Cloutier, among others.
But many professionals fell by the wayside as time and
the competition advanced. Chris Ferguson was eliminated
early, and he was followed later on by Phil Ivey, David
'DevilFish' Ulliott, Freddy Deeb and Nam Le, leaving the
top ten survivors headed by Greg Mueller with chip
counts ranging from 87 500 up to 130 000. But many top
players remain in contention outside the ten top dogs,
and anything could, and likely will, happen before the
end of play Sunday.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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