Here’s Why The Average Age Of A WSOP Participant Keeps Going Up

The 2018 World Series of Poker was a rousing success. Not only did WSOP Main Event attendance rise for the third consecutive year, the 2018 WSOP Main Event produced the second largest field in the event’s long history.

Among the 17 records that fell by the wayside at the 2018 WSOP were:

  • Most Entrants (across the entire series): 123,865
  • Largest total prizepool: $266,889,193
  • Largest Starting Flight in Main Event History: Event #65, Flight C: 4,571 entries

Despite the positive numbers, there is a growing concern within the poker community that a troubling trend is emerging. That trend? The average age of WSOP participants is going up, and young players are all but disappearing from the game.

The trend dates back to 2011, and since that time the average age of a WSOP Main Event player has risen by more than four years.

Year Average Age of Main Event Participants Average Age of WSOP Participants Overall
2010 37.33 No data available
2011 37.2 No data available
2012 37.74 No data available
2013 38.1 No data available
2014 38.93 39.28
2015 39.62 41.04
2016 40.08 41.12
2017 40.59 41.42
2018 41.23 42.27

In this column I’ll attempt to explain why the average age of WSOP participants is on the rise, and what it means for poker going forward.

Where have all the young players gone?

WSOP Main Event attendance has risen 23 percent since 2015, and as the table below shows, the only age brackets not keeping up with overall growth are 21-to-25-year-olds and 26-to-30-year-olds.

Year 21-25 26-30 31-35 36-40 41-45 46-50 51-55 56+
2015 501 1,509 1,090 749 720 642 499 710
2016 374 1,600 1,215 798 744 688 517 801
2017 347 1,520 1,478 895 731 753 613 884
2018 310 1,439 1,689 1,050 865 815 636 1,070
Increase/Decrease -38% -5% +55% +40% +20% +27% +27% +51%

The number of 21-to-25-year-olds participating in the Main Event is down 38 percent since 2015 (the first year the WSOP provided demographic breakdowns).

The next age bracket, 26-to-30-year-olds, has held relatively steady.

Every other five year age bracket is up at least 20 percent.

As seen in the chart below, in 2015 and 2016 there were about 2,000 participants aged 30 and under. In 2017 that number fell to 1,749.

The 38 percent decline amongst 21-to-25-year-olds is a bit misleading since there were only 501 players in the 21-to-25-year-old bracket in 2015. As such the 38 percent drop amounts to 191 total players, less than 2.5 percent of the total field in 2018.

Even if we include 191 extra 21-year-olds in the 2018 WSOP Main Event, the average age only drops to 40.75.

What does that mean?

It means that the reason the average age of the WSOP player is increasing has more to do with who is playing than who isn’t.

Poker is (once again) an old man’s game

Three age brackets are growing significantly faster than attendance as a whole:

  • 31-35-year-olds: +55%
  • 36-40-year-olds: +40%
  • 56+ year olds: +51%

So where are these older players coming from?

Targeting seniors

First, the 2018 iteration was the largest Seniors Event (minimum age of 50) in WSOP History, with a record 5,918 players showing up for this year’s WSOP Seniors Championship.

That was up from the previous record of 5,389 in 2017.

Further, the Super Seniors event (minimum age of 60) is in its fourth year and also set a new attendance record:

  • 2015: 1533
  • 2016: 1476
  • 2017: 1720
  • 2018: 2191

A little bit of basic math helps explain this influx of older players.

2018 was the 15th Anniversary of Chris Moneymaker’s 2003 WSOP victory. Yes, it’s been that long. So what you’re seeing is an influx of a lot of people who were in their 30s during the poker boom, and maybe couldn’t play in the WSOP Main Event (family, job, whatever), but were playing recreationally with friends, at local casinos, and even online.

Now that they’re empty nesters, a Las Vegas vacation to play in the WSOP Main Event isn’t out of reach.

The regulated market difference

Regulated markets have put an end to the teenage wizards that took the poker world by storm during the boom years.

Online poker was a self-regulated industry during the poker boom, and the extent of age verification at the time was effectively clicking a box that said you were over 18.

That made it easy for a 15- or 16-year-old to open an online poker account and learn the game. By the time these players were 21 (old enough to play in the WSOP) they already had several years of experience under their belts, and the bankroll to enter a $10,000 buy-in tournament.

In the new, regulated online poker universe, age verification is taken very seriously, and in a lot of jurisdictions you not only have to be 18, you have to be 21.

That is resulting in a higher average starting age.

It’s not easy anymore

As I said in a column last year, “The poker boom was a narrow window in the long history of poker where young players were better equipped than established players.”

That’s no longer the case.

The amount of time it takes to become a polished player is increasing, and bankrolls are no longer built overnight.

