conditions - Poker Player Newspaper
Transcription
conditions - Poker Player Newspaper
Charlie Shoten’s PAGE Ten Commandments for better poker Joe Hachem Player Profile by Phil Hevener 39 PAGE PAGE Entertainment Best Bets 17 46 POKER PLAYER Vol. 9 Number 12 December 12, 2005 A Gambling Times Publication www.pokerplayernewspaper.com Copyright ©2005 Bi-Weekly $3.95 USA/$4.95 CANADA WPF 1 Event, 2 New Millionaires By Jeffrey Toth Nick Schulman, a resident of the borough of Manhattan in New York City, took first place in the 2005 World Poker Finals $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em event exactly two months Nick Schulman of Manhattan wins over $2 million! after his 21st birthday. The youngest player to win a WPT event also won a (Continued on page 7) IVeY GROWS IN MONTE CARLO Phil Ivey beat out British player Paul Jackson to win the 2005 Monte Carlo Millions Ivey grew $1 million richer and took the coveted championship title of the first poker tournament to ever be held in the fabled Casino de Monte-Carlo. The tournament will be broadcast across the U.S. on FSN and internationally through its broadcast partners in early 2006. For the past three days, 112 of the world’s greatest poker players from 22 countries gathered in (Continued on page 9) The Hand of the Year! Kido Pham pulls off stunning upset victory and wins his first major poker tournament at Ballys-Paris WSOP championship Phil Ivey, trophy in hand, cracks a smile on the way to the bank By Nolan Dalla One single poker hand can change a life. One poker hand can create a new star out of someone previously unknown. One poker hand can validate a deeply personal decision made years earlier, against the well-intended advice of parents and peers. One A Word from the “Mad Genius,” Mike Caro Today’s word is... “CONDITIONS” Turn to page 6 for more 74470 05299 DOUBLE UP We have the biggest pros, it only makes sense we’d have the biggest sign-up bonus. Go to FullTiltPoker.com, and enter bonus code POKERPLAYER. 0 9 5 0> (Continued on page 11) *See Web site for details. Enjoy the free games, and before playing in the real money games, please check with your local jurisdiction regarding the legality of Internet poker. ©2005 Full Tilt Poker. All rights reserved. 100% SIGN-UP BONUS UP TO $600* w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 1 PARADISE MASTERS WEEK OVER $3 MILLION IN GUARANTEES PLAY ONLINE JANUARY 7TH -15TH MAIN EV Sunday NL Hold ENT Jan 15th ’em - $1 GUARAN ,000 Buy -In $1,000,TEED 000 Start 1p m ET Terms apply – Only open to players aged 21 and over SATURDAY Jan 7th 2 GAME SUNDAY Jan 8th MONDAY Jan 9th TUESDAY Jan 10th WEDNESDAY Jan 11th NL Hold’em Limit Hold’em PL Hold’em NLH Short PL Omaha THURSDAY Jan 12th FRIDAY Jan 13th NL Hold’em Limit Hold’em SATURDAY Jan 14th NLH R&A BUY-IN $500 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300 $200 GUARANTEE $300,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $100,000 $150,000 $150,000 $300,000 START TIME 4pm ET 4pm ET 4pm ET 4pm ET 4pm ET 4pm ET 4pm ET 4pm ET MAIN EVENT • Sunday Jan 15th • $1,000,000 Guaranteed • NL Hold’em • 1pm ET • $1,000 Buy-In NIGHTLY • $100,000 Guaranteed • NL Hold’em • 9pm ET • $30 Buy-In • R&A P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m ® 4 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m $555,000 G UA RA NT E E D! Friday, January 6 7:15 PM No-Limit Hold’em $100* + $25 MULTI Saturday, January 7 5:15 PM Limit Hold“em $100* + $25 MULTI Sunday, January 8 5:15 PM No-Limit Hold’em $200* + $30 ONE Monday, January 9 7:15 PM 7-Card Stud Hi-Lo $300* + $40 ONE Tuesday, January 10 7:15 PM No-Limit Hold’em $300* + $40 ONE Wednesday, January 11 7:15 PM No-Limit Hold’em $500* + $50 NONE Thursday, January 12 7:15 PM Limit Hold’em $500 *+ $50 NONE Friday, January 13 7:15 PM No-Limit Hold’em $1000 *+ $70 NONE Saturday, January 14 5:15 PM No-Limit Hold’em $1000* + $70 ONE Sunday, January 15 5:15 PM No-Limit Hold’em $2000* + $80 NONE *Service charge deducted from every tournament buy-in and rebuy and 100% distributed to tournament staff. • $10,000 Best All-Around Player Money! • Food Coupons for All Entrants! • Final Table Gifts + Winner Trophies! • Buy-in Gifts! Tournament Director John Ross Info: (310) 330-2800 x-2077 Management reserves the right to cancel promotions at its sole discretion. No purchase necessary for promotions. See Casino Manager for free entry information and complete rules. Gambling Problem? Call (800) GAMBLER w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 5 Caro’s Word: “Conditions” CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 T hree months ago I shared a big secret about value betting. Value betting is the act of pushing your hand for every extra penny of profit through aggressive wagering. We discovered that you should only do it when you have psychological dominance over your opponents. When you’re losing or you when haven’t established leverage over the table, that’s a poor time to value bet. At those times, opponents are more deceptive and you can’t count on getting calls borne of confusing – one of the ingredients that makes value bets profitable. Also, at those times, opponents dance around dangerously, pushing their own hands for maximum value. Their aggressive raises also make your value bets less effective. Today, we’re going to move along to another lecture I gave years ago on the topic. As we dig deeper, we’ll discover the definitive conditions required to make value betting work for you. Listen. Do your value betting at the right time Value betting is one of the most profitable and most costly weapons in poker. You heard me. I said it right. Value betting is one of the most profitable and most costly weapons in poker. I hear you wondering, how can something be the most profitable and the most costly at the same time? It can’t. And that’s the point. You need to value bet at the right times. If you do, you’ll make a lot of profit. I you value bet at the wrong times, you’ll lose a lot of money. On balance, players who don’t know when to value bet and for what reasons lose money overall, because their gains when they guess right are overwhelmed by their losses when they guess wrong. For that reason, many players would be much better off if they didn’t value bet at all. So, what do I mean by value bet? The term means different things to different people. One definition is that a bet has value because it can be effective in more than one way. For instance, a bet may succeed in chasing the potentially winning hand out of the pot, or it might get a call from a weak opponent, or it might confuse your opponent. But those multi-purpose bets are what I call utility bets. Value bets, to me, are different. Value bets are ones where you’re trying to extract every penny of profit by taking maximum advantage and not letting your opponents skate for free. Playfulness and power People learn to value bet and they get excited. It gives them a sense of playfulness and a sense of power. They’re stretching the limits, they’re in action, they’re enhancing their image. It can get to be addictive, value betting can. But there’s great danger. If you take these hands that can normally be bet for small extra profit or checked safely and begin to bet at the wrong times, you’re not getting extra profit, you’re often killing your chances of making any profit. The wrong times to value bet are when your image isn’t controlling, because you’re not winning or the cards haven’t yet given you the opportu- nity to assert yourself and make opponents want to stay out of your way. So, if the psychological atmosphere at the table is such that you’re a target, don’t value bet. You’ll get raised when your opponents have small edges, instead of you, and your attempts to bet aggressively will backfire and cost you more on balance. Only when your opponents are somewhat intimidated and will not push their small edges is it safe to value bet. And the particular opponents you’re value betting into must not be tricky. When opponents are tricky, they’ll set you up by just calling with very strong hands or by raising unexpectedly to press edges or even to bluff when you might fold incorrectly. This gives them the advantage when you make these daring value bets, instead of giving you the advantage. The right times to value bet are when your image is good and controlling, your opponents are passive and unlikely to assert themselves by raising with small edges, and those same opponents are not especially deceptive. That’s the time to value bet, and usually only then. But all this applies to my definition of a value bet. That’s value betting defined as being done with a borderline hand under typical circumstances that you can bet for value. Those circumstances make betting attractive right now, but not always. That means, when I’m talking about value betting, I’m speaking as if the value bet is a fixed entity – a for-certain hand in a for-certain situation whose real strength is determined by other factors, such as how loose your opponents are and how they perceive you. Sometimes worth pushing That’s what I mean by a value bet. The term applies to a specific, for-certain hand that is sometimes worth pushing for value and sometimes not, as the circumstances change. You could, instead, change the descriptions of the hands that are considered for value betting. For instance, 6 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m I consider world champion and Poker Hall of Famer Doyle Brunson a tricky, aggressive, world-class opponent – and everyone agrees. So, I wouldn’t usually value bet into him with the hands I would describe as being value bet candidates for typical situations. But, conceptually, there can be a value bet for any type of player, including Doyle, and for any type of circumstance. It’s just that against sophisticated and trick opponents, the hands you value bet need to be much more powerful. So, it’s important for you to understand that when I tell you that you should value bet in some situations and not in others, I’m talking about a pre-defined set of hands in a pre-defined set of circumstances. By using a more flexible definition, it’s always OK to value bet, despite the fact that you are doing it with hands that would normally be outside the range of the borderline ones we’re talking about. When I talk about value betting, I’m talking about hands that are just good enough to bet for extra profit under the right conditions. I’m talking about when to value bet with hands that, in typical situations, would be just slightly better than break even. The questions So, what you need to ask yourself is: 1. Is this a betting situation that would normally be about break-even or a little better, meaning it wouldn’t usually matter much whether I bet or didn’t bet? 2. Are my opponents who are still active in this pot passive and not deceptive? 3. Are my opponents who are still active in this pot more likely to call than most opponents. If those three conditions are true, you should often value bet. Why not always? Because you don’t want to go to the well too often with value bets or your more astute opponents will catch on and adjust their strategies in ways that might make value betting unprofitable. But, if those three conditions are not true, you prob(Continued on page 36) POKER PLAYER A Gambling Times Publication 3883 West Century Blvd. Inglewood, CA 90303 (310) 674-3365 www.pokerplayernewspaper.com Stanley R. Sludikoff EDITOR/PUBLISHER srs@gamblingtimes.com A. R. Dyck ASSISTANT PUBLISHER ard@gamblingtimes.com John Thompson PRODUCTION DIRECTOR FOR idrome INFO DESIGN poker@idrome.net Joseph Smith WEBMASTER jsmith@pokerplayernewspaper.com Mike Caro SENIOR EDITOR caro@caro.com Byron Liggett ASSOCIATE EDITOR byronpokerplayer@aol.com H. Scot Krause PROMOTIONS EDITOR krauseinvegas@att.net Len Butcher ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR lennylv@cox.net Wendeen H. Eolis EDITORIAL CONSULTANT Phil Hevener CONSULTANT Contributing Columnists Nolan Dalla George Epstein “Oklahoma Johnny” Hale Ashley Adams Susie Isaacs Diane McHaffie James McKenna I. Nelson Rose Nic Szeremeta Rich Wilens John Vorhaus Poker Player will be published Bi-Weekly by Gambling Times Incorporated, Stanley R. Sludikoff, President. Volume 9 Number 12. Copyright © December 2005 by Gambling Times Incorporated. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. Advertising Sales NV (SOUTH), CA (SOUTH), AZ, NM Debbie Burkhead 9030 Arkose Ct. Las Vegas, NV 89123 702-269-1733 fax 702-614-1650 pokerms@aol.com NV (NORTH), CA (NORTH), WA, OR, ID, MT, UT, CO & WY Byron Liggett North by Northwest Editor / Ad Manager P.O. Box 9874 Reno, NV 89507 775-746-5652 byronpokerplayer@aol.com ALL USA EAST OF THE ROCKIES Donna Blevins Gregory Weitzel 1108 E. Inverness Blvd., #611 Inverness, FL 34452 352-422-1441 pokerplayernews@yahoo.com EUROPE, CARIBBEAN & INTERNET Mike D’Angelo Mo Kings Poker Media Group Plaza Colonial, Office 2-5 San Rafael de Escazu, Costa Rica U.S.: 213-291-1638 Costa Rica: +506-838-0142 sales@pokermediagroup.com PUBLISHER’S STATEMENT This notice will certify that 48,000 copies of Volume 9, Number 12 of Poker Player were printed at Valley Printers, 16230 Filbert Street, Sylmar, CA 91342. Distribution to newsstands, card clubs, poker rooms and other distribution points throughout the United States, Canada, the Caribbean, Central America and Europe. Foxwoods WPF—2 Millionaires in 1 Event record prize for his victory; Nick takes home $2,167,500 which includes a $25,500 entry into the WPT Championship event in Las Vegas. Six players sat down a little after 4 PM and it was not long before Lenny Cortellino was the first to depart. The Lewiston, Maine, resident called Tony Licastro’s all-in with pocket 8’s. When Tony turned up pocket 10’s and, with no help from the board, Lenny was the sixth place winner of $276,000. One week ago, Lenny had won the $5000 No-Limit event and, with his finish today, he collected the Best Overall Player Award for the 2005 World Poker Finals. Lyle Berman, the Hall-of-Famer from Minneapolis, MN, was in 5th place when his AJ all-in was called by Nick with AK. Lyle was hoping to finish higher than his son, Bradley, who was 4th last year; Lyle took home $354,000. With the blinds going up quickly, Allen Cunningham, Las Vegas, NV, was all-in with J10 but Nick was calling immediately with K’s and Allen had to settle for 4th place money of $483,000; not a bad day’s work! Bill Gazes hung in for 3rd. He lost a particularly difficult pot with pocket A’s when Tony flopped a straight with a K10. In the end, his K8 could not compete with Nick’s AQ and he took $759,000 back to Miami Beach, FL. The last two of 783 players who started the event were the chip leaders entering the final table. Nick had maintained his dominate position throughout the day and, only four hands into heads-up play, the competition was over. Tony Licastro, who won one of the last Act II’s and then won his seat in the final Act III, had 82; he went all-in when he turned two pair. But, at the same time, Nick caught a flush and Tony was in 2nd place. Tony had turned his $225 investment into $1,035,000! The youngest player to win a WPT Championship event was now the first player to take home a prize over $2,000,000 in a $10,000 event! (Continued from page 1) 16. Peter Giordano . . . . $69,000 Liverpool, NY ON SALE NOW! 17. Anthony D Santich . $62,100 ONLY $19.95 San Pedro, CA 18. Loi Van Phan . . . . . . $55,200 Seattle, WA A tax book for the poker player. 19. Joseph M Cappello . $48,300 FOXWOODS RESORT CASINO Las Vegas, NV 2005 WORLD POKER FINALS 20. Eric J Sonnenstuhl . $41,300 11/11/05 WPT MAIN EVENT NO LIMIT HOLD’EM Waltham, MA 21. Vincent J Curry . . . . $34,500 New Britain, CT 22. Abraham Gray . . . . $34,500 Lawrenceville, GA BUY-IN $10,000 + $200 PLAYERS 783 PRIZE POOL 23. Kenneth N Selby . . . $34,500 Las Vegas, NV $7,845,400 24. James M Pechac . . . $34,500 1. Nick Schulman. . .$2,167,500 25. Benjamin B Kim . . . $34,500 Manhattan, NY Flushing, NY 2. Tony Licastro . . . .$1,035,000 26. Alex B Jacob . . . . . . $27,600 Parkland, FL 3. Bill Gazes . . . . . . . . $759,000 27. Dennis R Fabian . . . $27,600 Miami Beach, FL Norwalk, CT 4. Allen Cunningham $483,000 28. Feming Chan . . . . . . $27,600 Las Vegas, NV Cranbury, NJ 5. Lyle Berman. . . . . . $345,000 29. Felton Raphael. . . . . $27,600 Minneapolis, MN Las Vegas, NV 6. Lenny Cortellino . . $276,000 30. Mark A Zulkiewicz . $27,600 Lewiston, ME Amherst, MA 7. Samir Shakhtoor . . $207,000 31. Erik Seidel . . . . . . . . $20,700 Switzerland Las Vegas, NV 8. Minh V Nguyen . . . $172,800 32. Edward C Pelham . . $20,700 Bell Gardens, CA Stamford, CT 9. Avdo Djokovic . . . . $138,000 33. Ilya Liviz . . . . . . . . . $20,700 Staten Island, NY Boston, MA 10. Steven B Jacobs . . . $117,300 34. Steve Wong. . . . . . . . $20,700 Ardmore, PA Hoofdorp, Holland 11. Joshua E Ewing . . . $103,500 35. Jeffrey M Paquette . $20,700 S Lake Tahoe, CA McGregor, MN 12. Bryan S Veach . . . . . $96,600 36. Andrew Black . . . . . $17,200 Hyde Park, NY Dublin, Ireland 13. Eric B Haber . . . . . . $89,700 37. Eugene K Ji . . . . . . . $17,200 Syosset, NY Rego Park, NY 14. Thomas Schreiber . . $82,800 38. Matthew Sahagian. . $17,200 Danielson, CT W Peabody, MA Lexington, MA Poker Playing Into A Business Phoenix, AZ Hackettstown, NJ 15. Steven H Fiorentini . $75,900 How to Turn Your Knowing What to Deduct to Improve Your Odds With the IRS By Ann-Margaret Johnston, CPA To Order: Toll Free 877-PLAYBIZ (877-752-9249) www.pokerdeductions.com (Continued on page 13) w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 7 Charity Tournaments Revisited STUD SENSE By ASHLEY ADAMS ® Back about ten months ago I wrote an article about running charity poker tournaments. I explained that they benefited the industry as a whole while doing good for a bunch of worthwhile causes. I recommended them highly. Since then, the entire world has gone crazy with these tournaments. Where I’m from, Boston, Massachusetts, there are at least a couple of tournaments every night – for one “charity” or another. But they’re not all created equal. Some are pure fundraising events where the buy-ins are donations and the prizes are donated to the charity. The events are run by volunteers. Only the charity makes money. I work with Jason Daloia and the Multiple Sclerosis charity in Connecticut running a tournament like this every year. They raise $20,000 or so – and everyone has a good time. On the other end of the spectrum are the charity tournaments run by the professional operators who bring in a paid crew who deal, set up, and run the games – much as professional operators run Las Vegas Nights for charities. They rent their equipment out, handle the money, and at the end of the night, if the event has been profitable, after the professionals take their large cut, the charity makes money. I played in a tourney like this a month or so ago where the charity only made 20% of the buy-in. The professional operator of the event took away 44% of all the money and the charity was lucky to get about a third of the cash. In between are events that bring in a professional tournament director for a fee who acts like a host, MC, and speaker. But the game is self dealt, the charity sets up the operation, collects the money, and hands out either cash payouts or gift certificates. The charity doesn’t make nearly as much money as in the first example, since there are cash prizes and they do pay a tournament director, but they make much more than in the second example. When you play in these tournaments you need to consider your combined interests of benefiting the charity and having a decent shot of making some money. Make sure you know what percentage of the buy-in goes to the charity, what percentage goes to the prize pool and how much, if any, goes to the professionals who run the event. Only you can decide what the right mix is for you – but you probably want to avoid events where neither the participants nor the charity end up with the bulk of the buy-in. When I run tournaments for rotary clubs, fraternal organizations, synagogues, foundations or churches I either volunteer my time or charge a standard fee of $80. That includes the use of my casino quality chips and cards, consulting with the charity on how to run and publicize the event, set up, break down, and any auctioning or MC duties that the charity wants. I also bring along an assistant to help with all of these tasks. The charity usually makes between $3,000 and $15,000 – depending on how large the event is and how much they are charging. Typically, half of the buy-ins and re-buys go out as cash prizes, with the charity keeping the other half, minus their expenses. Some charities have told me that they don’t want to spend this much – and they have elected to run the events themselves. I encourage them to do so, as it leaves them with more money. But I’ve also received calls and ended up running tournaments from groups that tried and failed to run an event on their own. Ashley Adams is the author of Winning 7-Card Stud, (Kensington Press 2003). He has been playing 7-Card Stud for 40 years—and profitably in casinos for the past 10 years. He has played in casinos all over the world, including England, Denmark, Sweden, Austria, Hungary, Canada and the United States, but plays most frequently at at Foxwoods Resort Casino in Ledyard Connecticut. Professionally, he is a union organizer and an agent for broadcasters. He can be reached at: asha34@aol.com 8 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 NOW OFFERED AT GREE VALLEYN RANCH! POKER ROOM SPECIALS! 1,000 REWARD $ FOR ANY ROYAL FLUSH IN TEXAS HOLD ’EM DOUBLE IN HOUSE JACKPOT OF $20,000 ALL QUALIFIED PLAYERS ARE GUARANTEED A MINIMUM OF $100 WHEN THE IN HOUSE JACKPOT HITS & $200 WHEN THE JUMBO JACKPOT HITS! IT’S BACK! Why Play Anywhere Else? 367-2411 Sahara At I-15 658-4900 US 95 at N. Rancho 432-7777 Boulder Hwy. At 93-95 547-7777 Sunset Road At US 93/95 631-1000 N. Rancho At Lake Mead 617-7777 I-215 At Green Valley Pkwy Must be 21 or older. Management reserves all rights. ©2005 Station Casinos, Inc., Las Vegas, NV. Know Your Limits! If you think you have a gambling problem, call 1-800-522-4700. w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m Monte Carlo Monte-Carlo to play in the largest prize pool tournament in European history. Prima Network guaranteed the $3 million prize pool. The field included 27 World Series of Poker gold bracelet holders and seven World Poker Tour champions. The No Limit Texas Hold’em final table results are as follows: 1. 2. 3 4. 5. 6. 7. Phil Ivey . . . . . . . . . .$1,000,000 Paul Jackson . . . . . . . $600,000 Marc Goodwin . . . . . $300,000 Bengt Sonnert . . . . . . $250,000 Richard Herbert . . . . $175,000 John Juanda . . . . . . . $125,000 Kenna James . . . . . . . . $53,000 “Coming to the final table as the chip leader, I couldn’t do anything less than win,” said Phil Ivey. “I feel good; I stayed extremely focused and took my time.”Ivey had amassed a five to one chip lead on the underdog, Paul Jackson, coming into the head’s up match. Jackson, who’d previously won a satellite to the Bay 101 Tournament was no stranger to tough opponents. But in Monte-Carlo, playing in the Private Salon in the most (Cont’d from page 1) exclusive poker tournament in the world, Phil Ivey was too intimidating a force. In one intense hand Jackson bet $80,000 after the flop turned up J, J, 7. Ivey re-raised for $150,000 followed by another raise of $150,000 by Jackson. An icy cold Ivey contemplated his next move for what seemed an eternity and finally pushed all-in, psyching out “Action Jackson” who instantly folded. Ivey, a five-time WSOP gold bracelet winner, grew up in New Jersey and began his pro poker career in Atlantic City. In 2000, at the age of 23, he won his first WSOP title besting the likes of Amarillo Slim and Phil Hellmuth in the $2500 Pot Limit Omaha tournament. He has grown to become one of the most feared and respected poker players in the world. “It was nice to be a part of this and to play here was amazing. I’m looking forward to coming back next year and defending my title. This has been a superb tournament,” glowed Ivey. WHEN THE BOYS ARE AWAY . . . THE GIRLS WILL PLAY! Ladies! Let’s Play Poker! Texas Station’s Ladies Only Hold-Em Tournament Come Join The Fun Every Sunday at 6 pm $25 Buy In / $10 Re-buys The First Hour See Poker Room for tournament structure and complete details. 2101 Texas Star Lane • North Las Vegas, NV 89032 ©2005 Texas Station Gambling Hall & Hotel, a Station Casinos company. w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 9 Gathering Information I try to gather as much information from my opponents as possible. Anything and everything POKER COUNSELOR By John Carlisle, MA, NCC can provide slight insights into their personality and play. Clues may come from their clothes, their relative level of comfort at the table, the amount they drink, what they drink, how they interact with others at the table, etc. All serious poker players make this an automatic habit. This is especially difficult during online play, as the internet is nearly the perfect cloak to mask personal characteristics and overall personality. In home games and casinos, the atmosphere is conducive to gathering tons of valuable information in the realm of poker psychology. Getting to know your opponents is a sure way to quick dividends at the table. People play poker as their personality leads them, in most cases. In other words, knowing a player away from the table will certainly aid you in predicting their play at the table. An accountant with three kids from the Midwest will often play differently than an unmarried tattoo artist from Miami. You see, these bits of information provide great insights into their personality. It takes a certain personality composite to be attracted to these professions, lifestyles, etc. I try to be the chatty, friendly guy at the table. Most of the players assume that I am just making casual conversation as I work in questions about their jobs, their hometown, or even their favorite production shows. The question about the best show in town is one of my favorites. Being a regular player in the area, I know darn well all about all of the shows in town. My question is not a genuine inquiry into a show recommendation. For that, I’d be going to the hotel concierge. Instead, I am looking for some more bits of personal information. This (and other) questions seem harmless to answer for even the most careful casino poker player, but it can provide an opening for information to be divulged. It tells me if they are tourists or locals, for one. This tells me if the focus of their trip is gambling or entertainment. For instance, if a player excitedly recommends an energetic, trendy show like Zumanity or Blue Man Group, I anticipate an aggressive or looser player who is looking to see many pots. These players crave entertainment and excitement, and are not likely to sit patiently to wait on monster hands. Players who mention Vegas staples like Rita Rudner and Celine Dion are much more likely to play tight, patient, and selective. On the other hand, I get a solid read if the question is met with a scoff and a reaction such as, “I don’t do the shows and such, because I stick to the poker room.” Home games make this even easier. Mingling and casual conversation is the norm, rather than the exception. Everyone feels very comfortable talking about their family, hobbies, work, and even their poker experience. Always plan to arrive at these informal games early to scout your opposition. Be sure to greet every player and as you ask questions, you can gather information. On the flip side, be sure to do your best to not expose too much to the poker sharks at the table. I have never once revealed myself at the casino’s poker table for being a poker writer or a mental health counselor. Instead, I’ve introduced myself as everything from a politician to an organist at the local church. I always attempt to exude misinformation as much as possible. I’ll present myself as a tourist even if the floor manager and I might be friends. I’ll wear wild clothing and drink hard liquor on a night that I might be playing patiently and tight/aggressive. I know these subtle clues will play a part in the table image that is being perceived. It is all in tune with keen poker psychology – know your opponent and don’t let them know you. Now go make it happen. Commerce Concludes Holiday Bonus Events The Commerce Casino in Commerce, California completed the 17th and last of its events in the Holiday bonus series of tournaments, which ended on November 20th. 10 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 2. Minh Ly . . . . . . . . . . $14,005 Woodland Hls, CA COMMERCE CASINO HOLIDAY BONUS EVENT #15 11/18/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $485 + $40 PLAYERS 150 Temple City, CA 3. Mickey Mouse . . . . . . $7,005 Ocean Beach, CA 4. Kenneth Neeley . . . . . $4,425 Santa Monica, CA 5. Jerry Polevoi . . . . . . . $3,315 Simi Valley, CA 6. Tommy Wong . . . . . . . $2,580 Oakland, CA 7. Vladimir Cerin . . . . . $1,845 Bradbury, CA John Hoang 8. Jonathan Gillespie . . . $1,475 Valencia, CA 9. Lang Lee. . . . . . . . . . . $1,180 Allen Kim of Los Angeles took the Championship event along with a nice cash Thanksgiving.prize. Although the total of17 events featured both No Limit and Limit Hold ‘em, the last seven events, covered here, were all No Limit tournaments. The prior ten events were covered in the last issue of Poker Player, which may be found on our web site at: www.pokerplayernewspaper.com. COMMERCE CASINO HOLIDAY BONUS EVENT #17 11/20/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $2425 + $80 PRIZE POOL Rosemead, CA $72,750 1. John Hoang . . . . . . . $27,650 Garden Grove, CA 2. Gevork Kasabyan . . $13,825 Los Angeles, CA 3. Eric Rockey . . . . . . . . $8,140 COMMERCE CASINO HOLIDAY BONUS EVENT #12 11/15/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM Boulder City, NV BUY-IN $97 + $20 4. Ruy Heim . . . . . . . . . . $5,015 PLAYERS 336 Newhall, CA 5. Bahn Jae Hun . . . . . . $3,560 Beaverton, OR 6. Ramzi Daniel . . . . . . . $2,545 Joe Lim Los Angeles, CA 7. Bahman Sabahi . . . . . $2,185 Los Angeles, CA 8. Brian McCann . . . . . . $1,820 Reseda, CA 9. Steve Tourouk . . . . . . $1,455 Sherman Oaks, CA COMMERCE CASINO HOLIDAY BONUS EVENT #14 11/17/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $291 + $30 PLAYERS 304 PRIZE POOL $106,118 1. Joe Lim . . . . . . . . . . . $39,264 La Puente, CA 2. Saifuddin Ahmad. . . $20,162 Newport Beach, CA 3. Franco Brunetti . . . . $10,081 W. Hollywood, CA 4. Emad Rayyan . . . . . . $6,367 Fullerton, CA 5. Lawrence Hua . . . . . . $4,775 Alhambra, CA 6. Quoc Huynh . . . . . . . . $3,714 PLAYERS 171 Worcester, MA Moise Tishbi 7. Garen Reshdouni. . . . $2,653 Monterey Park, CA Allen Kim 8. Jacky Lee . . . . . . . . . . $2,122 PRIZE POOL $88,464 $414,675 1. Moise Tishbi . . . . . . . $32,730 1. Allen Kim . . . . . . . . $157,575 2. Jerry Snell . . . . . . . . $16,805 PRIZE POOL Riverside, CA 2. Robert Blechman. . . $74,640 3. Chris Karagullryan . . $8,404 Culver City, CA Glendale, CA 3. Can Hua . . . . . . . . . . $39,395 4. Jose Tavares . . . . . . . . $5,308 Rosemead, CA Commerce, CA 4. Hassan Kamoei . . . . $29,025 5. Lee Hoang Robinson . $3,981 Indio, CA Midway City, CA 5. John Trussell . . . . . . $20,735 6. Scott Herz. . . . . . . . . . $3,096 Danville, CA Los Angeles, CA 6. Jon Dean. . . . . . . . . . $16,585 7. Jorge Walker . . . . . . . $2,212 San Gabriel, CA Cerrito, CA 7. Gioi Luong . . . . . . . . $14,515 8. Marcus Pruitt . . . . . . $1,769 Westminster, CA Los Angeles, CA 8. Franco Brunett . . . . . $8,295 9. Gary Mcallister . . . . . $1,415 Santa Monica, CA W. Hollywood, CA 9. Ron Miller . . . . . . . . . $7,260 Sant Fe Springs, CA COMMERCE CASINO HOLIDAY BONUS EVENT #16 11/19/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $485 + $40 W. Hollywood , CA COMMERCE CASINO HOLIDAY BONUS EVENT #14 11/13/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $194 + $25 PLAYERS 322 Salfuddin Aamad PRIZE POOL $62,468 1. Salfuddin Aamad . . . $23,110 New Port Coast, Ca COMMERCE CASINO HOLIDAY BONUS EVENT #13 11/16/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $194 + $25 PLAYERS 380 2. Roland Weedon . . . . $11,869 Villa Park, Ca 3. George Rechnitzer. . . $5,934 Beverly Hills, Ca 4. Amir Gaazvinian . . . . $3,748 Reseda, Ca 5. Paul Kozusko . . . . . . . $2,811 PLAYERS 278 Los Angeles, Ca 6. Ramzi Scour. . . . . . . . $2,186 John Chaptman Burbank, Ca 7. Ricky Afalava. . . . . . . $1,562 Frank Earnest Ogden, Ut $73,720 8. Gebrehiwet Goitom . . $1,249 1. John Chaptman . . . . $27,270 9. John Hoang . . . . . . . . . .