Archive for December, 2005



Don’t blow your stack

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There is nothing more exciting than having a monster-sized stack in a No
Limit Hold’em tournament. With a big pile of chips, there are so many ways you
can use them to gather even more. Sheer brute aggression is one, but that
approach can also jeopardize your stack too, if you aren’t being careful.

You see, while you want to use a big stack to bully the table, it’s equally
important to protect your chips so that you can continue to be the dominant
force. If you’re reckless with your chips and lose a big pot, it will greatly
limit the weapons that you have in your arsenal.

Here are six things to think about the next time you’re sitting on a big
stack in a tournament.

Attack the short stacks. When players are down to very few chips, their
options are severely limited. They’re forced to wait for any decent hand and
then move all-in.

In the meantime, push them around with your big stack, since, even if they do
play with you, the damage to your chip fortress would be minimal.

When there are short stacks in the blinds, be very aggressive and raise with
a wide variety of hands. Understand, it’s not really all that important how
strong your cards are. What matters is whether or not your opponents can find a
hand strong enough to stand up to yours.

Avoid the big stacks. The last thing you want to do is tangle with another
player who also has a monster stack, unless of course you have a premium hand.
The targets that you should be bluffing at are the chip-challenged opponents
that can’t hurt you too badly. Remember, you always want to protect your big
stack, so when you’re up against a player that could cripple your stack, proceed
with caution. Don’t get involved unless you have a quality hand.

Don’t play big pots. One way to protect your stack is to avoid playing big
pots in marginal situations. Your goal is to increase your chip count slowly by
avoiding major risks. So, in situations where you aren’t totally sure that you
have the best hand, play cautiously. Continue to stay aggressive in small pots,
but don’t risk a large percentage of your chips unless you have the nuts or
close to it.

Be creative. One of the luxuries of having a big stack is that you can use
every poker trick in the book: slow playing, trapping, bluffing, semi-bluffing
and a host of others. While you want to be aggressive throughout, having a big
stack affords you opportunities to mix it up, try out new tactics, and play
hands deceptively.

When your opponents think they have you all figured out, it’s time to throw
them a curveball and play a hand in an uncharacteristic style. This will be
great for your table image as it makes you an unpredictable player that is tough
to put on a hand.

Strike fear in your opponents. You want to be an imposing figure at the table
when you’re a big stack. Your opponents should fear you whether you’re betting,
sitting in the big blind or haven’t even acted yet. When they’re afraid to play
with you, you’ll control the table.

Be a constant presence. Let opponents know that you’re there to play, not to
sit on your stack. Use your mouth, but please, don’t be rude, cocky or annoying.
You need your competitors to believe that you are on a mission. That alone will
make you a pain in everyone’s side. Cultivate that relentlessly aggressive image
and opponents will be convinced that you’ll play that way all day long. If
players fear you, they’ll often throw away hands they might otherwise raise you
with.

Following these six strategy tips will help your stack grow higher and lead
you to more final tables.
By Daniel Negreanu

 

Blackjack’s Death Count

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The future of blackjack has been revealed and it’s ugly. As legalized gambling
continues to blossom, with a record 73 million Americans expected to visit a
casino before the end of this year, the industry’s managers are scrambling to
stack the odds on the simple card game of 21 ever more in their
favor.

The motivation is transparent: Blackjack is the only game in the
casino where a player’s skill can radically increase his or her chances of
winning, maybe even shifting the edge away from the house.

Now,
gambling-machine maker Bally’s is marketing a player tracking system that
crushes whatever tiny advantage can be had, and that threatens to turn your
average 21 table into one more thinly disguised vacuum cleaner.

“After
you’ve played a series of hands, this table and its computer will evaluate your
play, keep track of whether you are an advantage player or not, keep track of
what you hit, when you hit it and how you hit when the deck was positive or
negative,” said Bally’s sales exec Dave Lucchese as he showed me the company’s
MindPlay blackjack table during an industry trade show this past spring in the
now-hurricane-ravaged Gulf gambling resort. “This is the holy grail for us. You
can’t do this with a slot machine.”

Skilled blackjack players win money
by at least counting the high and low cards that have been played as the game
progresses, and by betting accordingly. The more low cards played, the more
“positive” the deck is. With so many high cards still lurking in the deck, the
greater the chance that the dealer — who has to hit through 16 — will break. As
a deck turns more positive, a good blackjack player will increase the bet and,
likewise, scale it back when it goes negative. This is called the
advantage.

For almost a half century, casinos have been trying to limit
this advantage. In the 1960s, after the first beat-the-dealers books were
published, the big Las Vegas casinos moved from a hand-dealt single deck of
cards to a show-dealt game of six decks, making card counting that much more
difficult.

