September 11 2012, Rich Ryan

On Tuesday, the World Poker Tour Season XI Grand Prix de Paris continued with Day 1b at the Aviation Club de France. There were 132 registrants, creating a total player pool of 228, but only 92 survived the day. No player finished with 100,000 chips or more, but French singer Grégoire Boissenot ended with 95,000 chips. Biting at his heels are Peter Jetten and Matt Salsberg, both of whom bagged exactly 83,575 chips.
The overall chip leader in the tournament is Jacques Enjoubault, who finished Day 1a with 225,200 chips.
Other notables who survived the day include 2009 November Niner Antoine Saout (77,795), PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino EPT Grand Final Champion Mohsin Charania (72,250), two-time $50,000 Poker Players Championship Winner Michael Mizrachi (69,750), 2011 WSOP bracelet winner Fabrice Soulier (62,500), and Tony G (62,450), who finished runner-up in this event in 2004.
Tony G sat down and immediately won a nice-sized pot off of 2012 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure Main Event runner-up Kyle Julius. Tony G opened to 1,100 from early position, and two players called, including Julius on the button. The flop was 

, and the action checked to Tony G who tossed out 2,000. Only Julius called. Tony G fired 3,000 when the
turned, Julius called, and Tony G fired a third bullet worth 4,000 when the
completed the board. Julius folded tens face up, and Tony G flashed a black eight, announcing that he flopped a set.
Salsberg got off to a rough start, losing more than two thirds of his stack in the first few hours, but doubled through Vanessa Selbst. Salsberg turned a set of queens and called an all-in bet from Selbst who held straight a flush draws. The river bricked, shooting Salsberg’s stack above 40,000 chips.
Dan O’Brien, Guillaume Darcourt, Guillaume Rivet, Roberto Romanello, and Selbst all busted on their second bullet, and JC Alvarado, Ludovic Lacay, and Darren Elias all busted in their only try.
Day 2 is scheduled for 1500 CEST (0600 PDT) on Wednesday, and the PokerNews Live Reporting Team will be there providing up-to-the-minute updates from the Aviation Club de France.
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September 11 2012, Donnie Peters

The World Series of Poker recently announced a “50,000 Super High Roller event that will be held at the WSOP Europe. The announcement and the event has generated a fair amount of buzz throughout the industry, especially as the bracelet bash in Cannes grows closer and closer. PokerNews reached out to Ty Stewart, executive director of the WSOP and vice president of Caesars Interactive Entertainment, about the event, and he was kind enough to answer several questions.
How did the WSOP decide to put the “50,000 Super High Roller on the schedule?
Many factors, but really, the success of the Big One [for One Drop] and seeing all the high-stakes action it created around the city. There is an appetite for a group of players to continue to play really big, and we strive to have offerings for every player at WSOPE events. Also, there is the dynamic that in France for hold’em there is a 4 percent tax to the government with no cap [on live games], so nosebleed live action is difficult to organize. A high-stakes tournament seemed [like the] best way to ensure these players could get the action they crave beyond the large tournament fields.
Why make it a “50,000 buy-in and not “100,000 or higher?
Felt right, particularly since reentry is allowed. Guys like [Richard] Yong and [Paul] Phua are accustomed to playing really big. But 50,000 euros is already huge. We looked at the high-roller and super high-roller tournaments out there, how many distinct players each achieved, and felt that “50K would give the tournament the best chance.
Can you tell us about the decision to make the event a reentry?
Reentry has more competitive balance in my book. Obviously, we dabbled our toe in this format with this year’s $1,500 [No-Limit Hold'em] at the WSOP – and [are] doing it for the Circuit.
But a big reason for the reentry at the High Roller is two-fold. One, WSOPE is a destination event, and poker players would rather be back in action than on a beach. You go halfway around the world and want to play, unlike Vegas where there is another event starting in a few hours. Two, for a High Roller, I think players want to see the prize pool as big as possible. There will be guys in the field likely firing two bullets and that means more value.
Are reentry events now coming back into the mix for future WSOP events, specifically the 2013 WSOP?
We’re looking at the schedule right now, [but it's] too early to tell. We want diversity of games at the WSOP and players want the highest ROI. There’s likely a place for it, but we’re not going to go crazy and make every event reentry, which seems in vogue these days.
Why not make the “50,000 Super High Roller a bracelet event?
We try to be very cautious with expansion of bracelets to maintain prestige and credibility. We had a big year of growth moving to Cannes, but still wanted to stay flat and focus on event-by-event growth. We have additional bracelet events coming up later this year with WSOP APAC. We must be creative and extend the offerings around the centerpiece tournaments.
There’s a lot of action to be spread outside the bracelets. This year in Vegas, we had over 230,000 total entries in tournaments and satellites – with only about 75,000 of them bracelet events. We’re trying to do the same here in Europe with nearly 70 total events. Last I checked, players still like money.
How many players is the WSOP expecting for this event?
We’ve learned our lesson not to get into over/under business. We just like to continue to surprise people. High-stakes poker is alive and well. I don’t think the winner’s prize will be more than the Main Event, but you never know.
Are there any incentives for players planning to play?
We’re running great hotel specials right now; stay four nights, get the fifth free at Hotel Gray d’Albion, stay six nights, get the seventh free at Majestic Barrière. Regular fees are very low – 2 percent. I think the credibility that many of the high-stakes players will be teeing it up at WSOPE is strong incentive to come.
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