$999 PRIZE POOL PRIZE POOL Santa Ana , CA 9. Eric Prince . . . . . . . . . $1,698 Los Angeles, CA Los Angeles, CA $134,830 1. Frank Earnest . . . . . $49,886 Chino, CA 2. Mitri Yazbek . . . . . . $25,618 Irvine, CA 3. Chris Elkins . . . . . . . $12,809 Carls Bad, CA In addition to being an avid poker enthusiast, John is a certified Counselor in the state of Pennsylvania. He has a Master of Arts degree in Counseling from West Virginia University, and a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology with a minor in Sociology from Lock Haven University. You can ask the “Poker Counselor” your question at carlisle14@hotmail.com. 9. Steve Castro . . . . . . . . $2,157 4. Keith Lebowitz . . . . . $8,090 Dallas, TX 5. Jerry Polevoi . . . . . . . $6,067 Simi Valley, CA 6. Joseph Mcgowan . . . . $4,719 La Quinta ,Ca 7. David Daneshgar . . . . $3,371 Westlake Vlg, CA 8. Romeo Pueblo . . . . . . $2,697 Covina, CA w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m La Mirada, CA Los Angeles, Ca Garden Grove, Ca Canterbury Notice Canterbury Park Card Club is retiring its $10 “Grand Opening 2000” Chip. Any outstanding chips will not be redeemed after December 31, 2005 and will have no cash value. 1100 Canterbury Road Shakopee, MN 55379 1-866-MNPOKER www.canterburypark.com Pham Takes Bally’s Paris WSOP Circuit Event poker hand can be riveting to behold, and even more extraordinary to analyze. The poker hand of all poker hands took place precisely at 4:20 pm PST on a Tuesday afternoon in Las Vegas. The loser of the hand was destined to walk away shell shocked in frustration as the fifth-place finisher. The winner of the hand was to ultimately soar to victory in the World Series of Poker Circuit championship held at Ballys-Paris – an event which will be nationally televised later by ESPN. The hand essentially cost one player $352,000. It was – the hand of the year. This final table promised to be a crowd-pleaser. Two World Series of Poker champions, including the reigning world champ Joe Hachem (chip leader) were present, in addition to former WSOP Circuit winners -- Doug Lee and J.C. Tran. High-limit cash game player, Minh Ly was eliminated as the 9thplace finisher on the previous day. Eventually it came – the hand. What followed next was a bombshell or an abomination, depending upon one’s perspective. The hand clearly demonstrates that poker tournaments can be either won or lost within seconds. It all started when 2005 world poker champion Joe Hachem was dealt pocket Kings. After J.C. Tran made an initial 18,000 raise, Kido Pham re-raised another 50,000. Hachem must have thought he was in final table heaven. Pondering his move, Hachem re-raised again up to 150,000. Tran immediately folded and Pham moved over the top with an all-in re-raise, for 157,000 more. Hachem later admitted that he feared his opponent having pocket Aces. But there was no way to lay down the big hand. Hachem called and Pham knew immediately he had made the wrong move at the wrong time. Pham sheepishly showed J-10, a huge underdog to Hachem’s powerhouse KK. With 650,000 in the pot at stake (about half of the chips in play), it was to be the turning point of the final table. “I didn’t want to play a big pot,” Hachem said later. “But I made the right read and was the leader by a mile.” When three cards fell on the flop, the second floor of the Ballys Casino was rocked to its foundation. It took a few seconds for Hachem’s eyes to focus on the horror he was about to confront. Wham! J-J-2 (trip Jacks) twisted Pham from a big dog into a huge favorite and put the pocket Kings into a meat grinder. In an instant that will certainly haunt Hachem for some time, the Australian’s dreams of winning his second WSOP title were demolished. Hachem failed to catch one of two remaining Kings and was left with just 40,000 in chips. The damage has clearly been done. Hachem looked like he had been hit in the stomach with a sledgehammer. But poker champions never go out without a fight. Hachem managed to win one more pot and doubled-up to nearly 100,000 before finally running out of steam. He was dealt K-8 in the small blind and moved all-in hoping to steal a round of blinds and antes. Unfortunately, Lee Watkinson was sitting in the big blind with pocket Nines. He called the raise. A Nine on the flop effectively ended any hope of Hachem mak- (Continued from page 1) ing a dramatic comeback. The reigning world poker champion walked away to a standing ovation from the crowd. Perhaps more importantly, he proved the $7.5 million win back in July was no fluke. With this impressive performance, Joe Hachem demonstrated he is a serious contender in any event he enters. Fifth-place paid. $88,172. “I came here wanting (Continued on page 18) BACK ISSUES, SPECIAL FEATURES & UP-TO-THE MINUTE POKER INFO— www.pokerplayernewspaper.com Poker at The Mirage is a beautiful thing The warm, inviting atmosphere draws you in. The people make you feel welcome. All your favorite games spread ’round the clock. And the only thing smoking is the hand you’re playing. THE POKER ZONE SCHEDULE OF EVENTS Day / Time SUNDAY / 5pm MONDAY / 7pm TUESDAY / 7pm WEDNESDAY / 7pm THURSDAY / 7pm Game NO LIMIT Hold’em LIMIT Hold’em NO LIMIT Hold’em POT LIMIT Hold’em NO LIMIT Hold’em mirage.com for room reservations 800-77-poker (800-777-6537) For tournament information, please call (702) 791-7291 w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 11 How many players saw the flop? Carnival Poker POwer POKER PSYCHOLOGY By JAMES A. M C KENNA, P H D. There’s a good reason that you will not likely find any “wild” poker games in casino poker rooms. Good players would not show up. I’ve noticed that the way to neutralize a good poker player is to get him or she to playing in a home game that if laced with what I call “phony poker games.” These are carnival poker games that reduce the game to pure chance. Games like “One-Eyed Jacks (are wild),” “Doctor Pepper (10’s, 2’s, and 4’s are wild),” “Low hole card is wild (and all like it),” and “Follow the Lady (the card dealt after the Queen is wild, but could change if another Queen is dealt up).” There are some that are close to regular poker such as “Three card poker.” In this game, though, a straight beats a flush. Go figure! It’s explained that it’s harder to get a straight in three cards than a flush. Another “almost poker” game is a game of 7-Card Stud and the high spade in the hole splits the pot. In the carnival version of this, the low hole card is also wild. Then, there are the carnival games that have nothing remotely to do with poker. Games like “In-between,” where you get two random cards dealt up and bet that the next card will be in between the face value of your up cards. There’s a game called 7/27, where you get one card down and two up and either go for a low hand (7) or a high one (27). If you lose you have to match the pot. As “home games,” these near poker games can be a lot of fun, don’t take a lot of skill, and can be very costly. These carnival games will build big pots, even though the bets are anywhere from fifty cents to three dollars. Even the purest of these games, such as “Jacks or better, progressive to open,” can build big pots. Even this game is mostly luck, even though some skill can help this type of game. In order to open in a Jacks (progressive) draw poker game everyone antes a dollar. If nobody opens the next round requires a pair of Queens or better to open and everyone antes another dollar. This goes on until someone opens. By the time it gets to Aces to open, the rest of the contributors to the pot are sitting ducks. And, it’s a lot of fun if you draw a set. With the popularity of poker increasing, there are a lot of home and campus games that are being created. Most of them seem to be regular poker games, a lot are Texas Hold ‘em, and some are these “near poker” games are just an excuse to gamble. If you go to one of these games, be careful if they say that it’s “Dealer’s Choice.” That’s where you could walk into a “turkey shoot” and where you are the turkey. Why? The dealer is likely to choose to play one of these carnival games. In all of them, it’s likely that the dealer has the edge. That is, the dealer will choose to play the game that he does best at. After all, you can find some of these table games in a casino. And, guess who has the edge in “Texas Shoot Out,” or “Blackjack plus 3-Card poker?” If you go to one of these home games that are loosely referred to as poker and you are a good poker player, the only edge that you will have is luck. Some dealer’s favorite game may be the first time you even heard of the game. So, if you want a night of surprises go play dealer’s choice at some home game. If you prefer to play more predictable poker, go to your favorite casino or make sure that the home game that you go to is real poker. James A. McKenna, PhD., has been a practicing individual and group therapist for over thirty-five years. His knowledge of human behavior combined with over thirty years of gaming experience gives him a unique perspective on the psychology of the gamer. His book, “Beyond Tells-Power Poker Psychology,” was recently published by Kensington Press. Write to him at jim@JimMckenna-phd.com. 12 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 Sam Mudaro, BA, MBA, is a practicing tax accountant and financial executive originally from New York with over 35 years of analytical business expertise. He and his wife Eva are nine-year Las Vegas residents. Sam uses simulation software to analyze and develop strategies for Omaha Hi/Lo and other forms of poker. Reach Sam at: realguru2003@yahoo.com. T oday we will examine some of the factors to consider when formulating our decision to fold or muck. I outlined some of the factors last time as questions we should ask ourselves. Today we will look at why we ask these questions and what do the answers mean. A tip before we get started. When your cards are being dealt, look at your opponents. Watch the expressions on their faces and what the do with their cards and hands. This is one of the easiest ways to pick up tells. You will always have time to look at your cards before you act. Most of the factors discussed apply to Hold-Em as well as Omaha H/L. I will concentrate on Omaha though. Lets start at the top. How many players saw the flop? This is important in both Omaha and HoldEm. If for nothing else it is essential for calculating pot odds. If we are looking at a draw we want enough callers to render that draw profitable. We do not want to chase a 1 in 6 shot with only one caller. Especially if we are only shooting for half the pot, or there is a chance we could be quartered. Certain hands play well against few callers while others demand more players. In Omaha when you flop the nut high with no chance of counterfeiting you want as many players in the pot as possible. Your decision to call, bet, raise or re-raise is driven by your desire to keep your opponents in the pot. With the nut low you must be mindful of counterfeiting and getting quartered or worse. The more callers you have the higher the probability someone already has the nuts or is drawing to the nuts. With many callers you can be assured most of the aces and deuces are out there, especially if the pot is raised and re-raised. It is also very common for a player to have a wheel with w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m Sam Mudaro is the... a flop containing three low cards of 5 or less. If the flop contains two or three cards to a flush you are probably looking at the nut flush. On the other hand if you are last to act and have all high cards before the flop, you may be looking good. Flop A-2-3 A-2-4 A-3-4 A-2-5 A-3-5 A-4-5 2-3-4 2-3-5 2-4-5 3-4-5 Scoop 28.1% 28.7% 29.1% 31.1% 31.6% 33.7% 37.8% 39.3% 40.7% 41.1% Nut Low Share 6.6% 7.2% 7.4% 8.3% 8.6% 9.8% 15.9% 17.9% 19.9% 21.2% Lets look at a chart of how often the wheel will get there with 3 cards to the wheel on the flop. Contrary to what some players may think, the chance to scoop the low goes up when an ace does not hit the board. Look at the 3-4-5 it will scoop the low 41% of the time and there will be a low over 90% of the time. The A-2-3 scoops 28% of the time with a low occurring 80% of the time. The combined Nut low is almost double for the 3-4-5, 62.3% vs. the A-2-3, 34.7%. Remember, most people play A-2 rather than 3-4. There is much more sharing when the A-2 is not counterfeited. How many players to act after you? This has a material effect as to whether you want to call with a marginal hand. The more players to act behind you the more likely the pot may be raised. If the flop brings a made low or low draw especially if it does not include an ace or deuce and you are sitting there with a high draw it may get pretty costly real fast. You must ask yourself why did all these players call to see the flop in the first place. Is it worth pursuing a high draw with two pair, a set, a straight draw or a flush draw? The number of players to act after you will affect Should I Play This Hand? the pot odds you receive as well. The key is being able to estimate how many of them will call. The earlier offered tip should be very useful. How many players to act in front of you? If you Comb 34.7% 35.9% 36.5% 39.4% 40.2% 43.5% 53.7% 57.2% 60.6% 62.3% Low No Low 80.2% 80.9% 81.4% 82.0% 82.6% 83.8% 89.1% 89.7% 90.4% 90.6% 19.8% 19.1% 18.6% 18.0% 17.4% 16.2% 10.9% 10.3% 9.6% 9.4% have a hand that warrants a check raise you want few people in front of you. The more that are behind you the more likely one of them will bet. This works especially well when you have a good high, (Ace high flush) combined with the nut low, (a wheel). Another opportunity arrives when you have flopped quads. You want as many people in front of you as possible so you can watch them bet and raise while you wait to cap it. How many players were at the table at the start of the hand? This concept is valuable in both Hold-Em and Omaha. The greater the number of players that are dealt in the more likely you will run into superior hands. The fewer opponents dealt a hand, the easier it will be to steal the pot. In Omaha high/low the value of a high hand goes up as the number of players dealt in goes down. I have written an entire article on this subject. The reason behind this is that there is always a high hand winner. There is not always a low winner. One should always be cognizant of how many players were dealt in as well as who they are. So what have we learned? There are factors other then our own 4 cards to consider before entering a pot or calling on the flop. Fo x w o o d s 39. John V Lambiase . . . $17,200 87. Jeffrey B Henry . . . . $11,000 S Walpole, MA Mitchellville, MD 40. Jason Decker . . . . . . $17,200 88. Dean A Hamrick . . . $11,000 Clifton, NY Plymouth, MI 41. Michael May . . . . . . $14,000 89. Andrew Kelsall . . . . $11,000 New York, NY Lutz, FL 42. Marco Savoni . . . . . . $14,000 90. Jerry W Young. . . . . $11,000 Windsor, Ont Henderson, NV 43. Chris J Barbeisch . . $14,000 Poker Player is pleased to announce that our East Coast representative, Donna Blevins, took home $11,000 for a 91st place finish. Greene, NY 44. Thomas Coan . . . . . . $14,000 Hauppauge, NY 45. Glyn W Banks . . . . . $14,000 Smithville, TN 46. Thomas D McCormick . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $14,000 Fargo, ND 47. Stephen Diamantas . $14,000 Vero Beach, FL 48. Hasan A Habib. . . . . $14,000 Downey, CA 49. Young V Phan . . . . . $14,000 Garden Grove, CA 50. Sean Michael Scott . $14,000 Kingswood, UK 51. Willie B Tann . . . . . . $12,000 Bovington, GBR 91. Donna L Blevins . . . $11,000 WPF 95. Chris K Karagulleyan. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11,000 West Enfield, ME Glendale, CA 108. Kathleen H Liebert $11,000 96. Marsha Waggoner . . $11,000 Las Vegas, NV Downey, CA 109. Joseph J Peruti . . . $11,000 97. Walter M Williams . $11,000 Cheshire, CT Augusta, GA 98. Roy T Thung . . . . . . $11,000 White Plains, NY 99. Mark P Ader . . . . . . $11,000 110. Kenneth E Myers. . $11,000 (Continued on page 41) 113. William McKinney $11,000 Lutz, FL Walden, NY Princeton, WV 101. Ryan H Buckholtz . $11,000 114. Michael V Pascullo $11,000 San Diego, CA Syosset, NY 102. Ralph E Porter. . . . $11,000 115. Anthony M Nader . $11,000 Bothell, WA Milton, MA 103. Richard J Cairo . . . $11,000 116. Frank Cruess-Callaghan. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11,000 92. Arnold G Spee . . . . . $11,000 Agoura Hills, CA Thomaston, CT 93. Sam Haddad . . . . . . $11,000 105. Ronald K Kirk . . . . $11,000 Warwick, RI Lexington, KY 94. Mark A Seif . . . . . . . $11,000 106. Massoud Nikjouian $11,000 Woodbridge, VA Rich Yarmosh Is The Senior Champion! Pittsburgh, PA 100. Anthony J Camillery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11,000 Highland Park, IL Hollis, NH 119. Daniel D Sommer . $11,000 Burnsville, MN 112. Michael R Ramsey. $11,000 104. Frank Meaney . . . . $11,000 120. Christopher W Loveland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11,000 The 2005 Seniors Championship event had a record breaking number of participants as 471 players competed for a prize pool of $237,500. Oklahoma Johnny Hale was on hand once again as the host of this annual event. Oklahoma Johnny presented each of the final table participants an autographed copy of his autobiography, “The Life and Times of a Gentleman Gambler.” Rich Shreveport, LA 111. Eric J Hutchens . . . $11,000 Farmington Hills, MI Inverness, FL Las Vegas, NV 107. Mark S Awalt . . . . . $11,000 (Continued from page 7) Dublin, Ire 117. Matthew C Smith . $11,000 Tallahassee, FL 118. Andrew Wallach . . $11,000 Hasbrouck Hghts, NJ 52. Barry S Berger . . . . $12,000 Englewood, NJ 53. David F Scharf . . . . . $12,000 Columbia, SC 54. Daniel Yanofski . . . . $12,000 West Orange, NJ 55. Mohammad Berenjinataj . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $12,000 Arlington, TX 56. John Lakatosh . . . . . $12,000 Red Lion, PA 57. Michael M Menard . $12,000 N Smithfield, RI 58. Joanne Liu . . . . . . . . $12,000 Palo Alto, CA 59. Thomas M Fuller. . . $12,000 Boulder, CO 60. Carmen Menechella $12,000 Niagra Falls, Ont 61. John P Sousa . . . . . . $12,000 Pelham, NH 62. David B Thompson . $12,000 Bethlehem, CT 63. Erik Cajelais . . . . . . $12,000 Masc, Que 64. Hyon S Kim . . . . . . . $12,000 New York, NY 65. Michael J Mella . . . . $12,000 Armonk, NY 66. Mark Carlson . . . . . $12,000 Wilbraham, MA 67. Jason E Zausmer . . . $12,000 Burke, VA 68. James D Campbell . $12,000 Marlborough, MA 69. Scott G Wilson . . . . . $12,000 Victoria, BC 70. Spiro Mitrokostas . . $12,000 W Yarmouth, MA 71. William L Edler . . . . $11,000 Rodeo, CA 72. Amanda L Baker . . . $11,000 Boulder, CO 73. Brian T Batt . . . . . . . $11,000 Chicago, IL 74. Robert T Wittman . . $11,000 Dubuque, IA 75. Farzad Bonyadi . . . . $11,000 Aliso Viejo, CA 76. Steven W Dilliard . . $11,000 Malone, FL 77. John DiSandro . . . . . $11,000 Jamestown, RI 78. Temp D Hutter. . . . . $11,000 Charlottesville, VA 79. Abdol A Vahedi . . . . $11,000 Sherman Oaks, CA 80. Stafford A Woodley . $11,000 Bronx, NY 81. Kyle D Bowker . . . . $11,000 Walton, NY 82. William Krackomberger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11,000 Galloway, NJ 83. Peter F Campo . . . . . $11,000 Waterford, CT 84. Jerome L Saunders . $11,000 Orlando, FL 85. Jerry Burgess . . . . . . $11,000 Wake Forest, NC 86. Howard Elfant . . . . . $11,000 New York, NY w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 13 Two Goofs STRAIGHT SKINNY By RICHARD G. BURKE On a dreary Saturday in the fall at my local poker room, my poker gods were napping, so I readily agreed when Fred invited me to the bar to answer a limit Hold’Em question. While partaking of an adult beverage, Fred asked if he should have played the following hand differently. As the Cutoff in an average, ten-handed $4-8 Hold’Em game, he peeked at his hand and saw 2a2f. He called. The Button called, the Small Blind called, and the Big Blind checked. Seven-handed they saw the dealer flop 6d-2s-6f. Everyone upstream checked. Fred decided to bet $4, hoping that the enemy would think that he was trying to steal, and a few “customers” would call, but they all put him on a hand like 8a-6a and folded. I nodded wisely and affected a pensive look. A thoroughly good fellow, Fred bought another round. Raising with small pockets in late position has its advantages, I told Fred. If there were only one limper or raiser upstream, then your raise might isolate her. Although a big dog to higher pockets, heads-up a pocket Pair is a slight favorite against two overcards. If there were three or more callers upstream, then your raise might entice the Blinds also to call because their pot odds, and yours, would be attractive. Barring Straights and Flushes, the chance that you will improve to at least Trips is 0.192, about 20%, so you want four callers, and more would be a plus. If there were two or three callers, then you might play your small pockets as if they were Top Pair or an Overpair: if you win, then that’s great; if not, then you’ve advertised a “wild” image. Fred stirred his drink for a bit and agreed that he should have raised pre-Flop. The probability of flopping a Set and a Pair for a Full House is C(2,1)*12*C(4,2)/C(50,3), about 1 in 136 times, I told him. Because they’re so rare and so strong you want to make the most of your good fortune, I said. If you had raised pre-Flop, I told him, then your opponents would have put you on a hand like AaKf. One or two might have called your post-Flop bet. Or you even could have checked, acting like you needed a free Turn card. If you had raised and the Flop had been something like Kd-2s-Kf, then they might have put you on Trip Kings, but almost certainly not a Full House. You would have bet, hoping to elicit a call from anyone holding a King, and maybe even a check-raise when the bets doubled. In your case, because you were so far ahead postFlop you should have checked, so that everyone saw the Turn for free. When you’re way ahead, I told him, a check is deceptive, and it gives the enemy a free chance to make hands strong enough to call or raise you when the bets double. Slow-playing is always a gamble, I told him. You’d be at risk to a bigger Boat if anyone had started with 6d-2d, and/or Quads if anyone hit a fourouter like Ka-6a or Ad-6s, but that’s why we call it “gambling.” After the house rake and dealer toke, you stacked $28. You’re always happy to stack chips, but those two goofs forewent the opportunity to stack much more. At these drink prices, you would welcome a half-C or more. Fred agreed. Mr. Burke is the author of Flop: The Art of Winning at Low-Limit Hold ’Em, available from amazon.com, gamblersbook.com, and kokopellipress.com. E-mail your Hold ’Em questions to richardburke@comcast.net 14 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m to kill me. In this no-wayto-win situation, I do what that great poker philosopher Hugo All-In suggests—I show ’em my poker face. I tell Nickel and Dime, “Dorothy here is the thief that I’ve bluffed half-in at the pot, I have no choice but to bluff my life all-in. I yell, “I’ve blown up four poker rooms tonight and this one goes up next. I’ve got ten sticks of TNT strapped Poker Face A Poker Player Murder Mystery by Robert Arabella There are a lot of great poker songs: Kenny Rogers’ The Gambler, Aerosmith’s Deuces Wild, Bonnie Raitt’s Luck Of The Draw, and Jerry Reed’s Uptown Poker Club all come to mind. Right now, though, I’m thinking about the rapper/ poker player Hugo All-In’s Poker Face: It don’t matter what cards they holdin’ /Show ’em your poker face And soon they’ll be fold’in Hugo All-in /There’s no call’in Play like you got an Ace /Show ’em your poker face I have, by badly overplaying a weak hand, delivered Dorothy to certain death. Any second now, Nickel—a psychopath who doesn’t know the difference between right from wrong—and his partner, Dime—a sociopath, who doesn’t care about the difference between right and wrong—will recognize Dorothy as the woman who stole their laundered money. “Don’t move, Thayer!” says Nickel, aiming his gun between my eyes. Dime, his gun prodding my chest, echoes, “Don’t move,” adding, “there’s a $1,000,000 reward out on you for blowing up all those poker rooms tonight and we’re collecting it!” “No, you’re not,” says Dorothy, placing her knife at my throat, “if there’s a reward out for him, it’s mine! I saw him first!” “Who the hell are you?” asks Nickel. “Why the hell do you want to know?” answers Dorothy. “What the hell, let’s kill them both,” says Dime. I don’t know why this particular situation in which no one can win is called a “Mexican Standoff.” (Although right now I’d like to be South of the Border.) I have