The 2023 World Series Of Poker Is Here, And It's Ready To Break RecordsThe Annual Summer Series Returns To The Las Vegas Strip For Second Straight Year |
|
The World Series of Poker started as a seven-player cash game in 1970, with eventual champion Johnny Moss decided by a vote among the participants.
In the more than five decades since then, the annual WSOP has grown into the largest poker tournament festival in the world, with a record $342 million paid out across the 102 total bracelet events that comprised last year’s summer series.
The $10,000 main event attracted its second-largest field ever with its 8,663 players, falling just 110 entries short of tying the record set in 2006, when Jamie Gold earned a payout of $12 million as the champion.
The inaugural WSOP, and the 34 that followed it, were held at Binion’s Horseshoe in downtown Las Vegas. After Caesars Entertainment bought the rights to the WSOP, the series moved to the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino from 2005 to 2021. In 2022, the proceedings were moved for the first time to the Las Vegas Strip, with Bally’s and Paris Las Vegas Hotel & Casino hosting. And finally, this year the series officially returns home after Bally’s was rebranded as Horseshoe Las Vegas.
“With the momentum generated from the WSOP’s debut on the Las Vegas Strip last year, we expect a record-breaking WSOP and world championship at Paris and Horseshoe Las Vegas in 2023,” said Ty Stewart, SVP & Executive Director of the WSOP.
The summer series will feature the biggest capacity in history with 608 tables spread across more than 200,000 square feet of convention space. There will be 95 in-person bracelet events, up from 89 in 2022, with another 34 bracelet events held online at WSOP.com, for a total of 129.
The increase in tournaments, combined with a special emphasis being placed on breaking the record for main event turnout (more on that later) seems like the perfect recipe for yet another new high-water mark when it comes to key metrics like prize money and total entries.
What You Need To Know About The 54th Annual WSOP
Numerous additions and changes have been announced for the 2023 WSOP.
One notable schedule shift will see the $1 million freeroll Tournament of Champions moving to the opening week, after being the last bracelet event offered in 2022.
According to the WSOP’s press release, “the 2023 field will be limited to those winning a WSOP Circuit ring at a live event or during an online circuit from July 20, 2022 to May 22, 2023, as well as all winners from WSOP Online 2022… and WSOP Europe 2022. Registration for the 2023 Tournament of Champions will open on Tuesday, May 30 at 9 a.m. 2023 bracelet winners will be eligible for the 2024 tournament.”
This year will also see the popular Million Dollar Bounty event from last summer become the $1,000 buy-in Mystery Millions, with a seven-figure payday guaranteed to the tournament winner in addition to the $1 million guaranteed top bounty prize.
Last year, Minnesota’s Quincy Borland took home $750,120 and his first gold bracelet as the champion, while Pennsylvania poker pro Matt Glantz was the lucky winner of the $1 million bounty.
The 2023 event kicks off with the first of four starting flights on May 31, making it the centerpiece of the typically-packed opening weekend of the festival.
2023 will be the first year that the WSOP will not play host to a dedicated area offering single-table satellites. In fact, there will be no single-table satellites held outside of those that will directly qualify players for the main event (which will start on July 2), and the ‘Flip and Go’ (starting July 13 and concluding when registration ends for the event on the following day) which last just a single hand. Players will be dealt three cards and then be taken directly to the flop, at which point they will all be forced to discard one before the turn and river are dealt and a single winner is decided.
As a result, there will be no more tournament ‘lammers,’ which were chips that were awarded in past single-table satellites that could only be redeemed for tournament buy-ins, not cash. Instead, winners of the limited offering of single-table satellites will be escorted to registration and entered directly into the event that they qualified for.
While round-the-clock single-table satellites are now a thing of the past, in its place will be a wide variety of satellite options, with mega satellites running daily throughout the festival. For the most part, satellites into events with a seat value of $5,000 or lower will pay out casino chips that players can use to buy into their desired tournament. The two notable exceptions to this guideline are the $1,000 Mystery Millions and the $300 Gladiators of Poker event, which will see qualifiers directly entered.
