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It's the same story at the very top of the 2017 Global Poker Index Player of the Year leaderboard for another week as the latest update keeps Bryn Kenney at No. 1 for a ninth week running. Sitting in second position, Mustapha Kanit has closed the gap a little after notching a cash in a side event at the ongoing PokerStars Championship Macau series. Global Poker is able to function legally in the US thanks to its unique dual-currency system based on a promotional sweepstakes model. The site does not offer promotions or bonuses on a regular basis. There are not many variations of poker on the site. Players can only play Texas Hold’em or Omaha.

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Each week, the Global Poker Index releases a list of the top tournament poker players in the world using a formula that takes into account a player's results over six half-year periods. For a look at the entire list, visit the official GPI website. Below we look at the 2019 Player of the Year race and overall GPI rankings as of October 2.

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2019 GPI Player of the Year

RankPlayer2019 GPI POY Score
1Sean Winter3425.57
2Rainer Kempe3402.80
3Stephen Chidwick3385.95
4Sam Greenwood3294.67
5Bryn Kenney3254.17
6Shannon Shorr3251.53
7James Romero3108.07
8Manig Loeser3105.99
9Ali Imsirovic3040.60
10Danny Tang2993.56

Time once more to check in on the Global Poker Index rankings. Not a lot of movement has taken place over the last month in the 2019 GPI Player of the Year race. The Top 10 looks almost identical to how it appeared during our last check at the start of September, with the players in the top six spots all the same and Sean Winter still out in front.

That makes seven straight weeks at No. 1 for Winter who has occupied the top spot a total of 19 weeks during the first nine months of the year.

The only change in the Top 10, in fact, was thanks to James Romero who moved up from No. 10 a month ago to No. 7 at present. Since cashing four times during the European Poker Tour Barcelona series, Romero added two more scores in September at the Merit Poker Retro series in Cyprus, including a final table and seventh-place finish in the Main Event won by Sergey Konovalov.

Overall GPI Top 10

RankPlayerOverall GPI Score
1Stephen Chidwick3777.62
2Alex Foxen3605.30
3Rainer Kempe3449.14
4Bryn Kenney3405.02
5Sean Winter3342.41
6Sam Greenwood3331.12
7Manig Loeser3276.97
8Michael Addamo3219.67
9Timothy Adams3219.09
10Nick Pupillo3205.40

Meanwhile, there was a bit of shuffling in the overall rankings over the last few weeks, although today the top seven spots are all the same as they were a month ago. Stephen Chidwick hasn't moved from No. 1 since then, either, making it seven weeks in a row at the top for the UK pro.

Looking down the list, the Australian poker pro Michael Addamo has reached a career peak of No. 8 in the GPI rankings. Addamo's most recent big score was a third-place showing in the EPT Barcelona €25,000 Single-Day High Roller in which Juan Pardo won and Gerard Pique took second.

Timothy Adams also currently sits at No. 9 after winning a €10,300 event in Barcelona, also marking a career-high ranking. Indeed, it was just a week ago the Canadian pro cracked the Top 10 for the first time in his storied career.

Nick Pupillo likewise inched up a spot this week to join the list at No. 10. Pupillo spent September collecting cashes in Milwaukee, New Jersey, and Colorado, including earning a World Series of Poker Circuit ring at the Potawatomi Casino, his third career WSOP-C title.

To view the GPI overall rankings in their entirety, visit the official GPI website. While you're at it, follow the GPI on Twitter and its Facebook page.

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  • Tags

    Global Poker IndexSean WinterRainer KempeStephen ChidwickJames RomeroMichael AddamoTimothy AdamsNick PupilloEuropean Poker TourEPT BarcelonaWSOP Circuit
  • Related Tournaments

    European Poker TourWorld Series of Poker Circuit
  • Related Players

    Stephen ChidwickTimothy AdamsRainer KempeSean WinterMichael AddamoJames Romero
(Redirected from Global poker index)
Global Poker Index (GPI)
SportPoker
Founded2011
Owner(s)Alexandre Dreyfus
MottoThe Poker Ranking Authority
Most recent
champion(s)
Adrian Mateos
Official websiteGlobalPokerIndex.com

The Global Poker Index (GPI) is a leaderboard index that ranks over 450,000 live tournament poker players in the world. The GPI poker rankings are updated on a weekly basis. Players’ performances are assessed by their finishing positions in poker tournaments occurring over six periods of six months (3 years).[1]

The Global Poker Index uses data from the biggest poker database The Hendon Mob, known for collecting results of tournaments around the world and for being the reference in tournament results. They currently host results for over 325,000 poker tournaments.