In 2004 poker strategy was stagnant, and the internet provided a means for players to test theories and communicate with one another. Young players swarmed to the poker tables, and the best and brightest among them challenged the status quo. The result was several huge leaps forward.

As I said in last year’s column:

A good analogy can be found in baseball. It was as if the teenagers and early 20-somethings that came into poker during the five-year window of 2004 – 2008 were playing with aluminum bats, while the existing players were using wooden ones. There was a skill gap, as the young players were experimenting with new concepts and ideas, and using online poker and computer software to put them to the test.

That imbalance is over. Everyone is using aluminum bats now.

The bottom line is this: Instead of starting at 15-18 and being a very polished player with a high-stakes bankroll at 21, players are starting at 18-21, and grinding out bankrolls for multiple years.

New Players Get A Free Bonus At Global Poker

Lead image courtesy of Dutch Boyd/Flickr

The post Here’s Why The Average Age Of A WSOP Participant Keeps Going Up appeared first on .

Antonio Esfandiari Set To Embarrass Himself In Boxing Match With Kevin Hart

Following in the footsteps of poker luminaries such as Gus Hansen and Brian Rast, Antonio Esfandiari looks to be the latest pro poker player willing to embarrass himself by jumping in a boxing ring.

Esfandiari told TMZ Sports last week he and actor/comedian/athlete Kevin Hart have come to terms on a bet that will see the two fight next Spring:

“Kevin Hart and I were playing the other day, we were hanging out, we weren’t really playing, and somehow boxing comes up. So, we made a bet, and in March, around March, we are going to box in a ring.”

Apparently, Esfandiari got 35 to 1 odds on the bet, although the amount wagered was not disclosed:

“Kevin’s in much better shape. He’s an athlete. He’s fast as hell…I got the reach, I have a little bit of weight, but he’s fast, quick and he’s strong.”

Esfandiari refused to divulge whether or not he’s started training for the match. However, it’s clear that Hart has. In fact, there are photos and videos of Hart boxing all over the internet, suggesting he regularly trains and may be ready to hop in the ring today.

Poker and boxing don’t mix

Boxing has not been too kind to the images of the pro poker players or celebrities who have fought previously.

Back in 2009, poker pros Theo Jorgensen and Gus Hansen held a boxing match in Copenhagen, Denmark. If the match proved one thing, it was that neither is a professional fighter.

In 2011, Bertrand ‘ElkY’ Grospellier and Lex ‘RaSZi’ Veldhuis squared off in a kickboxing match that quickly dissolved into an embarrassment. Both men were left gasping for air in minutes.

Sorel Mizzi pummeled Brian Rast in a boxing match held in Las Vegas, Nevada in 2016. Although the bout is best described as amateurish, at least they managed to raise almost $9,000 for charity by doing it.

That same year, Olivier Busquet and JC Alvarado made a six-figure bet on an MMA match. This remains the one fight between poker players that turned out to be something other than embarrassing, at least for one of them.

Both had clearly trained and performed admirably. Although, Alvarado was clearly outclassed by the bigger, stronger and faster Busquet.

Celebrity boxing embarrassments

Celebrities haven’t fared much better in the ring.

FOX television ran the short-lived Celebrity Boxing TV show back in 2002 pitting notorious celebrities against one another in three-round boxing matches.

The show made the top ten of TV Guide’s 50 Worst TV Shows of All Time. Highlights included Todd Bridges beating up on Vanilla Ice and Tonya Harding winning by technical knockout over a reluctant Paula Jones.

Dustin “Screetch” Diamond also took on Ron “Horshack” Palillo in a battle of the TV nerds. No reputation left the Celebrity Boxing ring unscathed.

Esfandiari’s previous lapse in judgment

Of course, Esfandiari is no stranger to allowing prop bets to reach embarrassing levels. He was disqualified from the 2016 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure main event for relieving himself in a bottle underneath a poker table in an effort to win a bet.

Apparently, Esfandiari had bet billionaire Bill Perkins he could lunge everywhere he went around the Atlantis resort in the Bahamas for a 48-hour period. He didn’t want to lunge to the bathroom, saying it was starting to take a toll on his legs. Esfandiari ultimately apologized for the lapse in judgment.

However, it appears he’s ready to make another one. Taking on Hart in the ring has to be considered a bad idea for the 39-year-old poker player.

While Hart is only 5″4′, and also 39, he clearly has a lot more boxing experience.

Morning work #HustleHart #MoveWithHart #Progression

A post shared by Kevin Hart (@kevinhart4real) on Jun 29, 2018 at 7:56am PDT

Hart signed a deal to become a PokerStars ambassador in 2017, but he’s more athlete than poker pro. He’s run marathons, won multiple NBA All-Star Celebrity Game MVP awards, and in 2016, Hart signed an endorsement deal with Nike, something usually reserved only for pro athletes.

