
Originally Posted by
Dan Druff
Regarding Galen Hall...
I'd love to know the names of his 5 tickets.
First off, no player has 5 tickets left, nor did they before Thanksgiving. So obviously he has at least one partner, and it's possible he's part of a consortium of several people buying tickets together. So when he says he has "5 tickets", it could be 5 out of 20 they had remaining, and they burned 15.
Note that it is within the rules to have such partnerships, which some people have complained makes it unfair, and skirts the rule of 10 tickets max. I just tweeted at Jeffrey Benson to either allow one person to buy more than 10 entries, or to disallow partnerships in more than 10 entries. Otherwise this destroys the spirit of the rule of keeping people to 10 or fewer tickets.
Second, I am curious how many of these 5 tickets were forced into this spot (perhaps having taken all 4 favorites, or at least both Buf and Phi, and how many were done as part of strategy.
The other good thing about making it through in this fashion is that you're mostly against ploppies with bad tickets now. So provided you can fade further upsets, you should have a big edge on the field.
What would I like to see? Players who took an underdog with only one ticket, despite having availability of either Buf or Phi.
Note that there was good reason to try a dog if you had already taken Buf and Phi, even if you had KC and/or Det left. KC was on the road, has been struggling, and Dallas has been looking increasingly better, so taking KC may not have been appealing. Detroit was only a small favorite, and again seems to be on decline. So if all you had were KC/Det as favorites, it was probably worthwhile to say fuck it and go with a dog. I believe Brett Richey had used Bal/Phi on his "Get Crunk 9" ticket, which was otherwise a really good ticket, and went with GB exactly for this reason, which was smart. Now he's sitting in great position AND has tremendous equity.
I don't know who Hall was on 2+2. I had only heard of him after he won a WSOP bracelet in the Crazy 8s in 2018, and he wore a suit to the final table. I believe he's now 40 years old, so he would have been young in the 2000s on 2+2. I think he's a hedge fund guy and has a lot of money.