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#1
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Read an interview with Howard Greenbaum (Harrah's director of poker operations and the man in charge of managing the World Series of Poker) on PokerPages.com.
"For 6600 players in the main event, we expect top prize to be about $7.4 million. We had three goals in mind when we discussed the payouts and estimated field size for the main event: 1. Pay the last money finishers at least $15,000 as a reward for five days of effort. 2. Make every final table player a millionaire. No other sporting event in history has ever approached [prize money of that magnitude]. 3. Pay 10% of the field, as this is a standard payout scale, and players are content with that." Interesting stuff. Ken |
#2
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Seems kinda low for first place, but guess they wanted to make it deeper.
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#3
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i'm a little surprised about the first prize payout myself. i'd assumed they'd go with the marketable "$10,000,000 first prize" idea, but the more i think about it, the "everyone at the final table will become a millionaire" is a better approach from a marketing standpoint.
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#4
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[ QUOTE ]
i'm a little surprised about the first prize payout myself. i'd assumed they'd go with the marketable "$10,000,000 first prize" idea, but the more i think about it, the "everyone at the final table will become a millionaire" is a better approach from a marketing standpoint. [/ QUOTE ] I gues I'll just fold my way to the final table :-). |
#5
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Yeah, that is just about the sickest thing I have ever heard. [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img]
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#6
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Yeah it is a much flatter payout then any other tournies. 7.4 million probably isn't even 15% for the guy that ends up with all the chips.
Looking at last years payouts, the 2nd table got 175-373k, the 3rd table got 120k, 4th table got 80k, 5th table got 60k and so on down to 10k for many players. I am guesing the 2nd table would get 400-800k and the 3rd table somewhere around 200-300k. I doubt the "pros" are happy about the flat payout but for most of the 6600 that plays, this is a very good payout structure. Ken |
#7
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[ QUOTE ]
Yeah it is a much flatter payout then any other tournies. 7.4 million probably isn't even 15% for the guy that ends up with all the chips. Looking at last years payouts, the 2nd table got 175-373k, the 3rd table got 120k, 4th table got 80k, 5th table got 60k and so on down to 10k for many players. I am guesing the 2nd table would get 400-800k and the 3rd table somewhere around 200-300k. I doubt the "pros" are happy about the flat payout but for most of the 6600 that plays, this is a very good payout structure. Ken [/ QUOTE ] This is fantastic, actually. To 99.9% of the players in the main event this year this flatter payout would be preferable, simply because we've reached a point in prize money where it makes good sense to make as many big payouts as possible to as many players as possible. I seriously doubt that whoever wins it will feel like they got shorted. "Yes, Norman, I'm happy to have won, of course, but let's get serious--$7.5 million?! Please, I wouldn't even have PLAYED in that stupid $42 satellite in the first place if I'd have known they were gonna do THAT to me!" I think the following scenario is much more likely: "I'm sorry--excuse me?! HOW much did I just win for 35th place?! You're freakin kiddin me!! Woooooohooooo!! Yeah! Holy sh*t!! Damn!" |
#8
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I'd be happy with top 20% payout as it would help with my bets of who is going to get in the money!
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#9
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I would actually be happy with 20% paying out as well.
Even if 1000th place got less then their EF back. On the PPM cruise it paid 180 out of 735 places ($10k EF that most people won via a satellite). I finished 177th for $5215 and was pretty darned happy. I wouldn't mind at all if the WSOP lower prize money was less than $15k. |
#10
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[ QUOTE ]
I doubt the "pros" are happy about the flat payout [/ QUOTE ] Why? If you define "pro" as someone whose annual income comes mostly from playing poker, then most pros should be very happy with the payout structure described by Howard Greenbaum in the interview. (However, they might be concerned about whether Harrah's is going to facilitate/enforce final-table deals in televised events. Greenbaum's comment on this issue: "It's something that we haven't talked about, and it's something that maybe we should, but I don't have any comment on it right now… It's something I haven't really given much thought to. It's something I'll probably pick some other peoples' brains about. It's a point of discussion.") |
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