One of the highlights of any calendar year for poker players is the World Series of Poker. Held annually at the Rio All-Suites Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, the WSOP serves as the host of over 50 prestigious poker tournaments. For the second time, the WSOP also traveled across “The Pond” to London, England for four more bracelet events. At the end of the day, PocketFivers captured eight bracelets out of the 59 up for grabs in what was ultimately a highly-successful tournament series. Moreover, ESPN’s broadcast ratings of the Las Vegas events were up dramatically in 2008, in part due to viewers learning who will win instead of how someone already won.
Twelve countries claimed bracelets in Las Vegas and London. Among them was the European nation of Belgium, which grabbed its first bracelet by virtue of Davidi legrouzin Kitai’s win in a $2,000 Pot Limit Hold’em tournament. Belgium’s Gross Domestic Product was ballooned by $244,000 as a result. Other countries that boasted bracelet wins were Afghanistan, Brazil, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, The Netherlands, Russia, and the United States. The Danes took home four bracelets of their own, the second most of any country. Main Event Champion Peter Eastgate and Theo Jorgensen each took home one. Jesper Hougaard grabbed two bracelets, one in Las Vegas and one in London. Players from the United States earned 40 bracelets.
In November, the WSOP moved down the hall, as the final table of the Main Event was held in the spacious Penn and Teller Theater at the Rio. The two-hour telecast aired on November 11th, one week after general elections in the United States. In 2007, the Main Event final table scored a 1.29 rating. This year, that number shot up by 50% to 1.94. The second hour received a 2.08 rating, the highest mark for any WSOP program since 2004. To put those numbers in perspective, the 2003 Main Event final table in which Chris Moneymaker changed the poker world forever garnered a 1.64 rating. Major League Baseball games on ESPN during the regular season averaged a 1.4. In games that aired on ESPN and TNT, the National Basketball Association mustered a 1.3 rating average during its regular season.
The growing international presence at the WSOP was a noticeable trend from 2007 to 2008. Players from 125 countries descended upon the Rio this year, up 44%. Besides Kitai, other non-U.S. bracelet wins by PocketFivers included Alexandre Allingomes Gomes (Brazil) and Sebastian miamivice Ruthenberg (Germany). A total of 59 countries had at least one person cash. All 50 United States and all 10 Canadian provinces had entrants cash in the WSOP, the first time either has occurred. In a press release distributed earlier this year, WSOP Commissioner Jeffrey Pollack commented on the international lure of the tournament series: “The results this year demonstrate the increasing global appeal of our events and the universal recognition that winning a World Series of Poker gold bracelet is the game’s ultimate achievement.”
That’s a look back at some of the names and numbers that made the 2008 WSOP groundbreaking for PocketFivers everywhere. Happy New Year to every member of the online poker community!
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