World Series Of Poker Winners Earnings

Posted : admin On 4/7/2022
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The Venetian® Resort Las Vegas’ DeepStack Extravaganza I is running Feb. 2-28, with more than $2 million in guaranteed prize money to be paid out across a total of 35 tournaments. Through 12 events completed so far, there have already been 2,658 entries made, resulting in $1,524,887 in prize money already awarded roughly a third of the way into the schedule.

There are still many exciting events remaining to be played, including the $500,000 guaranteed $2,500 buy-in Card Player Poker Tour no-limit hold’em main event, which will run from Feb. 19-22. Below is a look at the results from the early preliminary events.

World Series Of Poker Winners Earnings

Event 1 – $400 No-Limit Hold’em MonsterStack ($20k gtd.)

World poker tour

Keith Tilston wins first WSOP gold bracelet in $100,000 High Roller defeating Daniel Negreanu heads up. Friday, July 12, 2019 6:30:00 PM EST. MAXIMILIAN KLOSTERMEIER WINS $1,500 POT-LIMIT OMAHA BOUNTY EVENT. Klostermeier wins his first WSOP bracelet and $177,823. 524230 players in the All Time Money List. This ranking list does not include results from recurring events (regular daily, weekly or monthly events).

  1. The event attracted the biggest professional poker players in the sport together with other wealthy people including at least 2 billionaires. There were 48 entrants, and eventual winner Antonio Esfandiari took home a 1st place prize of $18.3million, with even 2nd placed Sam Trickett taking home a.
  2. Dec 02, 2019 Poker has undoubtedly seen significant growth again in recent years, both online and in a live setting. Tournament series like the World Series of Poker, World Poker Tour, and 888pokerLive are seeing continued growth in the number of entries at events around the world. Players are now regularly battling it out for millions of dollars on the line.
  3. Cashing out for just the second time on the World Poker Tour, Qui Nguyen boosted his earnings from a paltry nine grand to well over seven figures with the $8-million WSOP final table victory.

The kickoff event for this series was the $400 buy-in ni-limit hold’em ‘MonsterStack’ event. The tournament attracted a total 165 entries by the time registration was officially closed, easily surpassing the $20,000 guarantee in the process to create a final prize pool of $55,275.

In the end, it was Blake Wittington who emerged victorious with the title and the top prize of $13,000. The Cleveland, Tennessee resident was also awarded 125 Card Player Player of the Year points for the victory. Whittington was just getting started making deep runs at this series, though, so more on him later.

Like Whittington, runner-up Edgardo Rosario also made multiple final-table finishes in the early events of this series. He took home $9,500 and 104 POY points for his second-place showing in this event.

World Series Of Poker Video

PlacePlayerEarningsPOY Points
1 Blake Whittington $13,000 125
2 Edgardo Rosario $9,500 104
3 Gary Waters $7,391 83
4 Justin Dombek $4,533 62
5 Mehdi Saleh $3,206 52
6 Thomas Phillips $2,487 42
7 Jonathan Khalifa $1,990 31
8 Michael Walsh $1,658 21
9 Robert Cahill $1,387 10

Event 2 – $200 No-Limit Hold’em Survivor ($6k gtd.)

The second event of the series was a $200 buy-in survivor tournament, in which the top 10 percent of the field all receives a payout of $1,600. A total of 105 players turned out, which meant that the top ten players all earned that payday, while 11th-place finisher Yu Yang took home $800.

Series

Event 4 – $600 No-Limit Hold’em MonsterStack ($40k gtd.)

The third event on the schedule was a mega satellite event, but the next official tournament was a $600 buy-in no-limit hold’em ‘MonsterStack’ tournament that featured a $40,000 guarantee. With 171 entries made, the final prize pool grew to $87,210, which was paid out among the top 20 finishers.

It was none other than Blake Whittington who was awarded the title in this event, just one day after having won the kickoff tournament. He added another $16,189 and 156 POY points for his second victory in as many days. He moved inside the top 100 in the 2021 POY race as a result of his back-to-back first-place finishes.

Whittington ultimately struck a deal with three players remaining in this event, which resulted in him earning the largest payday and securing the title. Myung Shin earned $15,685 as the second-place finisher, while Francis Anderson cashed for $15,291 for his third-place showing.

