Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament
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The Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament was a series of no limit
Texas hold 'em Texas hold 'em (also known as Texas holdem, hold 'em, and holdem) is the most popular variant of the card game of poker. Two cards, known as hole cards, are dealt face down to each player, and then five Community card poker, community cards ...
poker tournament A poker tournament is a tournament where players compete by playing poker. It can feature as few as two players playing on a single table (called a " heads-up" tournament), and as many as tens of thousands of players playing on thousands of tabl ...
s. The first season is available on
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. It airs on
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in the
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and Ftn in the
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.


Results


Crew

The first series was hosted by
Chris Rose Christopher Rose (born January 27, 1971) is an American sportscaster for the NFL Network, and the interim radio play-by-play announcer for the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League (NFL). Outside of football, he is also a commentator ...
, with support from poker author Michael Konik and poker professional Mark Gregorich. Mark Gregorich left the show at the end of the first season. The first series grand finale aired in February 2005 on the same day as
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.
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carried the Super Bowl that year, so instead of the series' usual home on FSN,
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carried the finale instead. It was hosted by
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, with support from poker professional
Erick Lindgren Erick A. Lindgren (born August 11, 1976, in Burney, California) is an American professional poker player. He has won two World Poker Tour (WPT) titles, two World Series of Poker bracelets, and more than $10,500,000 in tournament earnings during ...
. Backstage interviews were conducted by poker player
Evelyn Ng Evelyn Ng (born September 14, 1975 in Toronto, Ontario) is a Canadian professional poker player. She lives in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Early life Ng began her gaming career playing pool for money at age 14. By age 17, she had expanded into dea ...
. The first series was executive produced by David Doyle and Directed by
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. Howard "The Professor" Lederer replaced Michael Konik at the beginning of the 3rd season, with
Annie Duke Anne LaBarr Duke (née Lederer; born September 13, 1965) is an American former professional poker player and author in cognitive-behavioral decision science and decision education. She holds a World Series of Poker (WSOP) gold bracelet from 2004 ...
joining for several episodes as a "special guest". Mary Strong conducted the backstage interviews.


Structure


Season 1

The tournament was split into two series, with each player's finishing position in the series final determining their starting chip count in the grand finale. Similarly, the finishing position in two preliminary rounds per series determined the starting chip positions of each player in both series finals. The Grand Final winner received $1,000,000. The payouts for the other entrants from the $3,200,000 prize pool were unclear in the broadcast. However, Phil Ivey has said, on Full Tilt, that he walked away with about $400,000, and, therefore, broke even. In the first two rounds of each series, players start with 100,000 in chips. Their finish in each of these rounds determines their starting chips for the final round of the series as follows: Finish # 250,000 # 150,000 # 112,000 # 88,000 # 72,000 # 56,000 # 40,000 # 32,000 Series 1 Round 1 finish + Series 1 Round 2 finish = Starting chips for Series 1 Final Series 2 uses the same format. Finishes in each series final are then used to determine the Grand Finale starting chip count as follows: Finish - Finals # 500,000 # 300,000 # 224,000 # 176,000 # 144,000 # 112,000 # 80,000 # 64,000 Series 1 Final finish + Series 2 Final finish = Starting chips for grand finale.


Season 2

24 Players


Blind structure

The blinds increased every 20 minutes.


Qualifying rounds

Six players competed in each tournament, with points being allocated as follows: * Winner: 10 points * Runner-Up: 7 points * 3rd place: 5 points * 4th place: 3 points * 5th place: 1 point * 6th place: 0 points Each player played six preliminary tournaments with players randomly drawn. At the end of this, the points were tallied and the 16 players with the most points progressed to the next round.


Final 16

The top 16 are then split into 4 pools of players Players in the final 16 started with 25,000 chips for every point earned up to then. (20,000 in Season 3) Each pool had two matches, with points being allocated as follows: * Winner: 10 points * Runner-Up: 7 points * 3rd place: 4 points * 4th place: 0 points The points were cumulated from those 2 matches, and the players with the highest points then progressed to the quarter-finals.