two guns pointed at me and a knife to my throat and I know that, unless this standoff ends very quickly, one of these people is going who stole from your laundry account.” The psycho killers blink in disbelief. I tell Dorothy, “Let me introduce to you Mr. Nickel and his friend, Mr. Dime.” She lets out a desperate cry. The three people holding weapons on me stand there staring at each other. Now to my chest and unless you all want to be blown to rags, GET OUT OF HERE NOW!!” A poker face is a lying face. I need to make them believe the lie. Nickel, Dime, and Dorothy—like poker players suddenly check raised all-in on the river by a limper—hesitate, unsure of what to do next. w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m I sense their indecision and quickly raise the stakes by stating a countdown: “10 … 9 … 8 …” Dime turns coward and runs for the door. “7 … 6 …” Followed quickly by Nickel. “5 … 4 …” But not Dorothy. Her knife’s still to my throat. She says, “You’re bluffing.” I keep counting, “3 … 2 … 1 …” “I knew you were bluffing,” she says. “I knew you didn’t have the bal…” I never heard her finish the sentence. The Misdeal had exploded. D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 (To be continued in the next issue of Poker Player) P O K E R P L AY E R 15 DEBBIE BURKHEAD INTERVIEWS... An Accumulation of Errors FRESH YOUNG FACE OF Poker Ira Cohen C A R D R O O M M A N AG E R AT T H E P E P P E R M I L L By Jennifer Matiran A few errors in judgment repeated consistently can cost you a lot of money playing poker. There are many important aspects to a live money ten person game, position, limits, betting, calling and raising BUT there are two others in my opinion that are the most important. My father who has been consistently playing profitable poker all his life shared two key ingredients that are imperative to playing winning poker over a period of time. The first is the two hole cards one chooses to play. Blinds excluded, the person who plays ANY Ace for example, not considering his or her kicker, will inevitably be a loser over a period of time. For instance, an Ace, Four off-suit, should not even be played to begin with, perhaps Ace, Four suited (if pot hasn’t been raised) could be played. An Ace, Four off-suit, at times, may win but the chances are slim, more often it will be beat with a better kicker. So playing “any” Ace over a period of time will cost a whole bunch of chips. Always play strong cards which are even stronger when they are together. Secondly, always remember this “FLOP IT OR MUCK IT.” It’s that simple. I start with a King, Queen for example, beautiful King, Queen, it usually will mean nothing if the flop’s 2, 3, 4, rainbow, muck it! This concept will save a player so much money in the long run. I start with two nines, if the flop comes Ace, Queen, 8 and someone bets the nines usually will mean nothing. Muck it! “Players want to get married to their cards” my Dad always says “and that’s what separates the winners from the losers.” He says “folding is not like quitting, folding when appropriate is what separates the pros from the amateurs.” “FLOP IT OR MUCK IT!” Remember, the best players in the world usually play from twenty-thirty percent of the cards that are dealt them. Failure happens over a period of time in poker and in life. One does not become 600 lbs. in one day, one does not despise their spouse in one day, one does not burn their car engine in one day, one does not become an alcoholic after one drink, I could go on for days, but you get my point. A wise man said something like this “Failure is not a single, cataclysmic event. We do not fail overnight. Failure is the inevitable result of an accumulation of poor thinking and poor choices. To put it more simply, failure is nothing more than a few errors in judgment repeated every day. Now why would someone make an error in judgment and then be so foolish as to repeat it every day? The answer is because he or she does not think that it matters. On their own, our daily acts do not seem that important. A minor oversight, a poor decision, or a wasted hour generally doesn’t result in an instant and measurable impact. More often than not, we escape from any immediate consequences of our deeds. Those who eat too many of the wrong foods are contributing to a future health problem, but the joy of the moment overshadows the consequence of the future. It does not seem to matter. Those who smoke too much or drink too much go on making these poor choices year after year after year... because it doesn’t seem to matter. But the pain and regret of these errors in judgment have only been delayed for a future time. Consequences are seldom instant; instead, they accumulate until the inevitable day of reckoning finally arrives and the price must be paid for our poor choices choices that didn’t seem to matter.” Changing the world one sentence at a time, Jennifer Matiran believes the pen is, and always will be, mightier than the sword. She hopes to emerge into the tournament circuit of Poker. Contact her with questions, comments or interesting material at matiran@sbcglobal. net. Ms. Matiran has just completed her latest screenplay, her other passion (besides Poker!). 16 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 Ira Cohen was born February 6, 1960 in White Plains, New York. At the age of 10 his family relocated to Miami, Florida. Ira graduated from North Miami Beach High School in 1978 with a football scholarship to the University of Florida. In 1980 he transferred to the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. In 1981 Ira left college to pursue his dream of playing pro football in the USFL for the LA Express. His dream was shattered when he incurred a knee injury that forced him to give up football. In 1984 Ira headed for Las Vegas to pursue a career in the gaming business. His introduction into the world of gaming came as a craps dealer at the Dunes. He left the Dunes in 1986 to deal craps and baccarat at the Riviera. In 1998 Ira decided to leave the casino industry to finish his education. He enrolled in the University of Nevada in Las Vegas (UNLV) with the intention of earning a degree in child psychology. In 2001 Ira left Las Vegas for Reno to attend University of Nevada at Reno (UNR). While attending school he was also working part time as a Casino Supervisor at the Peppermill. In March of 2005 Ira was appointed Card Room Manager of the Peppermill poker room. DB: How many poker tables are available for live action at the Peppermill? IC: When I took over in March we had eight and since then we have expanded the room to 12 tables. We also have 20 plasma screen TV’s for sports viewing. DB: What other changes have taken place since you‘ve been assigned the room? IC: The room has been remodeled to accommodate two shift manager stations for easy access for our players. w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m We have installed a state of the art computer system, we are the only poker room in Reno to have this system. It has a computerized wait list for viewing, a tournament clock, structures and payouts. The system allows us to swipe a player’s card and it prints a tournament ticket with their seat assignment and table. DB: What live games are available on a daily basis? IC: We spread $2-$4, $3$6, and $4-$8 $10-$20 limit hold‘em on a daily basis. Our daily no-limit game starts at 7 p.m. with $2-$3 blinds and $5 to open. The minimum buy-in is $100 and the maximum is $1500. We also spread a $20$40 limit hold‘em game on Monday, Friday and Saturday that starts at 5 p.m. . . DB: What daily tournaments does the Peppermill offer? IC: On Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at 1 p.m. it’s no-limit hold’em with a $25 buy-in and one optional $13 add-on. On Wednesday at 7 p.m. the event is limit hold’em with a $65 buy-in. Thursday at 7 p.m. it’s nolimit hold’em with a $115 buy-in with one $110 rebuy. Friday and Saturday is nolimit hold’em at 6 p.m. with a $110 buy-in. Sunday at 2 p.m. the game is no-limit hold’em with a $35 buy-in and one $30 rebuy. Monday is a ladies only no-limit tournament with a $25 buy-in and a $20 rebuy. DB: Are you planning to add any more tournaments in the near future? IC: Yes, beginning in January we will have a monthly freeroll for our daily tournament players. The top 60 point earners from our daily tournaments will earn an entry into the freeroll. Our daily tournaments will be separated in three groups and the top earners from group one will play in January, group two will play in February and group three will play in March. DB: The Peppermill is known for running two major tournaments a year will you be adding to that number? IC: Last April we held a Celebrity tournament where we invited our top casino pit players and slot players to compete with our poker players. It was our way of introducing our casino players to our poker room and because it was so successful it will be a yearly event. As you mentioned, we also run two events a year, our Fall Poker Classic that’s takes place in November and our Spring Poker Classic in March. DB: What incentives does the Peppermill offer poker players? IC: We have a bad beat jackpot that is currently more than $100,000. Any four-of-a-kind beaten by a higher hand with both hole cards playing takes home the cash. We have a lightening Jackpot that takes aces full beaten by a higher hand with each player only using one hole card, that’s currently at $1500. We also have a royal flush, straight flush and four-of-a-kind jackpots. We offer our players comps based on hours played at .75 per hour but we have a very liberal comp policy. We offer poker room rates starting as low as $29 per night. DB: What promotions are offered at the Peppermill? IC: We just completed an event based on hours played where players that accumulated more that 100 hours of live play earned an entry into a tournament to win a $10,000 seat into the main event at the World Series of Poker plus $1,000 in cash. We have Monday Night Football Raffles where every quarter we give away a manicure, facial, haircut and an entry into either our Sunday or Wednesday daily tournament. DB: Who is responsible for making you job as Cardroom Manager a little easier? IC: My team, I have the best team. Because of my lack of poker experience I placed the best people in key positions. I have shift managers, dealers and cashiers with experience and personality. Bobby Helman, my assistant Poker Room Manager, brings integrity along with 20 years (Continued on page 31) “It still has not hit home,” World Series of Poker Champion Joe Hachem says about this business of becoming an instant celebrity. One minute he’s a reasonably successful but unknown Australian, a former chiropractor who fancied himself a pretty good gambler. efits generated by his World Series win could be very big. Sponsors anxious to sink big money into pokerrelated events want to be connected with people who look like winners, who ARE winners. Life has been pretty much become a non-stop shuttle from one photo op serious business of getting the most out of opportunities that fill the horizons of his life in almost every direction. “I signed with William Morris,” the oldest of the Hollywood talent agencies PLAYER JOE BY PHIL HEVENER Hachem Profile And then within a matter of days, he is the winner of the World Series of Poker’s main event, a man who outplayed 5,619 other wanna-be champs, gets a $7.5 million first prize and then jets off to LA for some late night conversation with Jay Leno on national television. “It’s an awesome thing, everything that’s happened,” he says, sitting in the Golden Nugget’s coffee shop on a November morning, telling a reporter what it’s been like, this leap from anonymity to being a famous face strangers stop on the street. He shakes his head, smiling, perhaps at the crowded panorama of experiences that have filled his life since the early hours of that mid-August morning at the Horseshoe when the final hand was dealt. With the victory still fresh in his mind, Harrah’s flew the 39-year-old Hachem and his family from Las Vegas to LA, put them up in a hotel. “The Leno people were nice. It was a fun interview,” saying it casually, as though he’s been getting the star treatment all his life. He’s done several other television interviews and has others coming up, so Hachem understands, but it’s best to skip the details for the moment until everything has been firmed up. There’s even an agent now, which seems to be the way it is for the winners of big poker events, who are suddenly plunged into the which has been actively looking for opportunities to link gaming with other complementary elements of big business and entertainment. “I was lucky enough,” Hachem says of Morris. “They actually came after me. Being totally ignorant about so many of the issues I have to deal with now, Morris seems like the way to go. People told me it is the biggest talent agency in the world and I haven’t found anyone walking away from William Morris saying they didn’t look after them.” He gives this piece of news a tight-lipped smile and look that seems to say, pretty cool, huh? Hachem will have no trouble staying busy with big poker tournaments, perhaps up until the time when he returns to Las Vegas next summer to defend his title at the next World Series. Some kind of book deal also seems likely. “I’ve had a very interesting life,” the Lebanese-born Hachem says matter of factly. The kind of conversations he has so far had with the Morris people range from video games to TV shows. The fact Hachem projects an image that goes well with television – an easy smile, personality and good looks – will work to his advantage at a time when the eventual ancillary ben- Poker Player is pleased to welcome Phil Hevener back to its pages. Hevener was the Managing Editor of Poker Player from July 1983 to December 1985. Phil wanted to produce his own publication, which he did with Larry Hall. They called it, “Las Vegas Style.” A popular journalist who writes for many major publications, Phil was replaced in 1985 by Gary Thompson, who is now the spokesman for Harrahs Entertainment. or poker event to another. During the months ahead he has tournaments scheduled in the Bahamas, Copenhagen, Paris, Monte Carlo and of course at several locations in the U.S. After the World Series, his thinking was that he would go back home and essentially be the same person he had always been. “That’s the way I was thinking,” he laughs, “but it was naïve. Wherever I go I’m gonna get media attention and a certain spotlight, so I’m going to try and enjoy what’s ahead of me and give what I can back to the poker world.” Sitting at the Nugget coffee shop, he was between tournaments, sipping a glass of orange juice, working on a piece of toast. He had just finished the Harrah’s Tournament of Champions, a $2 million free-roll event at Caesars Palace that was open to those who made the final table at last year’s main event and others who had qualified by virtue of their play in World Series circuit events at various Harrah’s properties over the last year or so. Hachem did not make the final table at Caesars, but he did get plenty of time in front of the ESPN cameras, a fact that is of no small importance for a poker champ who realizing the importance of image and quality exposure. After breakfast he would be getting ready for several days of activity associated with the third season of the Poker Superstars Invitational being filmed at the Nugget for showing over much of next year on cable’s FSN. He’s signed to play in the second annual National Heads-Up Poker Championship to be filmed in February at Caesars Palace for later showing on NBC. And he’s also just signed with PokerStars. com, as have the previous two World Series winners Greg Raymer and Chris Moneymaker. But unlike Raymer and Moneymaker who earned their main event seats via PokerStars satellites, Hachem bought into the $10,000 tournament with his own money. But didn’t he try to win one of the budget-priced online satellites that offered a seat in the championship? “Oh, of course I did,” giving this a big grin. “I didn’t suffer from a lack of trying. Who wants to put up that much of your own money.” The sequence of events that brought him to Las Vegas for the World Series began this past March when a friend played in a $30 online satellite and won. Hmmmm, how sweet it would be . . . so Hachem decided to take a shot and try his luck with several PokerStars satellites, figuring he needed a win because the price of getting to Vegas would otherwise be too expensive. “The thing was, I wanted to bring my whole family with me, you see, and I have four children . . . “So we’re sitting there at the beach one day and my wife, she turns to me and says that she thinks I should go with my friends. But he wasn’t through with the satellites, not yet. In Las Vegas he tried a thousand dollar satellite and played poorly, not winning anything. So he decided to try one more thousand-dollar event. He placed 10th out of 900 players and collected twenty-eight thousand. He suddenly had his ticket to the main event. What were his expectations as he sat down, one man among more than 5,600? “My first thought was if I make it to the money than I have done well but three days later I had made it into the money and I start thinking about the (championship) bracelet. It’s on the line and this is what w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m I’m here for and I stopped thinking about the money, it was no longer the point and just played my heart out.” On the final hand against second place finisher Steve Dannemann, Hachem started with a 7, 3 off-suit . . . 7 of clubs, 3 of spades.” Thinking about how to play this, Hachem knew that any kind of significant on the flop would probably have Dannemann pushing all his chips in. “I wasn’t prepared to get involved with him unless I actually had it . . . had the nuts. This was a plan I had had in place for hours.” At this point Hachem had about thirty-six million. There was about twenty million in front of Dannemann. Hachem had the two hundred thousand big blind and Dannemann made it seven hundred thousand to call. “I’m figuring I had to call, because if you get the right flop,” and he shrugs, as though the situation speaks for itself. “And then the flop comes 4, 5, 6.” Explaining this months later, a slow smile spread across his face. “Now the situation I was looking at was how do I get all his chips?” Hachem makes a bet calculated to get a raise from Dannemann but he only calls. Now he’s thinking that what Dannemann has is a couple of over cards, maybe a pair. “The turn comes an ace,” Hachem says. There’s that slow smile again, “and now I know I have him, but how do I get it.” So Hachem bet two million into what at that point was a six million dollar pot. Dannemann studies the situation for a little bit and then raises three million more. “Before he’s even finished doing it I just said stop. I’m all in.” Dannemann did not D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 (Continued on page 40) P O K E R P L AY E R 17 Speaking of Money Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the casino, BAM, right back at you! The time that I have taken off to focus on some other matters has rewarded me with a new perspective. In relation to life, this particular subject matter needs no introduction. However, through personal observa- Dealer Vibes By Donald W. Woods, Jr. tion I have arrived at one single note theme pertinent to every thing that we do. Therefore, without further ado, here is my testimony: MONEY TALKS! Money talks in an unmistakable language universal to all who may have difficulty understanding little else. Money can be even explicit or subtle as each situation dictates. What money cannot be is; ignored! Money will not have that. Money requires continual attention, for without proper attention, money troubles will escalate from subtle reminders to explicit consequences. Money matters are at the forefront of almost every single misunderstanding, many times leading to bitter lifelong decisions. Money can be overbearing, intrusive, relentless, and downright ruthless in its quest to dictate your life. When other matters require attention, there is money waiting in the wings for an intro to over-ride the intended subject. Now, historically we can trace money’s behavior as far back as the beginning of time, but for this column, we only need to go back to yesterday, to see how pertinent money’s effect has on our daily routines. Too many times money dictates in situations where it needs to be secondary. For, money is not a way of life, money has no allegiance to anyone-if you do not believe that, put some money in the bank, go around to the ATM to retrieve it, it will spit out different money. Make no mistake about it; the essence of man is not money! Be forewarned, without it though, there had better be a foundation in your life rooted in the greatest soil. The reason that many calamities befall us-as a people-is the constant rat race of the paper chase. We cannot be sure that someone or some thing is not trying to uproot us from our prized possession; money. Therefore, our universal guard is up for intrusions into our accrued wealth. Sort of like a 24 hour security system on alert for anti good intentioned predators. Rest assured that those without money are certainly on red alert to right that oversight, as Malcolm X says…”by any means necessary”. In our lives, no one has a blue print on how to live life. In life, we find out-mostly through trial and mostly error-what works best and move on. In the casino, no matter how person (A) conducts his/her finances enabling him/her to play the variety of games, your personal finances are what should dictate your playing structure. Too many times, we collectively play above our means, which invites a monetary calamity. That in and of itself is a mistake. I am sure if we heed the words of that rap master, Snoop Dogg, “keep your mind on your money and your money on your mind”, that will go a long way in keeping you above water, or felt, or poverty or…. Donald W. Woods, Jr. is a 9 year professional dealer. Some of his diversified interests include, track and field coach at the high school level yielding a championship in 2002. He is currently penning an original script, outside the poker arena, for his maiden voyage to movie-land. For more information, contact him at mrexcite20032000@yahoo.com Pham Takes Bally’s to avoid making any mistakes,” Hachem said in a post-tournament interview. “The fact is – I didn’t make a mistake. I’m proud of the way I played in this tournament, although it is very painful not to win.” When asked which emotion is more powerful in poker – joy or despair, Hachem was candid. “Despair is more powerful,” Hachem admitted. “It’s great to win, but it takes some time to get over losing. But that’s poker – you have to get over the tough beats.” Down to four players, Kido Pham enjoyed a sizable chip advantage. He had 650,000. J.C. Tran had 280,000. Lee Watkinson had 170,000. Meanwhile, Scotty Nguyen was on life-support. Down to about 75,000, Nguyen found a playable hand with A-J and moved all-in. Kido Pham could not have been more delighted to call the raise, holding pocket Kings. This time, the normally formidable cowboys held up, and Pham dragged the last chip from Nguyen’s stack. Scotty Nguyen, the 1998 world poker champion and official host of this tournament on behalf of Harrah’s Entertainment was in top form at this final table. But the $100,768 in prize money was bittersweet. “Second, third, fourth – it’s all disappointing,” Nguyen said afterward. “First place is what it’s all about. Money is good. But there’s nothing like firstplace, baby.” During his five hours spent at the final table, Lee Watkinson had been the stealth player. While other players openly talked, laughed, and cheered for themselves and each other, Watkinson sat stoically, rarely showing any emotion. Down to his last 100,000 in chips, Watkinson was dealt K-Q. He raised and was called by Kido Pham. The flop, K-K-5, was a thing of beauty to Watkinson. Unfortunately, there was danger on the horizon as two clubs were on board. Watkinson moved all-in. Kido Pham had more than enough chips to call the raise and did so with J-9 of 18 P O K E R P L AY E R clubs. Watkinson’s advantage was short-lived. A club on the turn brought a scowl to the emotionally-detached Watkinson. Hoping to see the board pair, all Watkinson could do was watch hopelessly as another club fell in the river. Third-place paid $138,556. Lee Watkins has enjoyed a stellar year in tournament poker that any other player would envy. He has won well in excess of a million dollars with two secondplace finishes, netting over $500,000 each time. Despite financial success, Watkinson has not fared so well in tournament victories. This would prove to be another impressive showing, but less than satisfying conclusion for the poker pro from Washington State. That said -- in stark contrast to Scotty Nguyen, Watkinson had a different view of his finish. “I really can’t be disappointed with this,” Watkinson said. “I was low in chips from the start and never had a big hand. I’ll take one of the top three spots (finishes) anytime I can get it.” It would be an allVietnamese finale. Headsup play began with Kido Pham (894,000) holding a 2 to 1 chip lead over J.C. Tran (446,000). The two finalists played for about 20 minutes before the relatively uneventful ending. On the final hand of the tournament, Pham was dealt A-8. Tran was dealt K-8. The flop came A-K-6. Pham bet out with top pair and Tran called with second pair. When a Queen fell on the turn Pham moved all-in. Tran thought for six long minutes before announcing “call.” Everyone in the audience rose to their feet and when Tran saw Pham’s Ace, he realized the end was only seconds away. A harmless Jack fell on the river, sealing the victory for Pham. J.C. Tran, decked out in his trademark Sacramento Kings (NBA) hat and jersey, slam dunked second place – good for $251,920. If anyone deserved to catch a few breaks and get lucky, it was Thang ‘Kido’ Pham. His personal odyssey is one of compassion and inspiration. At the age of eight, Pham fled his native Vietnam on a wooden boat and drifted out into the South China Sea. He and his family evacuated his war-torn homeland with all of their possessions tucked inside a few knapsacks. Pham’s family eventually arrived in the United States and settled down in Dallas. Pham later married and now has two children – ages 2 and 4. One of his children is autistic and has special needs. “I could not make it this far in my life without my wife,” Pham said. “I owe everything to her. This (win) is for her.” When he started to take poker seriously, his family expressed their reservations about gambling. But Pham believed in himself and his talent. He studied and started playing in poker tournaments. Pham cashed in two major tournaments earlier this year, but this win marked his biggest win ever. First-place paid $453,456. “My nickname is ‘freeroll,’ Pham said. (The reason is because) everything for me has been a freeroll in my life. I came here and am freerolling. When I left my home country, there was shooting and was very lucky to survive. Now, I can play poker and nothing affects me because whatever happens – I’m a winner.” When asked about the hand against Hachem, Pham was brutally sincere. “I played the hand very badly,” Pham admitted. “That was very lucky. I had already committed half of my chips, so I tried to steal the pot…. I caught a lot of cards today. I think after what I have been through (in my life), I deserve to get a break.” Who could possibly disagree? 2005 WSOP CIRCUIT EVENT AT BALLY’S-PARIS FINAL EVENT 11/22/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM CHAMPIONSHIP BUY-IN $10,000 + $0 PLAYERS 134 PRIZE POOL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 $1,260,000 Kido Pham . . . . . . . $453,456 JC Tran . . . . . . . . . $251,920 Lee Watkinson . . . . $138,556 Scotty Nguyen . . . . $100,768 Joe Hachem . . . . . . . $88,172 John Smith . . . . . . . . $75,576 Steven Hudak. . . . . . $62,980 s Paris WSOP Circuit Event 8 Doug Lee . . . . . . . . . $50,384 9 Minh Ly . . . . . . . . . . $37,788 2005 WSOP CIRCUIT EVENT AT BALLY’S-PARIS EVENT #10 11/18/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 2005 WSOP CIRCUIT EVENT AT BALLY’S-PARIS PLAYERS 124 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 $180,420 B. Hoover . . . . . . . . . $65,853 Brian Stonoff . . . . . . $39,692 Larry Wright . . . . . . $23,455 Douglas Carli . . . . . . $17,140 Mark Seif . . . . . . . . . $12,629 Glynn Beebe . . . . . . . . $9,021 Pete Bigelow . . . . . . . . $7,217 Scott Levy. . . . . . . . . . $5,413 2005 WSOP CIRCUIT EVENT AT BALLY’S-PARIS EVENT #9 6 7 8 9 Wendy Hursh . . . . . . . $1,564 Anne Knight. . . . . . . . $1,251 Morgan Brashear . . . . .