PlacePlayerEarningsPOY Points
1 Blake Whittington $16,189 156
2 Myung Shin $15,685 130
3 Francis Anderson $15,291 104
4 Bryant Miller $7,151 78
5 Vinicius Lima $5,058 65
6 Mihai Turenschi $3,924 52
7 Timothy Mcdermott $3,140 39
8 Kenneth Isaacs $2,616 26
9 Brian Barrosvazquez $2,189 13

Event 5 – $200 No-Limit Hold’em Survivor ($6k gtd.)

The second ‘survivor’ event of the series saw 124 players post a $200 buy-in, resulting in $19,840 to be paid out among the top 14 finishers. The top 12 all took home $1,600, while Jaymie Virtusio and Le-John Pai each earned $320 as the 13th and 14th finishers.

Event 6 – $1,100 No-Limit Hold’em Mid-States Poker Tour Poker Bowl ($350k gtd.)

The $1,100 buy-in no-limit hold’em Mid-States Poker Tour Poker Bowl event ran from Feb. 4-6, with the final day action coinciding with professional football’s big game on Sunday. The tournament attracted 908 entries across two starting flights, blowing away the $350,000 guarantee to build a final prize pool of $880,760 which was paid out among the top 96 finishers.

The lion’s share of that money was awarded to eventual champion Johnny Oshana. The San Jose, California resident earned $130,000 and 912 POY points for the win, climbing into seventh place in the overall POY race standings as a result. This was his second POY-qualified final table finish of the year, having placed sixth in a $600 buy-in event in January for $1,868 and 32 points.

World Poker Tour main event winner Jordan Cristos finished second in the event, cashing for $119,232 to bring his lifetime tournament earnings to $3,069,772. This was his first final-table finish of the year, but it alone was enough to see him move into 13th place on the POY leaderboard for the time being.

The final four players made a deal that resulted in the two previously mentioned payouts, while both third-place finisher Joris Springael and fourth-place finisher Seungmook Jung cashed for $85,000. World Series of Poker bracelet winner Erik Cajelais placed eighth for $14,092.

PlacePlayerEarningsPOY Points
1 Johnny Oshana $130,000 912
2 Jordan Cristos $119,232 760
3 Joris Springael $85,000 608
4 Seungmook Jung $85,000 456
5 Brandon Eisen $34,350 380
6 Quy Dao $26,423 304
7 Kfir Nahum $20,257 228
8 Erik Cajelais $14,092 152
9 David Gu $12,331 76

Event 7 – $1,100 No-Limit Hold’em MonsterStack ($75k gtd.)

Isaac Choi came out on top of the single-day $1,100 buy-in no-limit hold’em MonsterStack event held on Feb. 6, outlasting a field of 193 total entries to win $49,879 and 336 POY points.

This was Choi’s second POY-qualified score of 2021, having placed second in a $400 buy-in event during January’s DeepStack Showdown series right here at Venetian Las Vegas. He now sits in 30th place in the rankings as a result.

The strong turnout in the event saw the $75,000 guarantee more than doubled, with the total prize pool growing to $188,175 by the time registration came to an end. Kickoff event runner-up finisher Edgardo Rosario earned $15,430 for a fourth-place showing in this event.

PlacePlayerEarningsPOY Points
1 Isaac Choi $49,870 336
2 Nirav Parekh $30,070 280
3 Manh Nguyen $21,828 224
4 Edgardo Rosario $15,430 168
5 Joseph Beasy $10,914 140
6 William Harrison $8,468 112
7 William O’Connor $6,774 84
8 Jason Zarlenga $5,645 56
9 Mohamed Serry $4,723 28

Event 8 – $200 No-Limit Hold’em Bounty ($6k gtd.)

The next event on the schedule was a $200 buy-in no-limit hold’em bounty tournament. The event’s $6,000 guarantee was more than doubled when a total of 93 entries were made, creating a $14,880 prize pool.

The last player standing was none other than WSOP bracelet winner and WPT main event champion Pat Lyons. He secured the last bounty to lock up the title and the top prize of $2,081.

PlacePlayerEarnings
1 Pat Lyons $2,081
2 Kurt Crevin $1,923
3 Mikes Bairamis $1,704
4 Ray Dickerson $1,588
5 James Traber $685
6 James Austin $501
7 Mohammad Rafie $399
8 Marcus Alonzo $327
9 Kim Dung Nguyen $276

Event 9 – $400 No-Limit Hold’em MonsterStack ($80k gtd.)

