Chris Moorman leads mourners for lost PokerStake rankings

Author Adam Hampton
Adam Hampton
Posted on: October 10, 2024 08:43 PDT

[This story has been updated following a response from GGPoker]

For live tourney players The Hendon Mob has become a peerless online record of poker tournament results. Tournaments right across the world feed their results into the every-growing THM database, allowing players to track their own results as well as those of friends, rivals and famous faces.

The same essentially used to be true of the PocketFives website, only with the focus on online tournament results. Elite players were able to track their progress up and down the rankings, collecting badges, chasing triple crowns and competing with the best in the world in an arena that all could see.

Times change: PocketFives became PokerStake, began to focus more on offering staking packages than tracking online results, and was acquired by the online poker platform GGPoker. Then, last week, players logged on as usual only to find the rankings were gone, seemingly for good.

ACR pro and longtime online grinder Chris Moorman was one of the first to raise the alarm.

Fellow online legend Patrick Leonard was quick to support the cause, as were many others for whom the thrill of competition extended beyond the tournaments themselves and onto the online leaderboards.

A recent Reddit post from GGPoker claimed that the operator aims to ‘have PokerStake as our main staking platform, with all stats and relevant player info contained right there’.

We reached out to GGPoker, who replied: 'As part of PokerStake's ongoing analysis of platform traffic and user preferences, it was determined that the PokerStake community places greater importance on live results than online results. PokerStake is now working to create more holistic player profiles that combine live and online results.'

Whether these will include historic online results remains to be seen. A date for the launch of these profiles is still TBA.

PokerOrg caught up with Chris Moorman to find out what this move might mean for him, and potentially other longtime online pros.


Were the PocketFives online rankings a big part of your motivation to get to where you are now?

When I first started playing tournaments seriously I would message other players who were close to me in the rankings to see if they wanted to discuss poker strategy. In addition to using my own strategies, I tried to take the best parts of other peoples’ games and develop them into my overall gameplan.

As I moved up the rankings I found myself discussing strategy with more and more accomplished players, and I was really able to take my game to the next level.

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I’ve already noticed myself being less motivated to grind tournaments.

What does this mean to you personally?

For me, I’ve already noticed myself being less motivated to grind tournaments.

When I first got into online poker tournaments I loved the community aspect of it. That has deteriorated over time with a lot of my original poker friends no longer grinding tournaments full-time like they used to. I would use the rankings as a way of keeping score and building a legacy, and still having those records that I could show my parents and family. Without that I will have to adjust once again and find a new way of keeping my motivation to grind online tournaments at a high level.

What would you like to see happen?

I’d love to see it brought back to a similar formula that it was before. The system doesn’t include profit and loss and you have to opt into it to be actually tracked, so I don’t really see the harm - or potential harm - of keeping the system/database in place.