At 35-1, Esfandiari may think he’s getting the better side of the bet. However, he appears to little chance of doing anything but embarrassing himself. Therefore, he should probably stick to poker, where he knows he has an edge on Hart. Even if admits it is a diminishing one:

“He’s pretty good. He’s still a little fishy, but he’s pretty good.”

New Players Get A Free Bonus At WSOP.com NJ

The post Antonio Esfandiari Set To Embarrass Himself In Boxing Match With Kevin Hart appeared first on .

Why Are States Legalizing Sports Betting And Fantasy Sports And Ignoring Online Gambling?

To the dismay of legal online poker advocates, the legalization of online gambling has never been a pressing issue for state legislatures. Even after three states passed legislation in 2013, legislatures either ignored or merely flirted with online gambling. And then along came daily fantasy sports. Online gambling moved to the backburner once DFS appeared […]

The post Why Are States Legalizing Sports Betting And Fantasy Sports And Ignoring Online Gambling? appeared first on Online Poker Report.

MGM Resorts, Boyd Gaming Announce ‘Unprecedented’ Online Gambling, Sports Betting Partnership In US

MGM Resorts International and Boyd Gaming announced what they are calling an ‘unprecedented partnership’ on Monday morning focused on the future of both online gambling and sports betting around the US.

The post MGM Resorts, Boyd Gaming Announce ‘Unprecedented’ Online Gambling, Sports Betting Partnership In US appeared first on Online Poker Report.

MGM And Ladbrokes Are About To Become A Sports Betting Behemoth

Since May 14, the deals partnering up casinos, software companies, DFS sites, and sports betting operators seem to be announced every other day.

This latest deal is arguably the biggest of them all though.

According to Sky News, MGM Resorts is teaming up with one of the biggest European sports betting operations, Ladbrokes. GVC Holdings is Ladbrokes’ parent company, thanks to a deal that closed earlier this year. Shortly after news broke, GVC confirmed the story by issuing the following statement:

“The Group can confirm that discussions are at an advanced stage regarding such a joint venture and will update the market when appropriate.”

The joint venture in the two groups is said to be a $200 million project. The Sky report says the deal is likely a 50-50 venture, with each group putting up $100 million.

How strong are MGM’s sports betting prospects?

In addition to its 13 properties in Las Vegas, MGM has a presence in four other states, with two more on the way. Each state is in the process of legalizing or launching sports betting. Here is a look at each state and MGM’s holdings:

State Sports betting status Properties
Michigan Legislative effort still alive in 2018 MGM Grand Detroit
Maryland Early discussion, expect legislation in 2019 MGM National Harbor
Mississippi Legalized and launching soon Beau Rivage and Gold Strike
New Jersey Launched on June 14 Borgata
New York Major legislative push expected in 2019 Recently purchased Empire City Casino
Massachusetts Bill expected in 2019 MGM Springfield opening on Aug. 24

The two companies have not revealed details of the finalized deal yet, but there will likely be a formal announcement next week.

Play At Golden Nugget Now With Free Signup Bonus

What MGM and Ladbrokes bring to the table

MGM is the largest casino company in the world. Leveraging the MGM brand and the company’s portfolio of properties should position the venture to be one of the top players in the industry.

Ladbrokes brings its sports betting expertise as well as platforms for mobile and brick and mortar betting.

It is worth noting, MGM is already involved in sports betting in both Nevada and New Jersey. In Nevada, the company was a very small player in the mobile betting industry. However, it was first to market along with Monmouth Park when wagering launched in New Jersey last month.

The Borgata sportsbook brought in almost $1 million in its first two weeks. Monmouth Park fared much better, taking in $2.2 million.

GVC’s rumored deal with Valley Forge Casino

It appears MGM is not the only US company GVC has talked with about sports betting either. While not confirmed, rumors suggest GVC will be part of Valley Forge Casino’s online gambling plans.

The Pennsylvania casino was one of nine companies that applied for a $10 million interactive gaming license. If granted, Valley Forge would be able to offer poker, table games, and slots online.

What could throw a wrench in this potential partnership is Boyd Gaming. The company announced its $280 million acquisition of Valley Forge. That deal is not final yet. It is unclear how Boyd will treat the potential partnership.

It’s worth noting that MGM has a presence in many states, but Pennsylvania is not one of them.

Photo by Barry Barnes / Shutterstock.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The post MGM And Ladbrokes Are About To Become A Sports Betting Behemoth appeared first on Play USA.

Cure The Post-WSOP Blues: Top Stories To Watch In The Second Half Of 2018

These days, the poker world’s most compelling stories don’t end at the World Series of Poker. In fact, most are just heating up.

People play big-time tournament poker all year round. The 2018 WSOP wrapped up 10 days ago. However, there’s still a whole lot poker fans have to look forward to.

