Last Entry

The last entry for my 2006 WSOP blog will be just a quick summary.
Overall, it was a great experience playing in the WSOP that I am extremely happy I did it. That being said, it is a lot different than portrayed on ESPN's television coverage. I'll explain. The poker room was massive. There were poker tables, players, media people, camera's, tournament directors, dealers, etc. as far as you could see. We did not play in a 'poker room'. We played in the convention centre. It was bright, there was constant loud talking and PA announcements and it was extremely crowded. At the end of each day if you didn't have a headache from the constant noise/sensory input, you had a headache from the (average) 14-hours of poker you just had just played. It is also long. This is a long poker tournament. If you played on day one of the Maon Event, the final table is not scheduled for 13-days later. Las Vegas is great for a 3 or 4-day long weekend visit, but once you are there for more than a week, Vegas starts to get a little tiring.
Further, playing poker in this tournamnet is hard work. It is a grind from hand-to-hand-to-hand. In No-Limit, the next hand you play could be your last hand of the tournament. You have to be smart and you have to be patient. Extremely patient!
There is only one featured table each day and that is the table that you see the most coverage on when they air the WSOP on TV. That table has dark back droppings and it is the only table (in the early rounds) that has the 'hole card cameras'. Every other table is out on the convention floor. BTW, it is random, but I never sat at the featured table.
The WSOP Main Event has changed due to the on-set of internet poker. I estimate that out of the 8,700 entrants this year, over 7,000 players won their entry on-line. You could actually call it the WSOOP (World Series of On-line Poker). There is a new event this year at the WSOP called H.O.R.S.E. with a $50,000 buy-in. I believe that over the next few years, this event will become the 'premium' or the 'main event' tournament coveted by all the pro's. Either that, or the WSOP Main Event will have to raise the $10,000 entry. I can't see how the tournament can get much bigger and if nothing is done and everything remains the same as this year, there could be 11,000-12,000 players next year!
As to whether or not I'll be one of those players next year remains to be seen. I don't think I'd ever buy my entry into one of these big tournaments. However, if internet poker remains the same (there is current U.S. legislation pending to stop internet gaming), I think I'd try to win my seat 'on-line' again, as I did this year.
Again, over all I had fun and I enjoyed the experience. I also learned a heck of a lot, not about poker, but specifically about tournement poker.
Thanks once again for everyone's encouragement, thanks to my friends who flew to Vegas the weekend before the tournament to hang out, thanks to my Bermuda poker buddies in Vegas for the support during the tournement.
BTW, I did wear my sun glasses during the tournament for the most part, but CardPlayer Magazine happened to snap the attached photo when I did not have them on ...
