Archive for the 'News' Category

TV gambling ad ban to be ended

Wednesday, January 31st, 2007

The UK government has revealed that a long-standing ban on television advertising for gambling is to be lifted as part of new regulatory measures.

Casinos, betting shops and poker rooms will now be able to promote their products on UK television channels, though it was not clarified what limits would be put on this measure.

Television watchdogs may decide to permit such adverts to be displayed only after the 21:00 watershed. Proposals are currently being considered by governmental officials, with a code of practice set to be introduced shortly.

Gambling advertising is currently controlled by the UK’s Gambling Commission in conjunction with primary legislative policies. Broadcast advertising is overseen by the Advertising Standards Authority and Committee of Advertising Practice.  

However, it will become illegal for gambling sites located outside of the European Economic Area to advertise in any form in the UK under the new laws.

First major win nets Casterella $375,000

Monday, January 29th, 2007

Matthew Casterella has won the Borgata Winter Poker Open, taking home $375,000 for his troubles, it has been announced.

Names such as Michael Mizrachi competed alongside lesser known players in a battle for the main prize.

The final day saw 27 players left in the competition, with a final table coming around shortly afterwards. Mizrachi soon fell leaving the likes of John Myung and Bill Edler as the main names left in the tournament.

But it was Casterella who eventually triumphed and took home the prize money.

A near 600-strong field is now gathering to play the tournament’s main event, the WPT Borgata Poker Classic, with names such as Phil Ivey and Joe Sebok all ready to make a claim for the $1.6 million first prize. One satellite player began the qualifiers with just $100, but managed to secure a $10,000 seat at the main event later in the evening.

Atlantic City to get smoking ban amendment

Monday, January 29th, 2007

The Atlantic City Council has amended its much publicised smoking ban in casinos to allow for some smoking on gaming floors, it has been revealed.

A quarter of the gaming floor will allow smoking under the new ordinances, provided the areas are enclosed and ventilated separately, the Press of Atlantic City has reported.

Employees and anti-smoking groups had been in favour of a ban, but the new legislation will mean that any employee working in the smoking area will do so on a voluntary basis.

Officials cited financial concerns as their main reason for making the adjustment.

“There should be some understanding that this is a $5.2 billion business. We need to preserve that and protect the employees at the same time,” said councillor John Schultz, speaking to the Press of Atlantic City.

The ordinance had been put on hold while Atlantic Municipal Utilities considered a similar policy, but logistical reasons meant that the two groups were unable to co-ordinate their decisions.

Me and the Bunnies

Friday, January 26th, 2007

Life as Head of Poker could sometime be tough. This Wednesday I had to spend 5 hours teaching 3 Playboy bunnies how to play poker. Kitten, Hannah and Emily came into the office around lunch time and all of a sudden most of my male colleagues wanted to help out with stacking chips, were gladly going to the kitchen to fetch some coffee, volunteering to wipe the table in the board room – any excuse really to find a reason to help out in the Playboy bunny training session. I can’t remember a single time before I have been so popular. Kitten, Hannah and Emily were clearly used to this kind of attention and floated through the office in a glamorous manner while the guys in the office tried to act like they were working. When it came down to my poker training the girls actually where smarter than they looked and by the end of the session they mastered the concepts of semi-bluffing, double bluffing, how to read other players and sand bagging (check-raise). If you are going to the EPT final in Monte Carlo you will be able to see them in full poker action with full bunny suits on against the best. Beware all of you poker pro’s out there.
Fire and Ice and Bunnies in Bunny Suits 
This week London has been invaded by the worlds gaming industry due Europe’s biggest gaming conference ICE. The biggest in the world takes place in Vegas (where else?). This one is pretty darn big though covering three football pitches with exhibitions. The actual conference is quite boring and you can spend hours finding out about shuffling machines, security software, how to subscribe to bingo trays online and other meaningless things. If you’re lucky you could end up collecting countless T-shirts in the process. The fun stuff goes on at night when many different people from the industry come out for a few drinks and if one is lucky we all end up in the local card room! Surprisingly this was exactly what happened! There is no greater pleasure than taken money from competitive colleagues! I was on a roll and ended the night £250 up even if I managed to loose a £300 pot at the end of the session. Read the last paragraph on this grueling bad beat. By Wednesday it was time for the yearly Fire and Ice party. 1000 gaming professionals in one massive night club in London. Free drinks in the beginning and then more free drinks in the VIP-PlayboyGaming lounge. Through my training earlier in the day I qualified to get hold of one of the sought after VIP-entries. And of course my new friends Kitten, Hannah and Emily were on site and this time in bunny outfits. I’m telling you it feels weird to discuss the concept of slow playing with a person who stands in a bunny suit in a posh nightclub. Yes, life at the moment is hard!
Bad Beat of the Week  
Ok, all of you who don’t like the bad beat whining can stop reading now. I will reveal how I managed to loose £300 in a pot that I thought was the best call of the night. I was sitting on SB in a £1-2 NL game, picked up KQ in the hole. Got 3 limpers before me and decided to raise it up and make it £10 extra. BB folded and two more players stayed in. Flop Q 3 6 rainbow. I’m first to act so I fire off a £25 bet. A loose Irish guy immediately pushed it all in and making it a £100 extra. It’s an over bet that stinks bluff or semi-bluff long way. The third player folds. I go through his actions and it just doesn’t make sense. If he had AQ before the flop he should have raised it preflop. Same thing with QQ and most other pairs. I was afraid of a hand like Q6 or Q3, but if he had that why didn’t he fold pre-flop. I was on a roll and the guy looked nervous so I called him. He turned over Q9. Yes, the best call of the night. The turn came a 9 and to rub it in an extra 9 hit on the river. Now that hurt but when I thought about it was the only pot of importance I lost during the whole night so I was happy overall. With this I would like to wish all of you a good weekend and good luck at the tables.  Henrik
 