Other casinos are now introducing single-deck games, usually
called something saccharine like “Super Fun 21.” Using only 52 cards, they
restore the player’s ability to better track the cards. One catch, however.
These mongrelized games radically re-order the payoff rules (reducing a
blackjack from 3-to-2 down to 6-to-5, and barring players from doubling their
bets on certain combos), thereby handing the advantage firmly back to the
house.

In the past few years, some casinos — especially Indian casinos —
introduced perpetual-shuffle dealer machines. After each hand, the played cards
are returned into the machine and mixed back into the deck. No shuffle — no
counting. But many players, wisely enough, won’t sit at such tables.

Now
Bally’s $19,000-per-table MindPlay system takes all of these techniques a step
further and packages them in a user-friendly presentation that sets off no alarm
bells among average players.

“But let me quote the great blackjack
player Max Rubin,” says Bally’s Lucchese. “‘MindPlay means the death of card
counting as we know it.’”

The MindPlay system, promising “total casino
management,” looks like any other standard 21 table. “It has minimal impact on
the presentation of the game,” says Lucchese. What the player may not notice is
that after the cards are shuffled and before they are loaded into the dealer’s
shoe, they are very briefly placed in an indented bay where they are instantly
scanned into a database. An invisible 1/100-inch computer code marks each card.
As the card is eventually dealt out, it is read by another optical scanner
embedded in the table’s shoe.

Yet another optical reader, implanted
underneath the dealer’s chip tray, reads and calculates every chip on the table
— as long as the chips are the specially made “Moneypieces” treated with
“optical pattern recognition.”

All this info is fed in real-time through
a computer and then displayed on a monitor, ostensibly sitting on the desk of a
blackjack pit supervisor. “This game keeps track not only of the money,” said
Lucchese, “but it also tracks the player’s skill.”

Whoever sits in front
of the monitor knows everything — the tracking and recording of every card dealt
and every wager made — in real time. Screen after clickable screen computes,
ranks and breaks out every slice of data imaginable: the precise average bet of
each player, the relative profitability of each table, how fast or slow the
dealer’s pace is, whether the dealer is a “game builder” who attracts more
players or a “killer” who chases them away, what precise percentage of advantage
or disadvantage each player is performing at and, of course, how much, down to
the penny, each one has won or lost. For those players who have handed over a
“loyalty card” — the ever more common frequent-gambler card that accumulates
points for later freebies — their player histories are permanently filed and fed
into a running database. Next time they sit down and hand over their cards, the
casino will instantly have their player stats.

Lucchese calculates that
an average casino can recoup its investment in the MindPlay system within just a
few weeks. “This is why we call it total casino management,” he said. “Everyone
is tracked. Every player and every dealer. The biggest savings is made primarily
by reducing complimentaries.”

Let me translate. Traditionally, casinos
are willing to “comp” back 40 percent of a player’s estimated loss in free
meals, rooms or entertainment. The pit boss standing in a suit behind the table
makes the estimate based on how much a player bets and how long he’s been
playing (the loss can be estimated by the standing house advantage). MindPlay
now eliminates any estimate whatsoever. There’s a cold black-and-white
calculation making it easier for a table supervisor to shrug his shoulders at a
player’s comp request and say no-can-do — “the computer says you haven’t earned
it yet.”

Nor does MindPlay necessarily lead to the casino banning a card
counter once he’s been identified. Lucchese says with a smile that there are
more people who “think” they are effective counters than those who really are.
Armed with MindPlay’s scientific analysis, some players who count, but play
poorly, would now be encouraged to play more instead of getting
86-ed.

It’s not just the players being put under MindPlay’s scrutiny.
“Dealer evaluations are historically very subjective,” says Lucchese. “MindPlay
is very objective. It identifies each dealer’s ranking against his or her entire
class.” Meaning, of course, that even in the hypothetical situation where all
dealers in a certain casino are doing an adequate job, some will now be
considered “objectively” at the bottom of the cut and undeniably more
vulnerable.

Another threat posed by MindPlay is that its tracking
technology could be used to interrupt a game when the deck has turned too
positive and advantageous for the players. One Woodland Hills attorney, alleging
he saw a Nevada casino reshuffle decks at a MindPlay table in the middle of a
game, sued the makers. But the case was dismissed. And the makers of MindPlay
say it will never be used as a house cheating device. It should be noted that
compared to Nevada’s stringent standards and enforcement, most other states’
gambling regulations are quite lax.

