The World Series of Poker is the most prestigious set of poker tournaments in the world.
The Binion family not only nurtured the WSOP, but poker in general. Prior to the 1970s, poker was not found at many casinos because of the difficulty of keeping cheaters out. Through better security techniques as well as the Binion's tireless promotion through events like the WSOP, poker became a very popular game.
In 1970 the first WSOP at Binion's Horseshoe took place as a series of cash games that included five card stud, deuce to seven low-ball draw, razz, seven card stud, and Texas Hold-em. The format for the Main Event as a freeze-out Texas Hold-em game came the next year. The winner in 1970, Johnny Moss was elected by his peers as the first World Champion of Poker and received a silver cup as a prize.
Doyle "Texas Dolly" Brunson and Johnny "Oriental Express" Chan have each won ten bracelets, while Phil Hellmuth has nine. Doyle's son, Todd Brunson, won a bracelet in a pot limit Omaha event in 2005, making them the first and only father/son combo to win at least one event at the WSOP. (See also World Series of Poker multiple bracelet winners.) Also, celebrities Patrick Bruel, Jan Sørensen and Jennifer Tilly have won WSOP bracelets in 1998, 2002 and 2005 respectively.
The number of participants in the WSOP has grown every year, and in recent years the growth has exploded. In 2000 there were 4,780 entrants in the various events, but in 2005, the number rose to over 23,000 players. In the main event alone, participants grew from 839 in 2003, to 2,576 in 2004, to 5,619 in 2005. For the 2006 main event there are accommodations for at least 9,000 players.* Much of this growth can be attributed to the WSOP airing on ESPN and the World Poker Tour being shown on the Travel Channel, along with other televised series, as well as the boom of online poker.
Like most tournaments, the sponsoring casino takes a "rake" (a percentage between 6%-10%, depending on the buy-in) and distributes the rest, hence the prize money increases with more players. In the 2005 main event $52,818,610 (US) in prize money was distributed, including a $7.5 million first prize. Subtracting the $10,000 buy-ins, over $47 million was won by 560 players in the event.
Starting in 2005, the WSOP began a tournament "circuit" at Harrah's-owned properties in the United States where in addition to the $10,000 buy-in tournament at each site, qualifying players became eligible for a revamped Tournament of Champions. The 2005 TOC, made up of the top twenty qualifying players at each circuit event, along with the final table from the 2005 Main Event and the winners of nine or more bracelets (Hellmuth, Chan and Doyle Brunson) would participate in the revamped TOC at Caesar's Palace. Mike "The Mouth" Matusow won the first prize of $1 million (US), and all the players at the final table were guaranteed a minimum of $25,000 for the eighth and ninth place finishers. During a break in the final table of the 2005 Main Event on July 16, Harrah's announced that eleven properties — including the recently added Bally's and Caesar's properties — would host 2005-06 WSOP Circuit events that started on August 11 in Tunica, Mississippi. One event, that was scheduled for Biloxi, Mississippi was cancelled after the Grand Casino Biloxi, which was scheduled to host the event, suffered major damage from Hurricane Katrina.
The Rio will again host all 2006 WSOP major events, beginning on June 25 with satellite events and formally start the next day with the annual Casino Employee tournament, and will feature the TOC on June 28 and 29, 2006, along with the various events leading up to the main event, which will be held from July 28 until August 10. If the limit of 8,000 players buying in for $10,000 each is reached, the first prize is estimated to be $10 million as well as a special bracelet different from the others.
Since then, ESPN has greatly expanded its coverage to include many of the preliminary events of the WSOP, especially Texas Hold 'Em. Also, their coverage of the main event now typically includes at least one hour program on each day. Since 2005, ESPN has been broadcasting one hour programs of the "circuit" events that the WSOP has at various Harrah's-owned casinos. Additionally, ESPN's coverage now includes many of the trappings of sports coverage, such as lighter segments (called "The Nuts") and interviews.
In 2000 and 2001, the World Series of Poker was broadcast by The Discovery Channel. These hour long programs presented more of an overview or recap of the WSOP as opposed to broadcasting an actual live event with play-by-play analysis and color commentary. The Discovery Channel's broadcast also featured final table players interviews interlaced throughout the show. ESPN would resume coverage the following year.
ESPN's coverage in 2002 would be typical of their coverage in the 1990s (recorded in video, little or no post-production commentary or player profiles, no card cams). However, the final table broadcast was expanded over two one-hour episodes.
ESPN has expanded poker to all-new levels, especially with their coverage of the 2006 WSOP. It was announced that poker fans would be able to view the entire final table of the 2006 Main Event via pay-per-view. This would cost $24.95 per order. Nonetheless, this is huge indicator of the popularity "boom" of poker in the United States.
The winner of the Main Event is also given the unofficial title of World Champion, however the game's top professionals - who consider the Main Event a crapshoot due to its sheer size - have stated that the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E event is the one which ultimately decides the world's best player. H.O.R.S.E is an event in which Holdem, Omaha, Razz, Seven Card Stud and Eight-or-better are all played. The 2006 H.O.R.S.E tournament was won by Chip Reese.
There have been many memorable moments during the main events, including Jack Straus's 1982 comeback win after discovering he had one $500 chip left when he thought he was out of the tournament.
Four players have won the main event multiple times: Johnny Moss (1970, 1971 and 1974), Doyle Brunson (1976 and 1977), Stu Ungar (1980, 1981 and 1997) and Johnny Chan (1987 and 1988.)
The end of the 1988 main event was featured in the movie Rounders.
Chris Moneymaker and Greg Raymer, the winners in 2003 and 2004 both qualified for the main event through satellite tournaments at the PokerStars online cardroom.