$939 Stacy Mucci . . . . . . . . . .$626 EVENT #4 11/13/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM LISP (LADIES ONLY) BUY-IN $200 + $20 PLAYERS 169 PRIZE POOL 1 2 3 4 5 $31,286 Jing Xia Yu. . . . . . . . $10,325 Nicole Schachrovsky . $5,694 Kandi Kroon . . . . . . . $3,129 Jennifer Farmer . . . . $2,503 Merri Perry . . . . . . . . $1,877 2005 WSOP CIRCUIT EVENT AT BALLY’S-PARIS EVENT #2 2005 WSOP CIRCUIT EVENT AT BALLY’S-PARIS EVENT #3 BUY-IN $1,500 + $50 PRIZE POOL Roland Ng . . . . . . . . $11,436 Sean King . . . . . . . . . . $8,895 David Justin . . . . . . . . $7,624 Brendan Watson . . . . $6,354 Russ Quick . . . . . . . . . $5,083 Larry Davis . . . . . . . . $3,812 Scott Hunter. . . . . . . . $2,541 BUY-IN $1,000 + $60 PLAYERS 205 PRIZE POOL $199,000 1 Danny Howze . . . . . . $65,621 2 Jimmy Tran . . . . . . . $36,191 3 Constantinos Maniatis . . . . . $19,885 4 Zachary Marshak . . $15,908 5 Richard Harter . . . . $11,931 6 Jae Chul Chang . . . . . $9,943 7 Mark Wilds . . . . . . . . $7,954 8 Tuan Vu . . . . . . . . . . . $5,966 9 Daniel Starkey . . . . . . $3,977 2005 WSOP CIRCUIT EVENT AT BALLY’S-PARIS 11/11/05 EVENT #1 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $300 + $30 BUY-IN $300 + $30 PRIZE POOL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 11/10/05 LIMIT HOLD’EM PLAYERS 154 11/12/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM (Continued from page 11) PLAYERS 479 PRIZE POOL $74,690 Mark Hight . . . . . . . $24,646 Keith Barrett . . . . . . $13,594 Pablo Gonzales . . . . . $7,469 Nick Helm . . . . . . . . . $5,975 Christian Rasmussen $4,481 John Harris . . . . . . . . $3,735 David Kutcher . . . . . . $2,988 Yerushalem Yehuda . . $2,241 Harvey Vandeven . . . $1,494 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 $139,000 Michael Souza . . . . . $41,555 Aaron Donovan . . . . $22,301 Gary Cordeiro . . . . . $11,081 Todd Anderson . . . . . $9,696 Patrick Le. . . . . . . . . . $8,311 Marc Perea . . . . . . . . . $6,926 Mike Crowell . . . . . . . $5,541 Dariush Imani . . . . . . $4,155 Max Scharf. . . . . . . . . $2,770 BACK ISSUES, SPECIAL FEATURES & UP-TO-THE MINUTE POKER INFO— www.pokerplayernewspaper.com 11/17/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $1,500 + $70 PLAYERS 180 PRIZE POOL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 $261,900 Men Nguyen . . . . . . . $86,427 Scott Epstein . . . . . . $47,666 Jonathan Turner . . . $26,190 Adrian Pitts . . . . . . . $20,952 Mark Cole . . . . . . . . $15,714 Ron Stanley . . . . . . . $13,095 Jody Milhouse . . . . . $10,476 Filmore Humphreys . $7,857 William Gustafik . . . . $5,238 Time to Ram-and-Jam at Monte Carlo. 2005 WSOP CIRCUIT EVENT AT BALLY’S-PARIS EVENT #7 11/15/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $300 + $30 PLAYERS 408 PRIZE POOL 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 $134,640 John Cobb . . . . . . . . $36,806 Maria Stern . . . . . . . $18,996 David Hurley . . . . . . . $9,498 Thuy Nguyen . . . . . . . $8,311 Mike Young . . . . . . . . $7,124 Aaron Holye . . . . . . . . $5,636 Jason Alt . . . . . . . . . . . $4,749 Lance Hewitt . . . . . . . $3,662 Amble Mavad . . . . . . $2,375 2005 WSOP CIRCUIT EVENT AT BALLY’S-PARIS EVENT #6 [Ram-and-Jam: to bet, raise, and re-raise aggressively in order to intimidate opponents] Introducing No Limit Hold’em Tournaments at Monte Carlo Resort and Casino, Las Vegas. 11/14/05 POT LIMIT OMAHA BUY-IN $500 + $50 PRIZE POOL 1 2 3 4 5 PLAYERS 43 Join us every Thursday for our new No Limit Hold’em Tournaments $67,900 $40 Morning Tournaments start at 9:00 a.m. Shafran Vitali. . . . . . $27,160 Michael Mizrachi . . $16,975 Chad Layne . . . . . . . $10,185 Jason Stern. . . . . . . . . $7,469 Ryan Hughes . . . . . . . $6,111 The winner advances to the 6 p.m. $100 Tournament For more information, call 702.730.7780. 2005 WSOP CIRCUIT EVENT AT BALLY’S-PARIS EVENT #5 11/14/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $500 + $50 PLAYERS 262 PRIZE POOL $127,070 Convenient parking parking and and easy easy access access off of Frank Convenient Frank Sinatra Sinatra Drive. Drive. montecarlo.com 1 Ryan Gentry . . . . . . $40,664 2 Douglas Carli . . . . . . $22,364 w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 19 LESSON 64: World Poker Players Conference 2005 Lessons from mike caro university of poker BY DIANE M C HAFFIE The conference was held at the Foxwoods Casino in Connecticut. The casino is breathtaking, set amongst the woods of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation. This annual allday educational opportunity is hosted by Card Player Cruises and Mike Caro University of Poker. Mike Caro, the “Mad Genius of Poker,” was emcee and kept everyone riveted with his stories and tips. All speakers were famous poker personalities and players. Lee Jones was first, with his presentation titled Heads-up Strategy for No-Limit Hold ‘em Tournaments. He covered “ES,” Equilibrium Headsup Strategy for No-limit Hold ‘em that he and James Kittock developed. He explained that most of us don’t consider how drastically the value of our hands increases as the number of players diminishes. This is critical in a heads-up match. Lee unveiled a strategy for heads-up, no-limit play when the smallest stack size is less than 10 times the big blind. The small blind should go all-in more often than you’d expect, and the big blind should call frequently. While it didn’t surprise my mentor, who has analyzed heads-up play by computer, it did surprise me. Lively learning. Barry Tanenbaum, a leading professional poker player, teacher, and columnist followed with Earning One Big Bet Per Hour. “The skills to keep in mind,” Barry says, “are playing tight, folding early, incorporating position and strategy, reading hands, avoiding traps, winning without the best hand, inducing calls and bluffs, and playing the players.” I understand why people flock to him to be privately tutored. He’s humorous and makes learning lively. Mark Gregorich taught in high school, before poker. Now he’s a top player and married father of three who’s learned to juggle family and poker. His topic: Keys to Surviving in the Poker World. Mark advised simply, “Play when you have an edge, and quit when you don’t.” He showed why you’re doomed if you don’t apply that simple truth. He also stated, “Tilt can be your friend.” Other players’ tilt – he explained. Chip and chair. During lunch, Mark Tenner told how the poker expression, “All you need is a chip and a chair” came about. Legendary world champion Jack Straus went all-in at a major tournament in 1982. As he was leaving, the players discovered one $500 chip that had gone unnoticed. 20 P O K E R P L AY E R Straus was told to sit back down. He ended up winning! Kenna James, dressed in jeans and a western hat, is a red-hot performer on the professional poker tour. He looked as if he’d just ridden into town to play in an old west poker game. He addressed the topic of Principles of Tournament Poker. Those included positional values, situational values, knowledge and application of hand values. He went on to say that you should first identify and then exploit your opponent’s mistakes. He said that you needed to practice willpower, discipline, and patience. Kenna applied Vince Lombardi’s quote, “Winning isn’t everything, it’s the only thing!” I learned that Clonie Gowen, one of the favorite pros, was a member of her varsity basketball team. In 2003 she won the WPT Ladies Night event, the highest rated WPT show ever broadcast. She is a columnist for the All In magazine. Her presentation was Advantages of Being a Woman at the Poker Table and What Both Men and Women Need to Know About It. Men’s egos. She stated, “Women have natural abilities and they need to exploit those, especially when playing poker against men.” Men’s egos, she said, will sometimes affect their judgment, although professional male players seem to have better control and are less likely to play the flirt or be a chauvinist. I bet men in the audience may be more wary when playing against a woman next time. The conference finale was a Question and Answer session with experts Mark Seif, Linda Johnson, Clonie Gowen, and Mike Caro. Poker educator Jan Fisher was moderator. Surprise guests and attendees were Men the Master, Cathy Liebert, Wendeen Eolis, Marsha Waggoner, and Jim McManus. For a learning experience, the World Poker Players Conference excels. I’ll be there next year. Diane McHaffie is Director of Operations at Mike Caro University of Poker, Gaming, and Life Strategy. Her diverse career spans banking, promotion of major financial seminars and the raising of Whitetailed Deer. You can write her online at diane@caro.com. D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m Oh, Brother Part 1 A Joe & Hobby fiction by David J. Valley “H ey, Joe. Shake a leg; our reservation is for 7:30,” Hobby shouted. I was still looking for my keys when I heard the doorbell. “Get the door, Hobby. I’ll be right there.” Hobby was turned sideways to a young guy in jeans and tee shirt. “He says he’s your brother, Joe.” “What?” I said incredulously. “I don’t have a brother.” I looked him up and down and said, “Who the hell are you and what’s your game?” “Well, if you’re Joe Crest, I’m sort of your half-brother.” “And I don’t have a half-brother, either. So buzz off.” To Hobby I said, “I don’t know him and don’t care to find out what he’s up to.” I was closing the door when I heard, “Do you remember Mary Benton?” I hesitated, and then opened the door. “Okay. I know Mary Benton, but who are you and what’s this all about?” Memories were flashing back. After my mother died, my father had married Mary Benton. I was just a teenager. A few years later he had lung cancer, and for a long time was bad off. Mary took care of him until he died. I went into the Army after that. “My name is Jimmy Morrow, Mary Benton was my mother.” “Was?” “She died a few weeks ago.” “I’m sorry to hear that. She was a good woman.” He got choked up. Softly, I said, “Come in and sit down.” I offered a drink, but he waved it off. “Sorry about the brother thing. I was just hoping. I don’t have any family now. I didn’t even know about you until I was going through Ma’s things. She had a scrapbook about you. She wrote notes like, ‘That’s my boy,’ so I thought she was your mother, too.” “No, Mary wasn’t my mother. She was my stepmother, but I really liked her. She was good to me and she took good care of my dad before he died. (Continued on page 22) w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 21 Oh, Brother Should begging be allowed? TRUE POKER Part 1 (Continued from page 20) By Peter “The Poet” COsta About 20 years ago back in the UK, when Hold’em was still in it’s infancy - PL 7- Card Stud was the game when it came to playing cash. The games in Nottingham at the time became extremely lively as an influx of new faces came to play in the biggest game in town. In truth, it was very easy money as most of these fresh faces had very little idea of how to play the game. My brother Kim and I had very little choice but to sit at the same table. It as never an ideal situation but what can you do when with all this loose money about? As usual, both Kim and I played with the patience of Angels. After all, it was always a matter of time before this patience paid off for either of us. Suddenly, with barely 30 minutes to go before the Casino was set to close - the biggest pot of the night was brewing up nicely. On fifth street - there seemed to be five major hands developing. I was not involved in the pot - but Kim looks to be on a big draw. Showing 4s-3s - it looked like the Jh on fifth street was of no help to him. Open Kings now bet the pot and the three players before Kim call. Kim follows suit and happily call the bet big draw for sure!. Sixth street is dealt and the big hands get bigger. Kim hit’s the 2s for an obvious flush - but I hate his hand in this spot. I am hoping that he does not call the next bet. But with three players to act before him - all hell breaks loose. It seems that the players in seat 2 and 6 are heading for a different kind of showdown. They had been at each other all night! Their constant bickering had finally reached the boiling point - it looked like the table was going to be turned over during the heat of the moment. Suddenly…..Kim stands up and in the sweetest of begging tones calls out “gentlemen… please”. You guessed it…..Kim had just made a straight flush! Kim’s begging worked and peace was restored. The hand was played out and Kim had one of his biggest ever wins in Stud! The end of the night came, but the gentle ribbing for Kim had only just begun! “Gentlemen…. please” was now the new catch phrase in Nottingham. Followed by the odd “Not now….now that I have a straight flush!“. Fun times…. BTW - during the William Grand Prix event in Cardiff - I heard one the greatest ever statements by a player. This guy was an Internet qualifier in one of the heats. Having just lost most of his stack in the last hand before the break - he tried to assure himself that all was not lost. And in the most sincere of all tones…declared that he….as he put it “had a lot of experience at playing a short-stack”. And just as sincerely, added …..“it’s just that I don’t last very long“. Priceless! He was gone immediately after the break but he did add to his vast experience at playing a short-stack! Here we again. Having spent the last few months without playing much poker - the Bellagio is set to get under way with a stream of NL events. I will obviously try my best to get a few good results - but the money is not important here ….I NEEED MORE MATERIAL! Until next time - play well, get lucky and beg if you need to! 22 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 After I went into the Army I wrote to her, but never got an answer.” I had always been sorry we had lost touch. She was the last remnant of my family. Now Jimmy reminded me of the loneliness I had felt. I reached for his hand and shook it. “I’m glad to meet you, Jimmy. We’re not blood related, but as far as I’m concerned, you’re family.” He immediately brightened up and Hobby, who had been standing off to the side taking it all in, suddenly seemed ecstatic. I should explain that, like me, Hobby is a virtual orphan, too. “That’s great!” Hobby said with genuine enthusiasm as he shook hands. “We‘ve got to celebrate. You’re coming to dinner with us!” “Thanks, but you guys are all dressed up and –” Jimmy motioned to his attire. “I’ll get you a jacket. You’ll be fine,” I said. Jimmy was a country bumpkin, but seemed to be a nice kid. He kept looking at me like a puppy dog. This is unnerving for a guy who enjoys his independence. “So what’s in your future?” I asked, half-hoping he was heading back to Kansas soon. “Not sure. I might work here for a while and see if I like it.” “What do you do?” I asked. “I’m a VW mechanic. A dealer in Santa Monica offered me a job. I’m staying at the Y there.” “Hey,” Hobby said. “I’ve got a VW dune buggy that needs work, maybe…” That launched a halfhour discussion about VW engines, which bored me stiff. I finally broke in to ask Jimmy, “What do you do for fun?” “I like to play poker.” “Really!” Hobby and I said in unison. “I love it, but my friends stopped playing with me because I always win.” “Really!” we chorused again. w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m “After dinner, let’s stop at the Bike,” Hobby suggested. On the way to Bell Gardens we quizzed Jimmy about poker. He understood the game, but wasn’t familiar with advanced concepts. My thought of finding a poker genius in the rough was fast evaporating. Likely he was only a small town whiz; hardly star potential, but I’d show him a good time for Mary’s sake. “What’s your favorite game?” I asked. “7-card stud.” “That’s a good game,” Hobby said, “Why do you like it?” “I win more at seven, maybe because I have more time to think.” “7-card it is then. We’ll see how you do against the local talent.” “I don’t have much money to lose; we only play nickel and dime.” “Don’t worry about it, we’ll stake you. You’re our guest tonight,” Hobby said. We gave him two trays of singles and got him a seat at a $3/$6 pot limit 7-card game we could watch from the sidelines. He seemed uncomfortable for a while, but it wasn’t long before he caught on to the play. He didn’t play a lot of hands, and often dropped out after a card or two. Jimmy was finally in his first big showdown; the betting had been heavy. He had a goodly portion of his chips in the pot. After the down card was dealt, a player bet about half the pot; two others still in folded. It was Jimmy’s turn to call or fold. Our young friend was looking intently across the table at his older opponent. The up cards didn’t make clear who had an advantage. There could be straights or flushes in contention. I was feeling sorry for Jimmy, hoping he knew what he was doing. Then, darned if he didn’t raise the bet and go all in! The old fellow said, “I hate to take all your chips, Sonny.” He laid down a queen high straight; Jimmy showed a flush. “Beginner’s luck?” I asked Hobby. “Let’s watch and see.” We did for about two hours. Jimmy played several big pots and only lost one. He spooked the table; players had been dropping off and after his last big win those remaining picked up their chips and left. Hobby and I walked over as the dealer was helping Jimmy put his chips into trays. He didn’t know we had been watching. He smiled broadly and said, “It’s like I was telling you, even these guys don’t want to play with me anymore.” “It’s okay, Jimmy, that’s enough for the night,” I said. When Jimmy cashed in the chips, he couldn’t believe he had won over $4,000. “I never had so much money, except when I saved up for my truck,” he said. “Jimmy, Hobby and I are going to talk to you about playing poker. If tonight wasn’t a fluke, you might want to think twice about taking that mechanic’s job.” As we walked away from the cage one of the losers from Jimmy’s table jostled him and said, “You were lucky tonight, farm boy, but don’t ever get in my way again.” Hobby was immediately on attack alert, but I put a restraining hand on him. “Forget it,” I said loudly, “he’s just a sore loser.” “It’s okay, Joe,” Hobby said, but he went to the bully and whispered into his ear. The guy turned red and took a vicious swing. Not even close; Hobby ducked and with a couple swift moves subdued the man and turned him over to security. Jimmy said, “What did you say to him?” “I just asked if his mother had any legitimate children.” (To be continued.) Write to uthor David Valley at: dvalley1@san.rr.com w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 23 From Me in New York... To Her L.I.P.S. Quizzes from Mike Caro University of Poker NORTH BY NORTHWEST By Byron Liggett The SENECA WORLD POKER CLASSIC, Jan. 24 – Feb. 2, at the Niagara Casino, in New York, is going to be special. It promises to be one of those memorable events in which participants will declare with pride, “I Was There!” Seneca Director of Poker Operations, Mike Gainey, one of the most experienced, well regarded Quarterbacks in The Game, has assembled a Dream Team. At key positions are Super Stars Matt Savage, instrumental in the success of Bay 101, particularly it’s acclaimed “Shooting Star Tournament”, and David Lamb, another of Poker’s MVP’s, who took the Reno Hilton program to the top. Tournament Director Carlee Hunter is one of the Game’s premier Umpires. She keeps the players in line and the action on time. This columnist is proud to be invited to write and produce the Daily Tournament Newsletter for the Classic. Each edition will report on who’s who, what’s what, where it’s at, where it went, and who got it. It will capture the culture, color and characters that will distinguish the World Classic and make it a unique experience for all who attend. Seneca intends to win the tournament playoffs by establishing the World Classic as one of the foremost events in Pokerdom. A lot of legends have already signed-up, including Men “The Master”, Tom McEvoy, and Oklahoma Johnny Hale, to mention only a few. These are The Rulers of The Game; the ones you measure yourself by. So come and get fitted. A handsome new hotel will welcome participants. And hey, if you lose everything you own, Niagara Falls is nearby. LIPS sounds like a sexy acronym. It is. It’s the “Ladies International Poker Series”. And the lady with the LIPS is the brilliant, vivacious, energetic Lupe Soto. Lupe may be the Joan of Arc of Poker. Through her passion for the game, her spirit for organization, and her knowledge of computer technology, she’s on the verge of making women’s poker as big as women’s golf, maybe bigger. In just two years, Lupe has launched LIPS, the women’s poker tour, created women’s poker leagues, established an online poker club for ladies called “Poker Chix”, and is about to stage a “U.S. Ladies’ Poker Championship” in which the winners of state championships will compete for the national title. Lupe markets LIPS ladies-only tournaments to casinos across the country. Important poker tournaments like to feature a ladies event. Now, they just contact Lupe. She has the respect and affection (and contact info) of women poker players coast-to-coast. When Lupe smacks her LIPS, women show up. The Wildhorse Resort & Casino, in Pendleton OR, featured a LIPS event as part of its “Fall Poker Round-up”. Despite being in the northeast corner of the state surrounded by wheat farms and open range, 150 women warriors came when Lupe called. The LIPS ladies were also part of the recent “Fall Poker Tournament” at the Peppermill, in Reno. So many women came for the ladies-only No-Limit event that the casino looked like a “Flop House”. Caesars’, Hollywood Park, Paris Las Vegas, Bay 101, and Harrahs, including the WSOP, all feature LIPS events at their important poker tournaments. Women have been flirting with the game for the past couple of years. Asked why she thought Poker was becoming so popular with women, Lupe explained, “We discovered that in a poker game, the weaker sex is anyone with the secondbest hand.” Women and Poker Tournament Directors may contact her at: www.LIPSTour.com. Byron Liggett, originally from the Northwest, lives in Reno 24 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 asked & answered: This series is based on the MCU library of research and advice found at Poker1.com. Each issue, Mike Caro presents 10 new questions covering a category of poker, targeted for beginner, intermediate, or advanced players. Quiz #34 is about poker history for advanced players. (Answers and explanations appear in the next issue.) Poker History (level: advanced) 1. Which three players have won the most championship gold bracelets at the World Series of Poker? a. Daniel Negreanu, Phil Hellmuth, and Doyle Brunson; b. Howard Lederer, Annie Duke, and Phil Hellmuth; c. Doyle Brunson, Johnny Chan, and Phil Hellmuth; d. Stu Ungar, Doyle Brunson, and Johnny Chan. 2. How did the saying, “All you need is a chip and a chair” get started? a. It originated in a scene from a classic W. C. Fields movie b. In a 1982 tournament, Jack Straus bet what he thought were all the chips in front of him without declaring all in. It was discovered that he had a chip left, and recovered to win the tournament. c. It was quoted in the classing poker Herbert O. Yardley poker book, “The Education of a Poker Player.” d. It was a recurring line from the TV series Maverick, but was mysteriously left out of the movie. 3. Modern poker is thought to have evolved from… a. Cribbage; b. A bridge convention in 1922, when the key players went on an informal strike and held the first poker-like tournament, featuring a game they then called bluffand-run. c. Poque – a French game; d. An American Indian game played to win honorary beads supplied by the tribal chief. 4. Which game has never appeared as a championship gold bracelet event at the World Series of Poker… a. five-card draw poker; b. three-card lowball; c. seven-card stud lowball (razz); d. deuce-to-seven (Kansas City) lowball. w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m 5. What is the name of the famous book by David Sklansky that defined the concepts that govern poker? a. Winning Theories of Poker; b. How to Beat Poker Using Analytical Science; c. Sklansky on Pro Poker Technique; d. The Theory of Poker. 6. In what year was Doyle Brunson’s original Super/ System – A Course in Power Poker published (first edition had a different title)? a. 1960; b. 1967; c. 1978; d. 1984. 7. The sequel to Doyle Brunson’s Super/System (Super/System II) wasn’t published until 2005. a. true; b. false. 8. A pioneering book by John Fox appeared a year before work on Super/System began. What was it called? a. Quit Work, Play Poker, and Sleep Till Noon; b. Fox on Fierce Poker; c. Draw Poker Concepts Applied to Other Poker Games; d. Poker – Beyond Basic Theory. 9. Before the Hustler Casino was built in Gardena California, there was a major card room at that location called the Eldorado. What was the name of the card casino that predated the Eldorado on the same site? a. Blue Velvet; b. The Gardena Club; c. The Embassy; d. The Horseshoe Club. 10. There was a major poker tournament among 23 top players, called “The Gathering of Poker Professionals,” held at Binion’s Horseshoe Casino 12 years before the birth of the World Series of Poker, in 1958… a. True; b. False. WATCH FOR ANSWERS IN OUR NEXT ISSUE! If you do not remember the questions, you will find them on our web site—Download previous issues at http://www.pokerplayernewspaper.com/ to last issue’s questions backissues answers Q #1 ANSWER: (c). Part of the MCU motivational teaching is to imagine that you’re two people – one who stays at home and makes rational decisions about your long-term behavior and one who goes out into the world to obey. That way you won’t make irrational choices based on heatof-the-moment emotions. Q #2 ANSWER: (d). It’s important to realize that you earn money, not lose it, when you correctly fold a hand – even though doing so means you lose the pot. Q #3ANSWER: (c). You shouldn’t talk about bad luck, because – by doing so – you motivate your opponents to play better against you. That’s because they believe you can be beaten easily and they target your money. Q #4 ANSWER: (a). Just studying poker a little and staying motivated doesn’t mean you’re definitely going to win. Q #5 ANSWER: (a). It’s true that if your image is conservative and you seem like a tight player, you won’t be called as often when you hold big winning hands. Q #6 ANSWER: (a). 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( ) ' . ( ' ( , / .) N I N O I L L I M VER O T U E O S D O I L A C S P E M M O O C C R E EELS N O O 0ARTY0OKE N n R E B TEM P E 3 N I S L O O P PRIZE N O I L L I Y L H T s -ON 34 % M P $ECEMBER L A I C E P 3 K s 4 3 % M P $ECEMBER Y L K E E 7 K s 34 % Y A D N T A S T N EVERY3U E M A N R U YTO A L P O T E N E U T N R O O F N I A T W S O O T C E T C TPLA S E )TDOESN B E H T S T I T "U M O C R E K O 0 Y T 0AR &ORYEARSORWHEREREQUIRED4ERMSAND#ONDITIONSAPPLYSEEWWWPARTYPOKERCOMLEGAL6OIDWHEREPROHIBITED 0ARTY0OKERISATRADEANDSERVICEMARKOFTHE0ARTY'AMINGGROUPALLRIGHTSRESERVED¹ 28 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m Time . Some events H ...... Hold’em L ................. Limit N ...........No Limit 7. 7-Card Stud O .......Omaha H/L ...... High/Low C start after the hour O A, P ........ AM, PM ..............Week D Wk & . Add’l gametimes E on this day. Call •Denotes Advertiser Split Pi........ Pineapple Po.........Pot Limit Pn.......Panginque S........... Stud 5 ...Five Card MONDAY REGION/Cardroom(Ad Pg.) Time Games NH 1P& 7P NH Arizona Charlie’s 12P NH •Binion’s Gambling Hall (p28) 8P& N H Cannery Casino 10A NH 7P NH Carson Valley Inn 12P& H Sh Circus Circus 11A L/N H NV Aladdin SOUTH Col.Belle-Laughlin •Gold Coast (p42) Golden Nugget 7P& 10A 11A 7P Flamingo Laughlin 8A Harrah’s Las Vegas 11A •Imperial Palace (p9) 1P 12A Z NH NH NH Al ...... Alternates F .............Freeroll Z......... Freezeout Q .............Qualify Sh .........Shootout TUESDAY Buy-in $50RB(1)$40 $50RB(1)$40 $22RB$10AO$10 $60RB$10AO$40 $25 $40RB$20AO$2 $15 $40AO$3 Time Games 1P& NH 7P NH 8P& 10A 7P 12P& 11A HB $25RB$10AO$20 NH $22 10A N H $60RB(1)$40AO$40 11A N H $125RB$100AO(1)$100 7P •Jokers Wild (p41) 2P NH 7P NH Luxor 12P& L/N H Z $17 8A $30RB(1)$40 11A $50RB$25AO$5 7P $50RB$25AO$5 NH NH NH H Sh L/N H NH NH NH Z NH NH $25RB(1)$10 2P NH $25RB(1)$10 7P NH $25 12P& L/N H Z #M ..