The World Series of Poker Circuit is one of the most popular mid-major tours in the game, and gives mid-stakes grinders ample opportunity to pursue gold jewelry in the bracelet off-season. While poker players everywhere dream of winning a WSOP bracelet in the summer, Circuit grinders aim to collect rings to signify their accomplishments.
The 16th WSOP Circuit U.S. Season promises to be the biggest ever, both in terms of stops and payouts. This year, the U.S. Portion of the WSOP Circuit gets underway just one day after the summer WSOP concludes, with the first of 35 stops beginning July 17, 2019 at Choctaw Durant in Oklahoma/Dallas area. The 2018 World Series of Poker (WSOP) is the 49th annual tournament, and took place from May 30 to July 17 at the Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. There was a record 78 bracelet events. The $10,000 No Limit Hold'em Main Event began on July 2 and concluded on July 15. 2018/2019 WSOP Circuit The 15th season of the World Series of Poker Circuit begins August 2 in Harrah’s Cherokee. This is expected to be a record-breaking season on the Circuit, with an expected 28 stops. The 2018-19 WSOP Circuit season will have a familiar. Feb 04, '21 - Mar 03, '21 2021 Power Poker Series Kickoff Festival Bally's Las Vegas Hotel & Casino.
Drawing primarily mid-stakes grinders and recreational players, the Circuit has become a prime avenue for female poker players to showcase their skills and compete for hardware, cash and prestige. While year-over-year female participation stats can’t be tracked due to records being venue-dependent, ladies continue to make their mark on the Circuit with leaderboard runs, final tables and ring wins in open events.
Many women have excelled on the Circuit, most notably the female ring leader and two-time bracelet winner Loni Harwood, who has collected five Circuit rings. One of her bracelets came in the 2014/2015 season-ending National Championship, which was renamed the Global Casino Championship (GCC) the following season. She bested a field of 122 to win the $10,000 buy-in event for $341,599.
Harwood’s latest Circuit win came in the $2,200 High Roller at the Rio in February 2018 for $72,802. She also won a $365 No-Limit Hold’em Reentry event for $10,801 at the previous stop at Seminole Casino Coconut Creek.
While we're now past the halfway point of the 28-stop domestic Circuit schedule for the 2018/2019 season, we take a look at some ladies highlights from the first half of the season, through December's IP Biloxi stop.
Excluding winners of any ladies event on the schedule, the first half of the season saw 11 female ring winners, one of those coming in a Seniors Event and two in the Online Circuit stop. One of the 13 live main event winners from August-December 2018 was a woman, and four ladies landed among the top 50 players in the season-long Circuit leaderboard at the halfway point. Let's have a look at some major highlights.
Back in the summer of 2018, Farhintaj Bonyadiwon a bracelet in Event #36: $1,000 Super Seniors No-Limit Hold'em, joining her son Farzad 'Freddy' Bonyadi in family bracelet winners and making them the first mother-son duo to accomplish the coveted poker feat.
Another mother-son duo now has now claimed Circuit rings as Manju Gera, mother of two-time ring winner Nikhil Gera, is now a ring winner. The mother in the duo won her ring in the $400 H.O.R.S.E. event held during the Thunder Valley Circuit event in September. She outlasted a field of 74 players to claim the $8,303 top prize.
She went into the final table with the chip lead and held on to it, beating out a tough cast of opponents whom she said she knew nothing about.
“I think, with me being a middle-aged woman, they thought that they could bluff a lot of hands against me… and I just happened to get cards,” she said.
“I think, with me being a middle-aged woman, they thought that they could bluff a lot of hands against me.'
She may have gotten the cards, but she clearly also has the skill. She has 40 cashes on her Hendon Mob, many of those coming in Omaha hi-lo or mixed game variants, and she went on to add two more cashes including a final table after her win. Gera finished 10th in the very next event, the $400 Omaha Hi-Lo, and followed that up with a seventh-place finish in the $400 Pot-Limit Omaha event.
Gera's three cashes at Thunder Valley secured her Casino Champ, making her the first female to win that title since Wendy Freedman (lead image, right) did so at the Bicycle Casino in December 2015. It also appears that she is the first player to capture Casino Champion honors by racking up points solely in non-hold'em events.
In October 2018, Heather Alcorn became the third-ever female WSOP Circuit Main Event by outlasting a field of 389 entries at Horseshoe Southern Indiana. A professional dealer and familiar face at the WSOP Circuit and summer WSOP, Alcorn couldn't work the Southern Indiana stop, but popped in to say hi to friends and play one event while driving through town. It turned out to be a fortuitous decision, as she explained to WSOP Circuit reporters after the win.
'I thought I was going to stay one night and play one tournament, ended up final tabling, so I stayed the next day and final tabled that one. So I went ahead and played the main.'
