The Philippine Poker Championship recently posted its
Prize Payout Schedule. A few people have begun talking about this. On the manilapoker yahoo group, a debate has sprung up on its merits as a payout schedule - and beyond. I decided to throw my .02 cents in...here's a copy of what I posted. Let me know what you think.
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A humble submission on how the payout schedule may be altered to
better fit industry standards for payouts. I am also submitting this
document for the consideration of the Poker Club. I know at least
the Poker Club Secretariat reads this board, but I am also emailing
this to them.
Caveat: I don't speak as an insider, merely as an interested
observer (who is still trying to decide whether or not to play the
tourney).
Let's start with the basis of the debate on whether the current
published payout structure is "good" or "bad". As far as I know,
the PPT kicked of the event with a promise of a P1 million prize for
the 1st place finisher, and then ultimately guaranteed a total prize
pool of 1.6 million for the field. 600K then would be paid to final
9 players after the champ.
This clearly skews the whole pool (1.6m) badly vis-à-vis standard
payout schedules for the poker world.
But it was a great marketing message (they are after all selling a
21K seat, which is steep for most local players' tourney bankrolls).
What I would have done is not guarantee the 1m to the champion. I
would have used my standard (and admittedly flat) payout schedule to
disburse this way (10 ways paid). By the way, if they do seat
between 80 and 100 players, 10 players is a good portion of the
field to be paid.
Percentages:
30,20,12,10,8,6,5,4,3,2
Money:
480000
320000
192000
160000
128000
96000
80000
64000
48000
32000
1,600,000
But that's just to illustrate how I'd do it. The reality is the PPT
is faced with how to distribute 600K into 9 places in a reasonable
way. We now have to treat this as a tourney in which 9 ways are paid
with a total prize pool of 600K. That's tough for the players,
because the absolute value of their buy-in vis-à-vis the pot has
decreased to 7500 from 21K (assuming 80 players, because 600,000/80
= 7500.00). A reverse overlay, if you will.
Left to my own devices, I'd apply my nine ways paid schedule to the
600K.
Percentages:
32,21,15,10,8,5,4,3,2
Money:
192000
126000
90000
60000
48000
30000
24000
18000
12000
600,000
This makes a difference in the way people are rewarded, and I
believe more in keeping with the way players are used to being paid.
Remember we treat the 1st place winner as a real lucky person in
this field and the beneficiary of what I'm calling the reverse
overlay effect of this tourney. Everybody else makes money, even the
bottom 2 places, who are paid less than 21K. Remember that because
of the skew towards first, we have two prize pools (1m and 600K).
the net effect is that everybody but the 1st placer theoretically
pays 21K for a P7500.00 seat. Everybody but the eventual winner
should just resign themselves to that I guess.
As an aside, I know a guy who is trying to sell his seat (won in a
satellite) for 18K. Based on the above, I would pay no more than
P7500.00 for it, because in my mind that is its real value.
Satellite Effect
But, because the vast bulk of this field will have entered via
satellite tourneys, their net cost would actually be lower than our
theoretical P7500 mark. Around P3500 would be the average actual
cost of a tourney seat. So paying 10th and 9th place less than 21K
will likely still be profitable.
I believe that under this model, each person is rewarded
appropriately past the bubble, and the incremental jumps in money by
place make it worth playing up the ladder.
This model can be tweaked some more.
Appreciate any thoughts.