The next multi-day event of the series was the $400 buy-in no-limit hold’em MonsterStac event that ran from Feb. 8-10. The two starting flights saw a total of 534 entries made, more than doubling the $80,000 guarantee to build a final prize pool of $177,822.

The largest payday awarded in the tournament wen to Zilong Zhang, who took home $26,688 and the title after a five-handed chop that brought the event to its conclusion. This was the largest cash on the Rowland Heights, California resident’s tournament resume.

Six-time WSOP Circuit gold ring winner David Larson finished ninth for $3,379.

PlacePlayerEarningsPOY Points
1 Zilong Zhang $26,688 336
2 Jeremy Becker $23,430 280
3 Richard Ramos $22,658 224
4 Xinyi Wang $14,425 168
5 Judith Bielan $13,276 140
6 Robert Peacock $6,046 112
7 Jesse Vilchez $4,801 84
8 Cheng Liu $3,734 56
9 David Larson $3,379 28

Event 10 – $200 No-Limit Hold’em Bounty ($6k gtd.)

The tenth event on the schedule was another $200 buy-in no-limit hold’em bounty tournament. This time around there were a total of 74 entries, creating a $11,840 prize pool that fell just shy of doubling the $6,000 guarantee.

Jason Taticzek of Murrieta, California captured the last bounty to secure the title and the top prize of $2,767 after defeating Peter Dailey heads-up for the win.

Event six champion Johnny Oshana placed fifth in this event for $586.

PlacePlayerEarnings
1 Jason Taticzek $2,767
2 Peter Dailey $1,718
3 Hoan Nguyen $1,123
4 Adam Pritchett $790
5 Johnny Oshana $586
6 Konstantin Petrushev $456
7 Tao Dai $374
8 Joel Baker $326

Event 11 – $200 No-Limit Hold’em Bounty ($6k gtd.)

The following day saw another $200 buy-n no-limit hold’em bounty event take place, with 73 entries this time around. The top eight finishers made the money, with Tao Dai securing the title and the top prize of $2,500.

PlacePlayerEarnings
1 Tao Dai $2,500
2 Dominique Terzian $1,925
3 Duy Ho $1,108
4 Kenneth Chupinsky $779
5 Linvell Williamson $578
6 Paul Shunia $450
7 David Norelius $369
8 Scott Schriner $321

Event 12 – $400 No-Limit Hold’em Bounty ($20k gtd.)

The $400 buy-in no-limit hold’em MonsterStack event held on Feb. 10 saw a total of 147 entries made, easily surpassing the $20,000 guarantee to create a prize pool of $49,245 that was paid out among the top 16 finishers.

In the end, the largest share of that money was awarded to Antonio Modacure, who secured $9,219 and the title after striking a three-handed deal to bring the tournament to a conclusion. This was the largest cash yet for the University Park, Illinois resident, who also took home 115 POY points for the win.

PlacePlayerEarningsPOY Points
1 Antonio Modacure $9,219 115
2 Bobby Sanoubane $9,218 96
3 Bernice O’Neill $9,218 77
4 Hoan Nguyen $4,186 58
5 Joseph Malebranche $2,955 48
6 Joshua Manus $2,315 38
7 Richard Barcena $1,921 29
8 Jeffrey Hood $1,625 19
9 Alan Brand $1,359 10

Event 13 – $200 No-Limit Hold’em Survivor ($6k gtd.)

The final tournament of this preliminary event roundup was a $200 buy-in no-limit hold’em survivor. A total of 71 entries in the event mean that the top eight finishers all secured $1,420 paydays.

Make sure to stay tuned to Card Player for more coverage of the 2021 DeepStack Extravaganza I. A complete schedule of the remaining events on offer, including the $500,000 guaranteed CPPT $2,500 buy-in no-limit hold’em main event running Feb. 19-22, can be found here.

