2007

By: Poker Shrink – December 30, 2007

devil5I have been reading all of the year end poker articles and blogs the past several days. You don't need me to give you another recap of the year in poker, so I thought I would look for the one single event or change that has taken place in poker that was the most significant happening in 2007. My pick:

Around the world, wherever governments have attempted to limit access or prevent access to online poker; wherever this has happened, the games have gotten harder to beat.

Sweden, Turkey, France, United States and the list goes on. Whether the government is attempting to set up there own state controlled gaming site or limiting access to 'foreign' sites or seeking to prohibit gaming completely; the effect is the same. If new players cannot easily establish an account the deposit funds the player pool shrinks and the remaining players get better.

This analysis does not even consider the billions of potential players in Southeast Asia and China, who are effectively prevented from accessing online gaming sites, at least until the governmental agencies (Vietnam for instance) are in place to allowed state controlled poker.

With all the noise about "Free Markets" from the various western governments, the facts demonstrate that morality and greed dominate the various restrictions and, so far, none of them are even 50% effective in stopping players from playing. The real effect has been to prevent new players from joining poker sites and therefore depriving them of their basic human right to be free from governmental interference in their private lives.

Of course part of the learning curve of any game involves some losses, without new players the games get tougher and although that may help you take your game to a higher level. It will also stress your bankroll at times.

The bottom line? Prohibition does not work. It never has, it never will and there are certainly better endeavors for Parliaments, Congresses, Legislatures, Commissions, Agencies and Churches to spend time and taxes on.

 
By: Poker Shrink – December 28, 2007

chipsmeerAs the calendar year trundles to a close, I have riffled through my cyber poker files to find these tidbits that never quite made it into a post.

Looking for a really good collection of video poker clips, try Pokah Videos. This is a wide rangIng selection covering almost anything that has made it to the internet. The keyword search works great for finding your favorite player.

In the category of "The Other Side of the Coin" here is a comprehensive article about how the WTO/Antigua decision will affect the recording industry but allowing "legal pirating" of copyrighted material by Antiguan companies. This as the tradeoff to allow the US to keep Antiguan gaming companies banned from the States.

Tired of those poker playing dogs? How about poker playing American Presidents (an EU version soon?). Choose Republican or Democrat players.

Then there was the Drew Carey video defending online poker players and deriding governmental interference in the game.

If you are going to read just one article about the state of poker than this one from The Economist is the one to read.

Shana Hiatt blopper anyone? She clearly had input into which clips made it into this collection because the "wardrobe malfunction" was not included.

 
By: Poker Shrink – June 03, 2007

clockTiming may or may not be everything but the first two days of the World Series have been a lot about time and schedules. Events have started late because of huge crowds and late starts mean fewer tables for later events and Day Two restarts.

This is only the second day of the first week in this seven week marathon of poker. Tomorrow is our first final table and by early this coming week we will have six events running at one time. How was it all supposed to work?

There is more to scheduling a poker tournament than most players or fans really understand. It’s a complex management scheme that can derail at many points along the way. Imagine that on most days of this year’s World Series there will be five or six bracelet events running simultaneously. With most events scheduled for three days and a five day $50,000 HORSE event mixed in, there will be plenty of opportunity for confusion, upset and even some uber-tight scheduling just to have enough tables to keep all the events running smoothly. All of this has been on the mind of Jack Effel, 2007 WSOP Tournament Director, and his floor staff for months.

 
By: Poker Shrink – June 01, 2007

rioThe "Rio"

If you have been to the World Series in the past two years at the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino then you have been in the Amazon Room. If you have followed the Series on the many media outlets doing tournament reporting, then you still must feel like you know the Amazon room; we all talk about it so much. Well in the spirit of “getting better every year” the Harrah’s folks have a new layout for the Amazon room this year. Let me take you on a virtual tour.

Whether you have been in the room or not, I think you will be able to follow along. Imagine a huge convention room filled with poker tables with two wide aisles crossing in the center of the room. These aisles divide the room into four big quadrants of approximately equal size. Let’s stand right at that crossroads. You will notice there are two rows of cages with multiple windows at each end of the room. So let’s stand facing the far wall, so the cages are on our far left and our far right. One half of the room lies in front of us and one half behind; let’s talk about what is in front of us first.

To the left, in the front quarter of the room for those who have been there are the tables that last year were the cash games. This year this will be the satellite area for single, double and triple table satellites. Those satellites will be run from cashier cages right up there in the front of the room and that is where the satellite kiosk will be for seating and payouts. The other quadrant, which was the satellite area last year, is now the cash game area. The satellite and cash sections of the room have flip-flopped from last year.

 
By: Poker Shrink – May 31, 2007

binions

In 2005 when Joe Hachem won the Main Event of the World Series of Poker, it was the last time the WSOP Champion was to be crowned at Binion's Horseshoe in downtown Las Vegas. All the preliminary events of the 2005 WSOP were held at the Rio just off the strip as were the early rounds of the Main Event. In 2006 the WSOP moved completely to the Rio and last summer Binion's was without any summer special events. But this year things will change.

The Tournament poker staff at Binion's have set up the First Annual Binion's Poker Classic and they did it in a truly unique way. They took the 2007 WSOP schedule and picked one event from each day and then duplicated it but one day earlier and for 10% or less of the buy-in.

So on June 2nd at the WSOP, you can enter a $1500 NLHE event (3,000 starting chips) but on June 1st at the BPC, it's $150 NLHE (4,000 chips). The BPC will do this for 35 days beginning today with a Casino Employees event and include: Omaha8, Stud, HORSE, a Ladies event, Mixed Hold'em, Razz, Short-Handed Hold'em, PLO and more. I was downtown the other day and sat in on a dealer training at Binion's for dealers who had not dealt 2-7 Lowball. Yes, they are not only running lots of different events during the BPC; they are making sure that floor staff and tournament dealers are fully prepared for each event.

The Binion's Poker Classic runs everyday through July 4th. Here is the schedule.

 
By: Poker Shrink – May 14, 2007

percentageThe most comprehensive betting line on the WSOP is available at Blue Square Bet. The odds are not for winning the WSOP Main Event but rather for making the final table.

Mind you, if you just picked a random player last year to make the final table of 9; then the exact odds would have been 8773/9=975/1. With perhaps a shorter field this year the random odds would be perhaps 500/1 (4500/9=500). So the question arises: Is Phil Ivey 25 times better than a random player in the field?

Odds to make the Final Table of 9 in the WSOP Main Event.

Phil Ivey 20/1

Daniel Negreanu 33/1
Carlos Mortensen 2001 WSOP Champion
Allen Cunningham 2006 WSOP Final Table (4th)

Howard Lederer 40/1
Antonio Esfandiari
Michael Mizrachi
Phil Hellmuth 1989 WSOP Champion
JC Tran
Erik Seidel
Johnny Chan 1987-1988 WSOP Champion

Barry Greenstein 50/1
Gus Hansen
Doyle Brunson 1976-1977 WSOP Champion
Ted Forrest
John Juanda
Chris Ferguson 2000 WSOP Champion
Scott Fischman
Scotty Nguyen 1998 WSOP Champion
Erick Lindgren
Joe Hachem 2005 WSOP Champion
John 'World' Hennigan

Higher Odds after the break......