# of players maximum RB ......... Re-buys AO ......... Add Ons Cz .............. Crazy E....... Elimination WEDNESDAY Buy-in Time Games $50RB(1)$40 1P& NH $50RB(1)$40 7P NH 12P NH $60RB$10AO$40 8P& N H $25 10A NH $40RB$20AO$2 7P NH $15 12P& H Sh $40AO$3 11A L/N H 7PWk1& $22 10A $60RB(1)$40AO$40 11A $125RB$100AO$100 7P $17 8A $30RB(1)$40 11A $50RB$25AO$5 1P 12A Buy-in $50RB(1)$40 $50RB(1)$40 $22RB$10AO$10 $60RB$10AO$40 $25 $40RB$20AO$2 $15 $40AO$3 DAILY TOURNAMENTS NOW! Get Tournament Listings at our website: www.pokerplayernewspaper.com Note: All tournaments are subject to change. Check with the Cardroom for any updates. Cardrooms— please send your schedules to Tournament Editor A.R. Dyck, ard@gamblingtimes.com THURSDAY Time Games 1P& NH 7P NH 8P& 10A NH NH 12P& 11A H Sh L/N H FRIDAY Buy-in Time Games $50RB(1)$40 12P NH $50RB(1)$40 $60RB$10AO$40 8P& $25 10A $15 12P& $40AO$3 11A H $110 7P& O H/L B $25RB$10AO$20 7P& NH $22 10A NH $22 10A N H $60RB(1)$40AO$40 11A N H $60RB(1)$40AO$40 11A N H $125RB$100AO(1)$100 7P N H $125RB$100AO$100 7P Z $17 8A $30RB(1)$40 11A $50RB$25AO$5 1P $50RB$25AO$5 NH NH $25RB(1)$10 2P NH $25RB(1)$10 7P NH $25 12P& L/N H Z Z NH $25RB(1)$10 2P NH $25RB(1)$10 7P NH $25 12P& L/N H Z NH NH H Sh L/N H SATURDAY Buy-in Time Games $100AO$10 12P $125RB$25AO$50 8P& $25 10A NH NH NH $15 12P& $40AO$3 H Sh O H/L B $25RB$10AO$20 NH $22 N H $60RB(1)$40AO$40 N H $230RB$200AO$100 $17 8A $30RB(1)$40 11A $50RB$25AO$5 Z 10A 10A 11A 7P $17 8A $30RB(1)$40 11A HZ $30(30M) 10A NHZ $60(30M) 6P L H $130RB$100AO(1)$100 7P HZ $30(30M) 10A NHZ $60(30M) 6P N H $130RB$100AO(1)$100 7P HZ NHZ NH $30(30M) 10A $60(30M) 6P $130RB$100 7P HZ NHZ NH $30(30M) 10A $60(30M) $230RB(1)$200 HZ $30(30M) Nevada Palace Oasis-Mesquite 10A 11A 7P H NH NH H NH NH H NH NH $18 10A $15RB(1)$15 11A $25RB$10 H NH $18 10A $15RB(1)$15 11A H NH $18 10A $15RB(1)$15 11A The Orleans 12P O H/L 7P NH 12A& N H 7P O H/L 12P& N H Rio Suite Casino $18 10A $15RB(1)$15 11A $120 7P $40RB$20 $40RB$20 $65RB(1)$30 $45RB$20AO$20 $40RB(1)$40 River Palms 6P& •Sahara (p20) 11A 7P& •Sam’s Town (p40) O H/L NH NH Speedway Stardust •Sunset Station (p8) Stratosphere L/N H $23RB$10AO$20 NH $40 LH $18AO$2 NH $22RB(1)$20 N H $44RB(1)$40AO(1)$40 NH $40 NH (40M) OS $25RB$10 NH $20RB$10 4P 10A 10A 9A 8P •Texas Station (p8) 7P •Tuscany (p35) 10A 7P Virgin River Casino 6P Wynn Las Vegas NV Atlantis Casino NORTH Boomtown 12P& L H Sh Cactus Petes-Jackpot Carson Valley Inn 7P 12P Pi N H Sh Circus Circus Eldorado Harrah's Reno 4P H Harvey’s Tahoe Peppermill Reno Hilton Rainbow Cas. W Wendover CA Casino Morongo SAN Casino Pauma DIEGO Harrah’s Rincon & 10A& NH 2P NH 7P Ladies N H 9A NH 8P NH 12P 7P 12A& 7P 12P& $25RB$10AO$20 6P& $40RB$20AO$2 11A $40RB$20AO$2 7P& 10A 10A 9A 8P 7P 10A 7P 6P 12P $15 10A& 7P $15RB$10 $12 6P& H NH NH NH NH 7 H/L NH NH $19 10A $15RB(1)$15 11A $120RB(1)$100 6P $40RB$20 $40RB$20 $65RB(1)$30 $45RB(1)$20 $40RB(1)$40 12P 7P 12A& 7P 12P& NH H NH NH NH $25RB$10AO$20 6P& $40RB$20AO$2 11A $40RB$20AO$2 7P& NH NH NH NH $40 L O High $18AO$2 NH $22RB(1)$20 N H $44RB(1)$40AO(1)$40 O H/L B $37RB$10 NH (40M) OS $25RB$10 NH F NH $330 7 Sh NH NH 4P 10A 10A 9A 8P 7P 10A 7P $40RB$20 $40RB$20 $65RB(1)$30 $45RB(1)$20 $40RB(1)$40 12P H 7P O H/L 12A& N H 7P NH 12P& N H $25RB$10AO$20 6P& $40RB$20AO$2 11A $40RB$20AO$2 7P& 7P L/N H $23RB$10AO$20 NH $40 NH $23AO$2 NH $22RB(1)$20 N H $44RB(1)$40AO(1)$40 NH $40 NH (40M) OS $25RB$10 $15 12P& L H Sh $22RB$10 7P NH $25AO(1)$20 6P& N H 12P 10A 9A 8P 7P 10A 7P 6P 12P $15 10A& Pi Z NH NH SUNDAY Buy-in Time Games $22RB$10AO$10 $125RB$25AO$50 8P& $25 10A NH NH 10A 10A 11A 7P $17 8A $30RB(1)$40 11A 1P Pi Z $12 NH $22 N H $60RB(1)$40AO$40 N H $125RB$100AO$100 Z 5P H NH $18 10A $15RB(1)$15 3P H NH $18 $25RB$10 $40RB$20 $40RB$20 $65RB(1)$30 $45RB(1)$20 $40RB(1)$40 12P 7P 12A& 7P 12P& O H/L NH NH NH NH $50RB(1)$20 $60RB(1)$40 $65RB(1)$30 $45RB(1)$20 $40RB(1)$40 12P 7P 12A& 7P 12P& H NH NH NH NH $50RB(1)$20 $125RB(1)$100 $65RB(1)$30 $45RB(1)$20 $40RB(1)$40 12P 7P 12A& 7P 12P& NH H NH NH NH $50RB(1)$20 $60RB(1)$50 $65RB(1)$30 $45RB(1)$20 $40RB(1)$40 $25RB$10AO$20 $40RB$20AO$2 $40RB$20AO$2 $45RB$20AO$20 6P& 11A 7P& 7P O H/L NH NH NH $25RB$10AO$20 $40RB$20AO$2 $40RB$20AO$2 $45RB$20AO$20 6P& 11A 7P& 7P Po H NH NH NH $25RB$10AO$20 $40RB$20AO$2 $40RB$20AO$2 $45RB$20AO$20 6P& 11A 7P& 7P NH NH NH NH $25RB$10AO$20 $40RB$20AO$2 $40RB$20AO$2 $60RB(1)$40 4P LH F LH $23AO$2 11A NH $22RB(1)$20 9A N H $44RB(1)$40AO(1)$40 8P NH $40 NH (40M) OS $25RB$10 7P NH $20RB$10 NH $330 3P L/N H $23RB$10AO$20 4P L/N H $23RB$10AO$20 7 Sh L H Sh NH H NH NH NH F RB$10 $55 6P& $15 12P& 7P $25RB$10 OS $25RB$10 7P 12P $25RB$10 7P NH $540 $15 10A& $22RB$10 $23AO$2 6P Ladies L H OS 7 Sh OS OS $15 12P& L H Sh 7P NH 12P H $12 12P& N H N H Sh $12 12P N H Sh H $15 4P H $15 4P H $15 10A H $15 10A H $15 NH $25 10A NH $25 10A NH $25 10A NH $25 10A NH $25 6P $25AO$10 2P $35RB(1)$30 $15(24M) 9A& $25RB$20 H NH $25RB$20 $25AO$10 2P NH $25AO$10 NH $15(24M) 9A NH 7P $15(24M) 9A& NH NH $115RB$100 6P $15(24M) 9A 8P NH NH LH $110 6P $15(24M) 9A $25RB$20 NH NH $115 $25(30M) 9A 6P NH NH $25(30M) $50 H H NH $5RB$5AO$5 $5RB$5AO$10B$5 $15RB$10AO$10 $22RB$11 10A $65 10A H NH $22RB$11 $40RB(1)$20 $30 10A 4P $12RB$10AO$10 6P& $25B$5 10A $30 $30 $17 $12B$5 H N Cz Pi $10RB$10AO$10 7P& H $15RB$10AO$10 10A& NH $15RB$10AO$10 10A& NH $15RB$10AO$10 10A& NH $60 10A 4P $15RB$10AO$10 10A& DC H NH Lake Elsinore 10A O H/L $17RB$5AO$5 10A LH $17RB$5AO$5 10A 6P NH NH $17RB$5AO$5 10A $20RB(2)$15 LH $17RB$5AO$5 10A O H/L Lucky Lady Oceans Eleven 10A LH $35 10A NH $35 10A NH $55 10A NH $35 10A LH 10A $35 10A O H/L NH •Pechanga (p33) 10A 6P Sycuan 10A Viejas 10A NH NH LH NH O $30 10A $30 $12 6P& $12B$5 10A& NH $30 10A NH $30 10A NH F 6P& $12B$5 10A& LH NH NH $22 6P& $12B$5 10A 10A NH NH O $30RB$20AO(1)$50B(20)$5 10A NH NH LH NH LH 1P 7P NH NH 7P $20RB$10AO$10 1P $40RB$30AO$30 7P HH L H Mx NH $30 $30 $12 $12B$5 10A 6P 10A 10A& $30RB$20AO(1)$50B(20)$5 10A NH NH NH O H/L NH LH NH NH $30RB$10 12P $60 7P F NH Club One Casino 7P Commerce Club •Crystal Park Casino (p41) NH $27RB(2)$15 10A NH •Diamond Jim’s (p40) 6P O Pi H $25RB$10 6P LH Hawaiian Gardens 12P •Hollywood Park (p5) 11A 7P NH 7 H/L LH $15RB$10 12P $17RB$10 11A $35 7P O H/L NH NH NH $125RB(1)$100 7P 7P $30 $30 $12 $12B$5 $30RB$20AO(1)$50B(20)$5 California Grand Casino San Pablo Garden City Gold Rush Golden West-Bakersfield Kelly’s Cardroom Lucky Chances Lucky Derby Casino Oaks Card Club Palace Indian Casino Sonoma Joe's Tachi Palace Hotel & Casino 11A L H $28RB(1)$20AO(1)$20 11A 9A& Sp L H $70RB60 9A 12P 10A 6P 10A 11A CO N T ’ D O N PAG E 3 1 Sp L $14RB$5/$10AO$20 7P& 7P NH Pn $27(80M)RB(2)$15 10A $40 NH $14RB$5/$10AO$20 10A 7P 7P $20RB$10 6P Wk4LadiesL H $15RB$10 12P $17RB$10 11A $35 7P S H/L O H/L LH NH NH $40RB(1)$40 10A Sp L NH Sh $20 NH $50RB(1)$50AO$15 10A NH $15 1P $20RB(2)$15 6P 6P $100AO$20 10A H Sh NH NH Sh NH 6P NH HH N H HH N H $10RB$10AO$10 11A $5RB$5AO$10B$5 4P $15RB$10AO$10 10A& $17RB$5AO$5 10A $30RB$20AO(1)$50B(20)$5 $15RB$10 12P $17RB$10 11A $35 7P H H NH $230 7P NH $15RB$10 6P $17RB$10 11A $35 8P $15 1P $58 $20 $50RB(1)$50AO15 LH NH NH 1P LH $25RB 6P $17RB$10 11A $225RB(1)$200 8P Mx 7 Po H LH H H $65RB$50AO$50 $10RB$5AO$10 $20RB$20(1) $10RB$10AO$10 12P $5RB$5AO$10B$5 4P $15RB$10AO$10 10A& $17RB$5AO$5 H H Sh $48 $50RB40 9A $10 $40RB$40AO 10A $15 1P 10A Sp L H Sp L H Sh NH 11A w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m H $40RB$10 $15RB$10AO$10 $30RB$15AO$15 LH Pn $19RB$5/$10AO$20 $40 $25RB$10 1P 1PWk4 F RB$10 $17RB$10 11A $330RB(1)$300 4P NH NH $50 $100 3P 3P F 5P 3P& Pai Gow LH Sp L H H $25RB$20AO$50 $27RB(2)$15 12P $40 1P $15 $125RB(1)$100 LH N H Sh $22RB$10 $120 Pai Gow N H $125RB$100AO(1)$100 NH $30RBAO Sp L H 6P $125RB$60 9A NH Sp L H 10A NH 10A $25RB(1)$20 10A NH $15 1P 2P 5P $100AO$20 H Sh LH NF $15 $5RB$10AO$10 2P F 6P 10A 9A 12P NH Varies $40 11A $65RB$50AO$50 1P Varies LH Varies $100RB(2)$50 6P O H/L F RB$10 $110 9A $49RB$20AO$40 $70RB$60 $55 $25RB(1)$20 $60RB$40AO $55 6P 11A $20RB$20(1) 7P $70 LH N H $14RB$5/$10AO$20 7P& N H(80M) Pn $40 1P Pn NH $15 7P NH $30RB(2)AO(1) $40RB$40AO 10A H H NH $30RB$10 $40RB$20 $25 $25 6P LH/L OH/L $50RB$20AO$40 11A $50RB$40 9A Sp L HH $55RB$40 9A& $25RB$20 12P O H/L $55 6P H H/O H/L NH $30RB$20AO(1)$50B(20)$5 10A $30RB$10 12P $60 7P $20RB$10AO$10 H Sh NH 7P 7P H O O NH NH NH 7P $10RB$5AO$10 10A $60RB$10 12P $60 7P $15RB$10AO$10 7P NH$125RB(1)$100AO(1)$100 7P LH Sp L H H $30RB$20AO(1)$50B(20)$5 NH NH Mx 1P 6P H $60RB$40AO 10A 10A NH 6P NH 10A 7 H/L Sp 10A& N H 10A O $30RB$10 12P $40RB$20 7P 7P Normandie Casino CA Artichoke Joe’s NORTH Bay 101 Cache Creek $15 $22RB$10 F RB$20 $25 $15 4P $22RB$20 $25 10A $10RB$10AO$10 7P& •Hustler Casino $25RB$10 $25RB$10 H NH NH NH •Club Caribe (p41) 7P $25RB$10 $15 4P 6P $25 10A $30RB$10AO$20 10A $25AO(1)$20 12P NH $23AO$2 11A NH NH $22RB(1)$20 N H $44RB(1)$40AO(1)$40 6P Ladies N H 5O CA •Bicycle Club (p3) 12P L.A. 7P $25RB(1)$10 $25RB(1)$10 $25 N H$330RB$200AO(1)$200 10A 10A $17 $30RB(1)$40 $50RB$25AO$5 NH 10A& Village Club $125RB$25AO$50 $25 $15 $12 $22 $30RB$20AO(1)$20 $330RB$200AO(1)$200 Z Buy-in $25RB(1)$10 2P NH $25RB(1)$10 2P NH $25RB(1)$10 2P NH $25RB(1)$10 6P N H $35RB(1)$10AO$10 6P N H $35RB(1)$10AO$10 7P NH $25 12P& L/N H Z $25 12P& L/N H Z $25 12P& L/N H Z •Mandalay Bay (p42) 10A 6P •Mirage (p11) 7P •Plaza Casino INLAND EMPIRE Stud Mx ..Mexican Poker DC Dealer’s Choice HH ... Headhunter B .......... Bounties Sp ............ Spread NH $5RB$10AO$10 NH Sh $20 NH $100RB$60AO$60 $10RB$5AO$10 D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 29 Play Poker; Stay Healthy SENIORS SCENE By George “The engineer” EPSTEIN This is especially for senior citizens, but even baby boomers and younger people can benefit from our message here. . . It was George Bernard Shaw who said: “We don’t stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing.” Think about it. . . Have you ever wondered why this is so? And what does this have to do with playing poker? To answer these questions, I call your attention to a recent feature story by Diane Scarponi for the Associated Press (AP), entitled “Gambling Linked to Good Health.” She writes: “According to a surprising Yale University study, older recreational gamblers (I read that as older poker players) seem to be healthier than non-gamblers.” She said this was a “SURPRISING” finding. Maybe it was “surprising” to the Yale University researchers but not to me and probably millions of other seniors who enjoy playing poker. The Yale study actually interviewed 2,400 different people to arrive at this conclusion. Hmm. . . A phone call to me or a perusal of Chapter 8 in my book, The Greatest Book of Poker for Winners!, could have saved them a lot of time (and money). The chapter entitled “For Senior Citizens: Playing Poker for Fun, $, and Good Health,” was based on my own experience and observations of many other senior citizens who play poker compared to others who lead a more sedentary life after retirement. Older poker players are healthier than non-players. In fact, I’ve lectured on this at senior citizen centers, retirement homes, two Elderhostels, and even on a luxury cruise catering to older people. Before I started playing poker seriously, albeit strictly for recreation (the more money I win, the more fun it is!), I found myself forgetting things, misplacing my wallet, my car keys, etc. In case this hasn’t happened to you, let me tell you how frustrating it can be to drive home, park your car, go into the house – and then you can’t find your keys. Egad! Since I started playing poker once or twice a week, my memory has improved remarkably – even as I have aged. (I turned 79 on November 9.) And my overall health has improved, too. (No, playing poker doesn’t help my hearing problem.) What’s more, a healthy mind leads to a healthy body – and that makes for a happier family and love life. Being an engineer, I was curious as to why this was so. I found lots of good books that told me that our brains are made up of neurons with tiny cylinders called synapses surrounding sections of the neurons. These provide the means for transmitting impulses from one part of the brain to the next. We can look at the brain as sort of a muscle. When we exercise it with mental activity, it grows stronger by encouraging the growth of the synapses, making it easier to transmit messages or impulses within the brain. Playing poker requires us to make decisions – lots of them -- which provides the exercise for our brains. The Yale study did confirm my personal experience. The AP article quotes a 73-year old retired state highway worker: “I’m retired,” he said, “and it exercises my brain.” There is yet another facet of why playing poker is healthy for seniors. Getting out of the house and being with people provides a psychological lift. Everyone needs to interact with others. Yes, playing poker keeps us seniors healthy, alert and socially active. I highly recommend it to all seniors. . . . . . So readers, what’s YOUR opinion? George “The Engineer” Epstein is the author of The Greatest Book of Poker for Winners! (T/C Press, PO Box 36006, Los Angeles, CA 90036). His new algorithm booklet, Hold’em or Fold’em?, was a big hit at the recent World Poker Players Conference. George teaches a poker course for seniors at the Claude Pepper Sr. Citizen Center under the auspices of the City of Los Angeles Dept. of Recreation and Parks. He is currently writing a new book on Rules & Strategies for WINNING at Texas Hold’em. George can be reached by e-mail: geps222@msn.com. 30 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 Thomas “Tip” O’Neill Poker, Politics, and Power By Byron Liggett Thomas “Tip” O’Neill was a 20th Century American Hero. One of the last, great, liberal New Deal Democrats, he dedicated himself to a lifetime in politics fighting for the working class and underprivileged. He came from a family of risk-takers, Irish immigrants who gambled everything to win a new life in the USA. Born in 1912, O’Neill grew up in the poor, urban, Irish working-class neighborhood of Cambridge, Mass. Here he developed a lifelong love for baseball, betting, cards, and common folk. He writes in his memoirs, “All through my teenage years and into my twenties, my life revolved around a neighborhood gang” whose clubhouse was an abandoned basement barbershop. “There was always a card game”, poker or gin, “Nobody had much money; so the games were for a few pennies, a nickel at most.” Young O’Neill had a talent for numbers, counting cards, figuring odds and percentages. It proved to be a valuable asset for a poker player as well as a politician. According to one biographer, “O’Neill started his serious card playing in high school and college.” He conducted poker games under the baseball bleachers “to keep his father from discovering he was gambling”. After graduating from Boston College in 1936, O’Neill successfully ran for the State Legislature. He credited his poker pals for the victory “because without their hard work, I never would have been elected.” Tip O’Neill served 16 years in the Massachusetts Legislature, eventually becoming Speaker of the House. He said, “It helped enormously that I liked to play cards. There was w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m always a game going on in the basement of the statehouse.” Tip recalled, “It was a nickel game and the players came from both parties.” One participant remembered they would spend most weekends “playing cards, with our shirts off and a bathtub full of beer.” In 1952, O’Neill won the Congressional seat in the House of Representatives vacated by John F. Kennedy who was elected to the U.S. Senate. Here again, poker proved important to O’Neill’s rise to power and prominence. He would later write, “Poker provided me with a great opportunity to meet my fellow legislators, which in turn enhanced my political career.” “When I went to Washington I played cards probably every night of the week”, he says. The University Club was a favorite. They played a variety of 7-Stud games with raises limited to three. $400 was a good night. Among the regulars were Representatives and Senators, Democrats and Republicans. “There were no parties or factions in that room. There was only good fellowship”, Tip fondly recalled. Congressional Democratic Leader John McCormack, from Boston, became O’Neill’s political mentor. In his memoirs, O’Neill says, “Perhaps the most important place he ever took me was Speaker Sam Rayburn’s ‘Board of Education’, where I met some of the real powers in Washington.” Speaker of the House Rayburn’s “Board of Education” was like a private, insiders club. The room was unmarked and a guard stood at the door. It was the unofficial seat of power in Congress. Here, high end politics and high limit poker was played. O’Neill soon became a Democratic leader in Congress. In the late 1960s, he became a critic of his party’s President, Lyndon Johnson, over the war in Vietnam. Tip writes, “I began my investigation of the Vietnam War during a poker game at the Army and Navy Club.” One of the players was retired Marine Corps Commander General David Shoup who’d resigned over the Administration’s war policy. Eventually, Tip became one of the strongest critics of LBJ and the war. Johnson was angry; he considered O’Neill a traitor. The President said to Tip, “What kind of a S.O.B. are you? You and I have been friendly since the day you came to Washington. We were both at the Board of Education together.” O’Neill replied honestly, “In my heart and in my conscience I believe your policy is wrong. You can’t expect the country to stand behind you while you’re fighting a war that can’t be won.” Tip appreciated that “poker and politics require some of the same skills. In each case, you need to understand the people you’re playing with, as well as how to…calculate the odds.” And, “it helps enormously if you know when to bet, when to fold, and when to sit tight.” Among regular Washington players, O’Neill thought very little of Republican Congressman Richard Nixon’s game. One evening, after listening to Nixon complain about his bad luck, a disgusted O’Neill told him, “You know, I’m sick and tired of reading what a good poker player you are. As a matter of fact, you’re one of the worst poker players I’ve ever seen.” Nixon replied, “I was pretty good in the Navy, but you fellows are tough.” Later, as Majority Leader in the House, Tip O’Neill became the most (Continued on page 44) Time . Some events Wk ..............Week H ...... Hold’em 7. 7-Card Stud Pi........ Pineapple S........... Stud DC Dealer’s Choice Sp ............ Spread Z......... Freezeout #M # of players max DAILY TOURNAMENTS (CONT’D FROM PAGE 29) start after the hour & . Add’l gametimes L ................. Limit O .......Omaha Po.........Pot Limit 5 Five Card Stud HH ... Headhunter Al ...... Alternates Q .............Qualify RB ......... Re-buys A, P ........ AM, PM on this day. Call N ...........No Limit H/L High/Low Split Pn.......Panginque Mx ..Mexican Poker B .......... Bounties F .............Freeroll Sh .........Shootout AO ......... Add Ons Cz .............. Crazy E....... Elimination ● Denotes Advertiser REGION/Cardroom(Ad Pg.) AZ •Apache Gold (p38) Blue Water Casino Bucky’s Casino •Casino Arizona-Scottsdale (p39) Casino Del Sol Cliff Castle Fort McDowell Gila River/Wild Horse Pass Gila River-Vee Quiva Harrah’s Ak Chin Hon-Dah Casino Paradise Casino CO Midnight Rose Ute Mountain CT Foxwoods FL Dania Jai-Alai Derby Lane Hard Rock Palm Beach Kennel Club Palm Beach Princess Pompano Park Casino Seminole Hollywood Casino St Tropez Cruise IA Catfish Bend Isle of Capri Winn-A-Vegas IL Hollywood Casino-Aurora IN Belterra (Florence) Caesars Indiana Trump Indiana KS Harrah’s Prarie Band LA Grand Coushatta Horseshoe Casino-Shreveport MI Chip-In's Island Gold Strike Casino Resort MN •Canterbury Park (p10) MO MS MT NE NJ NM NY MONDAY Time Games OK OR SD WA Buy-in Time Games 11A 10A 6P& 12P& 12P 11A 4P 6P NH HZ S Sh NH NH 7B NH Flop 6P 8A& H NH 1P 11A& 12P 6P NH NH NH H 6P 8P 7P 10A NH O H/L NH DC 1P 11A 7P 6P& NH NH NH NH 6P NH 4A,6P& LH 10A 7 Fortune Bay Casino 6P Northern Light Casino Hotel Shooting Star Casino 12P Harrah’s St Louis 1P Isle of Capri 9A& Copa Casino Gold Strike Casino (Tunica) 4A& Grand Casino(Tunica) 1P Pearl River Resort 7P Black Jack’s Casino Rosebud Casino 7P Caesar’s Atlantic City 3P Harrah’s Atlantic City 7P Tropicana 7P Trump Taj Mahal 6P Cities of Gold 6P Isleta Casino & Resort 7P& Route 66 Casino 11A •Sandia Casino (p41) •Akwesasne Mohawk 7P •Seneca Allegany (p7) 10A •Seneca Irving (p7) 7P •Seneca Niagara (p7) 10A Turning Stone 12P 4 Bears Casino Dakota Magic 7P •Cherokee-Cartoosa (p49) 10A •Cherokee-W. Siloam 10A •Cherokee-Roland 10A& Comanche Red River Casino 10A Chinook Winds Casino 4P Wildhorse Casino Resort Dakota Sioux 6P Gold Dust Casino, Deadwood Rosebud Casino 7P Blue Mountain Casino 1P Chips Bremerton 9A Chips La Center 12P NH $60 $10RB$5 $15 $13RB$10AO$20 $25RB$20 $20 $30RB$10 $10 12P H 7P NH 10A O H/L Z 11A H Sh 12P& N H 11A 4P 6P HB NH H Sh F 7P NH $20RB$20 $60 8A& NH 12P& N H $45 6P LO H/L $100 Z 6P NH $45 6P NH $55 6P H $65 Z 12P& $70RB$30AO$50 $20RB$20 7P $10RB$10 6P $40 $45RB$10 $100RB$40AO$60 $25RB$5AO 6P& 6P $75RB$40AO$40 NH Buy-in Time Games $55AO 6P NH NH NHZ $25 12P $100 30M 1P $30 9A& 5P NH $65 5P& NH $80 50M 1P N H $20RB$15AO$25/$50 7P $25RB$5AO$25 $130 $10RB$5 $15 $13RB$10AO$20 H $45 7P $60 $45 $45 $150 Z $45 $55 8A 12P& 1P Buy-in Time Games $25RB$15 7P 7P 7P NH 10A Cz Pi Z 6P& O H/L 12P& N H $15+$5 11A $30RB$10 4P& F 6P THURSDAY HB NH H $30RB$10AO$10 $80RB$15 $150 $30RBAO $120 F RB(1)$15AO$100 $20RB$20 $25 30M 3P 12P 7P 6P 6P NH 2P NH 11A 7P NHZ $67 7P NH $35RB$30AO$30 10A NH $60 N H $35RB(1)$30AO(1)$30 10A LH $60 7P NH $35RB$30AO$30 S NH NH NH NH H F RB$10 $20RB$10AO$10 $20RB$10AO$10 $20RB$10AO$10 F(100M) $25RB(1)$5AO(1)$5 S H/L $10RB$5 7P 7P NH H 7 $20RB$20 7P $15RB$5AO$10 7P 1P $100 8A $45 12P& $45 6P NH NH NH $60 8A $45 12P& $45 1P 11A $45 $45 Varies N H $55 $45 $75 Z 12P& N H N H/O NH NHZ $25 NH $100 30M NHZ $30 7 $25Z NH $90RB$50 NH $80 50M N H $20RB$15AO$25/$50 12P 1P 9A& 4P 11A& 7P NH NH 7 NH Cz Pi H NH Varies NHZ NH $80RB$15 $120 $30RBAO $65 $20RB(1)$10 $15RB(1)$15 $25 30M $35 $57 $60RB$50 NH NLH NHB $60RB$50 $120 $50AO(1)$25 3P 7P 7P 6P 6P 7P& 11A NH $25AO$(1)$5 NH NH NHZ Pi NH NH $25AO $100 30M $30 $25Z $35RB$15AO$25 $130RB$100 70M O H/L $25RB(1)$5AO(1)$5 4P H $18RB$10 H NH NH NH NH H NH NH 7P NH 10A NH 7P NH 10A NH 7P NH 7P 7 7P S H/L 10A& N H 10A& N H 10A& N H 7P NH NH $35 7P(1st Wk) H 11A 5P NH NH $20 11A $13RB$10 5P 8P NH NH V $25 $110RB(1)$100 7P Wk2 N H B $25RB(2)$10 10A NH $20 11A $13RB$10 5P $25RB$20AO$20 NH NH NH NH $40RB$20AO 12P DB: Are there any future plans for expansion of the Peppermill? IC: We are currently in a $250 million expansion that HB NH $15+$5 $60 11A $60 12P $10 $13 1P 12P 12P NH NH NH H $13 $55 $15 7 $45 12P& N H $45 1P NH $200 Z Varies N H $45 $45 $45 $45 12P& N H Sh $45 12P& S $45 10A& NH $20RB$20 3P NH $60 2P N H/O $10RB$10AO$10 12P NH $85RB$15 $70RB$30AO$50 NH $100 10A 12P NH Varies $10RB$10 3P Varies NH $200RB$20 $60 3P $35RB$15AO$25 2P 10A 12P Wk1 5P $10RB$10AO$10 12P $50RB$10AO$10 12P NH LH H Sh NH NH 7 $25RB$10 $35RB$15AO$25 $12 $120 $15RB$10AO$10 $10RB(3)$5AO$5 $30RB$10AO$10 12P NHZ 12P $25 2P LH NHZ F$5RB(2)$5AO$5 12P $25 12P NH NH 9A& 5P 5P& 1P NHZ H NHZ NH NHZ $30 9A& NHZ $30 9A& NHZ $30 NH NH N H Sh $120AO$50 11A& $120 70M 2P $35 NH NH $35RB$15AO$25 1P& $230 70M 2P BNH NH $65RB$30AO$30 $100 50M NH NH NH NH NH H H NH $30RB$10AO$10 $100RB$20 $560 $65RBAO $340 $20RB$10 $15RB(1)$15 $18 30M NH NH NH NH O H/L H NH Varies NH $85RB$25 $1200 $55RBAO $120 $20RB(1)$10 $15RB(1)$15 $25 30M $35 $58 $80RB$15 $150 $40RBAO $65 $25 $20RB(1)$20 $25 30M 3P 7P 7P 6P 6P 2P 11A $30 9A& $50Z $120 5P& $100 50M 4P 2P N F $100 7P NH $80RB$15 3P NH $150 8P LH $30RBAO 4P NH $120 6P O H/L $20RB(1)$10AO$50 6P H $15RB(1)$15 7P& NH $25 30M 11A $27RB$5AO$10 $60RB$50 $25RB$10 $35RB$10 $85AO(1)$40 $10RB$5 F RB$10 $20RB$10AO$10 $20RB$10AO$10 $20RB$10AO$10 7P NHZ $57 7P NH $37RB$50AO$50 12P 7P NH $60 7P NH $60 12P NH $20RB$5 7P NH $60 $50 $10RB$5 7P $25 7P $20RB$10AO$10 10A 11A $10RB$5 2P 2P $20RB$10AO$10 NH H NH $85 11A $20RB$10 $30RB$10 3P NH $120 H NH NH NH NH H $20RB$10AO$10 $45RB(1)$10 9A $25RB(1)$5AO(1)$5 NH S H/L $10RB$5 4P NH N O H/L NH NH $45RB(1)$10 9A 4P 1P $10RB$5 4P 2P $30RB$10AO$10 6P $20RB(1)$10 1P $20 9A $20 12P NH NH H V H NH NH NH NH $45RB(1)$10 $25RB$5AO$50 $18RB$10 $20RB$10 $40 $30RB$10AO$10 $20RB(1)$10 $20 $20 9A 4P 11A 11A NH NH H NH $20 $20 $35 $13RB(1)$10 9A 4P 11A 11A NH NH H NH $20 $20 $35 $28RB(2)$10 5P NB $35 NH F RB(2)$15 10A NH $25RB(2)$10 NH NH $20 $25RB$20 NH $30RB$10AO$10 NH $80RB$15 NH $330 NH $60RBAO NH $225 H $30RB(1)$20AO$200 N H $50RB(2)$25AO(1)$35 NH $25 30M 7P 1P 12P 12P 6P& 5P 2P 7P 7P 12P 12P 6P 5P 2P 11A 12P $87 7P NHZ $35RB10 12P N H Sh 7P O H/L 7P H/L Sp Z 10A& Cz Pi 10A& Cz Pi $20RB$10AO$10 10A& 9A $25RB$5AO$10 4P Tahoe H/L $25RB(1)$5AO(1)$5 4P 6P N H $33RB(2)$15AO$15 6P $110 7P H $50 N O H/L NH NH $20RB(1)$10 1P $20 9A $20 12P NH NH NH 7P $20RB(1)$10 1P $20 9A $20 12P NH NH H NH $20 $20 $35 $13RB(1)$10 9A 4P 11A 11A NH NH H NH $20 $20 $35 $13RB(1)$10 7P $135RB$20 7P $25RB(2)$10 10A NH NH NH $45 $45RB$20 $25RB(2)$10 10A $20 11A $13RB$10 5P NH NH $20 11A $13RB$10 (Continued from page 16) give them a better gaming experience. $15 $13RB$10AO$20 $50 Debbie Burkhead interviews Ira Cohen of poker experience. I also have 100% backing from the Director of Gaming, Joe Ayarbe to our Director of Marketing all the way to our CEO and owners. They want to hear how to make our local players more comfortable and H Sh NH NH LH/NH $20 $20 $35 $13RB(1)$10 L/N H NH NH 11A $13RB$10AO$20 12P& $40RB$20 1P $35RB$15AO$25 11A NH NH H NH $15RB(2)$10 7P $45RB$20 7P $25RB(2)$10 10A $20RB$10 $25 NH LH/NH $20 $20 $35 $13RB(1)$10 LO NH NH H O H/L 7F NH H O H/L $100 $45 12P& $45 1P $150 Z 11A& $65 Z L/N H 3P 2P $25RB$10AO$30 1P $150 $30RB$20 6P $35RB$15AO$25 11A NH NH H NH 9A 4P 11A 11A N H Sh $30RB$20 12P 3P 1P F Buy-in NH LH/NH $20RB(1)$10 1P $20 9A $20 12P 7P 7P 10A 12P NH NH NH NH 12P H $60 4thWk10AN H $10RB$5 $15 $13RB$10AO$20 12P& N H 12P SUNDAY Buy-in Time Games $10RB$10AO$10 $150 7P 6P NH $85RB$15 1P N H $100RB$40AO$60 $40 12P NH $10RB$10AO 7P& F RB$15AO$15/$30 11A NH $75RB$40AO$40 6P Pi $10RB$5 6P $35RB$15AO$25 4A,6P& LH/NH $35RB$15AO$25 11A 7P Varies Varies $25AO 6P Buy-in Time Games $20RB$20 NH NH NH Little Creek Casino Muckleshoot Casino Northern Quest NH NH NH NH $20RB(1)$10 1P $20 9A $20 12P 9A 4P 11A 11A 12P $110 2P NH NH NH $20 $20 $35 $13RB(1)$10 NH Pi H Sh NH NH $30RB$10AO$10 $20RB(1)$10 1P $20 9A $20 12P NH NH H NH 11A 10A 11A 12P& $35 7P NH SATURDAY $20 $25 11A NH $60 10A N H Z $10RB$5 11A H Sh $15 12P& N H $13RB$10AO$20 12P Men H/N A I$25RB$10AO(1)$20 $15+$5 11A HB $15+$5 $30RB$20 12P& N H $30RB$20 $10 6P O H/L $25 NH N O H/L NH NH 9A 4P 11A 11A O H/L HB NH 12P NH 6P H 12P N H Sh $130ZB$20 12P& N H 7P NH $30RB$10 10A& O $20RB$10AO$10 7P Ladies N H $20RB$10AO$10 10A& O $20RB$10AO$10 4P 6P Buy-in Time Games $130 $10RB$5 $30 $13RB$10AO$20 7P NH NH NH NH NH FRIDAY 8P NH NH $35RB$15AO$25 4A,6P& NH $20RB$10AO(1)$10 Chips Lakewood Chips Tukwila •Drift-On-Inn (p44) Goldie’s Suquamash Clearwater Cas Wild Grizzly CAN Casino Regina WEDNESDAY 6P 7P ND TUESDAY will include a larger even more luxurious poker room, a 600 room all-suite hotel, a convenient new parking garage, a 50,000 square foot convention and entertainment center, a 21,000 square foot casino expansion, a new spa 9A 4P 11A 11A NH NH O H/L $15RB(2)$10 10A& $20 11A 2P and salon, and new restaurants. The parking garage will be complete in August 2006, the rest will open in late 2007. DB: I just attended the Fall Poker Tournament and it was held in the Tahoe Ballroom which was quite nice, will w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m H F RB$10 they continue to be held in that room? IC: Yes, they used to be held in the Mahogany Room but they will continue to be held in the Tahoe Ballroom. The room is classy and much more roomy. We had 25 tables with plenty of room to expand in the future. D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 31 Perks and Picks Visiting or playing in New York? You can win a seat for the World Poker Classic via satellite tournaments ($60 buy-in) held every Thursday at Seneca Allegany Poker Room. The Seneca World Poker Classic will be held on February 2, 2006 at Seneca Niagara Casino. Card Room Roundup The Bargain Bin By H. Scot Krause The confirmed attendees thus far for the Seneca World Poker Classic include: Jennifer Tilly, Phil Laak (aka Unabomber,) Tom McEvoy, Linda Johnson, Jan Fisher, Miami John Cernuto, Scotty Nuygen, Men the Master, Antonio (the Magician) Esfandiari and Jennifer Harman. Also, players at Seneca Allegany or Seneca Niagara can participate in “Punt, Pass & Pick,” a weekly football contest with more than $6800 given out in weekly