About a hundred MindPlay tables are
currently in use, a figure that is growing and that will very soon double. They
can be found in the Fantasy Springs Indian casino near Palm Springs, at the El
Dorado in Reno, in Aruba, aboard the Titan Cruise Line and throughout the
Flamingo on the Las Vegas strip. Caesars Entertainment, which merged with
Harrah’s Entertainment in June and owns the Flamingo, is considering placing
MindPlay throughout its many other properties.

Toward the end of
Lucchese’s presentation to me, we were joined by Bernie Burkholder, president
and CEO of the nearby Treasure Bay Casino — a Biloxi-coast gambling house built
into a replica pirate vessel, which got shipwrecked in the Katrina
fiasco.

“Isn’t this going to chase away my serious players?” Burkholder
asked Lucchese as he ran his hand over the reddish MindPlay table
felt.

“Exactly!” answered Lucchese excitedly. “That’s the whole point.
That’s your competitive edge. The advantage player is going to get up from this
table and go next door to play. That’s exactly what you want. Let the other guy
have the players who win.”

Burkholder merely stroked his chin and
pondered the new future of blackjack.

[via]La Weekly         

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How to choose the right Poker Rom

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Poker is one of the fastest growing sports in America today. It is getting so
popular, in fact, that it is spilling over onto the World Wide Web. However, we
all know the dangers of putting personal information on the internet for all to
see and poker generally involves money of some sort. The following information
will help to direct you to the best online poker rooms on the web.

One of
the best online poker rooms on the internet is Paradise Poker. This site is
popular, due in part, because there are constantly tournaments going on and a
player will always find some high stakes game to enter. People have mentioned
that this game has the most pleasing graphics and yet it is not crowded with all
sorts of unnecessary icons. For those players worried about the security of
their money, Paradise Poker has shuffle card reviews from a highly recommended
company, Pricewaterhouse Coopers.

Second, with all of Party Poker’s
efforts to get their name out there, they have certainly been rewarded by all of
the players they have brought to their tables. Although they do have quite a
large amount of customers, their customer service is nothing to brag about.
Party is presented by the same people that brought you CardPlayer Cruises,
including Mike Sexton. Every year Party Poker hosts a rather large tournament
called the Party Poker Million.

Poker Stars has never had a time where
there was not a large tournament going on that anyone could enter. This site is
popular with most of the free roll players; the site offers some amusing aspects
to the programming. Although the interface can appear rather chaotic with the
extensive graphics people can use for their icons.

Most of the time,
Ladbrokes has encounters worth watching, and for added reliability they are
connected with the Hilton Group. Sponsoring a huge tournament in Europe where
they don’t accept US players is an annual competition known as the Ladbrokes
Poker Tournament. Although their software is not extraordinary, it can still
provide one with hours of poker entertainment.

Poker Room offers a
variety of options. Which include multi-table tournaments, as well as Texas
Hold’em, Hold’em, Omaha, 7 Card Stud and a number of casino games. For those
players worried about viruses, no download is needed in order to play on Poker
Room. In addition to a good links section, players can play a free roll with
play money, including tournaments.

Prima Poker is more of a group of
poker sites rather than a single room and boasts a minimum wait time before the
start of a game. With twenty-one sites to gather players from, it doesn’t matter
what site in the group you connected from, you will be able to play a game of
poker.

Full Tilt ranks further down this list, although the graphics may
appear slightly childish, the site can really be a lot of fun, especially if the
cards aren’t flopping your way. With the addition of Team Full Tilt, the site
has some of the best players in the game and has earned its bragging
rights.

Relatively new to the online poker scene is Hollywood Poker.
Unlike any other site, Hollywood Poker allows players to play against some of
their favorite actors including James Woods, the official spokesman. The
graphics aren’t anything special but they offer a cornucopia of options allowing
players to maximize their experience.

Source : Editor

Shootout Harrah’s Tahao casino

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A shootout across a high-stakes players lounge in Harrah’s Tahoe casino
killed one man, injured two sheriff’s deputies and sent gamblers running for the
doors Saturday afternoon, authorities and witnesses said.

No one else was in the lounge, just off the main casino, at the time,
Harrah’s spokesman John Packer said.

Investigators were still trying to determine who fired first and what led to
the confrontation. They were questioning a woman believed to have been with the
suspect, a man described as about 50 who died at the casino.

"His identity, motive and the manner in which he died are under
investigation," Sgt. Tom Mezzetta said. "We’re still trying to put the pieces
together."

The two deputies had been investigating a report of a suspicious person at
the casino.