There are massive tournament series playing out on both sides of the Atlantic. Plus, the chance to see if some of the amazing trends that developed in the first half of 2018 will continue into the second.

We realize there are undoubtedly a whole lot more, but here at US Poker, we’re focused on two storylines centered around US players we think are the ones to watch for in the second half of 2018.

Can Justin Bonomo stay red hot?

Virginia-raised Justin Bonomo has had such a great start to 2018, his year will likely hold up as the most productive in poker history, even if he doesn’t play another hand for the rest of it.

Bonomo has booked an incredible $24,945,435 in tournament earnings up to the end of the 2018 WSOP. In fact, he’s now on top of poker’s all-time money winners list with $42,979,591 in career tournament earnings.

He collected $15 million alone by winning the two biggest tournaments of the year, the $300,000 buy-in Super High Roller Bowl and the WSOP’s $1 million buy-in The Big One for One Drop. He collected the other almost $10 million winning the HKD $2 million buy-in Super High Roller Bowl China, finishing second in the 2018 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure $100,000 buy-in Super High Roller, and making the final table or winning another 12 high roller events with buy-ins of $25,000 or more.

Bonomo, who now lives in either Las Vegas, Nevada, Toronto, Canada, or out of a suitcase, depending on what time of year it is, has gone on record saying he is going to take a little post-WSOP vacation. However, odds are he’ll be back for a little heat check before long.

Hot August nights

His outstanding 2018 could continue as soon as August. The 2018 Seminole Hard Rock Poker Open schedule in South Florida includes a $50,000 Super High Roller with a $1 million guarantee on Aug. 8. Plus, the PokerStars European Poker Tour will be back in Barcelona, Spain from Aug. 21 to Sept. 2.

That schedule includes:

  • The €100,000 EPT Barcelona Super High Roller with unlimited re-entry on Aug. 25
  • A Single Day €50,000 single re-entry event on Aug. 28
  • The Single Day €25,000 single re-entry event on Aug. 30
  • Another Single Re-Entry €25,000 event on Sept. 1

Heading for the fall

Even if Bonomo sticks solely to high roller events, he’ll have plenty more opportunities to add to his 2018 take.

WSOP Europe will go off in the Czech Republic in October with both a €25,000 High Roller and €100,000 Super High Roller on the schedule. Plus, The World Poker Tour will be in South Florida in November for the WPT Seminole Rock N’ Roll Poker Open, and it will likely include some high roller events.

Into December, the WPT Five Diamond World Poker Classic will run at Bellagio in Las Vegas. It traditionally includes a $10,000 Main Event and a variety of nosebleed buy-in events as well. Plus, EPT Prague is set for Dec. 7 to 18. The full schedule has yet to be released, but will include at least a €50,000 buy-in EPT Super High Roller Dec. 10 to 12.

With almost $25 million in the bank already this year, it will truly be up to Bonomo to decide when and where he plays to close out 2018. However, he’s a good bet to book cashes in at least one or two of these events and add to an annual total the high roller community will likely be shooting at for years to come.

Either way, it’ll be worth keeping an eye on these events just to see if he shows up.

New Players Get A Free Bonus At WSOP.com NJ

Can Shaun Deeb wrap up WSOP Player of the Year?

Upstate New York native Shaun Deeb could clearly care less what the world thinks of him. But even those who detest slow rolling would agree he’s now one of the most skilled, outspoken, and entertaining players on the planet.

His 2018 WSOP results are certainly impressive. Deeb cashed in an outstanding 16 events this summer for close to $2.5 million. He won two WSOP bracelets. Plus, he’s the clubhouse leader in the WSOP Player of the Year race heading into the 2018 WSOP Europe at King’s Casino in Rozvadov, Czech Republic this fall.

Deeb is committed to attending the 10-WSOP bracelet series running Oct. 9 to Nov. 2. If only to make sure no one edges him out in the POY race.

The WSOP POY clubhouse lead

Deeb has 4,334.06 POY points in the bag. However, there are other top pros close. He’ll want to make sure Ben Yu, Joe Cada and new Poker Hall of Famer John Hennigan don’t catch up. Not to mention the gaggle of players with more than 2,000 points already, including Deeb nemesis Paul Volpe.

It will be interesting to see how many bullets Deeb fires in the €550 Colossus kicking things off. It features a whopping eight starting flights. There should be a boatload of discount points available in that one. Points that could ensure it’s his face on the banner unveiled at the Rio in Las Vegas next summer.

Stay tuned poker fans, because this is bound to get exciting. In addition to these two storylines, there’s still plenty more worth watching for in the second half of 2018.

Lead image courtesy of WPT/Flickr

The post Cure The Post-WSOP Blues: Top Stories To Watch In The Second Half Of 2018 appeared first on .