Satellites into $10,000 buy-in events will allow those that qualify to choose between direct entry or casino chips. Finally, satellites for events with buy-ins of $25,000 and higher will only award direct entry into the target tournament. (Note: Any cash payouts over $5,000 above the satellite buy-in will be subject to tax reporting.)
Big Value Throughout The Summer
For those looking for big action at a lower price point, fear not! A whopping 50 of the 95 live events on offer this summer feature a buy-in of $1,500 or less.
A notable new addition to the affordable slate of tournaments is the $300 buy-in Gladiators of Poker. The no-limit hold’em tournament has a $3 million guaranteed prize pool, with four starting flights to choose from June 7-10.
Other new lower-buy-in tournaments include the first-ever $1,500 buy-in short deck event, which kicks off on July 12, the inaugural stand-alone Badugi bracelet event, which begins June 7, and the debut of the $1,500 Big O (five-card pot-limit Omaha eight-or-better) bracelet event that gets underway on June 17.
Returning classics for the weekend warriors include several popular no-limit hold’em events like the $1,500 buy-in Monster Stack (June 16-23), the $1,500 buy-in Millionaire Maker (June 23-28) with its $1,000,000 guaranteed top payout, and the $400 buy-in Colossus (June 30 – July 3). These contests are among the most popular of the summer, last year drawing a combined 28,027 entries.
While it falls in the middle of the final week of June, the $600 DeepStack Championship (June 28- July 1) is also likely to be popular with tournament grinders looking to battle their way through a big field for the chance at a huge top prize and the gold.
Another new addition is the $600 Ultra Stack that runs from July 11-14. Then, as the series wraps up, the $1,500 buy-in tournament known as The Closer finishes things off July 14-16, with two starting flights to choose from.
For those looking to get in and out quickly without committing several consecutive days to a single event, there are a number of live two-day deep-stacked events at affordable prices.
High Rollers Only
There are 27 total live bracelet events that feature a buy-in of five figures or higher during this year’s WSOP, including 11 events with buy-ins of $25,000 or more.
There will be a few new high-stakes tournaments offered at the series, including the $25,000 six-max no-limit hold’em event (May 30 – June 1), the $10,000 Secret Bounty (June 14-16), and the $25,000 H.O.R.S.E. (July 10-12).
The highest buy-in tournament on the schedule is a massive $250,000 no-limit hold’em event (June 16-18), which first debuted in 2021. The event has awarded two massive top prizes, with inaugural champion Adrian Mateos taking home $3,265,362 for topping a 33-entry field, and Alex Foxen earning $4,563,700 after outlasting 56 entries in 2022.
The only other six-figure buy-in event planned for this year is the $100,000 buy-in that will run June 12-14. These two events falling within a few days of each other makes for an unofficial ‘super high roller’ week at the series.
There are also four $50,000 events, two no-limit hold’em offerings, a pot-limit Omaha tournament, and of course, the nine-game Poker Players Championship, which will feature two-time defending champion Daniel ‘Jungleman’ Cates going for a three-peat.
Check out the full schedule for more details on these tournaments and everything else the 2023 WSOP has to offer.
Will The 2023 Main Event Be The Largest Ever?
While there are more events than ever, the centerpiece of the WSOP will always be the $10,000 buy-in no-limit hold’em main event.
And this year’s world championship, which runs from July 3-17, is shaping up to be particularly noteworthy as organizers are putting a special emphasis on setting a new turnout record.
“If the main event is on your bucket list, this is the year to get to Vegas,” said WSOP Executive Director Ty Stewart.
The push for a record field is already off to a strong start as there are set to be at least 600 seats awarded to players by WSOP online partner GGPoker. Another 112 guaranteed seats will be awarded on WSOP.com from June 25 to July 8, with 10 guaranteed seats per day.
If the record is broken, a drawing will be held for all players that will award one lucky participant a main event buy-in for the next 30 years. This ‘main event for life’ drawing is scheduled for Saturday, July 8.
There are four starting flights to choose from for this year’s main event, each beginning at noon on July 3-6. The tournament will feature 120-minute levels and 60,000 in starting chips, or 300 big blinds to start.