Deputy Dan Nelson was shot in the hand and hip, and Deputy Erik Eissinger’s
bullet-proof vest stopped a bullet to the torso. Hospital officials declined to
divulge their conditions, but Mezzetta said the injuries were not
life-threatening.

The main casino remained open Saturday evening with only the crime scene
cordoned off.

Witnesses said the card area wasn’t crowded when the shots rang out around 2
p.m.

"I heard a `pop, pop, pop," Jeff Wren, 23, of Sacramento, Calif., told the
Tahoe Daily Tribune. "All I saw was a lot of people running for the door."

Packer said most of the casino’s gamblers weren’t aware of the shooting. He
said hotel security had requested the deputies’ assistance, but he didn’t know
why the man was under suspicion.

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Senioirs busted

Three legions were warned by the Alberta commissioner of gaming and liquor
for holding seniors cribbage games. A single complaint
led to the warning in Lethbridge and Grande Prairie Alberta. Three legions were
targeted in the complaint.
The commissioner said the cribbage tournaments
constituted illegal gambling.

Seniors in Lethbridge, about 250 kilometres south of Calgary, are upset about
the warning. They pay $10 a couple to the club to enter the competition,
covering all the coffee they can drink and a small cash prize for the winner –
as much as $100.

“This doesn’t make common sense,” says cribbage player Mona Templeton in
Lethbridge.

“What is a law? A law is supposed to have some common sense to it.”

Templeton says cribbage tournaments are important to older people, especially
those who have little opportunity to get out of the house. It’s an opportunity
to socialize and have some fun, she says

The government says it’s just applying the law equally and suggests the clubs
give small gifts to the winners rather than money.

“We certainly don’t want them to feel they can’t play crib,” Stephanie
Francis, spokesperson for the commissioner, told CBC News Online.

“We have other more serious things to pursue. We would only continue an
investigation if there were more complaints. It’s just a warning right now.”

Liberal gaming critic Maurice Tougas calls the idea “outrageous” and says the
government should just fold its hand because the seniors aren’t doing any harm.

Illegal Gambling in China

According to this Guardian
report, the Chinese government has arrested 1.2 million people the past several
months, in attempts to curb illegal gambling. The report goes on to say over 163
thousand cases were investigated. Corruption is a big issue as China moves
toward a free market system.

More than 8,740 members of the ruling Communist party were punished for
gambling between January and October, the official Xinhua news agency
reported.
An official at the Communist party’s discipline inspection
commission was quoted by Xinhua as saying: “Cross-border gambling, especially
[on the part of] government officials, could directly undermine […] national
security and social stability and tarnish the party’s image.”

He said 30 gambling agencies linked to overseas casinos and 19 underground
banks were closed this year in an effort to deter cross-border gambling.

Among the party workers prosecuted was Cai Haowen, a former transport manager
in Yanbian, a city in north-east China’s Jilin province, which borders North
Korea. Haowen was sentenced to 17 years in prison in May for embezzling and
gambling £220,000 of public funds.

Macau is a former Portuguese colony, which was handed back to China in 1999.
On the face of it, the territory, long regarded as the poor cousin of nearby
Hong Kong and now back under Beijing’s authoritarian rule, seems an unlikely
place for a growth in casinos.

But experts say the mix of authoritarianism and liberal capitalist economics
has created the ideal environment for a gambling boom.

In recent years, as more and more American-style casinos and hotels have been
built, Macau has been vying for the title of entertainment capital of Asia and
trying to shed its disreputable image. It is known as a hive of organised crime
and prostitution.

Macua already generates 90% of its income from gambling and is profiting from
the opening of the gaming industry to foreign investors and a relaxation of
travel restrictions on the Chinese mainland.

The main lure for investors is the market of a billion potential Chinese
gamblers, who have a reputation for betting intensively.

In the past two years, 14 mainland Chinese provinces have loosened travel
restrictions, opening the door to Macau for hundreds of millions of people.
Similar liberalisation planned for a further 16 provinces will expand the
territory’s potential market by half a billion people.

But Macau’s sleazy reputation remains and has not been helped by rumours of
money laundering in the territory and reports of mainland officials squandering
public money on baccarat, blackjack and roulette.

Why are Casinos operating from the Caribbean?

The Caribbean Islands have been home to many online casino operators because it
is legal to run such gambling sites in accordance with their laws. That´s why
many online casinos have based themselves in countries such as Antigua with a
full support team operating on their soil. Despite pressure from the US to
penalize Caribbean countries like Antigua for allowing online casino operators
to run their sites from these countries, operations are set to expand in the
near future. These Caribbean nations will continue putting resources in the
online gambling industry and 10 new online casinos are slated to open in Antigua
alone this year.

