2015 Series News

There’s a lot more going on in Las Vegas this month away from the Rio and the WSOP. Most of the attention is there because most of the big action is there, but Here are a few links I’ve put together to try to keep up on other series where Pacific Northwest players are having some success.

World Series of Poker
The big one, of course. PokerNews is no longer doing the live reporting, so the only place you can find it is at WSOP.com. Click on the event you want to see in the schedule, then you can see Results (payouts), Chip Counts (only relevant for live tournament and not for every player), Updates (all live reports), Prizepool (payout levels), and Photos. The Structure tab doesn’t work, see the structure sheets on the main schedule page. Added: Daily Deepstacks Results are here.

Venetian Deepstack Extravaganza III
The main page for the DSE has links to PDFs for the schedule, the structures, and the results. The only problem is they’re not particularly fast to update the results. As of the night of June 7th, they hadn’t updated it since the 2nd. Last updates were June 23rd.

Binions Poker Classic
Payouts and results are posted in blog form.

Golden Nugget Grand Poker Series
Information’s posted by Ante Up Magazine.

Aria Poker Classic
Haven’t figured out where to find this yet. Results go to Hendon Mob, but they don’t post hometown info for all the events.

Wynn Poker Classic
You can find redraws (without locations) and winners at wynnpoker.com.

Planet Hollywood PHamous Poker Series
Posting results on Google Drive.

A (House) Piece of the Action

trekpieceoftheaction4In the STAR TREK episode “A Piece of the Action,” Captain Kirk breaks up a mob war by inventing a card game called “fizzbin,” see? Then he goes on to broker a peace between the warring mobsters by setting himself up as Godfather and taking the titular piece of the action, see? Yeah, that’s what he does.

Not that that has any real bearing on the topics for today, which are the ethics and issues (and economics) behind a tournament organizer (specifically, someone who’s on the hook for any overlay) participating in the tournament.

Several weeks back, a thread popped up on 2+2, claiming that the sponsor of a small tournament series had offered to refund half the buy-in to players, in exchange for half of any profit in the tournament. The tournament had a guaranteed prize pool, not enough players had entered the tournament to fund the prize pool with entry fees, so the sponsor of the tournament would be forced to pay any portion of the guarantee not matched by player fees, something that is known as an overlay.

For the purposes of this discussion, let’s assume all of these things are true: 1) The guarantee was unmet by player contributions. 2) The sponsor was committed to honoring the guarantee. 3) The sponsor was actually offering to buy half the profit from players. Is this a good idea?

Balance of Terror

Conventional wisdom would say there’s no way for the sponsor to lose money with this plan. Some of his players win some money, he doesn’t pay them as much (because he’s bought half their action), and he offsets a portion of the overlay. In reality, things can get messy.

For simplicity’s sake, let’s say the tournament has a $15K guarantee. It gets 100 entries at $100 each, with only $10K contributed to the prize pool. With 100 entries, the top 9 players will win all the money. In this scenario, the sponsor is out $5K in overlay.

If the sponsor can get the 9 players who win all the money to agree to his terms (and nobody else), he will have refunded $450 in player fees, making the amount players contribute to the prize pool only $9,550. But he only has to pay $7.5K in prize money, so he’s actually ahead by $2K!

On the other hand, if 9 players who don’t cash take the deal, the sponsor not only still has to pay out the original overlay but is also out the $450 in player fees that have been refunded.

If he can get everyone to agree to the split? He only pays out $7.5K–half the guaranteed prize pool–but everyone’s only paying $50 per entry, and with just $5K contributed by players, the overlay is still $2.5K.

There’s obviously some potential for mitigating losses with this strategy, but as the sponsor, if you whiff on picking winning players, you’re actually out even more money than the initial overlay.

Opinions on the sponsor’s action varied, with some claiming that it would be irresponsible for him not to try to offset his losses, and others decrying it for creating the impression the “house” was trying to cheat the players out of the prize pool. On this, I have to come down in the middle, since the more action the sponsor buys up, the more money they stand to lose, unless they pick the right people. It’s a gamble, just like any other situation where someone backs several players in the same tournament.

image-3

Amok Time

There’s a similar but distinct situation that is far more problematic, which I’ve seen happen in a variety of venues. In a tournament with an overlay and multiple re-entries allowed, the sponsor uses the overlay to put in one or more players who can play a high-variance style, with the intent of building up a big chip stack, knocking out non-sponsored players, and the ability to re-enter at no cost to either the player or the sponsor. In our example tournament above, the $5K overlay represents 50 buy-ins. With low registration early in the tournament and a large expected overlay, a sponsor could make a deal with several players to take more risks, with the promise that they’ll be bought back in by the sponsor several times, if need be.

So long as the number of entries and re-entries by both non-sponsored and sponsored players doesn’t exceed the guarantee, the sponsor isn’t taking on any extra risk. But they’re essentially playing against the people who have put up money to play in the tournament, and one of the things that has distinguished poker from casino table games has always been that you’re playing against other players, not the house. The sponsor of a guaranteed tournament is assuming risk when they announce the guarantee. They expect to make their costs back through entry fees and other spending by the players. But if it looks like their bet isn’t going to pay off, putting a thumb on the scale by using house money against the players they’ve brought in with the promised guarantee smacks of unethical practice.

Pacific Northwest Poker Players vs. the WSOP Millionaire Maker, Pt. 1

The $1,500 NLHE Millionaire Maker event has played through both starting days, with 1,118 of the original 7,275 players remaining. 371 are going to be leaving today without any money. Here’s the list of players from Oregon, Washington, British Columbia, and Idaho who made it through to Day 2.

Rank End of Day 2Rank End of Day 1PlayerStateChips End of Day 2Chips End of Day 1In the Money Finish Position
42604Micah BellWA489,00038,40021
121111Darlene LeeBC163,00091,10053
65416Parminder KumarWA354,00050,30065
19697Bradley ZusmanOR667,00032,10072
476Jiazheng LingWA45,800152
83Brenda TinjumOR101,100164
787Cole JacksonWA27,100169
355Jason AckermanBC56,100197
198Abraham LeavittWA74,400209
724Alan SnowWA30,700235
394Christopher PaaschOR52,400285
257Srider NadarajahOR66,600303
954Robert CorbeilBC18,700317
624Michael FinniganWA37,100325
503Kheang TangOR44,100399
818Eric LeeBC26,000419
180Cindy StenbeckWA77,000443
327Eric ValleeBC58,500466
714Glen HoBC31,000468
643Calen McNeilBC79,600481
231Robert CheungBC69,000494
901Chase CooleyWA21,000515
258James RostelOR66,500572
691Chris BackBC32,300588
845Douglas O'NealWA24,600611
511Dylan LindeID43,600637
647Michael BerdineWA35,400646
729Yongshuo ZhengBC30,300684
110Michael PaloWA91,100693
534Noah BronsteinWA42,600724
583Christopher CarmichaelWA40,000725
67Matt JarvisBC109,100--
78Byung NaWA103,800--
334Kyle HoBC57,900--
373Carter NewhofWA54,500--
524Robert BrewerOR43,000--
615Daniel TupperWA37,800--
622Azariah WojteczkoOR37,300--
710Kerry MoynahanOR31,200--
832Joanne LewisBC25,300--
864Tracy DossWA23,300--
940Ricky ChowBC19,300--
967Carolyn PowersWA18,200--
995Joseph BeanWA16,500--
1,017Graham LoucksWA15,100--
1,063Aaron DuczakBC12,200--
1,103Rajendra AjmaniWA6,500--