2008 WORLD SERIES OF POKER® TO BREAK NEW GROUND
AS PLAYERS SEEK SLICE OF HISTORY
Unprecedented
Main Event Format, New Event Mix, Player and Spectator
Enhancements Set Tone for 39th Annual Battle for the Bracelets
LAS VEGAS, NV – Following a 2007
season in which records were broken seemingly every day, the 2008
World Series of Poker Presented by Milwaukee’s Best Light
(WSOP) – and 39th annual – will deliver a new set
of historic firsts from the moment the cards are dealt this Friday.
The 2008 WSOP runs from May 30-July 14 and features
55 different bracelet events in almost every variation of poker.
The 47-day extravaganza unfolds at the Rio® All-Suite Hotel
& Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada, and is annually the world’s
richest and most prestigious gaming tournament.
In addition to offering a record number of new championships
in various poker disciplines and at a range of buy-in levels,
the 2008 WSOP will include a historic format change to the $10,000
World Championship of No-Limit Texas Hold’em – commonly
referred to as the Main Event – as well as a wide range
of improvements for players and fans alike.
The innovations will be on display beginning Day
One. The inaugural 2008 bracelet event is a $10,000 World Championship
of Pot-Limit Hold’em, the first of its kind at the WSOP.
The tournament also marks the first time since the WSOP went to
a multi-event format that it has opened with a $10,000 buy-in
championship.
In all, the 2008 WSOP will feature 55 bracelet events,
including an all-time high of eight $10,000 World Championships
and eight $5,000 championships. Tournament organizers also have
included eight $1,500 championships in the schedule to create
the most diverse mix of bracelet events ever offered.
“If you’ve dreamed of becoming a WSOP
champion, this is the year to enter,” said WSOP Commissioner
Jeffrey Pollack. “With 55 opportunities to win a bracelet,
more $1,500 and $10,000 events than ever before, and same day
television coverage of our Main Event Final Table, the WSOP stage
has never been brighter.”
Perhaps the most notable innovation at the 2008
World Series of Poker will be a groundbreaking format change for
the Main Event. For the first time in the WSOP’s 39-year
history, the Final Table of the Main Event will be televised in
primetime on ESPN the very same day that the WSOP World Champion
receives their bracelet.
Once the final nine players of the Main Event are
set on July 14, action will be suspended for 117 days. These players
– to be known as the “November Nine” –
will have an opportunity during that time to secure sponsors and
coaches, study their opponents’ play and devise new playing
strategies before reconvening at the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino
on Nov. 9 to compete for the most coveted prize in poker.
The Main Event winner will be determined in the
early morning hours of Nov. 11 and, in a telecast first, ESPN
will air its final table coverage that night beginning at 9:00
PM ET.
Amid these new and enhanced events will be a host
of highly compelling player stories that develop during the six-week
poker extravaganza. One of the most anticipated themes at the
2008 WSOP will be whether Phil Hellmuth, who won a record 11th
gold bracelet at the 2007 WSOP, can further distance himself from
the legendary duo of Doyle Brunson and Johnny Chan, or whether
either of these 10-bracelet-winners can even the score with Hellmuth.
Fans will be equally interested to learn if the
longest-ever winning streak for amateurs at the Main Event will
continue for a seventh straight year and whether the unprecedented
international participation – 87 countries were represented
at the 2007 WSOP, and five countries were represented at the Main
Event final table alone – will continue.
As spectators navigate a more spacious and comfortable
event layout – tournament and satellite tables will be spread
over five rooms, creating more space in each – they will
have a first-hand opportunity to see if any of the following records
established in 2007 will fall this year:
• Most total entrants for all events: 54,288
• Largest Prize Pool: $159,796,918
• Largest Ladies World Championship: 1,286
players
• Largest Seniors World Championship: 1,882
players
• Largest $50,000 World Championship H.O.R.S.E.:
148 players
• Largest preliminary event prize pool: $7.1
million for $50,000 World Championship H.O.R.S.E.
• Largest preliminary event top prize: $2.2
million for $50,000 World Championship H.O.R.S.E.
• Largest Field of Players (non-Main Event):
2,998 for $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em
• Oldest player to compete in a WSOP event:
94-year-old Jack Ury in Main Event
• Youngest player to win a WSOP gold bracelet
in the United States: Steve Billirakis – 21 years, 11 days
– in $5,000 World Championship Mixed Hold’em Limit/No
Limit
To enhance the overall player and spectator experience,
a number of significant changes have been made to the WSOP tournament
operations. In addition to spreading play over five rooms to reduce
congestion and improve sight lines, other changes being instituted
include:
• To further safeguard the integrity of events
– the most important consideration for all players –
the WSOP has implemented a new Code of Player Conduct to more
clearly define acceptable behavior during the course of the tournament
and reinforce the penalties that will result from violations of
the code;
• Registration opens Wednesday, May 28, two
days before the first bracelet event, to minimize lines;
• The cage will be separated from tournament
play to accommodate more guests, including a special area for
Total Rewards Diamond and Seven Star members;
• The payout area will be combined with the
cage area to allow for expedited processing of player paperwork;
• Separate entrances have been established
for players and spectators, allowing both groups easier access
to tournament areas;
• A concierge service has been established
for players to make hotel, restaurant, show, spa and transportation
arrangements for any Harrah’s-operated property in Las Vegas;
• No tournament action or poker play will
be housed in tents of any kind;
• Between national brand name chains and new
options including sushi and a noodle bar, food service will be
improved over previous years;
• Expanded restroom facilities will be available
throughout the Rio convention area;
• Player information will be stored electronically
to ensure quicker payouts to repeat winners.
by Nolan Dalla
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