2012 Aug 3

Global Poker Index: Brock Parker Sees Biggest Rise Up The GPI

Each week, the Global Poker Index releases a list of the top 300 tournament poker players in the world using a formula that takes a player’s results over six half-year periods. With the post World Series of Poker lull still in effect, the top ten remains mostly the same but for a few minor changes. For a look at the entire list of 300, visit the official GPI website.

The Top 10 as of July 30, 2012

Welcome to the GPI

Steve Barshak leads five new players on this week’s GPI. His 14th-place finish in the $5,000 No-Limit Hold’em Main Event at the 2012 Southern Poker Million Dollar Heater (worth $12,222) aged into Period 2, partly filling what was previously vacant. He still has a full slate of Period 1 results counting, too.

New Additions

PlayerTotal GPI ScoreGPI Rank
Steve Barshak 1,193.34 238th
Mike Gorodinsky 1,105.51 280th
Jeff Madsen 1,095.13 285th
Justin Zaki 1,084.43 293rd
Marko Neumann 1,074.79 299th

Falling from the GPI this week were Andrey Gulyy, Luca Pagano, Manuel Bevand, Mark Rose, and Basil Yaiche.

Ups and Downs

The biggest rise of the week belonged to Brock Parker. Two results from his 2012 Borgata Winter Open (a first and seventh-place finish worth $76,387 and $84,223, respectively), aged into Period 2, which was previously empty. Meanwhile, his Period 1 slate is still full thanks to his seven WSOP cashes this summer.

Biggest Gains

RankPlayerTotal ScoreChange in Rank From Last Week
103rd Brock Parker 1,608.39 +60
124th Heinz Kamutzki 1,510.32 +33
140th Bruno “Kool Shen” Lopes 1,459.28 +25
152nd Josh Brikis 1,432.95 +45
164th Zimnan Ziyard 1,370.83 +29
165th Jeff Lisandro 1,364.21 +34
197th Aubin Cazals 1,284.58 +42
230th Harrison Gimbel 1,208.37 +27
232nd Brett Richey 1,204.25 +35
258th Massimo Mosele 1,140.71 +22

The steepest fall this week belonged to Jean-Noel Thorel. His fifth-place finish in a “5,000 No-Limit Hold’em event (worth “38,830) at the Euro Finals of Poker 2012 aged into Period 2.

Biggest Drops

RankPlayerTotal ScoreChange in Rank From Last Week
137th Tristan Wade 1,464.15 -24
145th David Benyamine 1.447.72 -24
202nd Sean Getzwiller 1,273.68 -54
203rd Jean-Noel Thorel 1,270.74 -68
204th Dermot Blain 1,264.59 -37
234th Salvatore Bonavena 1,197.39 -34
239th Marco Leonzio 1,189.53 -66
251st Dan Murariu 1,159.50 -50
253rd Sebastian Winkler 1,156.83 -30
275th Chad Brown 1,110.46 -26
288th Andrea Benelli 1,092.88 -27

What’s In Store?

With August here, the live tournament scene is going to start to pick up. The WPT Merit Cyprus Classic is set to kick off this weekend (the results won’t take effect until after next week’s rankings, though).

To look at the entire list of 300, visit the official GPI website. While you’re at it, follow the GPI on Twitter and its Facebook page.

To stay on top of the GPI and other happenings in the poker world, follow us on Twitter and like us on Facebook.

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Global Poker Index: Brock Parker Sees Biggest Rise Up The GPI


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2012 Aug 2

When most people think about the World Series of Poker, they think of the no-limit hold ‘em Main Event. But from my experience, the best part of the WSOP is all the glorious mixed game events offered. For mixed games players, there aren’t many tournaments that offer such a great structure and a ton of value. So, when the WSOP rolls around, you bet that I am looking to play as many tournaments as I can. Aside from the difference of games in mixed tournaments compared to NLHE, there are many other great things about playing the mixed events. There is a lot of value in them, the community is very close nit, the chance of getting that elusive bracelet is much higher, and you can always enter in a mixed event if you bust out early in an afternoon NLHE event.

