Thursday 3 September 2020

Facts and Figures of the GGPoker WSOP Online Main Event

On Saturday night, all eyes of the poker world will turn to the Event #77: $5,000 No Limit Hold’em Main Event when a winner will be crowned in the biggest-ever online poker tournament with a total prize pool of $27,559,500.

Starting all the way back on Sunday, August 16, a total field of 5,802 players signed up for a shot at poker immortality. After 23 starting flights, that number was whittled down to 1,178 and with a long Day 2 played out last Sunday, just 38 of them are left in contention.

While each of the remaining can already look back on fondly on this event with a massive payday of $39,214 secured, all eyes will be on the life-changing first-place prize of $3,904,686 to be awarded in the early hours of Sunday morning.

The Main Event will resume Saturday, September 5 at 6:30 p.m. UTC (2:30 p.m. EDT) to play down all the way to a champion, with PokerNews live reporting on deck to bring you blow-by-blow coverage of all the action., Today, we bring you all the key facts and figures about this unique event.

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Overall WSOP Online Main Event Facts and Figures

Buy-in $5,000
Total prize pool $27,559,500
Total # of players 5,082
Total # of starting flights 23
Players left after all Day 1’s 1,171
Players left after Day 2 38
Chip leader after Day 2 Bryan Piccioli (USA)
Next payout (38th place) $39,214
First-place prize $3,904,686
WSOP bracelet winners left 4 (Michael Lech, 2020 – Jonas Lauck, 2019 – Bryan Piccioli, 2013 – Arkadiy Tsinis, 2011)
Biggest WSOP cash Bryan Piccioli (6th in 2017 WSOP Main Event for $1,675,000)
Smallest WSOP cash Kelly Wong, Wenling Gao (no prior WSOP cashes)
Most WSOP cashes Arkadiy Tsinis (62)
Most GGPoker WSOP cashes Craig Timmis (13)
Oldest player left Arkadiy Tsinis (44)
Youngest player left Joshua McCully, Tzai Wei Phua (25)

Four WSOP Bracelet Winners Drawing the Spotlights

Among the 38 remaining players, there are four players left that have tasted WSOP success before: Arkadiy Tsinis, Jonas Lauck, Michael Lech, and Bryan Piccioli are those with prior bracelet wins and among those to watch in this event.

Chip leader Piccioli is also the only one who’s been on a WSOP Main Event before: in 2017, Piccioli finished in sixth place in the event ultimately won by Scott Blumstein. Check out

Online powerhouse Bryan Piccioli leading the way

Bryan Piccioli
Chip leader Bryan Piccioli is one of seven Americans left in the field

Chip leader going into Saturday is Allegany, NY’s Bryan Piccioli, who is the only player to come back with over 100 big blinds. An online powerhouse back in the day as “theczar19”, Piccioli received widespread attention during the 2017 WSOP Main Event where he reached the final table.

At the first final table since retiring the November Nine, Piccioli ultimately finished in sixth place for a payday of $1,675,000, an amount he can eclipse by finishing third or better in this event.

Check out this profile on Piccioli from the 2017 Main Event

Overshadowed by his deep Main Event run, it’s easy to overlook that Piccioli already has a WSOP bracelet shining on his mantelpiece. In 2013, the American traveled Down Under to play in the 2013 APAC where he won Event #1, A$1,100 Accumulator for A$211,575. In addition, he’s boasting numerous six-figure scored including a nearly $500K score at the 2016 WPT Bay 101 Shooting Star championship. He also scored fourteen cashes this summer on WSOP.com and an additional five (with this being his sixth) on GGPoker.

Piccioli finds himself in the most coveted spot going into the final day and will be the odds-on favorite to claim the nearly $4M up top.

Arkadiy Tsinis: Long-Time Grinder with Bracelet and Five Rings

Arkadiy Tsinis, winner of Event 38 1.5k NLH
Arkadiy Tsinis won his first WSOP bracelet back in 2011

The oldest player left in the field at just 44 years of age, Miami, FL’s Arkadiy Tsinis will be drawing from his extensive experience when cards go back in the air on Saturday. Heralding from the Sunshine State, Tsinis’ roots lie in the former Soviet state of Ukraine.

His WSOP resumé is endlessly long, highlighted by a 2011 bracelet win alongside five WSOP circuit rings and $1,710,502 in total winnings from 136 cashes, by far the most out of all players remaining.

Tsinis will start the final day as one of the shortest stacks and will need to spin it up 15 big blinds.

Jonas Lauck Gets A Second Main Event Chance Online

Jonas Lauck
Jonas Lauck won his first bracelet in last year’s $1,500 NLHE Super Turbo Bounty

Germany’s Jonas Lauck (33) captured his maiden bracelet in last year’s Event #56: $1,500 Super Turbo Bounty NLHE to win $260,335 in a single day. While that victory might be the highlight of his WSOP career so far, it’s hard to overlook his harsh near-miss from the 2016 WSOP Main Event.

