Blog

How To Find Info on Opponents in Live Poker

How To Find Info on Opponents in Live Poker

When it comes to live poker data, finding personal poker-related information is not an easy process. You can always Google players or try to find something on their reputation, controversies, and winnings on forums like TwoPlusTwo, but you never know for sure all the details about their profits and losses, volume, and patterns before playing against them.
However, that doesn’t mean the poker community lacks tools for finding some basic info — and in this article, PokerListings will tell you about the most popular ones.

Note: You can find profiles of some poker players on the PokerListings Best Professional Poker Players page. Our team updates it regularly by renewing existing profiles and adding new pages for promising players.

Live Tournament Poker Players: The Hendon Mob & Brand Websites

A lot of poker brands freely share their event results when it comes to tournaments, even when they don’t provide full coverage. That’s why the stats of live tournament players are a little easier to follow than those of cash players — and in this section, you’ll learn two ways to do so.

Remember: Live tournament poker databases never show how much a player spent on re-entries and rarely share how many re-entries they’ve made. Using them, you can find information only about winnings, never about losses or additional expenses.

The Hendon Mob

As of May 2025, The Hendon Mob database can be fairly named the largest live poker database in the industry.
It accumulates information about every prize winner in live poker tournaments and is easy to navigate. Just open the website, type the player’s name or surname in the search bar, and the site will show you every profile matching your query.

THM Live Poker Stats

Once you find the player, you can check their stats, including total live earnings, best live cash, their position in different rankings, a full list of results, and more. For example, here’s how Phil Ivey’s profile looks there.

THM Live Poker Player stats Phil Ivey

This database is huge and useful, but be aware that:

  • Some people have multiple profiles with different information
  • Not all live events are registered, especially minor local ones
  • Mystery Bounty payouts are not currently included in the prize totals
  • The Hendon Mob focuses on English-speaking audiences, so names written in Cyrillic or using non-Latin alphabets are often hard to find or transliterate correctly

Poker Brand Websites

Almost any live poker tour brand has its own database of players who have ever cashed and/or even registered in their events. We chose three popular brands as examples for this section.
First is WSOP.com, which was hugely updated in 2025 after its acquisition by GGPoker. As of May 24th, 2025, you can find statistics of WSOP and WSOPC participants there by selecting Players → clicking Stats → clicking View full list, where you can find players by their name or surname.

Profiles there have enough useful information about the player’s personal history of participating in WSOP and events related to this brand. You can see the number of titles, bracelets, rings, cashes, total earnings, and staking data. For example, that’s how Jesse Lonis’ profile there looks like.

WSOP Live Poker Player Profile

Second is WorldPokerTour.com, which collects data about all prize winners of WPT events. Information is located in the Players tab → Stats page. There you need to choose Tour or Season to filter rankings or just click View Complete Total Earnings List to see everyone.

WPT Player Profile

Players there can’t be searched using in-site tools but can be found by searching the page with your browser toolset. There aren’t many stats for each profile, only Earnings, Cashes, Wins, Top 3 Finishes, and Final Tables. For example, that’s how Mikita Badziakouski’s profile there looks like.

WPT Player Profiles

Third is TritonPoker.Plus, where you can find players’ profiles on the Rankings page by choosing All-Time Money List and typing the player’s name or surname in the Search players… prompt.

Any profile there displays the player’s track record, number of titles and cashes, where and how the player performed on Triton over the years, etc. For example, that’s how Vladimir Korzinin’s profile there looks like.

TritonPoker.Plus is one of the few websites where you can see each time the player participated in events without cashing.

Live Cash Poker Players: Highroll Poker

Live cash games are one of the most difficult to reliably verify information about due to their closed nature, the secrecy of players about their earnings from the game, as well as the protection of personal data by casinos, rooms, and clubs.
But while for low and medium stakes gathering information is almost impossible, unless someone shares their data with the general public, for high stakes you can at least check information on players from a few venues that broadcast their games.
The biggest tracker website for them in 2025 is Highroll Poker, where the team accumulates:

  • Details of each streamed cash game from Poker At The Lodge, Hustler Casino Live, Triton Poker, Baily Live Poker, High Stakes Poker, etc.
  • Game participants’ Net Winnings, VPIP, PFR, Hours Played, Hourly $ and BB/Hour.
  • An archive of old poker cash TV shows such as Full Tilt Poker, High Stakes Poker from the early 2000s, PartyPoker Live The Big Game, Poker After Dark, etc.

Searching for players through the database is easy here: you just need to open the website → click on Tracker → scroll down to TV Cash Game Data → click View All-Time Data and search.

High Roller Poker Data

The players’ profiles there are extensive with a biography, nationality, country of residence, professional occupation, and any other details that the website’s team can find. For example, that’s how Andrew Robl’s profile there looks like.

High Roller Poker Data

The only huge issue with the Highroll Poker database is that player names are listed as they are on live streams. It means, some of them are listed in the database only by name without a surname, such as Steve or Anthony, while others are listed only by nickname, like Dr. H or Yoda, without any additional information.

High Roller Poker Data