She later told PokerNews contributor Bernard Lee for a strategy article that she gets to practice poker skills while dealing, skills that are useful when she finds herself on the other side of the deck.
'One advantage of getting to watch these players all the time is practicing my reading ability,' Alcorn said.
Having dealt in a variety of poker settings, including the WSOP Main Event final table in each of the last five years, Alcorn has had plenty of chances to practice reading poker players. The skills seem to be paying off, as she is now the proud owner of her own WSOP Circuit ring, which has also automatically qualified her into the $10,000 GCC for a shot at more.
Alcorn became the third woman to take down a Circuit main event, following in the footsteps of Yashuo “Michelle” Chin(Horseshoe Council Bluffs, April 2015) and Vanessa Truong(Harrah’s Cherokee, April 2017).
In addition to Gera and Alcorn, who both qualified for the GCC during the first half of the 2018/19 Circuit, nine more ladies captured gold. Loretta Sax won hers in the Seniors event of the Thunder Valley stop, and there were two online ring winners: Tara Cain (lead image, center) and Kathryn Stone Cappuccio (lead image, center right).
Wendy Freedman's Omaha hi-lo victory at Horseshoe Hammond in October earned her ring No. 3, putting her tied for second in most rings for a female player. The other owners of three rings include La Sengphet, Nancy Birnbaum and Janet Fitzgerald.
The following is a complete list of female ring winners (excluding Ladies Event winners) for the first half of the 2018/19 WSOP Circuit Season, in chronological order.
Player Name | Hometown | Circuit Stop 2018/2019 | Event | Entries | Prize Money |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lakisha Slaughter | Fairburn, Georgia | Harrah's Cherokee - August | Event #3: $400 No-Limit Hold'em | 584 | $40,471 |
Manju Gera | Diamond Bar, California | Thunder Valley - September | Event #4: $400 H.O.R.S.E. | 74 | $8,303 |
Loretta Sax | Citrus Heights, California | Thunder Valley - September | Event #9: $250 Seniors Event | 158 | $8,531 |
Tara Cain | Willmar, Minnesota | WSOP.com (Online Circuit) - September | Event #2: $215 No-Limit Hold'em | 531 | $27,081 |
Kathryn Cappuccio | Brigantine, New Jersey | WSOP.com (Online Circuit) - September | Event #3: $320 No-Limit Hold'em 6-Handed | 389 | $30,926 |
Heather Alcorn | Ozark, Missouri | Horseshoe Southern Indiana - October | Event #10: $1,700 Main Event | 389 | $129,654 |
Wendy Freedman | Las Vegas, Nevada | Horseshoe Hammond - October | Event #10: $400 Omaha Hi-Lo 8 or Better | 132 | $12,197 |
Ruth Hagen | Troy, Illinois | Harveys Lake Tahoe - October | Event #4: $400 No-Limit Hold'em | 145 | $13,398 |
Nancy Matson | Santa Monica, California | Bicycle Casino - December | Event #9: $1,125 No-Limit Hold'em | 159 | $42,940 |
Leslie Scearcy | Lemoore, California | Bicycle Casino - December | Event #13: $250 No-Limit Hold'em (1 Day) | 350 | $16,090 |
Debra Irvine | Baton Rouge, Louisiana | IP Biloxi - December | Event #2: $400 No-Limit Hold'em | 729 | $44,264 |
Besides gaining a freeroll $10,000 GCC entry by winning a Circuit main event or casino champion title at a domestic stop during the season, the 50 overall season leaderboard finishers also qualify. Just past the halfway point at the time of writing, four ladies occupy places in the top 50: Irene Carey (20th), Kinda Sakkal (29th), Lakisha Slaughter (34th) and Freedman (42nd).
The second half of the 2018/19 season is underway, now in the second domestic stop of the year at Thunder Valley. You can read the full recap from January's Choctaw stop here. A full list of ladies WSOP Circuit ring winners and GCC qualifiers for the season will be posted after the final stop in New Orleans in May.
Images and data courtesy of WSOP Circuit.
The 2018 World Series of Poker begins this week (live satellites on Tuesday, actual events on Wednesday), so naturally the focus of the poker world will be on the Rio in Las Vegas for the next couple months. But not everyone can take the time to travel to Vegas for the WSOP or afford the hefty buy-ins, so the WSOP Circuit is more up their alley. To that end, the World Series of Poker has released the schedule for the 2018-2019 WSOP Circuit season.
The 2018-2019 season will be the biggest ever for the Circuit, with 28 stops spanning this August to next May. The season won’t technically end until some time after that (date is TBA) with the Global Casino Championship. This year’s Global Casino Championship is scheduled for August, after the WSOP, but we will still need to wait for the date of next year’s event.