The WSOP is much like summer camp for poker players. We all run around hyped up that it’s summer looking forward to a great time with friends and sharing living quarters, and after it’s over we reminisce about (hopefully) the great time we had and can’t wait to go back next year. There are a ton of activities for us in Las Vegas and a wide variety of tournaments to choose from, so why choose mixed games? From the first year that I started playing in the WSOP, I have been grinding the mixed game tournaments with success. I have found that the best reason to play mixed tournaments is the value that comes from them. A lot of recreational players are drawn to the fun array of mixed games and want to jump in the action with little experience. I have seen it all- from recreational players playing the game for literally the first time ever to the pro who still didn’t understand the value of certain hands in razz. To be brash, there are very few people who know what they are doing in mixed games. This, as you can imagine, sets the stage for hundreds of players scrambling for a bracelet in hopes of running good without much experience. I generally like to play the higher buy-in events because the structure is much better for the solid player. The lower buy-in events are great, but are much more difficult to fade the variance of a quick structure. Because there are so few people that really understand the nature of mixed games, the ones that do understand the game generally are familiar with others that understand it.

I have met a great deal of friends through the WSOP. They are mostly mixed game players since I generally stick to playing the mixed game events, and I feel as if there is a great bond between friends who play mixed games. Because there isn’t a lot of info on mixed games out there, the info that is known is kept quiet between those that have done the work on the games. Most people generally don’t like to share unless it is a friend or another person who knows a different game better than them, to which they can share information. I have also made a bunch of friends through coaching stud games and swapping info with other pros. One of the experiences that I enjoy is watching my friends going for a bracelet and getting deep in a mixed tournament. This year I had a few shots at a bracelet in different events, but couldn’t close. However, I had two different friends win a bracelet (Vincent Van Der Fluit and Vanessa Selbst) and a few other friends come very close. It was great watching them and even better celebrating with them. It seems like someone I know wins a bracelet every year and I believe it’s because the shorter fields in the mixed games give the pros a greater chance at winning one.

After Chris Moneymaker won the 2003 WSOP, poker had a boom, and NLHE attracted a huge part of that boom because of the television coverage. The mixed games got a bunch of new players as well, but not nearly as many as NLHE. The fields of the NLHE events at the WSOP are huge. Generally, there are at least 1,000 players in the smaller fields, and up to 4,000 in the bigger fields (excluding the Main Event). The mixed games however generally have at most 900 players and can have as little as 100 players.  The 10k NL single draw got 101 entries (yes I was one of them). So, as you can imagine, the chances of beating out 100 players is going to be much better than beating out 4,000 players. This is why you hear about pros that win a bracelet that have never even played the game before; they ran good in a small field. Another reason the mixed game community is pretty close nit is because of the small field sizes; you will often play and see the same people most of the time. Generally when I sit at a table, if I don’t recognize one person at the table, it will be a good day for my chip stack.

For those that aren’t convinced yet to start learning mixed games and get in the tournaments next year, did I mention that all the mixed tournaments don’t start until 5pm? That’s right- you can go out and party the night before, or go out late with friends, and still wake up in time for the tournament the next day. Unlike most NLHE tournaments which always start around noon, the mixed tournaments are on their own schedule. They spread out the mixed games and set them all at 5pm. So if you bust early from a NLHE tournament, you can just hop right into a mixed one. This also attracts some weaker NLHE players and adds to the value. Personally, I love that they are later in the afternoon as I love to sleep in and I don’t think I could resist the nightlife in Vegas in exchange for waking up early.

In my experience, I’ve played a ton of mixed game tournaments during the WSOP and I’ve loved every trip. For the first time, I wasn’t profitable in tournaments this year, but I still had a blast as I enjoyed playing the tournaments, hanging out with friends, partying, and taking advantage of everything Vegas has to offer. The only problems I have every year is figuring out how I’m going to top last year, and how I’m going to fit more mixed tournaments in my schedule.

Copyright 2011 @ ChronicPoker.com | PokerBro.com | CardWhores.com


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