World Poker Tour 2019
Winning Numbers Tuesday 02/09/2021
Featuring 'ALL IN'
World Poker Tour League (WPT League) is the official poker league of The World Poker Tour. The World Poker Tour League is an exciting, vibrant company, taking the immensely popular game of Texas Hold'em Poker and holding 'Free to Play' Poker. The 2019 World Series of Poker was the 50th annual tournament, and took place from May 28-July 16 at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada. There were 90 bracelet events.
Win Instantly
Then Win Again
World Poker Tour is drawn nightly and offers 2 chances to win for only $2. Every ticket can win twice per day; instantly and in the nightly drawing! Win up to $100,000 in the nightly drawing. Win up to $5,000 instantly.
Add the 'ALL IN' feature for a chance to increase your instant winnings!
For an extra $1 per Hand, the 'ALL IN' feature pays bigger prizes on the top 5 instant win hands and includes a chance to win the progressive jackpot!
- With the 'ALL IN' feature the Royal Flush instant win Hand wins $5,000 plus 100% of the progressive jackpot.
- The Straight Flush Hand with the 'ALL IN' feature wins $500 plus 10% of the progressive jackpot.
The 'ALL IN' progressive jackpot starts at $10,000 and increases based on sales.
Subscriptions
Subscriptions are not available for this game.
Ticket Sales and Draw Time
World Poker Tour tickets can be purchased daily. The cut off for ticket sales is 9:00pm daily. Drawings are held every night after 9:05pm.
Cancelling Tickets
World Poker Tour tickets CANNOT be canceled.
How to Win!
Win Instantly
Get a pair of Jacks or better and win instantly. Win instantly if the cards on your ticket match one of the winning Poker Hands displayed at the bottom of the ticket. Instant win prizes can be paid immediately, you don’t have to wait for the nightly drawing. If you redeem an Instant Win prize prior to the nightly drawing, you will receive an exchange ticket with the same hand for the nightly drawing. You will not receive an instant win hand on the exchange ticket.
Go 'ALL IN' for an extra $1 and win even more with a flush or better.
Match | Win | with 'ALL IN' | Odds |
---|---|---|---|
Royal Flush Ace, King, Queen, Jack, and 10 of the SAME suit | $5,000 | $5,000 + 100% of Jackpot | 1:649,740 |
Straight Flush Any 5 consecutive cards of the SAME suit | $500 | $500 + 10% of Jackpot | 1:72,193.33 |
Four of A Kind Any 4 cards of the same value | $150 | $300 | 1:4,165 |
Full House Any 3 cards of a kind plus a pair | $75 | $150 | 1:694.17 |
Flush Any 5 cards the SAME suit | $50 | $100 | 1:508.80 |
Straight Any 5 consecutive cards of ANY suit | $20 | N/A | 1:254.80 |
Three of a Kind Any 3 cards of the SAME value | $10 | N/A | 1:47.33 |
Two Pair Any 2 Pairs of the SAME value | $5 | N/A | 1:21.04 |
Pair of Jacks or Better 2 Jacks, 2 Queens, 2 Kings, or 2 Ace | $3 | N/A | 1:7.69 |
Overall odds of winning an instant prize are approximately 1 in 4.8
Win Again in the Nightly Drawing
Match the cards on your ticket to the cards drawn in the nightly drawing. If your World Poker Tour Ticket matches at least three cards drawn, you win. Win up to $100,000!
Match | Win | Odds |
---|---|---|
Match 5 Cards | $100,000 | 1:2,598,960 |
Match 4 Cards | $500 | 1:11,059.40 |
Match 3 Cards | $20 | 1:240.42 |
Overall odds of winning a draw game prize are approximately 1 in 235.3
WPT record field
Alex Foxen won the World Poker Tour (WPT) Five Diamond World Poker Classic Main Event at the Bellagio over the weekend, the first WPT title of his poker career. For the victory, Foxen won nearly $1.7 million and a $15,000 seat into the season-ending WPT Tournament of Champions.
the field grew to 1,035, a record for a $10,000 event on the World Poker Tour
The Five Diamond is one of the few remaining $10,000 buy-in tournaments on the World Poker Tour. With unlimited re-entries permitted until the start of Level 12, the field grew to 1,035, a record for a $10,000 event on the World Poker Tour. The prize pool just eclipsed $10 million.
Flush with success early
Foxen entered the six-handed final table on Sunday second in chips with 9.750 million. Danny Park led with 11.100 million. The most important hand of the final table doesn’t often come early, but in this case, it may have.
That hand elevated Foxen into the chip lead with 14.125 million chips. Park was still in solid shape, but saw his stack plummet to 8.025 million after having just been over 12 million.
Foxen never relinquished the lead.
Dominant finish
Going into heads-up play, Foxen held a significant chip edge over Toby Joyce, 29.500 million to 11.900 million. Joyce would likely need a double-up to get back into contention, but he never got it. Foxen pulled away further; it took only nine hands to sew up the tournament.
Players World Poker Tour
Joyce needed four time extensions to think it over before finally calling all-in for his last 4.500 million
On the final hand, Foxen limped pre-flop and Joyce checked to see a flop of J♣-5♠-3♦. Joyce checked, but when Foxen bet 400,000, Joyce check-raised to 1.100 million. Undeterred, Foxen re-raised to 2 million and Joyce slowed down, just calling. The turn was the K♣. Joyce checked, so Foxen put him to the test, moving all-in for many millions more chips than Joyce had in front of him. Joyce needed four time extensions to think it over before finally calling all-in for his last 4.500 million.
Joyce had J♥-9♣, good for second pair, but Foxen had A♣-J♠, giving him the same second pair but the top kicker. The river was of no use to either player, giving the pot to Foxen, along with his first WPT title.
Momentous for year and career
Alex Foxen had come close to winning the WPT Five Diamond Poker Classic two years ago, finishing as the runner-up to Ryan Tosoc. That made this victory even more satisfying than it might have otherwise been.
World Poker Tour 2019 Final Table
“It’s surreal – it’s kind of hard to put into words,” he told WPT.com afterward. “It feels amazing. The last time I got to this spot I was a little bit disappointed in how I played heads-up. It’s just incredible to get the opportunity again and be fortunate enough to pull out the win.”
He added that this is the biggest win he has had so far in his career and that it feels “amazing” because of both the size and quality of the field.
With the win, Foxen also moved into the lead for the Global Poker Index Player of the Year. As there is just one week left in 2019, he likely has the honor wrapped up. Foxen won the GPI POY in 2018 and would become the first player ever to do it back-to-back.