prizes. Pick the winners of the Sunday and Monday NFL games for your shot at cash prizes. For those who are able to participate every week, a grand prize of $10,000 will be given away to the player with the most correct picks for the entire season. Ready for an adventure? This year Canadian Mountain Holidays (CMH), offering what many consider the greatest powder skiing in the world, joins forces with the man who is reputed to be the greatest poker instructor in the world for the first ever “Powder and Poker” trip - an exclusive seven day retreat for snow and Texas Hold ‘Em fans. Canadian Mountain Holidays invented Heli-Skiing forty years ago and continues to offer the world’s most comprehensive and spectacular wilderness skiing experience. Their twelve distinct ski areas in the remote mountains of British Columbia cover over 6,000 square miles. “Powder and Poker” will take place at the Adamant Lodge. Phil Gordon, (www.philgordonpoker.com) expert poker analyst and co-host of television’s Celebrity Poker Showdown, is a world-class poker player, author, adventure traveler, sports fan, and accomplished businessman. He took the poker world by storm at the 2001 World Series of Poker championship event, where he finished fourth. Phil has developed an in-demand series of lectures on many aspects of playing Texas Hold ‘Em. From April 22 -29, 2006, he will be Heli-Boarding with CMH during the days and teaching poker at night. Each lecture will be followed by tournament play with a champion to be crowned at the end of the week. For more information, visit: www.canadianmountainholidays.com In Horton, Kansas, the Golden Eagle Casino is offering several exciting opportunities and holiday promotions throughout December with cash giveaways on Monday and Friday, blackjack tournaments and the New Year’s Eve Cash Blast. In addition to daily poker tournaments in the Eagle’s Nest Poker room, Players’ Club members can enter the Stuff Your Stocking with Cash Wind Tunnel filled with $2,500 in total cash. Players will test their skills as they attempt to grab as much cash as they can and stuff a stocking in 18 seconds. Stuff Your Stocking with Cash is set for Monday, Dec. 12, and Dec. 19. Golden Eagle will give away a total of $16,000 in cash prizes in December in the Christmas Cash promotion. Guests can register for a chance to win up to $1,000 in cash prizes each Friday. Between 7:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m., on Fridays, Dec. 16 and Dec. 23, drawings will be held each half-hour and 21 winners will win cash. For blackjack players, Golden Eagle will be the place to be in December with two tournaments. A free tournament will be held Tuesday, Dec. 13 through Saturday, Dec. 17. Players will use Golden Eagle’s chips and cash for a chance to win the first-place prize of $500. Registration begins at 8:00 a.m., Tuesday, Dec. 13. The monthly tournament is scheduled for Wednesday, Dec. 28 at 7:00 p.m. Buy-in for the monthly tournament is $25 with a 100 percent payback. Guests can ring in 2006 with the $7006 Cash Blast. Each half-hour between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m., two winners will earn a chance to win their share of $5,000. At 12:30 a.m., January 1, one winner will be selected to win the grand prize of $2,006. See the complete details on all promotions posted at the Player’s Club booth. That’s it for this week! Number One Main Street, Las Vegas, Nevada Toll free 1.800.634.6575 or 702.386.2110 www.plazahotelcasino.com The Plaza Hotel opened more than three decades ago to much fanfare and promotion. I was there for the VIP opening preceding the public grand opening as a guest of one of the contractors that had helped in the construction of this new “Queen of Downtown.” The Union Plaza was simply elegant and newer than anything on the Las Vegas Strip. The crowd was definitely upscale and the event was one giant free party. Trays of food were everywhere, Champaign was flowing from fountains and everyone was excited about the future of downtown Las Vegas with this new jewel of a resort at Number One Main Street. The original Union Plaza housed the train station for the passenger trains that serviced Las Vegas then, bringing visitors to downtown from all points. Fast forward to the pres- H. Scot Krause is a freelance writer, gaming industry analyst and researcher, originally from Cleveland, Ohio. While raising his three year-old son, Zachary, Scot reports, researches, and writes about casino games, events, attractions and promotions. He is a ten-year resident of Las Vegas. Questions or comments are welcomed. Card room managers are also invited to send your specials and promotions to: krauseinvegas@cox.net 32 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m ent and even though the property is into its fourth decade and the trains no longer bring passengers to Las Vegas it remains the anchor of Main Street and the best place to view the Fremont Street Experience show. The 1037 hotel rooms provide guests with great accommodations at rates that are much easier on the budget than many of the strip hotels. All of downtown is within easy walking distance to the Plaza Hotel and Casino. The property has changed ownership over the years and is now owned by the Barrick Group. They have begun a renovation program that has brought the hotel up to modern standards without sacrificing the friendly feel and comfortable atmosphere long associated with the downtown Casino. The spacious casino provides visitors with a selection of hundreds of the newest slot machines, a full compliment of table games, Keno, Race and Sports book, a fast food court, and restaurants to please every taste and budget. The Center Stage Restaurant located in the mirrored dome covering the entrance to the hotel is one of the most filmed places in all of Las Vegas. Many movies have used the spectacular setting to convey the spirit of Las Vegas. During the Fremont Street Experience Light Show the lights in the restaurant are dimmed and the show’s music is piped into the room. Next time you’re in Las Vegas make an effort to have dinner at the Center Stage Restaurant for one of the original Las Vegas dining experiences. The second floor of the hotel is the location of the men’s barber shop where the master barber still provides a straight razor, Inside the Plaza’s immense cardroom You can’t miss it—The Plaza’s unique exterior from the street steaming towel shave, another unique experience that has become difficult to find. Live lounge entertain- Tournaments at the Plaza are numerous with a 10 AM to 5 PM daily, Single Table $25 & $50 Sit-n-Go’s plus $25 Shoot-Outs. Tuesday through Sunday play in the daily 7 PM $35 buy-in w/ rebuys No-limit Hold’em. Monday’s at 7 PM the Plaza Poker Room offers a $35 buy-in w/rebuys Omaha Hi/ Lo Split tournament. A $55 buy-in No-limit Hold’em w/rebuys tournament is offered at noon and every night at midnight, a great tournament for the late night crowd. The Plaza hotel is the home of the Ultimate Poker Challenge tournament series now into its third season. The Ultimate Poker Challenge is filmed for broadcast on TV and includes a championship event that always draws all the top name pros. The 2005 UPC is scheduled for November 16th through the 29th at the downtown Plaza Hotel with $500 No-limit Hold’em buy-in events offered daily. The Ultimate Poker Challenge is a great series of tournament to break into major Las Vegas poker tournaments and play your best game for a shot at a nationally syndicated TV show. The Plaza Poker Room offers players comps at the rate of $5 after 4 hours of play, better than average. Come to the Plaza Hotel and Casino to experience the personal service, hospitality and friendliness of downtown Las Vegas. Enjoy the historic old Vegas spirit of gambling and entertainment at Number One Main Street. Pechanga Poker DECEMBER DECEMBER Shuffle Up and Deal! Every Tournament Winner in December Wins an IPOD Shuffle. *Expires Christmas Day. TOURNAMENT SERIES Plaza Cardroom Manager Kenn Bennett THURSDAY, DEC. 1 6:30PM Limit Hold’em Tournament $5,000 Guarantee $35 + $15 Buy-In FRIDAY, DEC. 2 7PM Limit Hold’em Tournament $10,000 Guarantee $60 + $15 Buy-In SATURDAY, DEC. 3 4PM No-Limit Hold’em Tournament $15,000 Guarantee $80 + $15 Buy-In SUNDAY, DEC. 4 4PM No-Limit Hold’em Tournament $5,000 Guarantee $35 + $15 Buy-In THURSDAY, DEC. 8 7PM Ladies Only No-Limit Hold’em $85 + $15 Buy-In • $100 Added per Table 1st Place $1,000 Buy-in seat to the World Series Ladies Only Event 2006 All New Event! 2nd Thursday Every Month ment is always happening at the Plaza, and always free. The groups are typically well above average including an Asian Rock group that you won’t soon forget. The Plaza Poker Room is located in the casino area close to the main cashier’s cage. Convenient to valet and self parking makes the spacious room popular with tourist and locals alike. Plaza poker operations are managed by poker industry veteran, Kenn Bennett. The room has 9 pan tables and 19 poker tables spreading all of your favorite games. The Plaza Poker Room is one of the last places anywhere to offer pan. The Plaza Poker Room even offers the occasional pan tournament. The poker room offers $3-$6 Omaha Hi-Low Split, Texas Hold’em with $2-$4, $3-$6 or $4-$8 limit, and $1-$4 Seven Card Stud. A $1-$2 blind No-limit Hold’em game with a $40 min up to $500 max buy-in and a $2$5 blind No-limit Hold’em with a minimum $100-No max limit buy-in. THURSDAY, DEC. 22 6:30PM Last Chance No-Limit Hold’em $10,000 Guarantee $85 + $15 Buy-In FRIDAY, DEC. 23 7PM Last Chance No-Limit Hold’em $6,000 Guarantee $55 + $15 Buy-In SATURDAY, DEC. 24 4PM 2005 Big Showdown Series 1st Place $10,000 Buy-in seat to the 2006 World Series Guaranteed $200 + $25 Buy-In SUNDAY, DEC. 25 4PM No-Limit Hold’em Tournament $35 + $15 Buy-In $5,000 Guarantee D A I LY T O U R N A M E N T S C H E D U L E DAILY DOUBLE JACKPOTS • Mon. thru Fri. 2-5PM • 1:30-3AM • 4-5AM • 6-9AM MONDAY 10AM 6PM 6:30PM 6:30PM to 9:30PM 9:30PM to Midnight TUESDAY 10AM 2PM to Midnight 6:30PM WEDNESDAY 10AM 6PM to 1:15AM 6:30PM THURSDAY 10AM 2PM to Midnight 4PM to 10PM 9PM to Midnight FRIDAY 10AM 6PM to 8PM SATURDAY SUNDAY No-Limit Hold’em Tournament $2,000 Guarantee Monday Night Football $2,000 Cash Giveaway $250 per quarter and $1,000 at 10PM No-Limit Hold’em Tournament $2,000 Guarantee Double Jackpot Stud Double, Omaha Triple and Hold’em Quadruple Jackpot $20 + $5 Buy-In Hold’em Tournament Free entry for TOC Players High Hand of the Hour Hold’em Tournament $2,000 Guarantee $20 + $5 Buy-In No-Limit Hold’em Tournament Wacky Wednesday No-Limit Hold’em Tournament $2,000 Guarantee $1,500 Drawing $2,000 Guarantee $20 + $5 Buy-In $300 Every Hour (Omaha $50) $2,000 Guarantee $20 + $5 Buy-In $20 + $5 Buy-In $20 + $5 Buy-In Hold’em Tournament $2,000 Guarantee $20 + $5 Buy-In High Hand of the Hour $300 Every Hour (Omaha $50) Single Table Sit-N-Go Tournaments $85 + $15 Buy-In Top three places paid, 1st $525 • 2nd $200 • 3rd $125 Triple Hold’em Jackpot Thursdays Stud and Omaha Doubled No-Limit Hold’em Tournament $2,000 Guarantee $40,000 Hold’em Jackpot Fridays (All Hold’em Games) Stud and Omaha Doubled $20 + $5 Buy-In 10AM No-Limit Hold’em Tournament $4,000 Guarantee $20 + $5 Buy-In 10AM No-Limit Hold’em Tournament* *10 hours live play weekly = free entry No-Limit Hold’em Tournament Double Jackpot Sunday $2,000 Guarantee $20 + $5 Buy-In $5,000 Guarantee $35 + $15 Buy-In 4PM 1PM to 3PM & 6PM to 1AM Check out California’s hottest spot for Table Games action featuring Blackjack, Pai Gow, 3 Card Poker and more! All Weekday AM Tournaments have a $2,000 Guarantee, $20 Buy-in and a $5 Entry Fee. All Jackpot promotions reset and doubled until end of promotion time. Winner must be present to win Monday Night Football drawing. Hotel Poker Rate subject to availability Monday through Thursday and no discounts on Friday, Saturday or Sunday. Please see a Poker Room Floor Person for promotion details. Management reserves the right to cancel or modify promotions without notice. Must be 21 or older to enter Casino. 45000 Pechanga Parkway • I-15 • Temecula • 877.711.2WIN • www.pechanga.com w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 33 T exas Hold’em has infiltrated just about every aspect of human consciousness. Now it’s made it and the Foxwoods World Poker Championship, according to the website. The March 4 Eastern Caribbean cruise, the May we charter an entire boat and have 2,000 poker players sail for a week,” Fisher says, speaking of the PartyPoker Million cruise. “The highlight of the week is a WPT event. Last year’s event had more than $7 million in the prize pool. All of our cruises include tournaments, live games, seminars and beginner’s les- tion than a poker cruise, and you can play as much or as little poker as you want.” “Business was good even before poker was on TV,” says Herb VanDyke, head of marketing for Saloon Entertainment, which runs the World Poker Showdown cruise. “We got all these people coming on the cruise – they saw it on TV, they’ve never played! They want to play. Greg Raymer’s on there, and he’s there to play, so if you want to play against the world champion...” “We have $1/$2 teaching tables,” he says. “People that want to feel better pick up some tips. Our whole purpose is, we go after upper middleclass people where the buy-in isn’t as huge as the World Series. Our biggest buy-in is $2,500. SPECIAL POKER CRUISES By Steve Horton aboard two of the biggest cruise lines in the world: Princess Cruise and Carnival Cruise. Every week at least one new two-to-seven-day cruise kicks off from one of these cruise lines somewhere in the world, and it’s a good bet that cruise has Hold ‘em aboard. And then there’s scheduled cruises just for gambling: Card Player Cruises, affiliated with the magazine of the same name, which includes the PartyPoker Million cruise; Classic Gaming Cruises, run by Casino Publishing Group (which does Casino Player magazine); and the World Poker Showdown, in its second year, managed by Saloon Entertainment. It seems likely that some of the newer poker publications will get in on the casino cruise action while the getting is good. Players aboard the Classic Gaming Cruises can earn a seat in the World Series of Poker 34 P O K E R P L AY E R 13 Bermuda & Bahamas cruise and the July 23 Alaskan cruise will award entries into the ‘06 World Poker Championship. The Oct. 7 cruise to Canada and Nov. 6 Mexican cruise will offer entries into the ‘07 Foxwoods event and the ‘07 WSOP, respectively. “Business is booming,” says Jan Fisher of Card Player Cruises. “Most of our cruises sell out far in advance.” As the demographics have skewed younger, poker players’ interests are changing, according to Fisher. “We have a lot more interest in no-limit tournaments and no-limit side games,” she says. We still get mostly recreational players for our cruises, and our passengers are probably younger than the average cruise passenger, though we have many senior citizens in our group.” Card Player Cruises is also part of the World Poker Tour. “Once a year D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 sons. We also have private parties for our passengers. Card Player Cruises also hosts an annual World Poker Players conference at a brick-andmortar cardroom.” According to the Card Player Cruises and PartyPoker websites, this year’s PartyPoker Million V kicks off Mar. 12 and will offer a similar prize pool. Players can win a cruise package on PartyPoker through super satellites, multi-level “cruise-step” tournaments, $675+$40 Gateway tournaments with one cruise package for every 20 players, or a freeroll using 15,000 player’s club points. The twist with the big PartyPoker tournament is that it’s limit poker – the biggest limit tournament in the world. Fortunately for no-limit fans, there are plenty of NL side events aboard the cruise. Fisher doesn’t see poker cruises going anywhere in the future. “I think that cruising will continue to be a popular pastime for poker players,” she says. “After all, there is no more affordable vaca- w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m Affordable, yet we play by TDA [Tournament Directors Association] rules and everything is run very similar and close to the World Series.” VanDyke says the crowd aboard his World Poker Showdown is filled with new players. “70% of the people have never played live. Online or in a casino. I have a group of retired people coming – they’re entering every event.” Poker cruises are able to run a little differently than land-based casinos. “We’re trying to keep our events fun,” says VanDyke. “We have a bounty in there occasionally. I’ll walk over to a table to give a guy a bonus – it’s a different kind of atmosphere because we’re not restricted to Las Vegas gambling regulations. It’s completely different. People have a lot of fun. We had one argument all last year. The guy was drunk, didn’t understand his hand – that’s it. I used to run poker in Russia, we’d have an argument every 20 minutes!” According to VanDyke, it was online poker that first led to the poker explosion, then TV poker was second. “I think live and online interreact,” he says. “Before TV there was an expansion of poker. Because of online poker, it became a teaching platform and the casinos actually did better. It was the first step. A lot of people were intimidated – I know people who, when they first walked in and they see all those people with sunglasses – You’re going to play against all these sharks? That’s the first impression you get when you enter.” The World Poker Showdown in 2004 had Chris Moneymaker as co-host, and this year it’s Greg Raymer. VanDyke says he didn’t plan on having two WSOP champions as hosts two years in a row – it just worked out that way. “They’re doing it almost like a favor,” he says. “Look, the [Five Diamond World Poker Classic] is the same time ours is, and where is Greg going? Not that he won’t make money on the cruise – he will, and the players know it.” The throng of new players with lots of money to burn attracts poker players looking to make some money and meet their fans. “Last year, we had Layne Flack and Chip Jett onboard – they both won a tournament! In the main event, Moneymaker was at the final table. He went out third or something. And then the cash games. How many Vegas bookings do I have? One. We have over 60 people from Virginia. 20 from North Carolina. We get a lot from Florida. You can see the demographics.” “The one good thing about a cruise – it’s the same people on the ship,” VanDyke says. “You get to understand their play and the types of players they are.” VanDyke believes that paying out to a higher percentage of players is better. “We use a little bit of a flatter payout to make it fairer,” he says. “For years, they were paying the top 3, which was crazy. The way they’re doing these things, it’s time to change it. I’m certainly going to reduce what 1-2-3 pay, make it more even. All day long, you make it to the final table, you make a little bit back – it’s a joke.” “I know one pro that played – the leading player in the circuit, he was first or second, I forget,” VanDyke says. “At the end of the year, he actually lost money. You have to come out first or second to make it worth it. You look at NASCAR, they have guys that become points leader that haven’t won an event. That’s where the future has to go. I’ve been fighting for it for a couple of years. I’m going to change it myself.” 2 Diamond Princess Los Angeles CA 3 Diamond Princess Anchorage AK 4 Grand Princess Galveston TX 5 Sapphire Princess Los Angeles CA 6 Sapphire Princess Anchorage CRUISESLINES CARNIVAL CRUISE 7 Carnival Conquest Galveston 8 Carnival Legend Fort Lauderdale 9 Carnival Miracle Tampa A Carnival Pride Los Angeles B Carnival Spirit San Diego C Carnival Triumph Miami D Celebration Jacksonville E Ecstasy/Elation Galveston F Fantasy Port Canaveral G Fascination Miami H Imagination Miami I Paradise Los Angeles J Sensation Port Canaveral CARD PLAYER CRUISES K Alaskan Explorer Seattle AK CRUISE DATES May 11 – 13, 2006 Saturdays Sep. 23-Oct 21, 2006; Saturdays Nov. 4Dec. 30, 2006 May 20; June 3; June 17; July 1; July 15; Aug 12; Aug. 26; Sep. 9, 2006 Saturdays Dec. 3 – 31; Saturdays Jan. 7-Apr. 8, 2006 Saturdays Dec. 3 – 31; Saturdays Jan. 7-May 6, 2006 May 27; June 10; July 8; July 22; Aug. 5; Aug. 19; Sep. 2, 2006 2 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 B 7 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 B 7 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 B 7 1p – late 4 L N 5/10 B 7 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 B 7 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 B Morning Tournaments 30 Player Maximum $22 Buy-In ~ $10 Re-buys Graveyard Tournaments Mon thru Fri at 3 am - registration begins at 1 am 30 Player Maximum $65 Buy-In ~ $20 Re-buys And on the “Live” Games check out the Payouts from $50 to $599! Progressive High Hand Payouts for 4 of a Kind or Better See Poker Room for All Details 947-5917 Dec. 4; Dec. 11; Sundays 7 Jan. 8-Dec. 31, 2006 Dec. 11; Dec. 19; FL Every eighth day from 8 Jan. 12-Dec. 26, 2006 Sundays Dec. 4 – 25; FL Sundays 7 Jan. 1-Dec. 31, 2006 Sundays Dec. 4 – 25; CA Sundays Jan. 17 Dec. 31, 2006 Every eighth day CA 8 beginning Dec. 2 Alternating 7-day Eastern FL Caribbean and 7-day Western 7 Caribbean beginning Dec. 3 Alternating 5-day and FL 4-day Bahamas 4-5 beginning Dec. 3 5-day and 4-day TX Western Caribbean 4-5 beginning Dec. 3 Alternating 4-day and FL 3-day Bahamas beginning 3-4 Dec. 4 Alternating 3-day Bahamas FL and 4-day Western Caribbean 3-4 beginning Dec. 2 Alternating 4-day and 5-day FL Western Caribbean beginning 4-5 Dec. 1 CA Alternating 4-day and 3-day 3-4 Baja, Mexico beginning Dec. 19 FL Alternating 4-day and 5-day Bahamas beginning 4-5 Mar. 23, 2006 TX 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 2 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 3 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 NS 1p – late 1 L N 5/10 NS 6 9a-3a 12-20 N,L,O, RbyR N,L,O, 9a-3a 12-20 RbyR 9a-3a 12-20 N,L,O, RbyR 9a-3a 12-20 N,L,O, RbyR N,L,O, 24 hours 60 RbyR 6 6 6 6 7 24 hours 24 hours 24 hours 24 hours 24 hours 6 24 hours 27 WA July 25-Aug. 5, 2006 10 Eastern Caribbean New York NY Oct. 11 – 19, 2006 7 M Mexican Riviera San Diego CA Dec. 2 – 10 7 N Mexican Riviera San Diego CA Dec. 2 – 9, 2006 6 PartyPoker Million V Fort Mar. 12 – 19, 2006 Lauderdale FL CLASSIC GAMING CRUISES P Alaska Seattle WA July 23 – 30, 2006 Q Bermuda & Bahamas New York NY May 13 – 20, 2006 R Eastern Caribbean Miami FL Mar. 4 – 11, 2006 S New England/Canada New York NY Oct. 7 – 14, 2006 T Mexico Los Angeles CA Nov. 6 – 14, 2006 WORLD POKER SHOWDOWN Poker Port U World Dec. 11 – 18 Showdown II Canaveral FL * Open hours are only while at sea in international waters S/NS – Poker room allows smoking (S), non-smoking (NS) or both (B) Days open, hours of operation, games offered and tables may vary 255 E. Flamingo Road Las Vegas, Nevada No Limit Texas Hold ‘em Tournaments! OPEN # OF HIGH DAYS HOURS TABLES GAMES NL? LIMITS S/NS L O Suites & Casino Mon thru Fri at 10 am - registration begins at 8 am United States Special Poker Cruises # ON LAUNCH MAP CASINO CRUISE CITY STATE PRINCESS CRUISES 1 Diamond Princess San Francisco CA TUSCANY 10 10 10 10 10 N,L,O,7 N,L,O,7 N,L,O,7 N,L,O,7 N,L,O,7 PA L M S P O K E R R O O M P R E S E N T S Bd]SPh<^]SPh=XVWcb 3daX]VCWT6P\Tb $ FX]d_c^ 4eTahcX\TPcTP\bR^aTb P]SPccWTT]S^UTeTahVP\T Play in the Palms Poker room with your Club Palms Card while you watch the game. At the end of each game and each time a team scores you could win $100 to $500 instantly! And Join Us In The Poker Room For Y 20/40 NS Y 20/40 NS Y 20/40 NS Y 20/40 NS Y 20/40 NS Y Y Y Y Y 20/40 20/40 20/40 20/40 20/40 NS NS NS NS NS See the Palms Poker Room for complete rules. Must be 21. Management reserves all rights. N,L,O Y 30/60 B 4321 West Flamingo Road Las Vegas, NV 89103 702.942.7777 • www.palms.com © 2005 Fiesta Palms LLC. All Rights Reserved. w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 35 Bigger is Better– Foxwoods POKer east of the ROCKIEs By DONNA BLEVINS “When you build it, they will come,” is a famous line from the movie Field of Dreams. Many people called it a baseball movie. I call it is an amazing life lesson told around a baseball theme. This same belief was certainly shared by the visionary who first built a high-stakes bingo hall in the Connecticut woods in 1986 when Foxwoods Resort and Casino was born. We heard a story about a local resident who went to the first construction site and asked the workers what they were building. When told it was a high-stakes bingo hall, the resident laughed and said, “No one will come all the way out here in the woods for bingo.” No one could ever have been more wrong. No one could have ever guessed that Foxwoods would become the largest resort casino in the world when they opened their first casino in 1992. Or, that they would grow from that single casino to today’s sprawling six casinos with 340,000 square feet of gaming in a complex that covers nearly 5 million square feet? How big is that . . . well, the playing area of a regulation football field is 100’ X 300’ or 30,000 square feet. Our first view of Foxwoods was breathtaking. We flew into Hartford late in the day and rented a car. We were given rather obscure directions. When I asked for more specifics, the car rental agent just smiled and said we would know when we got there. That made about as much sense as directions like “take the last exit before the first toll”! It was one of those cold and miserable days when the rain is persistent and the wind is unforgiving. Less than an hour into our foggy drive, we turned a curve and, as if by magic, this amazing structure glowed in the distance and rose from the mist. It reminded me of my childhood vision of Camelot. I heard classical music in my head, just like the music the helicopter pilot played when we came over the crest and he dropped us into the Grand Canyon for the first time. We drove another mile or so as the structures grew larger and larger. I said, almost absently, “I wonder how exactly we get there.” Greg responded, “Just follow the line of cars!” When we arrived at one of the three hotels, the Grand Piquot Towers, pronounced pee’-qwat, we were greeted warmly . . . like returning dignitaries. To say the architecture is expansive is an understatement. The glass domed entrance of the hotel was massive and welcoming in the cold evening 36 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 air. We soon discovered that much of the development was treated like an art gallery with original art honoring the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation, the owners and founders. We made a game of eating out and deciding which of the 25 restaurants we would visit for each meal. Even though I generally shy away from shopping, I enjoyed the selections in the retail shops along the airy glass enclosed concourse. This place is really, really big! Big, however, is getting even bigger. Tribal and Foxwoods officials broke ground November 15, 2005, on yet another $700 million development project. The project will add 2,300 permanent jobs, bringing total employment to more than 13,500 people at Foxwoods. The new development will add an additional 2 million square feet bringing the total to nearly 7 million square feet under one roof! For us poker players, Foxwoods plans to open a newly expanded state-of-the-art poker room in the Spring of 2006. The project will boost the number of poker tables from its current 76 to 114. Director of Poker Operations, Kathy Raymond says, “More tables and cutting edge technology will translate into less waiting and more action for our players, as well as giving us an even greater opportunity to host premiere Kathy Raymond poker events.” We just returned from Foxwoods’ record breaking World Poker Finals where 783 people entered the championship event. After winning a multitable satellite, I played in my first $10,000 event and cashed at 91st. Even though I was blue for a couple of days, Greg was so proud of me you would have thought I won the tournament and brought home the $2.1 Million first place prize! Since Foxwoods’ World Poker Finals is a World Poker Tour event, once the final table is down to heads-up (two people), there is a money presentation. The remaining prize pool of more than $3 Million is ceremoniously brought to the final table. At Foxwoods, we were delighted with the presentation by Red Bear Productions, a group of Native Americans from differing tribes who honor their roots with traditional attire, singing and dancing. On our second trip to Foxwoods, we were shuttled to the property from Providence airport rather than having to rent a car. Once on property, we had everything we needed. There is simply no need for a car! By the way, on one of our airport commutes, the driver told us it would take one full day to just tour all of the casinos, and three full days to tour the entire complex. I wonder how long it will take once the expansion is completed to nearly 7 million square feet. “When you build it, they will come.” Foxwoods did, and the people continue coming . . . to the tune of more than 40,000 guests each day! To sum up my overwhelming feelings of Foxwoods in one word, “Wow!” To quote another famous movie line, “I’ll be back.” Check out www. Foxwoods.com. Remember, if you can’t raise, don’t call. A true entrepreneur at heart, Donna Blevins is a marketing consultant, professional speaker and trainer, as well as a poker journalist. She looks forward to meeting you at the final table. Contact Donna to advertise in Poker Player, to cover your poker tournament or with article ideas - PokerPlayerNews@yahoo.com. w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m Caro’s Word: “Conditions” CONT’D FROM PAGE 6 ably don’t have a situation in which you should consider a value bet. That doesn’t mean you should never bet. Your hand might be too strong to meet the value bet definition, and then you will be considering whether to bet out or to check-raise. So, again: When you can’t quite figure out whether or not to value bet, here’s the right time to do it. The right time 1. The hand you hold is marginally strong for the situation and either a bet or a check would seem reasonable to most experienced players holding your same hand. 2. The opponents you’re about to bet into are passive and not especially tricky. 