Several living poker legends have tried unsuccessfully for years to win the main event, including T. J. Cloutier, the 1985 and 2000 runner-up.
As of 2006, a cap of 8,000 players is now an official stipulation of the Main Event. With the exception of winners of the World Series Of Poker Main Event satellite tournaments (who automatically win a spot in the main event), all remaining players (including former champions, celebrities, and professional poker players) must supply the $10,000 buy-in, in order to participate.
Below are the past winners of the main event, together with brief information about each year's main event. For more information, view the article on the WSOP for that specific year.
| Year | Birth nationality / Winner / Winning Hand | Prize (US$) | Entrants | Birth nationality / Runner-Up / Losing Hand |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | To be decided July 28 - August 10, 2006 | 10,000,000 (est.) | 8,000 (est.) |
| 2005 | Joe Hachem 7♣ 3♠7,500,000 | 5,619 | Steve Dannenmann A♦ 3♣|
| 2004 | Greg "Fossilman" Raymer 8♠ 8♦5,000,000 | 2,576 | David Williams A♥ 4♠|
| 2003 | Chris Moneymaker 5♦ 4♠2,500,000 | 839 | Sam Farha J♥ T♦|
| 2002 | Robert Varkonyi Q♦ 10♠2,000,000 | 631 | Julian "The Kid" Gardner J♣ 8♣|
| 2001 | Juan Carlos "El Matador" Mortensen K♣ Q♣1,500,000 | 613 | Dewey Tomko A♠ A♥|
| 2000 | Chris "Jesus" Ferguson A♠ 9♣1,500,000 | 512 | T. J. Cloutier A♦ Q♣|
| 1999 | Noel Furlong 5♣ 5♦1,000,000 | 393 | Alan Goehring 6♥ 6♣|
| 1998 | Scotty Nguyen J♦ 9♣1,000,000 | 350 | Kevin McBride Q♥ T♥|
| 1997 | Stu "The Kid" Ungar A♥ 4♣1,000,000 | 312 | John Strzemp A♠ 8♣|
| 1996 | Huck Seed 9♦ 8♦1,000,000 | 295 | Bruce Van Horn K♣ 8♣|
| 1995 | "Action" Dan Harrington 9♦ 8♦1,000,000 | 273 | Howard Goldfarb A♥ 7♣|
| 1994 | Russ Hamilton K♠ 8♥1,000,000 | 268 | Hugh Vincent 8♣ 5♥|
| 1993 | Jim Bechtel J♣ 6♥1,000,000 | 220 | Glenn Cozen 7♠ 4♦|
| 1992 | Hamid Dastmalchi 8♥ 4♣1,000,000 | 201 | Tom Jacobs J♦ 7♠|
| 1991 | Brad Daugherty K♠ J♠1,000,000 | 215 | Don Holt 7♥ 3♥|
| 1990 | Mansour Matloubi 6♠ 6♥895,000 | 194 | Hans "Tuna" Lund 4♦ 4♣|
| 1989 | Phil Hellmuth Jr 9♠ 9♣755,000 | 178 | Johnny "Oriental Express" Chan A♠ 7♠|
| 1988 | Johnny "Oriental Express" Chan J♣ 9♣700,000 | 167 | Erik Seidel Q♣ 7♥|
| 1987 | Johnny "Oriental Express" Chan A♠ 9♣625,000 | 152 | Frank "Hollywood" Henderson 4♦ 4♣|
| 1986 | Berry Johnston A♠ T♥570,000 | 141 | Mike Harthcock A♦ 8♦|
| 1985 | Bill Smith 3♠ 3♥700,000 | 140 | T. J. Cloutier A♦ 3♣|
| 1984 | "Gentleman" Jack Keller T♥ T♠660,000 | 132 | Byron "Cowboy" Wolford 6♥ 4♥|
| 1983 | Tom McEvoy Q♦ Q♠580,000 | 108 | Rod Peate K♦ J♦|
| 1982 | Jack "Treetop" Straus A♥ 10♠520,000 | 104 | Dewey Tomko A♦ 4♦|
| 1981 | Stu "The Kid" Ungar A♥ Q♥375,000 | 75 | Perry Green T♠ 9♦|
| 1980 | Stu "The Kid" Ungar 5♠ 4♠385,000 | 73 | Doyle "Texas Dolly" Brunson A♥ 7♠|
| 1979 | Hal Fowler 7♠ 6♦270,000 | 54 | Bobby "The Wizard" Hoff A♣ A♥|
| 1978 | Bobby Baldwin Q♦ Q♣210,000 | 42 | Crandall Addington 9♦ 9♣|
| 1977 | Doyle "Texas Dolly" Brunson 10♠ 2♥340,000 | 34 | Gary "Bones" Berland 8♥ 5♣|
| 1976 | Doyle "Texas Dolly" Brunson 10♠ 2♠220,000 | 22 | Jesse Alto A♠ J♦|
| 1975 | Brian "Sailor" Roberts 9♠ 9♥210,000 | 21 | Bob Hooks A♣ K♦|
| 1974 | Johnny Moss160,000 | 16 | Crandall Addington|
| 1973 | Walter "Puggy" Pearson A♠ 7♠130,000 | 13 | Johnny Moss K♥ J♠|
| 1972 | Thomas "Amarillo Slim" Preston80,000 | 8 | Walter "Puggy" Pearson|
| 1971 | Johnny Moss30,000 | 6 | Walter "Puggy" Pearson|
| 1970 | Johnny Moss *n/a | 7 | n/a |
* awarded by vote
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