Quarter-finals

The quarter-finals are 2 groups with 4 players in each. Each group will play one match where the top two finishers will advance to the semi-finals. The winner of the match will start the semi-finals with 1,000,000 in chips while the runner up will start with 700,000. Players start with 50,000 chips per point earned in the round of 16.


Semi-finals and finals

Both the semi-finals and finals were played in best two out of three heads-up matches.


Time limit rule

Players had 60 seconds to act on their hands. A player failing to act was penalized the worth of one small blind. An additional small blind penalty would be imposed for each additional ten seconds without action. The collected penalties were added to the next pot.
Kathy Liebert Kathleen H. Liebert (born October 1, 1967, in Tennessee) is an American professional poker player. Poker Liebert started her professional poker career as a prop player in Colorado. She would later go on to enter tournaments and she won the f ...
and Mimi Tran were the only players penalized in season two, for one small blind.


Payouts

The payouts were as follows: Winner=$400,000 USD Runner-up=$140,000 USD The total prize pool was $1.21 million. It is unclear who supplied the extra $250,000 for the pool, since 24 times 40,000 equals only $960,000. (NOTE: This problem was solved in Season 3 with a $1.2 million prize pool and $50,000 buy-in.)


Season 3

Season 3 played exactly like Season 2, except for the following differences: * The entry fee was $50,000 instead of $40,000 and the prize pool was $1.2 million instead of $1.21 million. * Each player played five preliminary tournaments instead of six with players randomly drawn. * The finals were played in best 3-out-of-5 rather than 2-out-of-3. * The Top 16 Players were split into 4 groups and played 2 games with 20,000 chips for every point earned up to then. The winner of each game, with the winner of game one not participating in two, advance to the quarterfinals, starting there with 600,000 resp. 400,000 chips. Same format is used in the quarter-finals, with the two advancing to the semi-finals starting with 1,500,000 resp. 1,000,000 chips. * The time limit rule was modified. After 60 seconds, a player had five seconds to act before being assessed a one small blind penalty. An additional small blind penalty would be assessed for each additional 30 seconds without action. Phil Ivey was assessed a penalty in his first Super Sixteen match.


Payouts


Competitors

* Season 1 featured 8 competitors each paying $400,000 to enter. (This $400,000 entry fee was the largest in history until the
Big One for One Drop The Big One for One Drop is a $1,000,000 buy-in No Limit Texas Hold 'em poker tournament hosted first in 2012, and for its first four editions, with the World Series of Poker (WSOP). It became the highest buy-in poker tournament in history as wel ...
in 2012) * Season 2 featured 24 competitors each paying $40,000 to enter, and $250,000 added to the prize pool. * Season 3 featured 24 competitors each paying $50,000 to enter.


Computer versions

There have been two computer games made of the first two seasons of the show. * Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament * Poker Superstars II * Poker Superstars III There is an online web version made in flash of the computer game * Poker Superstars II Web Game These were published by Funkitron and available a
Play Poker Superstars
the official Funkitron Poker Superstars website. The AI used in them was created by
Brian Sheppard Brian (sometimes spelled Bryan in English) is a male given name of Irish and Breton origin, as well as a surname of Occitan origin. It is common in the English-speaking world. It is possible that the name is derived from an Old Celtic word me ...
, the programmer who created the
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Scrabble playing AI for
Scrabble ''Scrabble'' is a word game in which two to four players score points by placing tiles, each bearing a single letter, onto a Board game, game board divided into a 15×15 grid of squares. The tiles must form words that, in crossword fashion, re ...
.


External links


Finding the Ace Among Kings: A True Story (The Making of the Show)Poker Superstars (Article by Mike Sexton)Pokersuperstars.net (official site of show)
{{Major Poker Tournaments Poker tournaments Television shows about poker Poker in North America