Currently there are already 14 online casinos operating
in Antigua according to Finance Minister Errol Cort and in addition to this,
there will be another 10 online gambling operators to open soon. This is
estimated to bring in over $2 million in casino operating fees as well as
creating about 500 new jobs for the people of Antigua. The US has taken its
appeal to shut down online casino operations in the Caribbean to the World Trade
Association which will ultimately pass a verdict on the ruling.

The
Finance Minister of Antigua has promised that online casino operators set up in
Antigua will be exposed to the most stringent international practices once they
are operating fully. Despite this the US will press on with it´s anti online
gambling campaign in hopes of shutting down all online casino operators in the
Caribbean and Antigua in particular.

Source : OCR

How is your Poker Daddy?

SANTA MONICA, Calif., Dec. 3 /PRNewswire/ — In a fierce heads up match
between "Action" Dan Harrington and Michael "The Kid" Gracz, time and experience
was on the veteran’s side as he schooled the young blood on poker. After playing
in three previous matches and the finale, Harrington took home the grand prize
of $50,000, and the POKER ROYALE: BATTLE OF THE AGES crown.

Known for his "action" at the table, Harrington is one of the most recognized
players on the poker circuit today. Gracz has also made a name for himself in
his young career. Most recently, he won World Poker Tour’s PartyPoker.com
Million IV in March of 2005.

Harrington and Gracz had tough company at the final table. They beat out
veterans "Miami" John Cernuto and Wendeen Eolis and youngsters Jennifer Leigh,
and Erin Ness. The stakes were high during the final hand. It came down to poker
master Harrington having nearly a three-and-a-half-to-one chip lead over young
blood Gracz.

Gracz raised with pocket jacks after Harrington called with king/queen
suited, as both players tried to trap one another. Then, both players went all
in and headed to the flop with eight/king/nine, giving Harrington a pair of
kings. With the turn card an ace, and the river a queen. Harrington emerged
victorious.

Other players for the veterans were TJ Cloutier (six World Series of Poker
bracelets), Barbara Enright (best all around 2002 Legends of Poker) and Maureen
Feduniak (1st Place 2003 World Poker Tour Ladies Night Main Event).

Other young poker stars were Dutch Boyd (tied for 11th place in the 2003
World Series of Poker main event), Evelyn Ng (2nd Place World Poker Tour Ladies
Night) and Kasey Thompson (Associate Publisher of All In Magazine).

GSN, the Network for Games, is the only U.S. television network dedicated to
game-related programming. The network features game shows, reality series,
documentaries, alternative sports programs and casino games. As the industry
leader in interactivity, GSN has allowed viewers to play-along with on-air
programming via their computers and GSN.com for some time. The recent launch of
GSNi (GSN Interactive) has taken interactivity to the next level, affording
viewers the chance to play-along with TV shows using only their remote controls.
Reaching more than 57 million Nielsen homes, GSN is distributed in the U.S.
through all major cable systems and satellite providers. The network is jointly
owned by Sony Pictures Entertainment and Liberty Media Corporation. For further
media information, visit GSN’s press website at corp.gsn.com.

People play chess!

There were no American contenders in the recent world chess championship
tournament in San Luis, Argentina, which was limited to the world’s top eight
players. The closest American candidate for the tournament was Hikaru Nakamura —
a 17-year-old who is ranked 42nd in the world. But Nakamura — who at 15 became
the youngest American grandmaster, breaking Bobby Fischer’s record — says that
he might give up pro chess because there is so little money in it. Losing
Nakamura would be devastating for American chess.

How can American chess
save itself? No doubt it would make purists protest, but chess should steal a
few moves from poker. After all, in the past few years, poker has lured away
many chess masters who realized that the analytical skills they’ve learned from
chess would pay off in online card rooms.

And that’s a shame. There are
plenty of smart people playing poker (and I love playing it myself), but there’s
no denying that when it comes to developing mental acuity, chess wins hands
down, so to speak. Dan Harrington, a former world poker champion who quit chess
because there wasn’t enough money in it, laments that poker is thin and
ephemeral in comparison.

So here are some poker-inspired ideas for
chess:

Teach it more. Web sites and TV programs that explain the rules of
poker abound. Chess needs to do the same. Programs like Chess-in-the-Schools in
New York are improving chess literacy by teaching the game to schoolchildren.
But there are very few opportunities for adults to learn the basics. Chess Web
sites, like that of the U.S. Chess Federation, should include interactive
tutorials on how the pieces move. Chess tournaments, which are now closed
gatherings of devotees, should include more basic commentary and
instruction.

Source : Herald Tribune




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