The index is used in famous newspapers along with sports results to communicate poker rankings, both on the online and print version.[2]

History[edit]

The Global Poker Index was originally created by Federated Sports + Gaming, along with the Epic Poker League(EPL), with Former World Series Of Poker (WSOP) commissioner Jeffrey Pollack acting as the executive chairman, professional poker player Annie Duke as commissioner, and Matt Savage as the League's tournament director. The GPI was employed to rank players for the EPL and decide which players could take part in the League. On 29 February 2012, when Federated Sports + Gaming announced that they had filed for Bankruptcy, all of the organizations and all the brands were acquired by Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc., at a bankruptcy auction in June 2012.[3] Following this acquisition, Zokay Entertainment and the company's CEO, Alexandre Dreyfus acquired the GPI brand, along with its patent-pending formula, in order to create a single, unified ranking platform covering the live tournament poker world in its entirety.[4]

The GPI ranking system[edit]

The GPI tracks players' results for their prior 3 years of play, in qualifying tournaments with 32 or more entrants (specialty events and freerolls are not counted), using a patent-pending formula that takes into account result ages, field difficulties, and field sizes to generate live tournament player rankings.[5]

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For each qualifying tournament a player finishes in-the-money they receive a GPI score. Those scores fall into one of six time periods, each of which covers a half-year based on the starting date of the tournament. These are called GPI Aging Periods. The sum of the player's largest five (5) scores for each of the two Aging Periods in the most recent year and their four (4) largest scores for the four Aging Periods prior to that is their total GPI score. GPI scores themselves are calculated by multiplying a Buy-in Factor, Finishing Factor, and Aging Factor.

The Buy-in Factor is the GPI's measure of relative difficulty, presuming larger buy-ins draw a more skilled field. Its median is calculated by dividing the USD equivalent of a $1,000 buy-in (fee included) by 1,000. This results in a Buy-in Factor of 1.0 for a $1,000 tournament, with Buy-in Factors being larger or smaller than 1.0 depending on whether the buy-in is larger or smaller than $1,000. This calculation uses a logarithmic function. It does so because the incremental increase in the skill set of the field theoretically diminishes as the buy-in amount increases. For example, in the GPI formula the percentage increase of GPI's Buy-In Factor between a $1500 event and an $2000 event is much greater than its percentage increase between $19,500 and a $20,000 buy-in events. Furthermore, all tournaments with a buy-in larger than $20,000 are treated as though the buy-in was only $20,000 and all tournaments with a buy-in smaller than $400 are treated as though the buy-in was $400.

The GPI also includes a Finishing Factor, which measures how players perform relative to the rest of the field they compete within in any given poker tournament. This Finishing Factor is calculated initially by dividing the field size by the player's finishing position and is also done using a logarithmic function. Furthermore, for any tournaments with a field size larger than 2,700 players will be treated as though their field was only 2,700. The GPI also employs an Aging Factor to player results. This is a multiplier that gives more points to tournaments based on how recently they were played in order to reward players both for recent success and consistency over time. Each Aging Period consists of 6 month periods of time, with the most recent being the previous 6 months from the present, and going backwards from there through to a point 3 years in the past. Each Aging Period has a different multiplier that is applied to score calculations, with multipliers decreasing as each Aging Period becomes less recent.

National and regional rankings[edit]

The Global Poker Index National Rankings ranks players by Country, with 20 different national rankings are currently available, by North American, Latin American, European, and Asian regions as well. The GPI is used as a central reference point when ranking live tournament poker players including France,[6] Italy,[7] Spain, Brazil, Latin America [8] and the USA.