Sumner comes out on top at World Poker Open

Friday, January 26th, 2007

The World Poker Open has concluded after several days of play, with Brian Sumner coming out on top after an intensive heads-up contest.

 

Sumner faced off against Daniel Negreanu, who had earlier become only the fourth player to make the money in four consecutive World Poker Tour (WPT) events.

 

Sumner’s pocket eights were enough to see off Negreanu’s ace-three in the final hand, with an eight on the flop effectively ending the contest there and then.

 

For his efforts Sumner took home over $900,000, along with a seat at the $25,500 buy-in WPT Championship at the Bellagio. Negreanu himself won $500,000.

 

The result represented something of a turnaround after Young Cho went in to the final day with a huge chip lead – more than double that of nearest challenger Negreanu.

 

Cho eventually had to be content with third place and prize money of $250,000.

PPA president claims poker could be exempt from UIGEA

Wednesday, January 24th, 2007

As the new-look Congress begins to exert its authority over a number of issues, Poker Players Alliance (PPA) president has revealed that there may be light at the end of the tunnel for US players.

 

The Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act (UIGEA) put paid to legal online gambling in the US when it was passed last year by the Bush administration, but PPA chief Michael Bolcherek is hopeful that this may soon change.

 

The PPA was nearing the introduction of a bill that could result in online poker being exempted from the ruling, he revealed.

 

“Poker should be exempt under the new law and that exemption is our primary goal. I have spent a good portion of January in Washington, DC, meeting with lawmakers and others to get support for legislation that would provide a “skill game” exemption for poker,” revealed Mr Bolcherek in an open statement published in Bluff Magazine.
 

Although a recent court case in the UK ended with the jury deciding that poker could not be categorised as a skill game, Mr Bolcherek was still hopeful of a positive resolution.
 
The PPA president advised that the organisation would be using grassroots support to speak to congressmen in their home districts, and added that other countries had shown that regulation was the “only proven public policy” when it came to online gambling.

Korea sees rise in casino popularity

Monday, January 22nd, 2007

The introduction of competition into the casino market in Korea has led to a boom in revenues and attendance, it has been reported.

 

Last year the number of foreign visitors to Seoul casinos more than doubled to 700,000 from 330,000 in 2005, reports the Chosun Ilbo newspaper.

 

Prior to 2006 the Paradise Walkerhill Casino had dominated the city’s gambling industry for almost 40 years, but the monopoly was ended last year.

 

The move has strong parallels with a similar introduction of competition into Macau, which also ended 40 years of monopolistic interest in 2002.

 

“The growth rate of Seoul’s casino market for foreigners hovered at 4.2 per cent between 2002 and 2005. But since the market opened to competition, the figure is expected to soar to 16.8% on average for the next three years,” said Shinyoung Securities analyst Han Seung-ho, speaking to the newspaper.

 

Last week South Korean authorities introduced a new law requiring casino owners to report any financial irregularities to the government.

Poker tournament sets new Atlantic City record

Friday, January 19th, 2007

A poker event held in Atlantic City, New Jersey, has hit the headlines by turning into the largest such tournament ever held in the famous gambling region.

