WSOP Main Event: 6,352 players out for $8.3 million

ImageFrom Las Vegas Sun

Chris Moneymaker peered out into a sea of poker players and briefly reflected on the past decade.

The World Series of Poker undraped a tribute bust to Moneymaker on Monday, 10 years after the former accountant from Memphis defeated 838 players to win $2.5 million in the world championship Main Event.

“Back then, I knew three poker players,” Moneymaker said at the ceremony. “Over the last 10 years, I’ve met thousands and thousands of wonderful people in this game. It’s really evolved into something magical, and what you see here today.”

What was on display at the Rio was the biggest single-day starting field in Main Event history as 3,467 players paid the $10,000 entry fee to compete in the final of three starting days for poker’s world championship.

That brought the total number of players for the 2013 Main Event to 6,352, the lowest turnout since 2005, which was the last year the final table was held at Binion’s Horseshoe.

It’s the eighth largest Main Event of all-time, falling just six players short of surpassing the 2007 edition when amateur Jerry Yang won $8,250,000.

This year’s winner, however, will pocket more than Yang as first-place pays a hefty $8,359,531. Despite the dip in players — 246 more showed up last year — WSOP officials were pleased with the total, and the fact that 83 different countries are represented in the event.

“If you don’t get a chance to play in any other event, this is the one you scrounge up enough money to get into, to satellite into,” Tournament Director Jack Effel said before honoring Moneymaker. “We’ve had an enormous amount of satellite winners the last few days.”