Global Poker Index: Marvin Rettenmaier Climbs in Player of the Year and GPI 300

Brett Collson
Chief Editor
3 min read
Marvin Rettenmaier

Each week, the Global Poker Index releases a list of the top 300 tournament poker players in the world using a formula that takes a player's results over six half-year periods. The GPI also ranks the top performers of the year over two six-month periods as calculated by the USA Today Global Poker Index point system.

For a look at both lists, visit the official GPI website.

2013 GPI Player of the Year

RankPlayerScoreChange
1Paul Volpe767.76--
2Mike Watson753.37--
3David Peters736.55--
4Daniel Negreanu731.18--
5Scott Seiver692.20--
6Steven Silverman670.01--
7Igor Kurganov663.10--
8Chris Klodnicki656.19--
9Ole Schemion651.74--
10Bryn Kenney633.02--

There were no changes in the GPI Player of the Year Top 10 this week. Paul Volpe still leads, and several big names are within striking distance with the busy fall tournament schedule on the horizon.

Last year's GPI POY runner up Marvin Rettenmaier made up huge ground over the weekend, jumping 25 spots to No. 11. "Mad Marvin" won the High Roller event at the World Poker Tour event in Cyprus for $182,000. The WPT has been Rettenmaier's personal playground for the past two years, but he'll likely need to put together some big results on the European Poker Tour if he intends to catch Volpe atop the leaderboard.

Others climbing the standings this week were Joe Kuether (up 35 spots to No. 32), Vladimir Troyanovsky (up 23 spots to No. 39), Daniel Laidlaw (up 89 spots to No. 53) and Matt Glantz (up 33 spots to No. 71). Kuether took down the Arizona State Poker Championship on Aug. 14 for $246,161.

GPI 300 Top 10

RankPlayerTotal ScoreRank Change
1Jason Mercier3223.76--
2Marvin Rettenmaier3097.08+4
3Joseph Cheong3017.37-1
4Michael Watson2960.98--
5Ole Schemion2943.05--
6Philipp Gruissem2937.08+1
7Daniel Negreanu2937.09-4
8Steve O'Dwyer2916.79--
9Bertrand Grospellier2910.22--
10Igor Kurganov2906.90--

As mentioned above, Rettenmaier took down the High Roller in Cyprus, resulting in a bump back to No. 2 in the GPI 300. He still trails Jason Mercier, who has now held the top spot for 46 consecutive weeks.

Daniel Negreanu dropped four spots after a subpar World Series of Poker in Las Vegas, but he said on Twitter this week that he's "feeling strong like bull" down the stretch as he is in contention for many POY awards.

Welcome to the GPI

New Additions

PlayerTotal GPI ScoreGPI Rank
Daniel Laidlaw1341.12218
David Williams1252.49272
David Stefanski1250.03273
Corey Burbick1213.08295
Tommy Vedes1207.23298
Eric Sfez1206.24299
Martin Hanowski1204.71300

Daniel Laidlaw made huge moved in both the GPI POY and GPI 300 this week following an incredible month at the tables. Earlier this month, Laidlaw finished runner-up in the ANZPT Queenstown Main Event for NZ$59,550, and a few days later he took down the Sydney Champs Main Event for AU$165,000. Laidlaw then added another cash last week by finishing 51st in the Macau Poker Cup Red Dragon Main Event.

Among the other big names joining the GPI 300 this week are Team PokerStars Pro David Williams and Tommy Vedes.

Biggest Gains

RankPlayerTotal GPI ScoreChange
29Roger Hairabedian2403.3014
79Vladimir Troyanovsky1905.2256
137Benjamin Pollak1603.5724
158Gavin Smith1511.7124
170Nick Wong1458.2426
182Samantha Cohen1417.2829
215Rodger Johnson1347.4274
243Eric Baldwin1289.8528

Roger Hairabedian and Vladimir Troyanovsky each made the final table of the High Roller event at WPT Merit Cyprus Classic this week. Hairabedian finished runner-up to Rettenmaier to collect a $124,103 payday, while Troyanovskiy earned $35,549 for his seventh-place result. Troyanovskiy was one of the biggest decliners in last week's GPI 300 rankings, dropping 40 places, but he more than made up for it with his final table in Cyprus.

Rodger Johnson was the biggest mover this week after finishing seventh place at the Running Aces Tournament of Champions event. Johnson also placed 12th at the WSOP Millionaire Maker tournament this summer for $82,205.

Biggest Drops

RankPlayerTotal GPI ScoreChange
81Joni Jouhkimainen1901.06-41
121John Juanda1676.05-34
196Matthias De Meulder1400.05-33
204Jonathan Karamalikis1379.28-42
223Andrey Zaichenko1332.54-49
231Anaras Alekberovas1323.77-61
254Mikolaj Zawadzki1270.17-46
271Pierre Neuville12 1254.10-56
284Leo Fernandez1229.41-44
290Max Silver1218.49-39

Pierre Neuville suffered another huge drop in the rankings this week. After falling 32 spots last week, Neuville was down another 56 positions this week. The Belgian amateur has seven tournament cashes around the globe this year, but most of his big scores in previous years are aging into less significant periods in the GPI scoring formula.

To view at the entire list of 300, visit the official GPI website. While you're at it, follow the GPI on Twitter and its Facebook page.

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Brett Collson
Chief Editor

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