You see, Lauck has been to the late stages of a WSOP Main Event before. Back in 2016, Lauck made it deep into Day 6 when a brutal bad beat occurred against Gordon Vayo, with the latter all-in and at risk for his tournament life holding ace-king against Lauck’s aces in a pot of over 60 big blinds. Vayo got there by turning an unlikely straight to double up and the rest, as they say, is history: Vayo went on all the way to finish second for over $4.6M, while Lauck was left with dust to bust shortly after in 37th place.

Later that year, the German received direct redemption as he won the 2016 WCOOP Main Event on PokerStars under his llJaYJaYll moniker for $1,517,541. With both the online score and last year’s bracelet win in the pocket, he’ll be one to watch on the final day as he’ll continue from the middle of the pack with 23 big blinds.

It’s a Fiesta with Michael Lech

Michael Lech
Michael Lech has eight WSOP circuit rings and a bracelet.

Popular American grinder Michael Lech (31), known as “MiguelFiesta” online, made headlines earlier this summer when he captured his first WSOP bracelet on WSOP.com after already having won eight Circuit rings. Always one to spread good vibes around, Lech’s celebration clip went viral afterwards.

Relocating to his favored Mexico after the WSOP.com series concluded, Lech moved over to GGPoker and continued his online onslaught to claim his spot among the final 38. He’ll start near the bottom of the pack, having 23 big blinds to work with.

Check how Michael Lech won his WSOP bracelet earlier this summer


21 Different Countries Represented: USA on Top

Despite Americans being forced to travel abroad to play on GGPoker due to legal reasons, they still are the most-represented country in the remaining field with seven players left, including chip leader Piccioli. The United Kingdom follows closely with five irons left in the fire, including no fewer than four (Michael Kane, Kelly Wong, Craig Timmis, and Benjamin Rolle) players in the top 10.

Poker powerhouses Brazil and Germany each have three players left to root for, while Russia, China, and Singapore are being represented by two players each. 14 countries have only a single player left, leaving a very diverse field to try and make online poker history.

Wenling Gao
Wenling Gao

There’s at least one female left in the field as China’s Wenling Gao sits in ninth place after two days. Those following the Asian poker scene are familiar with the Chinese powerhouse who sports nearly $700K in lifetime winnings according to the Hendon Mob, including a $150K score in the 2018 HK$100,000 High Roller at the APPT.

Kelly Wong sits fourth in chips but at this time, not much more information is known about the player besides the name and location. Both Gao and Wong are the only two players with no prior WSOP cashes, whether live or on one of the online clients.

Players Left by Country

Country Players Left
USA 7
United Kingdom 5
Brazil 3
Germany 3
Russia 2
China 2
Singapore 2
Bulgaria 1
Switzerland 1
Italy 1
Japan 1
Australia 1
Argentina 1
Spain 1
Thailand 1
France 1
Finland 1
New Zealand 1
Poland 1
Canada 1
The Netherlands 1