The official final table of nine will be set on July 14. The remaining nine will then have one day off before resuming play on July 16, with the plan being to narrow the field from nine to four, crowning a champion on July 17.
In 2022, it was online streamer Espen Jorstad who topped the second-largest field in WSOP main event history for the top prize of $10 million. Jorstad, who had won his first bracelet earlier in the series in the $1,000 tag team event alongside Patrick Leonard, beat out 8,662 other players to become the first player from Norway to win the main event.
“It means a lot, it’s the biggest tournament in the world,” Jorstad said after closing out the win.
Year | Champion | Entries | Prize Pool | Payout |
1970 | Johnny Moss | 7 | N/A | N/A |
1971 | Johnny Moss | 6 | $30,000 | $30,000 |
1972 | “Amarillo Slim” Preston | 8 | $80,000 | $80,000 |
1973 | Walter “Puggy” Pearson | 13 | $130,000 | $130,000 |
1974 | Johnny Moss | 16 | $160,000 | $160,000 |
1975 | Bryan “Sailor” Roberts | 21 | $210,000 | $210,000 |
1976 | Doyle Brunson | 22 | $220,000 | $220,000 |
1977 | Doyle Brunson | 34 | $340,000 | $340,000 |
1978 | Bobby Baldwin | 42 | $420,000 | $210,000 |
1979 | Hal Fowler | 54 | $540,000 | $270,000 |
1980 | Stu Ungar | 73 | $730,000 | $385,000 |
1981 | Stu Ungar | 75 | $750,000 | $375,000 |
1982 | Jack Straus | 104 | $1,040,000 | $520,000 |
1983 | Tom McEvoy | 108 | $1,080,000 | $540,000 |
1984 | Jack Keller | 132 | $1,320,000 | $660,000 |
1985 | Bill Smith | 140 | $1,400,000 | $700,000 |
1986 | Berry Johnston | 141 | $1,410,000 | $570,000 |
1987 | Johnny Chan | 152 | $1,520,000 | $625,000 |
1988 | Johnny Chan | 167 | $1,670,000 | $700,000 |
1989 | Phil Hellmuth | 178 | $1,780,000 | $755,000 |
1990 | Mansour Matloubi | 194 | $1,940,000 | $895,000 |
1991 | Brad Daugherty | 215 | $2,150,000 | $1,000,000 |
1992 | Hamid Dastmalchi | 201 | $2,010,000 | $1,000,000 |
1993 | Jim Bechtel | 231 | $2,308,000 | $1,000,000 |
1994 | Russ Hamilton | 268 | $2,680,000 | $1,000,000 |
1995 | Dan Harrington | 273 | $2,730,000 | $1,000,000 |
1996 | Huck Seed | 295 | $2,950,000 | $1,000,000 |
1997 | Stu Ungar | 312 | $3,120,000 | $1,000,000 |
1998 | Scotty Nguyen | 350 | $3,500,000 | $1,000,000 |
1999 | Noel Furlong | 393 | $3,930,000 | $1,000,000 |
2000 | Chris Ferguson | 512 | $5,120,000 | $1,500,000 |
2001 | Carlos Mortensen | 613 | $6,130,000 | $1,500,000 |
2002 | Robert Varkonyi | 631 | $6,310,000 | $2,000,000 |
2003 | Chris Moneymaker | 839 | $7,802,700 | $2,500,000 |
2004 | Greg Raymer | 2,576 | $24,224,400 | $5,000,000 |
2005 | Joe Hachem | 5,619 | $52,818,610 | $7,500,000 |
2006 | Jamie Gold | 8,773 | $82,512,162 | $12,000,000 |
2007 | Jerry Yang | 6,358 | $59,784,954 | $8,250,000 |
2008 | Peter Eastgate | 6,844 | $64,333,600 | $9,152,416 |
2009 | Joe Cada | 6,494 | $61,043,600 | $8,547,042 |
2010 | Jonathan Duhamel | 7,319 | $68,798,600 | $8,944,310 |
2011 | Pius Heinz | 6,865 | $64,531,000 | $8,715,638 |
2012 | Greg Merson | 6,598 | $62,021,200 | $8,531,853 |
2013 | Ryan Riess | 6,352 | $59,708,800 | $8,361,570 |
2014 | Martin Jacobson | 6,683 | $62,820,200 | $10,000,000 |
2015 | Joe McKeehen | 6,420 | $60,348,000 | $7,683,346 |
2016 | Qui Nguyen | 6,737 | $63,327,800 | $8,005,310 |
2017 | Scott Blumstein | 7,221 | $67,877,400 | $8,150,000 |
2018 | John Cynn | 7,874 | $74,015,600 | $8,800,000 |
2019 | Hossein Ensan | 8,569 | $80,548,600 | $10,000,000 |
2020 | Damian Salas | 1,379 | $14,238,400 | $2,550,969 |
2021 | Koray Aldemir | 6,650 | $62,011,250 | $8,000,000 |
2022 | Espen Jorstad | 8,663 | $80,782,475 | $10,000,000 |
WSOP Statistics And Record Holders
Here is a look at where things stand in the key WSOP statistical categories entering the 54th annual series.
