Good explanation, but one point to clarify: the tournament prize pot and the Calcutta pot are different and separate pots.
thanks for clearing that up, was gonna be my next question. so the Calcutta is all side action? does everyone have to be purchased. If they are not purchased and they win who gets the money?
It's all side action, but every tournament I've played in, they made the calcutta mandatory. A mandatory calcutta is bulls*** in my opinion.
Typically any player not bought would go into the pool. At the end of the auction the pool is sold as a group.
Typically any player not bought would go into the pool. At the end of the auction the pool is sold as a group.
He would be playing for at least third place, I can't imagine them losing on purpose. Also, usually the player has the option to buy half of themselves.You forgot the player may be so pissed he did not get himself, he will intentionally lose to "warn" about future calcuttas and to leave him alone. Buy at your own risk.
JV
i have never seen a calcutta where a player won who was not sold and ive seen 100s or more
He would be playing for at least third place, I can't imagine them losing on purpose. Also, usually the player has the option to buy half of themselves.
No one said it is not a gamble. If the player does not have a piece of themselves they can do what they want. They have enough to worry about much less some guy who is trying to make a buck off their efforts. Many players see them as parasites. I have seen exactly what said happen with Strickland. He got so mad he was just raking the balls any time he didn't get out forfeiting the game.After witnessing a very good open speed player throw a tantrum and lose two matches to C players, I know this happened. Yes, they had the option to buy themselves.
I have also seen players lose the first round and forfeit the second in a "screw it" I am behind, lets go to the go-go bar or poker game...
As I said.. buyer beware
JV
The auctioneer puts each player up for auction and anyone can "buy" that player.
Players are auctioned off (with a usual minimum bid of $20).
The auctioneer may know the player and start the bidding higher (Chris Miller is an excellent auctioneer).
Once all players are bought, the money goes into the pot and is broken down into payouts.
Example:
Calcutta Payouts:
1st: $20,000
2nd: $8,000
3rd: $2,500
If Shane Van Boening goes up for auction and I win him for $4,000.
That money now goes into the pot.
If Shane Van Boening wins the tournament, he will win the tournament payout and whoever bought him, in the auction, will be payed $20,000.
Some calcuttas allow the player to buy half of themselves. Resulting in them receiving half of the payment. So, SVB would receive $10,000 of the $20,000 if he bought himself.
Here's something I was never clear on, is the payout just randomly decided by the TD?
It's usually broken down and agreed on before hand. I've seen it pay out the top 4, top 5, top 7, and top 9.
Do they always pay back 100% of the money, and just redistribute it from a bunch of people to a handful of people?
From my experience, yes.
Or do they keep a cut for themselves?
From my experience, no.
Any legal ramifications to keeping a cut?
From my understanding, yes.
What's the typical percentage breakdown?
It varies, but I think it's pretty close to the tournament payout. It depends on how many spots are payed out.
Here's something I was never clear on, is the payout just randomly decided by the TD?
Do they always pay back 100% of the money, and just redistribute it from a bunch of people
to a handful of people? Or do they keep a cut for themselves? Any legal ramifications to keeping a cut?
What's the typical percentage breakdown? I think they posted pics of the white diamond calcutta
and first was 25% (?) of the pot, is that typical?