WSOP Statistics of All Remaining Main Event Players

Rank Name Country Chip Count Big Blinds Age Total WSOP Cashes 2020 WSOP GGPoker Cashes Biggest WSOP Cash
1 Bryan Piccioli USA 18,417,494 115 31 46 5 $1,675,000 – 6th in 2017 WSOP $10,000 MAIN EVENT
2 Michael Kane United Kingdom 15,907,969 99 32 16 2 $34,845 – 368th in 2019 WSOP $10,000 MAIN EVENT
3 Stoyan Madanzhiev Bulgaria 15,299,783 96 29 3 3 $2,859 – 552nd in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $1,500 Millionaire Maker
4 Kelly Wong United Kingdom 13,108,575 82 26 0 0 N/A
5 Craig Timmis United Kingdom 12,809,181 80 33 13 13 $77,883 – 2nd in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $800 Double Stack PLO
6 Dinesh Alt Switzerland 11,681,173 73 29 18 11 $10,721 – 92nd in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $5,000 NLHE 6-Handed Championship
7 Mariano Martiradonna Italy 11,116,489 69 39 2 0 $24,622 – 386th in 2015 WSOP $10,000 MAIN EVENT
8 Benjamin Rolle United Kingdom 10,789,181 67 32 6 2 $13,855 – 36th in 2015 WSOP $5,000 NLHE 6-Handed
9 Wenling Gao China 10,553,281 66 26 0 0 N/A
10 Joao Santos Brazil 10,433,786 65 28 5 5 $8,214 – 111th in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $1,500 Millionaire Maker
Rank Name Country Chip Count Big Blinds Age Total WSOP Cashes 2020 WSOP GGPoker Cashes Biggest WSOP Cash
11 Tyler Cornell USA 10,152,249 63 33 24 4 $102,102 – 68th in 2013 WSOP $10,000 MAIN EVENT
12 Dingxiang Ong Singapore 9,320,927 58 27 4 4 $2,115 – 669th in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $1,500 Millionaire Maker
13 Xuming Qi China 8,842,916 55 35 14 5 $59,295 – 151st in 2019 WSOP $10,000 MAIN EVENT
14 Samuel Taylor USA 8,635,342 54 30 16 0 $118,145 – 5th in 2013 WSOP $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em
15 Stefan Schillhabel Germany 8,412,841 53 34 15 4 €96,819 – 7th in 2017 WSOP Europe €25,000 NLHE High Roller
16 Satoshi Isomae Japan 8,359,674 52 39 3 1 $40,654 – 256th in 2011 WSOP $10,000 MAIN EVENT
17 Maicon Junior Gasperin Brazil 8,171,017 51 26 7 7 $5,225 – 225th in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $1,500 Millionaire Maker
18 Joshua McCully Australia 7,906,110 49 25 8 8 $6,091 – 29th in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $1,000 No-Limit Hold’em
19 Tyler Rueger USA 7,692,938 48 31 2 0 $37,705 – 325th in 2018 WSOP $10,000 MAIN EVENT
20 Tzai Wei Phua Singapore 7,338,038 46 25 8 8 $14,681 – 17th in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $400 COLOSSUS
Rank Name Country Chip Count Big Blinds Age Total WSOP Cashes 2020 WSOP GGPoker Cashes Biggest WSOP Cash
21 Martin Alejandro Arce Llobera Argentina 6,131,772 38 28 7 7 $246,766 – 2nd in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $1,111 Every 1 for Covid Relief
22 Jonas Lauck Germany 6,118,751 38 33 23 1 $260,335 – 1st in 2019 WSOP $1,500 NLHE Super Turbo Bounty
23 Avidan Cohen United Kingdom 5,880,731 37 32 6 6 $8,271 – 18th in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $1,000 NLHE 6-Handed
24 Manuel Saavedra Spain 5,847,283 37 32 9 7 $229,990 – 3rd in 2016 WSOP $5,00 No-Limit Hold’em 6-Handed
25 Lucas Fernandes Tabarin Brazil 5,695,282 36 26 7 7 $8,145 – 84th in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $2,100 NLHE Bounty Championship
26 Phachara Wongwichit Thailand 5,153,525 32 34 17 0 $84,453 – 4th in 2017 WSOP $1,500 NLHE Shootout
27 Chris Brewer USA 4,908,096 31 28 17 8 $49,664 – 6th in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $10,000 Heads Up NLHE Championship
28 Julien Perouse France 4,866,548 30 30 6 4 $5,161 – 21st in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $400 PLOSSUS
29 Samuel Vousden Finland 4,241,694 27 27 13 12 $24,832 – 14th in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $10,000 Heads Up NLHE Championship
30 Michael Lech USA 4,192,636 26 31 32 3 $401,888 – 2nd in 2016 WSOP $888 Crazy Eights NLHE
Rank Name Country Chip Count Big Blinds Age Total WSOP Cashes 2020 WSOP GGPoker Cashes Biggest WSOP Cash
31 Thomas Ward New Zealand 4,083,422 26 30 4 3 $33,734 – 313th in 2014 WSOP $10,000 MAIN EVENT
32 Mateusz Rypulak Poland 4,079,246 25 27 14 5 $31,170 – 356th in 2017 WSOP $10,000 MAIN EVENT
33 Ricky Tang Canada 3,397,845 21 40 5 0 $13,849 – 66th in 2017 WSOP $1,500 Monster Stack NLHE
34 Arkadiy Tsinis USA 2,394,386 15 44 62 7 $540,136 – 1st in 2011 WSOP $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em
35 Freek Scholten Netherlands 2,248,788 14 27 10 6 $327,563 – 2nd in 2019 WSOP $1,500 NLHE Double Stack
36 Julian Stuer Germany 2,111,979 13 31 14 2 $165,277 – 5th in 2017 WSOP $2,620 Marathon NLHE
37 Aleksandr Trofimov Russia 1,602,207 10 32 4 4 $82,633 – 4th in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $1,500 No-Limit Hold’em
38 Evgeny Galakhov Russia 958,516 6 30 1 1 $126,773 – 12th in 2020 GGPoker WSOP $25,000 NLHE Poker Players Championship

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Remaining WSOP Online Main Event Payouts

Place Payout
1 $3,904,686
2 $2,748,605
3 $1,928,887
4 $1,353,634
5 $949,937
6 $666,637
7 $467,825
8 $328,305
9 $230,395
10-13 $161,686
14-17 $113,465
18-26 $79,625
27-35 $55,880
36-38 $39,214

Sign Up for a GGPoker Account Through PokerNews

If you want to play in the WSOP 2020 Online on GGPoker, you’ll need to sign up for an account. By downloading GGPoker via PokerNews entitles you to a welcome bonus worth up to $600. Your first deposit is matched 200% up to a maximum of $600. Make sure you do it fast: the WSOP is in its final week!

The bonus releases into your account in $10 increments each time you earn 6,000 Fish Buffet Points, which is the equivalent of $60 in rake or tournament fees.


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source https://cryptonews.wealthsharingsystems.com/2020/09/facts-and-figures-of-the-ggpoker-wsop-online-main-event/

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