The Borgata Winter Poker Open has only been running for two years but entered the record books on January 17th when 1,370 players competed in the first day of the 2007 event, which also features the World Poker Tour (WPT) Classic tournament.

The Borgata Open runs until January 30th. Its numbers are thought to be so high because of the influx of players from the world of online gambling. Seasoned professionals such as Men Nguyen competed against a number of internet qualifiers who learnt their trade at online casinos.

Other big names in attendance include 2006 World Series of Poker (WSOP) winner Jamie Gold and Daniel Negreanu, who will both arrive for the WPT Classic early next week.

In total 13 main events and 32 satellite tournaments will be held over the course of the Open, with prizes on offer ranging from $120 to $1.5 million.

London poker cheat is jailed

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

A poker player who conned casinos out of vast sums of money has been jailed after being found guilty of setting up elaborate sting operations. 

Yau Yiv Lam, a 45-year-old chef, made roughly £250,000 from his schemes in London casinos thanks to a vast array of spy equipment. 

Secret cameras, microphones and surveillance vans were all employed in the operation to defraud the six London casinos, it was revealed. 

Lam used a camera hidden up his sleeve to film cards being dealt, with footage then being played back in slow motion by accomplice Fan Leung Tsang, located outside the venue in a surveillance van. Another accomplice, Bit Chai Wong, was then informed of card details via a hidden microphone. 

Wong’s continued good fortune soon meant that staff at the London venues were uncertain of her methods, eventually culminating in her arrest. 

Lam was jailed for nine months, with Tsang and Wong receiving suspended sentences of a similar length as well as community service orders. 

First Managers Blog and Henrik Larsson Rocks the Nation

Tuesday, January 16th, 2007

“If there weren’t luck involved, I guess I’d win every one.” – top pro Phil Hellmuth Jr after losing in the 2004 World Series of Poker

I think this statement is entertaining, makes a great quote (that’s why I’ve put it in my first manager’s blog) but utterly stupid. Let me tell you why. If you take the luck factor out of poker, you’d be left with a game similar to chess, bridge or gin rummy, a game where the best player always wins and the not-so-good players continue to play against other not-so-good players. That is if they continue to play at all…

By the same token, I like golf and tennis but I couldn’t dream of playing British Open or Wimbledon. Poker is different, I can dream of playing and winning the WSOP main event. And honestly, I think I could do it on a good day –with a little bit of luck. Or maybe a lot of luck…

This is because luck is such a big part of the game and is actually what makes Hellmuth and many other top pro’s the millionaires they are. In short; luck is what makes less good players able to take money from the good players in the short term, making them believe they are better than they are. Myself included.

“If I played 2003 WSOP with the improved poker skills I have today, there is no way I would have won it.”

I met 2003 WSOP champion Chris Moneymaker here in London a few months ago. We had quite an interesting discussion about luck in poker and his sensational win in 2003. He said; “If I played 2003 WSOP with the improved poker skills I have today, there is no way I would have won it.” That’s a sobering observation that I found quite interesting. Long term, pro’s should be happy that they get outdrawn against less experienced opponents once in a while, otherwise they would simply run out of games.

This thought reminded me of Stu Ungar, in my option the best no limit player that ever lived. The reason he took up poker was that he ran out of gin rummy games because due to his superiority. In the end he began offering potential gin opponents a handicap. He was known to let his opponent look at the last card in the deck, offer rebates to defeated opponents and always play each hand in the dealer position, all of which put him at a decisive disadvantage. He still won.

Enough about the late Stu, this is the first manager’s blog here at InterPoker and I hope you will continue to read it in the future. Your’s truly is a 35 year old Swede with 9 years professional experience of the online gaming industry, living in London, soon to move in with my Australian girlfriend, no kids, Head of InterPoker since this summer and the only Swede in this company making me both special and odd at the same time.

When my English and Australian colleagues where getting excited about cricket, I thought they where talking about some weird insect. When I try to explain the amazing achievement of Sweden winning both the Ice Hockey World Championships and the Ice Hockey Olympic Gold – the first country ever to win both in a year – I might as well have talked about gender issues during the dark ages! And don’t get me started on the glorious statistic of Sweden not losing to England at football since May 1968, despite 11 attempts. O well, I will most likely get some stick for writing this and will probably eat my words when England actually will win. For once, this week the two nations share a common interest with super Swede Henrik Larsson making an amazing debut for Man U. – one goal and an great overall performance against Aston Villa. At the same time it hurts on a personal level because I’m a Liverpool fan and Man U. is the arch enemy.