Only one player, Phil Hellmuth, is among the top five in all three categories. The Poker Brat holds the record for the most bracelets with 16, and is also ranked third in cashes (187) and fourth in earnings ($16.8 million).
Daniel Negreanu has the impressive one-two punch of being the all-time leader in WSOP cashes (217) and the second-highest earner in history with $20.7 million.
WSOP Bracelet Leaderboard
Player | Bracelets |
Phil Hellmuth | 16 |
Phil Ivey | 10 |
Johnny Chan | 10 |
Doyle Brunson | 10 |
Erik Seidel | 9 |
Johnny Moss | 9 |
Men Nguyen | 7 |
Billy Baxter | 7 |
Daniel Negreanu | 6 |
Chris Ferguson | 6 |
John Hennigan | 6 |
TJ Cloutier | 6 |
Jeff Lisandro | 6 |
Brian Hastings | 6 |
Layne Flack | 6 |
Ted Forrest | 6 |
Jay Heimowitz | 6 |
Michael Mizrachi | 5 |
Shaun Deeb | 5 |
Allen Cunningham | 5 |
Brian Rast | 5 |
Jeremy Ausmus | 5 |
Scotty Nguyen | 5 |
John Juanda | 5 |
Jason Mercier | 5 |
Daniel Alaei | 5 |
David Chiu | 5 |
Eli Elezra | 5 |
Adam Friedman | 5 |
Berry Johnston | 5 |
Stu Ungar | 5 |
Gary Berland | 5 |
WSOP Earnings Leaderboard
Player | Earnings |
Antonio Esfandiari | $21,917,460 |
Daniel Negreanu | $20,732,100 |
Dan Colman | $17,413,780 |
Phil Hellmuth | $16,753,010 |
Justin Bonomo | $14,937,400 |
Jonathan Duhamel | $14,644,200 |
Joe Cada | $13,727,150 |
Fedor Holz | $13,373,430 |
Elton Tsang | $12,388,310 |
Martin Jacobson | $12,260,470 |
Koray Aldemir | $12,218,720 |
Jamie Gold | $12,198,920 |
Sam Trickett | $11,755,580 |
Dario Sammartino | $11,358,630 |
Joe McKeehen | $11,013,770 |
Dan Smith | $10,976,230 |
Espen Jorstad | $10,873,390 |
Ryan Riess | $10,589,840 |
Greg Merson | $10,319,020 |
Hossein Ensan | $10,314,660 |
WSOP Cashes Leaderboard
Player | Cashes |
Daniel Negreanu | 217 |
Roland Israelashvili | 201 |
Phil Hellmuth | 187 |
Chris Ferguson | 161 |
Yueqi Zhu | 160 |
Ben Yu | 154 |
Arkadiy Tsinis | 142 |
Erik Seidel | 138 |
Shaun Deeb | 137 |
Jeff Madsen | 132 |
Barry Greenstein | 127 |
Shannon Shorr | 121 |
Mike Leah | 120 |
Ryan Riess | 116 |
Ryan Laplante | 115 |
Eric Baldwin | 112 |
Max Pescatori | 107 |
Men Nguyen | 107 |
Chris Moorman | 106 |
Matt Stout | 106 |