By Sean Chaffin The WPT Action Clock has generally received positive reviews since it debuted at the Season XIV WPT 👄 Tournament of Champions. The goal was to speed up play in later stages of a tournament – striking a balance 👄 in speeding up play but also offering opportunities for time extensions when players have particularly…
Matt Clark
By Sean Chaffin
The WPT Action 👄 Clock has generally received positive reviews since it debuted at the Season XIV WPT Tournament of Champions. The goal was 👄 to speed up play in later stages of a tournament – striking a balance in speeding up play but also 👄 offering opportunities for time extensions when players have particularly difficult decisions.
However, as tour events continue to attract bigger and bigger 👄 fields, a few changes were added beginning with the WPT Seminole Hard Rock Poker Showdown.
The Action Clock comes into play 👄 when a tournament is one full table off the money bubble and continues until a champion is crowned. Each player 👄 has 30 seconds to act on a hand, and received four time-extension chips for an extra 30 seconds each. Players 👄 reaching the final three tables of the tournament are then reset to a maximum of six time-extension chips, and those 👄 at the final table are reset to a maximum of eight chips.
Now, the tour is adjusting the number of time 👄 chips players receive based on the number of players who will cash in an event.
“What happened at the Borgata [Winter 👄 Poker Open] is that we just had so many people in the money,” WPT executive tour director Matt Savage (pictured) 👄 says. “It was always four time extensions to play down to 24. We could have been paying 28 and from 👄 28 down to 24, you got four time chips. At the Borgata, we paid 136, which is great, and you 👄 got four down from that to 24. Is that fair?”
Players basically had to play a full day with four time 👄 chips because of the increased number of entries. The tour is now trying to adjust for those increases and distributing 👄 more chips accordingly.
“We’re giving more time chips based on the number of players paid,” Savage says. “Players brought it up 👄 to me and obviously it makes sense that if we’re playing that many more, that it’s not really fair for 👄 them to be getting the same amount of time chips.”
Players can now receive as many as 10 time-extension chips when 👄 the Action Clock comes into play. Once play reaches 24 players, all other time extension rules remain the same. A 👄 full copy of Action Clock rules can be found here.
Here’s a look at the new time chip structure for future 👄 tournaments when the Action Clock is put into play:
Number of players in the money Number of time-extension chips (per player) 👄 25-34 players Two (2) time-extension chips, per player 35-44 players Three (3) time-extension chips, per player 45-64 players Four (4) 👄 time-extension chips, per player 65-80 players Five (5) time-extension chips, per player 81-100 players Six (6) time-extension chips, per player 👄 101-120 players Seven (7) time-extension chips, per player 121-140 players Eight (8) time-extension chips, per player 141-160 players Nine (9) 👄 time-extension chips, per player 161+ players Ten (10) time-extension chips, per player
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