Poker team rankings[edit]

The GPI create rankings of players comprising professional poker teams to show which teams’ players have the best overall results. Ranked teams include PokerStars, Winamax and Party Poker.

Former Number Ones[edit]

GPI Player Of the Year[edit]

The GPI Player Of the Year (POY) award is given to the player topping GPI's Player of the Year Leaderboard at the end of each calendar year. Standings are updated weekly with the top 1,000 contenders ranked according to results, with the Leaderboard utilizing an augmented version of GPI's existing ranking formula which disregards aging factors and includes 11 total results from qualifying tournament results in each given year (top 6 results from the first 6 months of the year and top 5 results from these 6 months of each year). Buy in restrictions, minimum player field restrictions are kept as-is, as[9]

  • POY 2012 : Dan Smith
  • POY 2013 : Ole Schemion
  • POY 2014 : Daniel Colman
  • POY 2015 : Byron Kaverman
  • POY 2016 : David Peters
  • POY 2017 : Adrian Mateos
  • POY 2018 : Alex Foxen
  • POY 2019 : Alex Foxen

Global poker masters[edit]

The Global Poker Index aggregates the Top 300 performing players in the world and groups them by nationality to create GPI Country Rankings to show how many top players hail from specific nations. Currently the US is the world's top performing country in terms of live tournament player results, with over 50% of all Top 300 GPI ranked players being American.Using the country rankings, the Global Poker Masters will be a world cup of poker, gathering the best players from 9 countries around the world, in order to decide which country is the best.[10]

Awards[edit]

The Global Poker Index is the host of the European Poker Awards. The GPI EPA takes place every year in January and rewards the best European Poker Players and newcomers, as well as the people involved in the industry.[11]

Index

Starting in 2015, the American Poker Awards took placee in Los Angeles, USA, and rewarded the best live poker players in America, as well as the biggest contributors in the industry.

Fantasy poker manager[edit]

Global

The Global Poker Index released the first ever Fantasy Poker game allowing poker fans to draft for free their favorite players for the biggest poker tournaments in the world. The game quickly became the official game of the World Poker Tour[12] and the World Series Of Poker[13]The game consists in drafting 10 poker players with a defined virtual budget, following the concept of fantasy sports in general.

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GPI Magazine[edit]

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GPI launched its first print publication during the 2014 World Series Of Poker where the magazine was distributed for free in the Rio All Suite Hotel and Casino, as well as in other places in Las Vegas. The 56 page first edition saw the poker pro Vanessa Selbst making the cover, and featured numerous people from the industry.[14]

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References[edit]

  1. ^The Global Poker Index: Ranking the top 300 poker players on USA Today
  2. ^poker rankings on USA Today
  3. ^Pinnacle Entertainment acquires bankrupt operators of Epic Poker League and Heartland Poker Tour on Las Vegas Review Journal
  4. ^Global Poker Index Sold to Alex Dreyfus’ Zokay Entertainment on pokerfuse.com
  5. ^Vanessa Selbst is currently 2nd in the Global Poker Index according to the Las Vegas Review Journal
  6. ^French RankingsArchived 2012-12-20 at the Wayback Machine on MadeInPoker and on the French Poker FederationArchived 2012-09-28 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^Italian Rankings on CardPlayer.it
  8. ^Latin American Rankings on CodigoPoker
  9. ^the race for the Global Poker Index leadership week after week on Pokernews
  10. ^Global Poker Index Announces the Global Poker Masters: 'It's Going to Be Poker's World Cup!' on Pokernews
  11. ^The GPI European Poker Awards: A Guaranteed Success on Poker 52 Europa
  12. ^Fantasy Poker Manager Named Official Fantasy Game of the World Poker Tour on workdpokertour.com
  13. ^The top 25 things to watch at the 2014 World Series of Poker in the Las Vegas Sun
  14. ^The GPI expand into print with their new magazine on Calvin Ayre's website.

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External links[edit]

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