As if things weren't
pumped up enough in 2003 when a record 839 Texas Holdem
players entered the $10,000 buy-in no-limit holdem
championship at the World Series of Poker, this
year the head count more than tripled. In case you've
been hibernating on a deserted island with Robinson
Crusoe or the cast of Survivor and haven't heard
the news, last year's event marked the coming of the
online gaming community into
Texas
Holdem
poker's
premier event. When a 27-year-old accountant by the name
of Chris Moneymaker parlayed a $40 entry fee in an
online satellite event into a $2.5 million payday when
he won the 2003 World Series of Poker, it helped
set the poker world on its ear.
When
all of last year's shouting was over and done, I found
myself standing next to Horseshoe owner Becky Binion
Behnen and asked her how many
Texas
Holdem
players
she anticipated for the main event in 2004. She smiled
and said, "I guess we might have as many as 1,000." I
thought she erred on the side of caution, and in a
column right here in Card Player, entitled
"That's My Number and I'm Sticking to It," I predicted
1,150 entrants. I thought I was conservative, too, but I
might have been swayed somewhat by Becky's estimate.
After all, she owned the joint — or did.
For
a while, it seemed like there might not even be a 2004
World Series of Poker. In early January 2004,
U.S. marshals entered Binion's Horseshoe and seized $1.9
million to satisfy debts owed to the Southern Nevada
Culinary and Bartenders Pension Trust Fund and the Hotel
Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union
Welfare Fund, and forced the closure of the 52-year-old
property's casino.
Seizing the Horseshoe sparked all sorts of rumors, and
for weeks no one could tell you what the casino's fate
would be. And if the casino's fate was up in the air, so
was the fate of its biggest asset: the World Series
of Poker. But the Horseshoe reopened on April 1,
only three and a half months after its closure by U.S.
marshals, under the management of Harrah's
Entertainment.
While Harrah's promised Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman
that at least the final days of the 2005 WSOP
would take place Downtown as part of the city's
centennial celebration, preliminary events will probably
be sited at the Rio, another Harrah's property in Las
Vegas. After that, it's anybody's guess. Most crystal
ball gazers predict the WSOP will eventually move
to a new megaresort on the Strip.
Since its relatively modest beginnings, the World
Series of Poker has grown exponentially. From five
events in 1970, it's grown to a tournament comprising
more than 30 events. The grand finale, the $10,000
buy-in no-limit
Texas
holdem
tournament, attracted 839 participants in 2003 and
created a prize pool of $8,390,000 in the process. This
year, it attracted 2,576 players and generated a prize
pool of nearly $25 million.
By
the time the main event was set to open, so many players
ponied up $10,000 for this year's main event that the
first day was run in heats, with half the field playing
on Sunday, May 23 and the other half on Monday. They
combined the reduced fields on Tuesday. At the
tournament's start, no one was even sure how many
players entered the event. Estimates ranged between
2,550 and 2,600, and the actual number turned out to be
2,576 — more than triple last year. If you graphed the
growth of the World Series of Poker over the past
34 years, you'd see an acceleration curve that looks
like a turbine engine ramping up to speed, growing
slowly at first, then swinging from its steady
horizontal rise to an almost vertical line resembling
the vapor trail of a rocket launched into outer space —
up, up, and away. Zoom. Swoosh. All of those comic book
adjectives come together to form a perfect descriptive
fit.
In
1997, the 300-entrant barrier was crossed for the first
time, and it seemed a lot. Everyone was shocked when
more than 800 entered last year, but 2,576 players is
off the charts. And it could have been more. The
limiting factor was not the number of players, but
available space to seat them all. Had they scheduled the
first day at the Las Vegas Convention Center, we might
have seen the total number of players climb to 3,000 or
more.
As
the number of players grew, the folks at the Horseshoe
did what they could to constrain the field. Usually,
there's a feeding frenzy of satellite tournaments right
up to the start of the main event, with each player
paying $225 to enter a satellite that awards as many
$10,000 buy-ins as it can. They also play one-table
satellites, with players paying $1,025 for a chance to
win a buy-in for the main event. Once Harrah's
management saw that there would be no possible way to
accommodate all of these other players, last-minute
satellites were eliminated.
On
the day prior to the main event, the last satellite they
ran had the longest line I've ever seen for an event at
the Horseshoe. It snaked from the tournament area into
the hall, beyond the gift shop and buffet, down the
escalator to the first floor, and then out onto the
sidewalk. No one wanted to be shut out of the main
event, but many were. There is only so much room at the
Horseshoe — even with many of the ground floor slots
temporarily removed so that poker tables could be put in
their place — and it wasn't enough to accommodate 2004's
seemingly inexhaustible supply of poker players.
Five
Texas
Holdem
players in
this year's event earned at least $1 million. One event,
five millionaires — not bad. And all of TV-watching
America can view it as part of ESPN's expanded
coverage, with two new one-hour episodes back-to-back
every Tuesday throughout the summer, for a total of 22
hours of coverage. ESPN plans to triple its
WSOP coverage compared to a year ago, which will
give it a product that rivals the World Poker Tour
in breadth and depth of coverage.
Total prize money at the 2004 World Series of Poker
reached $49 million, a new poker tournament world
record, as was Greg Raymer's first-place win of $5
million. Last year's World Series of Poker
tournament prize money, by comparison, was just under
$22 million, and 2003 World Champion Chris Moneymaker
won a top prize of $2.5 million.
What
are we to make of it all? The biggest poker tournament
in history just took place in a year when no one was
certain that it would even take place at all. Last year,
ESPN focused only on the tournament's main event,
and covered it in a few shows. This year, it's devoting
significantly more time to the entire tournament. It saw
what television did for the World Poker Tour, and
now it has its own series to compete with it.
If
the first few days of next year's event are moved to
another Harrah's property, such as the Rio, you can
expect attendance for the final event to dwarf what you
saw here. After all, the Horseshoe ran headlong into
space restrictions, but the Rio has a convention center,
and the event could easily accommodate many more
players. Perhaps the player base, lured by TV coverage
and a bigger facility, will double. Maybe it will even
triple. Can you imagine a poker tournament with 5,000
entrants? How about 8,000? It's all quite possible.
Texas
Holdem
Poker's
riding the crest of a tidal wave right now, and this is
just the beginning. Most of the game's growth was fueled
by TV and the increasing popularity of Internet poker,
along with the compelling human-interest story of Chris
Moneymaker. In achieving his dream, he democratized
Texas
Holdem
poker and
showed its accessibility to everyone who sat up and took
notice.
More
TV coverage will probably bring more
Texas
Holdem
players to
the table, and if they can't get to the tables in
person, they can train to become next year's champion in
their skivvies and bathrobes by playing
Texas
Holdem
online.
That's the pathway the winners have taken the last two
years. And while it's a long shot, to be sure, that
prize pool just keeps growing, and growing, and growing.
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