3. The opponents you’re about to bet into are more likely to call than most opponents. If all three of those conditions are true, bet much of the time, but check sometimes to throw your opponents off-guard. If all three of those conditions aren’t true, and your hand is not especially powerful or worth bluffing with, you should decide to check. Without those three elements being true, you’re costing yourself money by betting those normally just-better-than borderline hands. So, save yourself money and don’t bet them unless you’re against relatively passive and nondeceptive opponents who are more likely to call right now than typical opponents would be. This is “The Mad Genius of Poker” Mike Caro and that’s my secret today. Mike Caro is widely regarded as the world’s foremost authority on poker strategy, psychology, and statistics. A renowned player and founder of Mike Caro University of Poker, Gaming, and Life Strategy, he is known as “the Mad Genius of Poker,” because of his lively delivery of concepts and latest research. You can visit him at www.poker1.com. All About Home games BY LEE “COOL HAND” GARCIA Before I start, let me clarify what I consider home games. These are poker games that are put on for profit by someone other than a licensed casino. it is not your brother Billy Bob and the family, playing poker in the parlor for a few bucks. It certainly isn’t your buddies that get together once in a while to Poker Humor Isn’t a Contradiction By Byron Liggett Poker is a mean game. It’s agony and ecstasy, frustration and fulfillment, delight and despair. Consequently, we find Poker websites devoted to news, views, how-to’s, who’s who’s, and what-todo’s. But what’s funny about Poker? A lot. If you’re not getting laughs out of your game, there’s a special website for you: HoldemHumor. com. It’s a flop house for poker jokers. “I was playing poker with tarot cards the other night. I got a full-house and four people died” is typical of the one-liners posted on the website. Another favorite asked, “What is the difference between a poker player and a dog? In about ten years the dog quits whining.” Holdemhumor.com is conducting a contest in order to gather the largest collection of Poker jokes. The winner with the best joke wins $500 when the contest ends January 15, 2006. There are prizes for 2nd and 3rd place. Any one who submits a joke that’s used on the website receives $25. Humor is not accepted that contains profanity or is disrespectful of race, gender, religion, or nationality. So, if your humor is better than your Hold’em, here’s an opportunity to win a buyin. Remember -- if you’re grinnin’, you’re winnin’. play a game, drink some beer and buy pizza! Those are social games where you may lose a few bucks, but you’re glad you’re there with all your close friends etc. What I’m talking about are organized games that you can find in just about every city in the country. A promoter buys a professional poker table and chips, hires a couple of dealers, and then spreads the word it is by invitation only. The latter is because these games are quite illegal by virtue of their taking a rake for profit. if a plainclothes officer were to sit in on the game it would be disastrous for all present. Hence, the security. Some of these games keep it simple, in that they are held in someone’s home and they post someone at the door to see who is arriving. Others are very sophisticated and go so far as to install TV monitors surveying the premises, an electric gate that is opened only upon recognition, and membership cards that are signed by the owner. Every state has different penalties for hosting, or attending, such a game. In some states, certain activities are considered felonies, and in others, simply misdemeanors. If a licensed poker dealer is caught at one of these games, however, he could have his license suspended. In general, I am not in favor of home games for several reasons. Some of these situations could apply to the games in your town, and some may not, but I’d like to point out what you should watch for in non-casino games. These games take a rake, in most cases, of $4 or $5 per hand. I have seen dealers take the rake at the beginning of the hand, then when the pot gets bigger, drop another rake. In years past, I dealt a home game and was told that my rake was too low. I was taking in $72 to $80 per 1/2 hour, and the other dealer was dropping over $120! It is ludicrous to believe someone can deal out 30 hands in a 1/2 hour! Sometimes they play a round of each, which means one round of Hold’ em, then one round (Continued on page 38) -BT7FHBTPOMZ5FYBT)PMEA&N3PZBM'MVTI1SPHSFTTJWF +BDLQPUTUBSUJOHBU &BTZBDDFTTPĊ+PF8#SPXO%SJWFBOEBNQMFQBSLJOH -*7&(".&4 -JNJU5FYBT)PMEA&N /P-JNJU5FYBT)PMEA&N 5PVSOBNFOU /P-JNJU5FYBT)PMEA&N 0NBIB)- 5FYBT)PMEA&N 3PZBM'MVTI+BDLQPU 'SFF1PLFS-FTTPOT%BJMZ 'PPUCBMM4JU/(PT BN4BUVSEBZUP.JEOJHIU4VOEBZt#VZ*O /07&.#&3ǩ%&$&.#&3 8*/ B+BDLFU 1MBZ)PVSTJOUIF1PLFS3PPNBOE SFDFJWFB'3&&-PHP+BDLFU 8IJMFTVQQMJFTMBTU0OFKBDLFUQFSQFSTPO.VTUIBWF 1MBZFST$MVCDBSEBOEIPVSTSFDPSEFE 'PSNPSFJOGPSNBUJPODBMMUIF1PLFS3PPNBU Ari Mizrachi Poker Room Manager w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 37 How Could You Slow Play Quads? -PART 3 NEVER PLAY Poker with a man CALLed “DOC” By Dr. Scott Aigner, M.D. (This article is the last in a series on common mistakes that I see in no limit hold em by inexperienced and weak players). A third mistake I see is betting the wrong amount in no limit. It is rare that a calling station will bet. He usually just calls but how many times have you seen a calling station hit a draw and then when he makes it he either moves all in or he check raises all in? The inexperienced player does this too. They over bet their strong hands when the better play is to make a value bet that will get called. The tight passive player also shares this flaw. How many times have you seen this player type move all in preflop when he holds aces or kings? A player makes a standard raise and this guy moves in no matter how many chips he has or his position. He doesn’t want anyone to outdraw him. They’ll often even say that they didn’t want anyone to call them had they made a smaller raise and then have their hand get outdrawn post flop. Be very happy they think this way as it makes it very easy to read them and to get away from a hand that you would have gone broke with had they played their hand correctly. Another mistake is not knowing the pot odds and/or implied odds as well as overestimating their outs. They will often draw to straights and flushes when the board is paired and they are drawing dead or have a lot less outs than they realize. They not only do not read boards very well but don’t read opponents either. They don’t think about what you might be holding, just what they have. They don’t recognize what the bet size in relationship to the pot could mean. It is whether they think the bet is reasonable to call just based on the size rather than the size in relationship to the pot that matters. This is why value bets work very well against these opponents. They just do not see betting patterns that the better players see. It is also why _ pot bets work well in no limit and pot limit structures. By always giving an opponent 3 to 1 on his call you are minimizing giving away information about your hand to the better players and you are going to receive a lot of calls from the weaker players who see the bet as a reasonable amount to call. Of course I like to vary my bets based on my opponent’s style of play and their stack size but that is another subject for an article in the future. Another common mistake is the old “but it was suited” flaw. They will often call a raise with their hand only because the hand is suited. Overvaluing suited hands is a huge leak in these player’s games. They just do not realize how often they will actually make a flush or that they are not going to have the right odds to catch a flush against a good player who does understand them. They are also not aggressive and they will just call rather than push their chips into the pot which would give them the right odds if their all in raise gives them ~2 to 1 pot odds. Although these are not all of the mistakes that weak players and inexperienced players share it is a good overview of the most common ones that one will see in no limit tournaments. The main difference between these two groups of players is that the inexperienced player will learn to avoid these common mistakes with experience. The weak players will continue to make these common mistakes over and over again. Dr Aigner is a board certified Urologist. He has multiple final table finishes in major tournaments including a WPO bracelet in 2001. You can contact him at http://www.PokerStrategyForum.com 38 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 All About Home games CO N T I N U E D F RO M PAG E 37 of Omaha HiLo. They will rake more for Omaha because it takes longer, but when the Hold’em starts, they continue the higher rake. These things won’t happen in a casino. Kris, a young friend of mine who attends such games, has a new bad beat story every week. I politely asked him if there was any chance that he was being trapped by partners in the game. He answered with a resounding no, but later admitted that he had never given that a thought. Most people are trusting in this regard, and don’t look for these combines as a rule. Casino personnel do that for you automatically. How do partners work? asked & answered: C O N T I N U E D F R O M PA G E they wouldn’t make against other players. Q #7 ANSWER: (a). You’re more likely to beat poker if you imagine you’re being paid by the hour for making the right choices, rather than by pots won. Q #8 ANSWER: (a). A powerful way to win at poker is to give opponents “permission” to play poorly. You can do this by showing them that you play weak hands and conveying that you enter pots with more of those inferior hands than you actually do. 24 Q #9 ANSWER: (a). Suppose your in an unfamiliar home game. It’s true that you should often quit that game if you’re concerned about cheating, even if those concerns are unwarranted. It’s too hard to make quality decisions when you’re worried about other things. Q #10 ANSWER: (d). All of the first three statements were true. Skillful players can motivate themselves by believing in the long-term power of probability, you shouldn’t be concerned with winning or losing streaks, and most players exaggerate their bad luck. Sometimes they will act as if they are angry at each other, even to the point of swearing. If that happens often but never escalates, be on the lookout. If the same two players and you are repeatedly in a big hand, and you never win, be sure to ask the dealer to cover the muck and show all hands. That will tell you if raising was legitimate. Most guilty players will act offended by such a request and make a scene. An honest player won’t mind that request. In today’s casinos with automatic shufflers, the machine counts the deck every hand. In most casinos without them, the dealers randomly count down the stub often. A house game doesn’t do that, and that makes it possible for a hold-out artist to hold out an ace, substitute it in another hand, and put all cards back in the deck without worrying that the stub will be counted short. And don’t think that doesn’t happen! I know a gentleman that makes a living doing card tricks. He doesn’t play cards, but he says that anyone can master making cards disappear and re-appear easily. It just takes practice. (Continued on page 39) Ante Up The Apache Gold Poker Room Shark Club. As a member, you’ll get official jackets, shirts & hats. Quarterly free-rolls. Paid entries in our weekly tournaments. $100 cash on your birthday. Hotel discounts. Cash promotions every Wednesday through Sunday, and cash drawings the first Saturday of each month. Tournaments every Wednesday and Thursday at 6 pm, and Sunday at 3 pm. In San Carlos, five minutes east of Globe on Hwy. 70. For hotel or FunBus® reservations, call 1-800-APACHE 8. Go For The Gold. Poker room closed Monday and Tuesday. Must be 21 or older to participate in any gaming activities. apachegoldcasinoresort.com w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m All About Home games CONTINUED FROM PAGE 38 But the biggest threat is still from partners signaling each other to raise and re-raise. This is especially true in Hi Lo games. They’ll do things like put one chip on their cards for a low hand and several for a high hand. If they have the nut hand, maybe they’ll put on dark glasses or touch their ear. There are hundreds of possibilities for signals. A sharp player watches for repetitive motions followed by strong actions, and tries to decipher what is happening. In a casino, as soon as a customer or employee reports that two players are possibly in cahoots, they are monitored closely by the eye in the sky. In a house game, the promoter doesn’t want to offend anybody because he needs the players to keep the game going. For that reason he usually doesn’t say a word to these sharpies. In El Paso, a couple of years ago, the competition for customers was so great that the promoters started reporting the other games to the police so they would be raided! It worked, but soon players started backing off for fear of getting arrested. Many people had to pay fines and lost their equipment, chips and cards. Some dealers lost their jobs in the New Mexico casinos because of the charges. The last thing I wish to point out is that there is always the danger of a house game being held up or players mugged outside. This is especially true in an isolated location such as a ranch or a deserted industrial area. The bad guys know there is money there and you don’t want cops around! As I said before, these situations may not present themselves in your area, but nonetheless, it pays to keep a sharp eye at all these games. You just never know........ do you? Metaphysical Poker & Life all have Thought Terrorists cause watched feelings such as fear and anxiety that cause us to many play, whether in lose our focus. The best poker, basketball or golf, players are not distracted focus at the highest level. by Thought Terrorists. But, few of them can Focusing at the highest maintain their focus day in and day out, “How poor are they month after month who have not patience” as Phil, Michael —William Shakespeare and Tiger do. In my first “He who exercises discernment three articles is a patient man” in Poker Player —Charlie Shoten Newspaper, I level, they introduced the concept of take their time, allowing Thought Terrorists, which their instincts and sixth destroy our ability to sense free play, and then focus throughout an entire consider all of their choicpoker tournament. These Charlie Shoten In poker and life people find it very difficult to focus for long periods of time. I once overheard Phil Ivey giving someone advice where he emphasized focus, focus, focus. Like Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods, what separates Phil Ivey from the rest of the field is his ability to focus at the highest level while playing. We es and the consequences of each. When they make their decision, they act decisively. To improve your poker game you must train yourself to focus at the highest level while you play. Poisonous memories, ideas, thoughts and beliefs are the Thought Terrorists that cause feelings which destroy our focus and interfere with our ability to make our best decisions, have a joyous mind-set set and a radiant smile. Even though people hold onto Thought Terrorists, and (Continued on page 43) Just make the final table and be one of nine to win a $10,000 entry to the premier poker event in Las Vegas. Come play in Casino Arizona’s no-limit Hold ‘Em Points Challenge. Tournaments are held every Monday - Friday and the last Saturday of the month, now through April 30th, 2006. Qualifying players will go on to compete in the semifinals, held May 6th, 2006, with top players advancing to the Championship Challenge on May 7th, 2006. The top nine players receive a $10,000 entry to the premier poker event in Las Vegas. Call Casino Arizona for details. Casino Arizona reserves the right to cancel or alter this promotion at any time. All winners will be responsible for any tax liabilities. Voted Best Texas Hold ‘Em 2005 WE’VE GOT YOUR GAME 101 & Indian Bend Adjacent to Scottsdale 480-850-7777 www.casinoaz.com Owned and operated by the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community. Please gamble responsibly. Write to Lee Garcia at coolhandlee@comcast.net w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 39 Joe Hachem Keeping Out Legal Gambling Player Profile: CONTINUED FROM PAGE 17 POKer AND THE LAW By I. NELSON ROSE Licensed online poker rooms, casinos, sports books and lotteries are now a multibillion-dollar-a-year industry. Yet, for most governments, they are not dreams come true, but public policy nightmares. States and countries that permit their operators to take at-home wagers from foreigners gain tax income and create jobs. But the governments where the bettors live usually get nothing. Worse, they suffer the negative side-effects created by underage and compulsive gamblers. For a jurisdiction like the federal government of the United States, cross-border gaming means exporting money and importing social problems. So, while the issue of whether to legalize is being debated, law enforcement officials face a more fundamental question: Can a state or nation keep out foreign legal gaming? We now may be able to answer that question, or at least make educated guesses, due to recent decisions from the United States Supreme Court, the European Court of Justice and the World Trade Organization. The first step is to find a statute or regulation that might apply. Most fights against remote betting stop here, because lawmakers simply have not enacted the necessary laws. The anti-gambling laws that are on the books were designed for specific problems from other eras. The Wire Act, for example, the major federal barrier to overseasbased gaming, was passed in 1961 as part of Attorney General Robert Kennedy’s “war on organized crime.” It was designed to help states fight illegal bookmakers who took sports bets by telephone. No one at the time thought about the possibility of playing poker on home computers. The federal Department of Justice, which is charged with enforcing federal laws, asserts the Wire Act covers all forms of interstate and international gambling. But the three courts that have looked at the issue have ruled the Wire Act is limited to bets on sports events and horse and dog races. So, if these courts are correct, the question of whether the U.S. Congress has the power to bar foreign, licensed Internet poker, need not be answered, because Congress has not yet passed such a law. Assuming there is a law in place that makes it illegal to accept bets on a particular form of gambling, there is no doubt that a state can keep out illegal gambling. The situation gets much more complicated if the operator is acting legally under its local laws. Still, states start with the right to bar the importation of all goods and services, even if these come from places where it is legal to sell and ship these products. The problem arises when a government has agreed, sometimes unintentionally, to 40 P O K E R P L AY E R eliminate its trade barriers. Usually when a state joins a federation, like the states of the United States or Australia, or signs a treaty organization, like the European Union, it finds it has opened its borders to goods and services from its sister states or trade partners. The United States discovered that it had consented to allow in legal gambling from other member states of the World Trade Organization (“WTO”) when it signed the WTO treaties. Its major mistake was failing to do what some other member states did: specifically list “gambling” as an activity it wanted kept out. But decision-makers have unanimously agreed that gambling is different from other legal businesses. A government can bar foreign gaming, if it can come up with good reasons for doing so. This is easy if the state has a complete prohibition. Utah does not have to allow in California State Lottery tickets if it does not permit anyone to sell lottery tickets to its residents. States that want to exclude legal foreign gambling always raise the same arguments: fear of fraud, money laundering, organized crime, underage and problem gambling, and because it offends local morality. Governments cannot rely solely on the real reason – to keep out competition. It is almost impossible to successfully argue that a state has the right to exclude a legal activity from its sister states or trade partners when that state allows only local operators to do the exact same thing. This is what happened to the U.S. in its fight with Antigua in the WTO. The WTO ruled that the U.S. had agreed to let in legal gambling from other members of the WTO. But it then bought the argument that federal laws against remote gambling were necessary to protect Americans. So, the U.S. would have won . But Antigua raised the Interstate Horseracing Act, which allows Americans to bet on races from their homes, but only with operators in other U.S. states. Since there is no reason for this discrimination against Antiguan horsebooks, the U.S. was held to be in violation of the WTO treaties. The same type of analysis can be done with any two countries and any form of gambling, for anyone willing to spend large amounts of time and money. Professor I Nelson Rose is recognized as the world’s leading expert on gambling law. A full professor at Whittier Law School in Costa Mesa, California, Prof. Rose also works for governments and industry as an expert witness, consultant and public speaker. His latest books, Gaming Law: Cases and Materials and Internet Gaming Law, are available through his website, www.gamblingandthelaw.com. D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m waste time calling and then turned over an ace, 3. The river card did nothing for Dannemann. A friend listens to this description and shakes his head slowly, saying, “This talk of twenty million and thirty six million dollar bets. It just doesn’t sound like the sort of thing that happens in the real world.” But that’s the way it is at the World Series of Poker. Hachem nods, “Yeah, it’s a bit crazy,” thinking about this for a moment then saying, “And to think it wasn’t many months ago that I was back home just struggling to get any kind of decent game together. No one wants to play at a reasonable limit.” What was a reasonable limit? “You know, something like 25 and 50 no limit.” Another pause and a can-you-believe-this shrug, “And now here I am playing with the biggest players in the world on TV.” The line-up scheduled at d his tournament table later in the day would include Carlos Mortenson, Johnny Chan, Todd Brunson and Mike Sexton. Hachem figures his Middle Eastern roots probably help explain his fascination with poker. “Being born Lebanese as I was and playing cards, it’s a combination that’s natural. Most of us enjoy card games and many of us are also very aggressive players.” He mentions Sammy Farha and Freddy Deeb as examples of other successful high limit poker players with Lebanese roots. “So what does it take to play hold ‘em successfully? “The most powerful piece of advice anyone’s given me is that in hold’em you have to be the aggressor. You can’t be the caller. If you’re in the habit of calling then you’re losing. You need to be the person forcing other people to make big decisions … “It’s the way a champion plays.” Diamond Jim’s Casino 118 20th St. West Rosamond, California Exit A 14 Freeway The Best Little No-limit Tournament in Southern California The Last Sunday of Each Month $155 Buy-in–No Rebuys $10,000 in Tournament Chips Call for more info: 661-256-1400 Fo x w o o d s Yarmosh was the chip leader when the table began and he was the last one standing when the night was over. Rich, who related that he last won a tournament 15 years ago, will return to his home in Glen Head, NY, with the first place prize of $74,813. Rich tangled right off the bat with John Parker, Weston, CT. John, only slightly behind Rich in chip count, went all-in with Q’s after a KJ10 flop. Rich called immediately with KQ. John did not improve and he was 10th with $4,750. Ninth spot went to Fred Brockunier, Yorktown Heights, NY, whose J10 could not top Richie Bell’s pocket 6’s; Fred left with $5,343. Richie was all-in a short time later with AQ. He got no help from the board and Terry Ferentinos’ pocket 9’s were good; Richie would head back to New York, NY, in 8th with $5,938. John Pelton, Flushing, NY, was all-in with pocket 8’s but David StLaurent paired his A and John was relegated to 7th place worth $7,125. Tom WPF Mucci from Brewster, NY, had pocket 10’s but Rich Yarmosh, with Ac, caught a flush on the turn and Tom had 6th position and $8,906. David StLaurent, a resident of Exeter, NH, could not improve his AJ and lost to Ray Tortorigi’s pocket 3’s. David took home $10,688 for 5th. Bob Dow, from New Hartford, CT, did well to come back from the second lowest chip position to finish near the top. When Rich Yarmosh called his KQ with pocket 5’s, Bob’s run ended with 4th place money of $15,437. Ledyard resident, Raymond Tortorigi, lost most of his stack to Rich when Rich caught a straight on the turn. Shortly thereafter, he was all-in with 92 which could not compete with Rich’s Q’s; Ray took 3rd and $21,969. Rich had a dominant chip position and Terry Ferentinos from Alpharetta, GA, stayed with Rich for a few hands but was soon all-in with A9. Rich paired his Q on the flop and Terry was the 2nd place finisher and the winner of $39,781. (Continued from page 13) Rich Yarmosh had come back to the tournament trail to claim the first place crystal trophy, commemorative leather jacket and $74,813! 