POKERSTARS MANAGEMENT 'ASTONISHED' BY ANNIVERSARY
TOURNEY SUCCESS
23 March 2007
WSOP entry field not in the same league as this
event!
When PokerStars sweetened the pot to celebrate its one
year anniversary for the regular Sunday Million
tournaments it was a safe bet that the event would be
exciting and the player support significant...but it
soared above expectations in both departments.
Interviewed by Rolling Good Times this week, PokerStars
manager Lee Jones said it took even him by surprise: "I
was astonished," he told RGT. "I didn't think we'd hit
10 000 - eight or nine thousand maybe, but then again,
I've been underestimating the size of fields for the
last three to four years."
He was referring to a record turnout - 10 508 - of
players who registered for the event, creating a giant
prizepool of over $2 million - well in excess of the
planned and guaranteed $1.5 million. The field
significantly exceeded the WSOP Main Event entries for
last year, and even this year Harrah's is planning on 10
000 for the 2007 World Series of Poker Main Event.
The Rolling Good Times interview is a fascinating review
of the historical progress of online poker's currently
leading website, sprinkled with management insights into
how it sees future growth and the landmark events that
have characterised its development.
The last Sunday Millions winner was decided in 11 hours
(see previous InfoPowa report), unlike the massive World
Series of Poker and World Poker Tour events that can
take days or weeks to complete, Jones pointed out in the
interview. Online tournaments do not have dealers or
chips, thus, shuffling time and minutes spent stacking
and counting are eliminated.
"I think the reduced time definitely makes people more
likely to play in a large online event," Jones told RGT.
"Look at the WSOP. They had 8 800 players in the Main
Event and it took them 14 days to finish. We can do that
with relative ease in 9-10 hours. Our players don't have
to set aside two weeks of their lives. They can play in
the largest tournament in history in the course of one
Sunday evening."
Rolling Good Times reports that the Sunday Million
launch was the third significant achievement for
PokerStars when it debuted in March of 2006.
The site hit a mark of 100 000 players concurrently
logged-in, an astonishing feat considering the site
recorded the first 10 000 level of players on-site at
the same time in November 2003.
"I remember when we hit the 10 000 player mark," Jones
said. "It was a big deal at the time. Now we have 10 000
and more players competing in one tournament."
Poker Stars also reached the 5-million player benchmark
that month.
Las Vegas native George Draper, a 35-year-old chef who
was new to online poker, joined the poker room in early
March 2006 as the record-breaking player. That made the
PokerStars population larger than the 46th biggest city
in the world, larger than Baghdad, Toronto and
Washington D.C.
In May, June and July of 2006, PokerStars averaged
around 5 200 players per Sunday Million. Those numbers
created prizepools just over the $1 million guarantee,
the RGT interview reveals. A record-breaking crowd of 5
921 on August 21 put PokerStars within reach of cracking
the 6 000 player barrier, but it didn't break until
after the site ran the record-breaking World
Championship of Online Poker (WCOOP).
That series drew 27 399 and created an $18.5 million
prize pool, including a Main Event figure of $6.2
million. Professional J.C Tran took home $670 194, the
largest single-person payout in online poker history.
The largest boost of calendar 2006 came after Party
Poker dropped out of the U.S. market because of the
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement act.
PokerStars broke through the 6 000 player barrier in
October, and then broke its own participation record
five straight weeks consecutively starting two weeks
after the UIGEA passed.
The first non-holiday event in 2007 (January 7) saw
PokerStars break through the 7 000 player level.
PokerStars peaked the following week at 7 632 players.
Then the Neteller arrests, coupled with the NFL Playoff
schedule, slowed growth once again, bringing the poker
room back under the new benchmark.
Overall, the Sunday Million has stood the test of time.
PokerStars has experienced only two-overlays in the
history of their Sunday Million – Father's Day and
Christmas Eve (Both 2006).
"Breaking records is not something we planned," Jones
said.
"When bad things happen you deal with them, you put your
head down and go on running a poker site. Our job is
deliver a fair and honest poker game and give players
promotions that will keep them happy and keep them
playing at PokerStars."
Lee added, "You can't control things that happen
outside. You can only hope that the players can respond
to adverse situations. And they have in spades."
Lee told RGT there are no plans to increase the Sunday
tournament guarantee. He believes player participation
drives the process.
PokerStars will increase their guarantee when player
demand warrants the jump, Lee said. He doesn't believe
the site will make incremental raises like a $1.2
million guarantee, choosing instead to wait for a
significant increase like $1.5 or $2 million.
"I don't see much point of increasing until there is
another big threshold. "$1 million brings them in," Lee
said. "If it seems likely that we can reach $1.5 million
every week, we might guarantee that and put another
stake in the ground, but personally, I appreciate the ad
hoc nature in the growth. We don't decide the levels,
the players do."
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
More news here.
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