There are no new casinos on the 2018-2019 WSOP Circuit, though one, Horseshoe Baltimore, has been removed from the schedule. A number of casinos will host two tour stops, including Harrah’s Cherokee in North Carolina, where the season kicks off, and Horseshoe Hammond and Horseshoe Tunica, which only had one stop last year.
The WSOP has implemented a few changes to this year’s Circuit events, as well. The buy-ins have been “polished,” as the WSOP puts it, in an effort to increase prize pools and make the cash-out process smoother. The “primary” price points will be $250, $400, and $600; $400 is the new price for ring events, up from $365. Main Events at each stop are now $1,700.
Starting stacks have been increased by 50 percent for ring events. Players will begin with 15,000 chips in the $400 events and 30,000 chips in the $1,700 Main Events.
And for the first time, some ring events on the 2018-2019 WSOP Circuit will be Big Blind Ante tournaments. This game type was tested on last year’s Circuit and apparently worked well enough for Big Blind Ante events to be added to the WSOP proper this year. In this game, rather than having each player pony up an ante once the tournament reaches that stage, the player in the big blind will pay everybody’s ante. It is a way to speed things up, as it will virtually eliminate instances of players forgetting to pay the ante and dealers won’t have to keep track of as much.
“For our fifteenth season, the time was right to take a hard look at our offering and refreshing it to give players a better experience all around,” said WSOP Tournament Director Jack Effel in a press release. “Everyone loves more starting chips, and we think things like the Big Blind Ante and larger prize pools will be big hits for all players.”
As mentioned, the date for the Global Casino Championship has yet to be announced. This event is invitation-only and will have a minimum prize pool of $1 million. To qualify to the tournament, players must do one of three things:
1) Win a Circuit Main Event
2) Win a “casino championship,” determined by the player who earns the most tournament points in ring events at a single Circuit stop
3) Rank in the top 50 total points earners for the entire 2018-2019 WSOP Circuit season
Those players will earn free seats into the Global Casino Championship. Everyone who wins a ring event but does not qualify for a free seat can buy-in for $10,000, as can the top 100 players in the 2018 World Series of Poker Player of the Year standings. In years past, the WSOP Circuit has extended the freeroll qualifiers past the top 50 if players in the top 50 also qualify via one of the other methods. Thus, if a Main Event winner is also in the top 50, the free invites are extended to the top 51.
August 2-13, 2018 – Harrah’s Cherokee (North Carolina)
August 16-27, 2018 – Foxwoods Resort Casino (Connecticut)
September 6-17, 2018 – Thunder Valley Casino (Sacramento area, California)
September 13-24, 2018 – Seminole Casino Coconut Creek (Coconut Creek, Florida)
September 27 – October 8, 2018 – Horseshoe Southern Indiana (Louisville)
October 11-22, 2018 – Horseshoe Hammond (Chicago)
October 25 – November 5, 2018 – Harveys Lake Tahoe (Reno/Tahoe Nevada)
October 31 – November 12, 2018 – Choctaw Durant (Dallas/Oklahoma)
November 16–27, 2018 – Planet Hollywood (Las Vegas Strip)
November 22 – December 3, 2018 – Harrah’s Cherokee (North Carolina)
December 1-12, 2018 – The Bicycle Casino (Los Angeles)
December 6-17, 2018 – IP Casino Resort Spa (Biloxi, Mississippi)
January 2-14, 2019 – Choctaw Durant (Dallas/Oklahoma)
January 10-21, 2019 – Thunder Valley Casino (Sacramento area, California)
January 17-28, 2019 – Horseshoe Tunica (Mississippi)
January 31 – February 11, 2019 – Potawatomi (Milwaukee, Wisconsin)
February 7–18, 2019 – Seminole Casino Coconut Creek (Coconut Creek, Florida)
February 15-26, 2019 – Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino (Las Vegas)
February 21 – March 4, 2019 – Horseshoe Hammond (Chicago)
February 28 – March 11, 2019 – To Be Announced
March 3-14, 2019 – The Bicycle Casino (Los Angeles)
March 7 – 18, 2019 – Harrah’s Atlantic City (New Jersey)
March 14-25, 2019 – Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Tulsa (Oklahoma)
March 21 – April 1, 2019 – Bally’s (Las Vegas Strip)
March 28 – April 8, 2019 – Horseshoe Council Bluffs (Omaha/Iowa)
April 10-22, 2019 – Harrah’s Cherokee (North Carolina)
April 25 – May 5, 2019 – Horseshoe Tunica (Mississippi)
May 9-20, 2019 – Harrah’s New Orleans (Louisiana)
To Be Announced – Global Casino Championship