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Chumash Casino Resort reserves the right to cancel or change promotions. w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 41 PART 61, Kill Pots Foxwoods WPF improving performance FOXWOODS RESORT CASINO By TOM “TIME” LEONARD 2005 WORLD POKER FINALS In this installment of Improving Performance let’s discuss limit Hold’em games that employ what is known as a kill pot. For the uninitiated, a kill pot occurs when one individual wins two pots in a row and then the stakes for the ensuing hand are doubled. Some card rooms have a specific threshold that the pot must reach in order for the next pot to be a kill but others view any two wins in a row as good enough to qualify. There are also games that employ a half kill which only raises the stakes by 50%. The kill pot feature adds another dimension to the game and another very good reason to always remain observant of your opponent’s tendencies. Recently I was playing in a limit Hold’em kill pot game with my friend Jon when he leaned over and made an observation about how he felt most of the table reacted to the stakes being doubled on occasion. Jon said, “Notice how most of the players loosen up when they have a leg up to a kill (having won one pot and if they win the next they will be required to post a double blind) when they should really be tightening up”. Jon’s reasoning was that if you win that second pot, you will be required to post the double blind. Also, once there is a kill pot many players significantly change their playing style relative to looseness vs. tightness. Aside from giving me further insight as to how Jon approaches his game, it got me thinking about what the proper strategy for kill pot games should be. Should you significantly loosen up or tighten up when you’re either a leg up to a kill pot yourself or just playing a hand with double the normal stakes? The players who loosen up seem to do so for two reasons. They see the opportunity to win a much larger pot than normal and they feel that some of their opponents have just been forced outside their comfort zone and therefore can be pushed off all but their very best hands. Others, who may well be temporarily out of their comfort zone, tighten up considerably requiring top premium hands to participate and then play weak/tight. Obviously, neither of these approaches is optimum play unless, of course, you have a significant read on the opposition which would dictate your course of action. Without a strong read to convince you there is an opportunity to be taken advantage of, you should ignore the doubling of the stakes and play your normal game. If the kill pot situations force you to tighten up because you’re uncomfortable, then maybe you’re in the wrong game because you can and will be bullied. You need to put your powers of observation to full use to identify who the loose cannons are and who plays the kill pots weak/tight because they’re uncomfortable. The most profitable opportunities in these type games require identifying the loose cannons who play marginal hands and build pots which you can win with your superior holdings Our goal for this session regarding kill pots is to catalog your opponents’ reactions to the doubling of stakes while not letting the increase effect your play. If you do your homework, you can take advantage of both these prevalent behaviors in kill pots. Stay observant and I hope you kill them! No stranger to the green felt, Tom “Time” Leonard has played poker for more than 30 years and has been a serious student of the game and writer on the subject since 1994. He has regularly played the cardrooms of Atlantic City, Las Vegas and California. His experience as a sales and marketing professional have helped him hone his skills at “selling” a hand and “buying” a pot. Tom can be contacted at: thleonard@msn.com. 42 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 11/11/05 SENIORS NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $500 + $65 PLAYERS 471 PRIZE POOL $237,500 Rich Yarmosh 1. Richard J Yarmosh . $74,813 Glen Head, NY 2. Terrence J Ferentinos . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $39,781 Alpharetta, GA 3. Raymond J Tortorigi $21,969 Ledyard, CT 4. Robert D Dow . . . . . $15,437 New Hartford, CT somewhat. Lenny and Gene squared off head to head with virtually identical chip positions. Gene, a resident of Brooklyn, NY, who had the slight edge in chips, went all-in with K4 after a 494 flop; Lenny called with A4 to take huge pot. Now down to the felt in the next hand, Gene could not connect and he collected $203,300 for 2nd place. Lenny happily took the crystal trophy, commemorative leather jacket and $377,175!! 5. David StLaurent . . . $10,688 (Cont’d from page 41) FOXWOODS RESORT CASINO 2005 WORLD POKER FINALS 11/10/05 NO LIMIT HOLD’EM BUY-IN $5,000 + $200 PLAYERS 212 PRIZE POOL $1,070,000 Leonard Cortellino 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Leonard Cortellino $377,175 Gene Todd . . . . . . . $203,300 Lee Markholt . . . . . $112,350 Nicholas J Laudano. $74,900 Elizabeth Lieu . . . . . $53,500 Kalyan Gullapalli . . $42,800 James Bernard. . . . . $32,100 Thomas I Franklin . $26,750 Frank Selldorff . . . . $24,075 Exeter, NH 6. Thomas E Mucci . . . . $8,906 Brewster, NY 7. John H Pelton . . . . . . $7,125 Flushing, NY 8. Richard Bell . . . . . . . . $5,938 New York, NY 9. Alfred Brockunier . . . $5,343 Yorktown Hts, NY Lenny Cortellino Takes The Title—Wins $377,175! Lenny Cortellino, a “regular” in the Foxwoods Resort Casino Poker Room, captured the $5000 No-Limit Hold’em championship by outlasting 212 competitors. Lenny, who hails from Lewiston, ME, has played in almost every Act III tournament leading up to the World Poker Finals; he won his $10000 seat and 4 times since then. He earned $377,175 from the prize pool of $1,070,000. The total prize pool for the 2005 World Poker Finals is now over $4,000,000! After two hours of play five were gone and it would be another three hours before Liz Lieu of Los Angeles, CA, took 5th. Liz had survived an earlier all-in against Nick Landau by catching a flush on the river; however, he returned the favor shortly thereafter. Liz was short stacked and all-in with 10’s; Lee Markholt called with J4 and caught the J on the river to leave Liz with $53,500. Nick Landau, Branford, CT captured 4th spot when Lee caught a river flush; Nick took home $74,900. Lee, who resides in Eatonville, WA, lost a huge pot with A4 to Gene with A10. The next hand Lee was all-in and lost to Lenny with two pair. The $112,350 for 3rd place soothed the pain w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m 4000 W. 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It takes effort and commitment to maintain focus. Poisonous memories, ideas, thoughts and beliefs have been implanted in all of us. Being neglected or abused has caused other thought terrorists. We have been carrying this baggage all of our lives, never noticing the damage it does to our hopes and dreams. No more, need you experience alienation, resentment, vindictiveness, despair, hopelessness, resignation, Charlie Shoten defend, sustain, feed, nurture and obey them, most never notice them or realize how they affect their poker game. And even if they notice them, they don’t know what to do about them. My following Ten Commitments help me notice and let go of them. I happily share them with you: 1. My attitude is gratitude. 2. I focus on my inner self and look after it and care for it. 3. I notice any memory, idea, thought or belief I hold onto that causes stressful feelings. 4. I ask for and pray for my intentions to help me let go of them. 5. I believe and trust in myself. 6. I am calm, confident and clear, and I wait for my best choice to appear after considering all my choices and the consequences of each. 7. I am not attached to outcome. 8. I humbly ask for forgiveness from those I have knowingly or unknowingly, through thought, word or deed, neglected or abused, and I forgive those who have abused or neglected me. 9. I notice the next Thought Terrorist when it appears and repeat commitments #3 through #8. 10. I maintain my attitude of gratitude. depression, anxiety, or any other hurtful feeling. You must notice and let go of the thoughts that cause each of them. Only then will you free yourself from those terrible feelings. Continue to smoke or take drugs and alcohol and you will never be free of them. Notice and let go of each Thought Terrorist one at a time. To free yourself from them you must go where Angels fear to tread. You must embrace your worst feelings. When you find the thought that creates the feeling you can let go of it. Do this and the feel- ing will go away. My Ten Commitments can help you free yourself from them by noticing and letting go of them. Focusing throughout an entire poker tournament will improve your play and bring you a joyous mindset and a radiant smile. Now you know how to do it. Noticing and letting go of a Thought Terrorist is your ticket to freeing yourself from hurtful feelings. Embrace your stressful feelings to find and let go of the thoughts hidden behind them. Now is the time to act. (Continued from page 39) Questions or comments: charlieshoten@msn.com & www.no-limitlife.net and don’t miss his book, “No-Limit Life”, (Best Book Award 2005: USA Book News, Category: Psychology/Mental Health) I refer to my Ten Commitments before, during and after each tournament. Having memorized them, they are always at the forefront of my mind where they are ready to help me notice and let go of any Thought Terrorist that cause harmful feelings which destroy my focus at the poker table. When my mind thinks, ‘Will I know what to do when it is my turn to act?’ or when any other thought arises that causes fear or anxiety, my Ten Commitments help me let go of such thoughts. Call them my security w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 43 Which Comes First—The Egg or the Chicken? BacK in the saddle Again By OKLAHOMA JOHNNY HALE ...or do you get your poker hand first and make the pot later? Or do you make the pot and then get your hand? Ab ovo—would you play the poker hand different if you could start it again? Ab ovo usque ad mala—the translation is “From the eggs to the apples”! It was first penned by the Roman poet Horace—and in poker talk, it would mean—starting with one thing and ending up with another. Horace, in the account of the Trojan War, began with the mythical egg of Leda, from which Helen (whose beauty sparked a war) was born. Carol, I know you will say, “Johnny,” what in the hell’s (Hale’s) half acre does this have to do with poker? Well, this is going to require you, the reader, to think a little. If you want to know that an A will sometimes beat a K, go read that other Writer’s stuff in the Reader’s Digest. If you want Jell-O, go over there, but here in Poker Player, you get something different—the meat and potatoes. First, when you lie in a poker game you are not lying— you are just playing poker. You are just “Hoodwinking.” You are trying to dupe the other poker players into believing something is different than the facts. You are trying the best you can to make the other poker player believe something that may or may not be true. Odysseus was the ruler of the island kingdom of Ithaca and was known like Johnny Moss, Bill Boyd or OK-Johnny, or you, or a thousand other poker players, for their cleverness and cunning. He was a suitor of Helen of Troy. But Menelaus was married to Helen and during the wedding, Iris, the goddess of strife, had a little too much wine and threw a golden apple (Ab ovo usque ad mala) into the middle of the wedding. Later on, Menelaus became the ruler of Helen’s homeland Lacedaemon. Now into this love triangle comes Paris, who was the son of King Priam of Troy. Paris was playing a little poker with Odysseus and Menelaus and the minute that Helen walked into the poker room, he just knew that she was better than A’s in the pocket. Paris, abducted Helen and sailed off with her to Troy. Well, folks, Menelaus was a little upset with Paris for kidnapping his wife Helen. So much so that he got all of Greece to declare war on the city of Troy. At one point, Menelaus wanted to settle the conflict by single combat with Paris. Yes, Paris got out of Lacedaemon and took Helen with him back to Troy. Menelaus called in a few of his markers and enlisted the aid of Odysseus and some of the original suitors of Helen to come with him and help him fight to get his wife, Helen, back from Paris at the city of Troy. The Greeks all got together and build a great giant wooden horse (The Trojan Horse), and during a daring nocturnal raid, fooled Paris and his boys into letting the Trojan Horse inside the gates of the city of Troy. They hoodwinked Pairs and his troops into thinking that the Trojan Horse was a Deuce/Seven off suit. So the stratagem of this column is: if it waddles like a duck, acts like a duck and quacks like a duck, it may not be a duck! But that’s the way I would bet. Until next time, remember to STAY LUCKY!!! Book reviews Kill Phil by Blair Rodman and Lee Nelson 2005, 275pp, $24.95 Kill Phil is Right on Target Don’t be surprised if you hear some poker player or poker fan declare that Phil Hellmuth’s arrogance and ego could put King Kong on tilt. Many claim. that The “Poker Brat,” as he likes to refer to himself, usually lives up to his name and rep. To take advantage of his persona, Blair Rodman and Lee Nelson have come up with a book title worth remembering. It’s Kill Phil, and while the focus of the book isn’t totally Phil, the subtitle -- The Fast Track to Success in No-Limit Hold’em Poker Events -pretty much explains why the title fits. Russ Hamilton, who won the World Series of Poker at Binion’s in 1994, says of this work, it’s “the best book on no-limit hold’em I’ve ever read. “The Kill Phil strategy is designed to take advantage of what we, and many others, feel is a weakness in no-limit hold’em tournaments -- the overemphasis on the all-in move in the later stages,” the authors emphasize.” In a way, it questions whether or not the hype and quick-off-the-hip poker instructions as seen on TV really explain how to play properly in certain situations. But This is an interesting Editor’s Notes: You may contact OK-J at his e-mail Oklajohnny@aol.com, or play poker LIVE, ONLINE with Johnny, Carol and Sarah at www.OK-J.com. Johnny’s book, “The Gentleman Gambler,” is in its third printing. Contact Johnny for your copy. 44 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m work in other ways as well. It’s both instructive overall, by analyzing players and their styles, and it covers much territory often neglected or skimmed over by other books and theorists. Rodman, well-known in blackjack circles for his skill at that game, and Nelson, one of Australia’s best players, examine “small ball” players who “chip away with a variety of intricate strategies” including being involved in many pots “ … waiting for the fattest opportunities,” especially those which occur after the flop. The “long ball” players (similar to home run hitters), usually apply their skills before the flop. The serious, calculating players will learn more about concepts like the “chip-status index” and how to calculate the CPR (cost per round).They will get insight into playing aces or kings early with small blinds and a large stack; basic post-flop play. A small (two pages) section on sit-ngo tournaments and singletable satellites, two pages on online play, an interesting section (three pages) on how to avoid tells, and a discussion of “downtime to learn” (meaning when you’re not in action, don’t get lazy; observe your opponents’ play) help flesh out the book. Rodman and Nelson also examine how to play according to your stack size; the power of the re-raise; table image and how to change gears. By the ninth chapter the book is a fast-moving fighter pilot with deal aim on things like Advanced PostFlop Strategy, Heads-Up, Unraised Pot, You Act First or You Act Last; Counting Outs; Trapping and Avoiding Traps; Avoiding Pre-Flop Traps and Trapping Post-Flop. Players and fans often ask about “final-table deals” (sometime they’re allowed, sometimes not) where players agree to split tournament prizes so the authors devote four pages to this controversial area. The book also contains pre and post-flop matchup tables based on expected value; the odds of making your hand with two cards to come; pair probability (A-A through 2-2). This book has much to offer, and I’m sure anyone playing in some major tournament will want a copy on the table the next time Hellmuth faces them. They can use it like garlic repelling a vampire. Overall, an intelligent, original effort with many new tournament table survival tips. —Howard Schwartz of 81, the old New Deal Democrat died. (Continued from page 30) Senate Republican powerful Democrat in the Leader Bob Dole, who admired his adversary, House to push for invesdeclared that Tip O’Neill tigation and impeach“will go down in history ment of President Nixon. as one of the great politiUltimately, in 1974, cal leaders of our time.” Nixon resigned. And he might have added, O’Neill was the unanione of the nation’s most mous choice for Speaker important poker players. of the House in 1977 and served until he retired in 1987. In 1994, at the age e-mail: byronpokerplayer@aol.com Thomas “Tip” O’Neill No Limit Hold ‘em tournaments at Wynn Las Vegas. Tuesdays $300 + $30 Wednesdays $300 + $30 Thursdays $300 + $30 Fridays $500 + $40 All tournaments begin at Noon. Single Table Satellites available from 8 a.m. on tournament days. Convenient parking available steps from the Poker Room. For more information please call 702-770-7654. Tournament subject to cancellation or change at any time without prior notice. Problem Gamblers HelpLine 800-522-4700. Know Your Limits.™ w w w. p o ke r p l a y e r n e w s p a p e r. c o m D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 P O K E R P L AY E R 45 Entertainment Listings Entertainment RePORT By LEN BUTCHER Went to see the Folies Bergere at the Tropicana recently, first time I’ve seen it in about 10 years. I have to say, I was impressed, and I didn’t even go to the 10 p.m. show, which is topless. The costumes, sets and dance numbers were great, and the showgirls were gorgeous. Not that I noticed, of course. On my way out, I was thinking what it must take to put a show like this together, and even more fascinating, how has the Folies been able to endure for 45 years in a town that eats up and spits out shows at an alarming rate. You heard me right. The Folies Bergere has been running continuously at the Tropicana for 45 years and shows no signs of slowing down. Okay, so what do I do about it? Being a trained journalist, I thought a good way to start would be to talk to the people who put this show together. Picture my surprise when I find out there are no “people”, just a “person” in the name of Jerry Jackson. Jerry writes, choreographs, designs the costumes, writes special music, directs and co-produces the show, which he’s been doing since 1966. To say this guy is talented is like saying President Clinton was monogamous. I caught up to Jerry when he was in the midst of redoing a part of the show, and therein lies part of the answer to its longevity. “We keep it fresh,” he says, “and replace anything that’s not working.” But it’s much more than that, as I soon found out talking to this man, who at 67 has more energy and enthusiasm than most people half his age. “A traditional show would quickly become dated. You always have to come up with something fresh, something new. When I do a show, I’m also commenting on it. I like to instill the essence of each period and style, much like the movie ‘Moulin Rouge’. The costume designer and set director in that movie did not adhere to history or authenticity, but they captured the spirit of the period.” Let me explain something about the show, for those of you who haven’t seen it. It is a celebration of women and how they have changed from 1850 to the present day. This transformation is shown through dance and music, from a minuet set in 19th century France, through the Roaring ‘20s and rock ‘n’ roll, with many other stops along the way, but let me warn, you there are new numbers all the time, Jerry’s idea of keeping it fresh. He does exhaustive research when he has to choreograph a particular dance style and will actually study with whoever’s a master at it. “I want all of my choices to be based on authenticity. I think it’s the underlying substance that gives the show longevity. In other words, it’s not just tits and feathers.” The pace of the show has also changed over the years, says Jerry. “It’s become very important, even more so since the advent of MTV. In the first five minutes of the show there are three or four costume changes. I don’t like anything to stay on stage longer than 45 seconds to a few minutes before it is changed, whether it be the introduction of a new person, or a change of costume, set, or music. The audience’s attention span isn’t what it used to be.” In selecting the dancers, Jerry looks for their ability to act and their stage presence. “They don’t have to be technically brilliant, although that helps, but they must be able to act and project on stage. I want them to have what I call a dancer’s spirit, and lots of energy.” Then he adds with a smile: “And, of course, pretty doesn’t hurt.” If you want a fun night out, next time you’re in Las Vegas, catch this show. It runs nightly, except Sunday, with covered (not topless) at 7:30 p.m. and 10 p.m. (topless). Len Butcher, a 25-year resident of Las Vegas, is an online columnist for the Las Vegas Review-Journal and a former Managing Editor of the Las Vegas Sun and of Gaming Today. Reach him at lennylv@cox.net 46 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 Poker Player Advertisers are shown in RED along with their ad’s page number To list your event, contact Len Butcher, Entertainment Editor at lennylv@cox.net CALIFORNIA Agua Caliente Casino Comedy Shop Arena Patio DJ / Karaoke Live Bands Ballroom Dance Party Crystal Park Casino & Hotel Cambodian Dance Party (41) Karaoke El As De Oros Night Club Journey Fantasy Springs Resort Rita Rudner Harrah’s Rincon Hollywood Park Casino (5) Finish Line Lounge Pechanga Resort & Casino (33) Kelly Clarkson CONNECTICUT Bonnie Raitt Foxwoods Resort Casino Gwen Stefani Mohegan Sun Casino NEW JERSEY Brooks & Dunn Taj Majal Hotel & Casino Tropicana Casino & Resort Village People (Atlantic City) NEW YORK Gwen Stefani Turning Stone Casino NEVADA-LAS VEGAS Kanye West Aladdin Hotel & Casino Magician Steve Wyrick Donn Arden’s Jubilee! Bally’s Resort & Casino O Bellagio Resort & Casino Boulder Station Hotel & Harry Connick, Sr. Casino (8) Black Diamond Cannery Hotel & Casino Thunder From Down Under Excalibur Hotel & Casino Wayne Newton Holiday Show George Wallace Flamingo Las Vegas The Second City Commerce Casino 8:30 p.m. Featuring three top comedians weekly. Joker’s Comedy Club, Karaoke Thursdays 8 p.m. Sunday-Wednesday, 9 p.m. Fridays & Saturdays, 9 p.m. Thursdays 8 p.m. to Midnight, Sundays 2-6 p.m. Fridays 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. Thursday through Monday Presents Banda Nortina Sats 8 p.m.-3 a.m. Dec 11, 6 p.m. Dec 10, 7 & 10 p.m. Live Jazz, Tues. 8 p.m. Dec 11, 7 p.m. Dec 16, 9 p.m. Dec 12, 7 p.m. Feb 18, 7 p.m & Feb 19, 6 p.m. Dec 30-31, 8 p.m.. Dec 14, 8 p.m. Dec 31, 8 p.m. Ongoing, Wednesday through Monday, 7 & 10 p.m. Sat-Thu, 8 p.m. Fridays through Tuesdays, 7:30 & 10:30 p.m. Jan 6-7, 8 p.m. Gold Coast (42) Forever Plaid Golden Nugget Hotel & Casino Harrah’s Hotel & Casino Imperial Palace Hotel & Casino (9) Gordie Brown Tony Bennett Clint Holmes Jan 13-14, 8 p.m. Fridays through Wednesdays. 8:30 & 10:30 p.m. thru Dec 23, 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 p.m. Thursdays through Tuesdays, 8 p.m. Tue thru Sun (dark Mon), 7:30 p.m., Sun 3 p.m. & 7 p.m. Fri thru Tue, 7:30 p.m. Dec 16-18, 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Legends In Concert Mondays through Saturdays, 7 & 10 p.m. Johnny Mathis David Brenner Rodney Carrington Carrot Top Dec 21-22, 10:30 p.m. Nightly (dark Thursdays) Dec 9 & 10, 8 p.m. Sun thru Fri (dark Tues), 8 p.m. & Sat, 7 & 9 p.m. 7 p.m. Wednesdays, Thursdays, Sundays; 8 p.m. Fridays; 7 & 10:30 p.m. Saturdays, Mondays. Dec 30, 8 p.m. Dec 30, 8 p.m. Fri thru Tue, 7:30& 10:30 p.m. 8 p.m. (Monday thru Friday) Dec 9-10, 9 p.m. Tuesdays thru Saturdays, 7pm; Tuesdays & Saturdays. 7 & 10 p.m. Dec 15-18, 8 p.m. Las Vegas Hilton (37) Luxor Resort & Casino Mandalay Bay Resort & Casino (42) Mamma Mia Black Eyed Peas Neil Diamond MGM Grand KA. 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Wed thru Mon, 9:30 p.m. Wed thru Mon, 7:30 p.m. Tue thru Sun, 9:30 p.m Sun thru Thu, 7 p.m. 8 p.m. nightly Dec 14-18, 8:30 p.m. Dec 31, 10:30 p.m. Dec 30-Jan 1, 8 p.m. Ongoing, Thu thru Tue 2 & 4 p.m. Ongoing, 10:30 p.m. Ongoing, 6:30 & 8:30 p.m. Ongoing, 2 & 4 p.m. Nightly, 10:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 10 p.m. Ongoing, 7:30 p.m. & 10 p.m. Ongoing, 8 p.m. Ongoing, 8 p.m. Fridays & Saturdays, 8 p.m. Nov 25-26, 7 p.m. Thru Dec 22, 8 p.m. Dec 27-30, 7 p.m. 10 p.m.-4 a.m. Ongoing, 8 p.m. Dec 16, 9 p.m. 8FSFTFSJPVTBCPVUXBOUJOH ZPVJOPVSQPLFSSPPN 8IJDIJTXIZXFSFPGGFSJOHPVS /PSUI"NFSJDBOCBTFEQMBZFST HSPTTSBLFCBDL 2EGISTERASAPLAYERINTHE7ILLIAM(ILL0OKER2OOMVIATHE DEDICATED52,BELOWBEFORE&EBTHANDGETGROSS RAKEBACKFOREVER s 4HESECURITYANDREPUTATIONOFTHE5+SLEADINGBETTINGORGANIZATION LISTEDONTHE,ONDON3TOCK%XCHANGE s HOUR#USTOMER3UPPORTnCALLTOLLFREE OREMAILCUSTOMERSERVICES WILLIAMHILLCOUKDAYORNIGHT s 0LAY4EXAS(OLD@%M#ARD3TUDOR/MAHAIN53 4OCLAIMYOURRAKEBACKYOUMUSTREGISTERVIATHE52,BELOW 8JMMJBN)JMM1PLFSDPN1PLFS 3%2)/53!"/540/+%2 7EAREPLEASEDTOACCEPT /FFICIALSPONSORSOFTHE%UROPEAN0OKER2ANKINGS 0OWEREDBY /FFEROPENTONEWPLAYERSONLYWHOREGISTERBEFORE&EBTH2AKEBACKWILLBECREDITEDTOYOURACCOUNTONAMONTHLYBASISBETWEENSTANDTHOFTHEMONTH !LTERNATIVELYCALLPLEASECHECKWITHYOURTELEPHONEPROVIDERASSOMECALLCHARGESMAYAPPLY Profiling, PART 1 With the warp-speed pace of internet poker play, it becomes important not KILLER Poker NOW! Get Tournament Listings at our website: www.pokerplayernewspaper.com By John Vorhaus just to profile your foes but to do so quickly and efficiently, so that you know how to respond to them in the moment. This is not so much about storing longterm information on an enemy (though you can do that, and it’s helpful) but about observing a player’s patterns, assigning those patterns a label, and then using the label to clarify what kind of player you’re dealing with right here, right now. Players will switch gears, of course -- and when they do, you amend your label. But your first order of business is to assign a label, so that you can assign a probability of someone playing a certain way. Yes, you’re making a number of assumptions, and no, those assumptions are not backed by massive statistical support. Yet I contend that a player who has demonstrated the ability to check-raise bluff deserves a different designation -- even if it’s a tentative, speculative one -- from a player who has shown strong tendencies to call and fold. So I watch the patterns to crack the codes, and then sum up my sense of my foes by labeling them. In this column and the next one I’m going to share with you some of the labels I use, along with associated characteristics and characteristic plays. Take a moment to amplify my definitions. Guess, in other words, what you would expect to encounter from a player with a certain label. Note how much information about a player is implied just by his handle and not much more. Don’t be afraid to be wrong in your assessments. It’s learning to make assessments that’s important -- and more than most players bother with. “To name a thing is to own a thing,” says the sage; if so, then to define an opponent, and to extend and expand your definition, is to own the deed to his house. KOSHER. A kosher player is simply simple. Straightforward and honest, he plays his own hand and doesn’t think much about yours. Offering little or nothing in the way of deception, he bets, calls, raises, or folds according to the real strength of his holding. Take his actions at face value. About the trickiest play in his repertoire is the check-raise; a check-raise bluff is beyond him. TIMMY. Short for “timid Timmy,” this player is weak, passive, and unlikely to make any sudden moves for fear of startling himself. Timmies don’t play to win; rather, they play not to lose. Therefore you find them liberally inhabiting the middle stages of tournaments, but rarely the final table. Aggressively attack uncontested flops against a Timmy. He won’t play back unless he has a real hand. SPEEDER. A speeder is a dangerous player. He plays fast in every sense of the word, and part of his motivation for playing fast is to get you to play fast, too. If he’s better able than you to analyze and act on the fly, he can make money on the margin, so he attempts to increase the pace of play not just through fast choices but through promiscuous raises and re-raises. Take your time against a speeder. Pause to consider your decisions. This will not only ensure that you’re thinking things through, it will frustrate him by breaking his rhythm. I’ll be back with more profiles next time; in the meantime, why not start compiling a list of your own? Trust me, to name a thing is to own a thing indeed. [John Vorhaus is the author of Poker Night and the Killer Poker book series, and news ambassador for UltimateBet.com.] 48 P O K E R P L AY E R D EC E M B E R 1 2 , 2 0 0 5 2005-06 WORLDWIDE POKER TOURNAMENTS >Denotes Advertiser; Poker Association Events also denoted: t=World Poker Tour, s=World Series of Poker and e=European Poker Tour. To list your 3-day events contact: A.R. 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