Viva Las WSOP: Watching Poker Legends & Having Fun
(Part Two)
VIVA LAS VEGAS -- August 8th -- The
timing for the WSOP this year was impacted by the United
States Department of Justice (DOJ) when they arrested
David Carruthers, CEO of BETonSPORTS, in Dallas, Texas,
while changing planes on his return to Costa Rica from
the Company’s AGM in the UK.
Other online gaming company executives like Calvin
Ayre, CEO of BoDog.com, were compelled to change their
plans of attending the WSOP, and supporting events,
as a precautionary measure to avoid being possibly arrested
themselves; eventhough unrelated to the BoS situation.
As I mentioned in the first part of this article yesterday,
that was also a compelling reason why I was in Las Vegas;
to explore possibilities of moving to Nevada from Washington
state.
Why would I want to move from the beautiful mountains
of Washington to the vast desert of Nevada you ask?
Well, you see, not only had the U.S. House of Representatives
passed a bill onto the U.S. Senate called the Internet
Gambling Prohibition and Enforcement Act (IGPEA), but
my own state of Washington’s governor, Christine
Gregoire, has signed into law a bill proposed by State
Senator Margarita Prentice that makes Washington the
first state to outlaw online gaming. The irony in all
this is scuttlebutt has it, per an internet
website, that Senator Prentice is said to have received
numerous campaign contributions from land based casinos
in Washington that may’ve had an influence on
the introduction of the bill in the first place. Make
sense to you? Gambling houses wanting gambling illegal?
Now
here’s the kicker – I operate a network
of poker and gaming investment information websites
just outside the Seattle area. My websites are deemed
illegal by this new law, and I could be prosecuted with
a felony, punishable up to 5/years in prison.
Not only does the law ban online gambling, but it also
bans even talking about online gambling; poker, sportsbooks,
etc. Specifically the law outlaws the passing of ‘gambling
information’, and gambling information is defined
in the law as: “information as to wagers, betting
odds and changes in betting odds shall be presumed to
be intended for use in professional gambling.”
Finally, the law prohibits websites such as mine from
providing links to online poker sites, or sportsbooks,
for my readers to enjoy in their spare time.
So you see my dilemma, and why I’m in the process
of moving to Nevada? The fair state of Washington, named
after our first president, George Washington, is trampling
with their goose-stepping boots through the living rooms
of honest, hard-working Americans who simply want to
play a game of poker online.
This, my friends, was one of the main topics of discussion
among the many operators I spoke with at the WSOP. Basically,
people were stymied how the U.S. House of Representatives
could pass legislation that banned online gaming, ‘to
protect the morals of our children’, and yet they
would allow people to bet on horse racing online. Perhaps
if we all agreed to wear top hats and frilly Kentucky
Derby bonnets they would allow us to play poker
online?
When I left the exhibition hall however,
and began mingling with the poker players themselves,
the topic of discussion was entirely different. Politics
was the furthest thing from their minds, and they were
more concerned with how an amateur online poker player,
for example, could go all-in with J-10 offsuit, and
hit a J-10 on the flop, making the pocket Kings of the
traditional poker player counterfeit, all the way to
the River.
Along with pro & semi-pro players being 'off balance'
playing against amateurs who'd never played in a professional
poker tournament before, there was also frustration
over the sheer number of players entered into this year's
WSOP. To give you an insight into how much the field
has grown over the past 10/years I have listed 4/years
below:
1996 WSOP Championship Main Event - 295 entrants.
2000 WSOP Championship Main Event - 512 entrants.
2004 WSOP Championship Main Event - 2,576 entrants.
2006 WSOP Championship Main Event - 8,773 entrants.
This
years event was roughly 50% larger than last year's
number of 5,619 entrants, and we can only anticipate
we'll see the same growth next year. Having spoken with
several amateur players who'd been eliminated, and by
their own admission, they were astounded by the number
of players, and the event itself, because they'd only
played online up until the WSOP.
A professional poker player will tell you that they're
uncomfortable playing againt the amateur poker players
because you never know whether they're following the
conventional guidelines of poker, or not. If the pre-flop
betting is heavy, a pro may muck an A-4, but the amateur
may go all-in with a K-5, hoping to get lucky on the
flop.
So, needless to say, different new methods of holding
the WSOP in the future were bantered about, and even
Daniel Negreanu proposed a unique, and apropos concept,
on his blog. Essentially, there would be separate
tournaments for bracelet and non-bracelet winners (or
pros, and non-pros). Therein lies the problem - a boatload
of seats were given away to online poker players with
little to no experience in professional poker tournaments.
Perhaps, if there's an online WSOP event for amateurs,
and a Brick & Mortar (B&M) WSOP event for professionals,
and the best of both fields then compete in a smaller
showdown, we would see more of the pros we all enjoy
watching?
Actually, right now I'm looking at the stats on CardPlayer,
and other than Allen Cunningham, I cannot find a name
I recognize among the remaining 27 players vying to
go to the Final Table of the WSOP. You can be sure though,
that come August 10th, I will be tuning in the final
table on ESPN pay-for-view to see if my bet for Allen
Cunningham to 'win-place-show' comes to fruition.
Where will I be moving you ask? Just outside of Reno,
Nevada, where I will be covering the action of WPT &
WSOP Circuit Events for our PokerAllstar
site, so stayed tuned, and also be watching PokerNewsweb
this fall as we will be offering freerolls for our loyal
members & readers.
Good luck, and happy gaming.
Kurt
Editors Note: I’m Kurt, the publisher and
editor of the ComKings network, which includes: PokerNewsweb,
PokerAllstar,
and GamingInvesting.
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