Back to poker. The intention of this blog is to give you the InterPoker player, some insight into what’s going on behind the scenes at InterPoker from my personal perspective. This forum is not intended to be an advertising area for whatever promotion we’re offering you. You can find all that out under our promotion page here .By the way don’t miss our latest promotion Reload Revolution with a bonus match all the way up to $1000 (I had to say that otherwise my boss will give me a slap). Plus it was my idea.

The ever ongoing discussion about RNG’s being rigged

The first subject I would like to bring up is the ongoing discussion about potentially rigged games in online poker. I play a lot of online poker with InterPoker’s competitors and when the cards are not with me I’m biting the table, cursing the random number generator and feel that sometimes the games have got to be rigged or fixed in the other players favour. Especially when I do well on one page and loose out on another.

However, when I calm down and think about all the years I’ve been on the inside of the industry and the endless discussions I have had with poker industry professionals (we all play on our competitors sites) it’s just doesn’t make any sense to rig the games. I have never encountered any company that’s done it and I ask myself why a company would do it. What some players tend to forget is that the company behind the site doesn’t really have any financial interest in who is winning and losing. All poker companies make their money out of rake which basically translates to player rent for using the tables.

If we going down the most paranoid train of thought the most financially rewarding model for the company would be if the games were rigged so all the players were winning an equal amount of money and just bouncing the money back and forth between each other. And not even the worst beaten player has encounter a site setting up their operation like that. No, the only way that makes business sense long term is to set up the random number generator, just as is should be, random.

Bad Beats

When we are on the subject of luck and randomness. I would like to discuss another subject that ties into the above; the ever ongoing discussion about bad beats. I know a lot of you guys hate to hear about bad beats but I think they do deserve some space in the public sphere. I would like to encourage each one of you to send through your bad beat stories and I will publish them if I think they are especially bad. To save all of you that dislike the whining I will publish them last in each blog so you don’t have to read them if you don’t want to.

Before I give you my bad beat from my home game this weekend I would like to give you the reason for why I think they deserve some blog space.

Bad beats stories are just like a blog itself a form of therapy. The fluffy concept of a bad beat means you have unfairly been beaten and therefore have the moral right to whine about it. A little bit like getting an unfair parking ticket when following the rules. Some players even blame their opponent for playing badly enough to find themselves in the situation in the first place. All that bad beat emotional distress could have been spared if only the opponent had enough balls to fold his mediocre hand. I’m no exception, even if I think I have got better at it, because it is a pathetic way to behave.

Anyway let me whine a little before I have to go back to work.

The setting is a home game in my living room this Saturday. I’m up against a very fresh player that is acting calling station in a S&G game. My cards are running cold and I have tried twice to bluff this player with mediocre hands. Both times I’ve been called and lost. Finally I pick up AA on the button. One player in mid position flat calls, I raise it up to a total of 200 making it an extra 100 to go (SB 50 BB 100). SB folds and fresh player who is on BB calls and original caller from mid position is folding, knowing I’m up to something (yes we have played each other many times before). Flop comes down Q94 rainbow. Ain’t too bad given my hand. Fresh player checks and wise from outdraws I fire off a bet of 500 (pot). After thinking for about 5 seconds she calls. Next card 10 and I just got a feeling it hurt me. She checks and I will not give her the chance to get another free card so I shuffle in my last 500 and she calls. What did she have? 10-9 suited and she knocks me out of the tourney and I immediately start to whine and ask her how the heck she could play it like that. She says; “I won didn’t I? Stop being such a bad looser.” And you know what, she is right.

No Flash in the Pan for Aussie Joe

Finally a big congratulations to 2005 WSOP champ Joe Hachem winning the Doyle Brunson North American Poker Championship, main event in Five Diamond World Poker Classic (why keep the name simple when you can make it complicated). This victory proves Joe to be one of the best tournament players right now and gives him some extra pocket money to the tune of $2,182,070. I have met him too and whish him the best of luck for the reason that he’s not only a great player, but he’s also one of the nicest guys in the industry making him a perfect ambassador for poker.

Next week it’s EPT in Copenhagen and I will be there. If you read this and are going don’t hesitate to get in touch with me for some gossip or a chat.

Until then good luck at the tables and don’t forget to send your bad beat stories or just general poker thoughts through.

/Henrik