World Series Of Poker Winners Earnings
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WSOP TitlesWPT TitlesEPT TitlesPoker Earnings
1Erik Seidel810$21,499,344
2Phil Ivey910$17,649,220
3John Juanda500$15,113,768
4Allen Cunningham500$12,031,743
5Carlos Mortensen230$11,598,083
6Gus Hansen140$11,240,678
7JC Tran210$10,416,658
8Erick Lindgren220$9,881,849
9Mike Matusow400$8,974,373
10Chris Ferguson500$8,281,926
11Vanessa Selbst200$8,018,466
12Paul Wasicka000$7,896,100
13Huck Seed500$7,582,816
14David Benyamine110$7,047,146
15Howard Lederer220$6,571,538
16Gavin Smith110$5,959,186
17Kathy Liebert000$5,929,521
18Andy Bloch100$5,415,383
19John Cernuto300$5,352,640
20Roland de Wolfe111$5,330,556
21Robert Mizrachi100$4,498,967
22Andy Black000$4,432,368
23Annie Duke100$4,270,549
24Lee Watkinson100$4,146,149
25Jeff Madsen300$4,054,686
26Annette Obrestad100$3,910,678
27Vanessa Rousso001$3,513,841
28Max Pescatori200$3,322,683
29Phil Gordon010$2,786,896
30Jennifer Harman200$2,697,533
31Joanne Liu000$2,678,069
32Greg Mueller200$2,621,740
33Liv Boeree001$2,281,097
34Tom Dwan000$2,213,937
35Sandra Naujoks001$1,789,239
36Victoria Coren001$1,745,178
37Clonie Gowen010$1,639,064
38Viktor Blom000$1,527,299
39Eddy Scharf200$1,327,119
40Erica Schoenberg000$848,458
41Aaron Bartley000$215,777

The Lucrative Game of Poker

There is a lot of money to be made in the poker world. You can see that just from our rankings above, with players who have tournament poker earnings of 10 or 20 million dollars. It is possible to rack up a sizeable personal fortune if you have the skills to regularly win poker events, or even if you have a good run at one large poker event and walk away with a monstrous and sometimes outrageous prize.

This is very different to the old days of poker, where winners of large tournaments would still walk away with very good prizes, but would be more like a few hundred thousand dollars rather than the many millions of today’s game.

This is largely due to the influx of poker players over the past decade, with the transition of the sport to a game played behind closed doors, into a main stream sport that is televised and shown all over the world. Some of the large events in the poker calendar attract fields of thousands of players, and the more players, the bigger the prize pool.

The World Series of Poker Main Event

The World Series of Poker main event still offers one of the biggest prizes in poker. This is due to the massive field generated by the tournament. The field, which ranges from 6,000 to 9,000 each year has to be split over a number of starting days, as the full field cannot fit into the massive WSOP tournament space at the Rio, in Las Vegas.

The huge fields are partly driven by the prestige of the being the headline poker event of the year, but also by the quantity of people who qualify for the event via smaller buy in online satellite tournaments run by online poker sites.

Of course these huge fields are all paying $10,000 to enter the tournament which generates a outrageous prize pool. The biggest was in 2006 with a prize pool of $82.5million and a first prize of $12million.

The WSOP One Drop – Biggest Prize in Poker

Poker

In 2012, the World Series of Poker introduce a new event. It was a high rollers $1million buy in tournament which was 4 times the next biggest buy in tournament. The event attracted the biggest professional poker players in the sport together with other wealthy people including at least 2 billionaires.

There were 48 entrants, and eventual winner Antonio Esfandiari took home a 1st place prize of $18.3million, with even 2nd placed Sam Trickett taking home a sizeable $10million.

The event generated a massive amount of Buzz in the poker world and in the main stream press, culminating in the biggest spectacle the poker world has ever seen, with a broadcast on ESPN, showgirls and piles and piles of cash.

World Series Of Poker Winners Earnings History

Online Poker – The Internet Poker Millionaire

Online Poker allows anybody to sit at their computer, or on their tablet on the sofa and play online poker. The rise in popularity of online poker has lead to regular high payout tournaments where players can enter for quite a modest fee and win prizes of hundreds of thousands, or even millions.

Regular tournaments take place at the big online poker sites, such as the Pokerstars Sunday Million which takes place every Sunday night, with a guaranteed prize pool of $1million for a relatively small buy in of $215. This guarantee is usually smashed and a much larger prize pool results. Many similar weekly tournaments take place but this is the largest.

World Series Of Poker Updates

There are also Online Tournament Series which regularly occur and mirror the festival feel of the World Series of Poker by running a series of events, of varying buy in amounts and various formats of poker. The biggest two of these are the World Championship of Online Poker (WCOOP) run by Pokerstars which in 2013 had a guaranteed prize pool of $40million over 66 events and the Full Tilt Online Poker Series (FTOPS) run by Full Tilt Poker.