Write about Poker. Read about Life. Welcome to PokerWonks.com.

I ended up at Harrah’s last night thinking I could hit its
7:15 p.m. tournament. It’s similar to Showboat’s and I enjoy Harrah’s poker room, so that’s where my car headed. It really has a mind of its own.
However, when I got to Harrah’s there was no tournament starting at
7:15 p.m., it moved to
8:15 p.m. and, AND, the tournament is now $80 ($68+$12). Honestly, I could only shake my head at this. It seems whenever I walked into Harrah’s things just change for the worse. I really like Harrah’s, I want to like Harrah’s, but why, oh why, do they make it so difficult.
I guess I’ll be sticking to the Showboat tournament after all. I’m going to try and get there on Thursday night.
I ended up playing $1-$5 stud, which was uneventful. I made a whole $4.
For the record, if anyone asks, I have not gone off to become a nun. I don’t where people hear these things.
Read Full Poker Blog Post
My New Year's resolution this year isn't to lose weight or stop smoking (I don't even smoke). I have a real goal in mind. I want to become a better tournament player.
I play cash games exclusively. I play while tournaments are going on because I like to wait for the those that bust out to come to a cash game. They usually have a hard time getting back into cash-game mode.
On the other hand, I have the other problem. When I play a tournament, I have problems switching from cash-game modes. So, my New Year's resolution is to become a better tournament player. I haven't been playing much poker lately so I think tournaments would probably fit my situation better.
If I play once a week, I am only risking a little amount of money for a big profit. I'm so set on this idea that tonight I am going to play in my first tournament. Showboat, here I come.
Read Full Poker Blog Post
 |
| EVENT | TOURNAMENT | DATE | TIME | BUY-IN | ENTRY |  | | 1 | No Limit Hold’Em | Tue, 1/15 | 11am | $300 | $50 | | | | 2 | No Limit Hold’Em | Wed, 1/16 | 11am | $500 | $60 | | | | 3 | No Limit Hold’Em | Thu, 1/17 | 11am | $750 | $60 | | | | 4 | No Limit Hold’Em | Fri, 1/18 | 11am | $1,000 | $80 | | | | 5 | No Limit Hold’Em | Sat, 1/19 | 11am | $1,500 | $100 | | | | 6 | WPT Ladies No Limit Hold’Em | Sun, 1/20 | 11am | $300 | $50 | | | | 7 | Limit Hold'Em | Sun, 1/20 | 12pm | $300 | $50 | | | | 8 | Modified Shoot Out | Mon, 1/21 | 11am | $300 | $50 | | | | 9 | No Limit Hold'Em | Tue, 1/22 | 11am | $500 | $60 | | | | 10 | No Limit Hold'Em | Wed, 1/23 | 11am | $2,500 | $150 | | | | 11 | No Limit Hold'Em | Thu, 1/24 | 11am | $500 | $60 | | | | 12 | No Limit Hold'Em | Fri, 1/25 | 11am | $5,000 | $200 | | |
| SUPER SATELLITE DAY | Sat, 1/26 | 10am |
|
| | | | 13 | WPT Borgata Poker Classic Championship Day 1 | Sun 1/27 | 11am | $9,700 | $300 |
| WPT Borgata Poker Classic Championship Day 2 | Mon, 1/28 | 11am | $9,700 | $300 |
| WPT Borgata Poker Classic Championship Day 3 | Tue, 1/29 | 11am | $9,700 | $300 |
| WPT Borgata Poker Classic Championship Day 4 | Wed, 1/30 | 11am | $9,700 | $300 |
| WPT Borgata Poker Classic Championship Final Event | Thu, 1/31 | 5pm | $9,700 | $300 | | | | 14 | No Limit Hold'Em | Sun, 1/27 | 12pm | $1,000 | $80 |  | | 15 | No Limit Hold'Em | Mon, 1/28 | 12pm | $500 | $60 | | | | 16 | No Limit Hold'Em | Tue, 1/29 | 12pm | $300 | $50 | |
Read Full Poker Blog Post
NBC's successful late-night poker show is back for another season. Poker After Dark begins Monday. The premise of the show is easy. Six players buy in for $20,000 in a winner take all format.
I've enjoyed Poker After Dark, not so much for the poker play, but the banter between the players. Sometimes PAD gets a group of players together that provides some good entertainment. I like watching Antonio Esfandiari and Phil Laak, though I think there are players out there who can't stand them. When they're in the show, it does its job in entertaining me for an hour.
PAD isn't going to teach me many new things about poker. There have been some interesting moves and comments that have helped, but in the end the show is for sheer entertainment purposes. There are some interesting matchups this year. I look forward to the "19th hole" with Gavin Smith, David Oppenheim, Erick Lindgren, Phil Ivey, Doyle Brunson and Daniel Negreanu. Actually, I look forward to anything with Ivey in it. He is definitely one of my favorite players and watch whenever I get the chance. It's his Atlantic City upbringing.
For those who watch PAD to get their Shana Hiatt fix, I have good news and bad news. The bad

news is she has been replaced. The good news is its by Argentinian Marianela (left) who is nicknamed the Poker Princess. Hopefully, she can provide insight into the game that Shana was never able to do. Her questions at times were pretty lame and she really didn't have a clue for someone who was around poker as much as she was.
Here are the new matches that will take place during Poker After Dark's third season:
Match 21: Dream Table (Week of December 31)
Seat 1: Daniel Negreanu
Seat 2: Phil Hellmuth
Seat 3: Jennifer Harman
Seat 4: Mike Matusow
Seat 5: Scotty Nguyen
Seat 6: Ken Light
Match 22: 19th Hole (Week of January 7)
Seat 1: Gavin Smith
Seat 2: David Oppenheim
Seat 3: Erick Lindgren
Seat 4: Phil Ivey
Seat 5: Doyle Brunson
Seat 6: Daniel Negreanu
Match 23: Hecklers (Week of January 14)
Seat 1: Gavin Smith
Seat 2: Sam Grizzle
Seat 3: John-Robert Bellande
Seat 4: Mike Matusow
Seat 5: Shawn Sheikhan
Seat 6: Phil Hellmuth
Match 24: World Champions (Week of February 11)
Seat 1: Chris Ferguson (2000)
Seat 2: Johnny Chan (1987, 1988)
Seat 3: Berry Johnston (1986)
Seat 4: Jamie Gold (2006)
Seat 5: Phil Hellmuth (1989)
Seat 6: Huck Seed (1996)
Match 25: Cowboys (Week of February 18)
Seat 1: Doyle Brunson
Seat 2: Chris Ferguson
Seat 3: Chau Giang
Seat 4: Andy Bloch
Seat 5: Hoyt Corkins
Seat 6: Gabe Kaplan
Match 26: International (Week of February 25)
Seat 1: Patrik Antonius (Finland)
Seat 2: Johnny Chan (China)
Seat 3: Roland de Wolfe (England)
Seat 4: Daniel Negreanu (Canada)
Seat 5: Gus Hansen (Denmark)
Seat 6: John Juanda (Indonesia)
Match 27: Jam Up (Week of March 24)
Seat 1: David Williams
Seat 2: Howard Lederer
Seat 3: Mike Matusow
Seat 4: Barry Greenstein
Seat 5: Antonio Esfandiari
Seat 6: Eli Elezra
Match 28: Gus and the Ladies (Week of March 31)
Seat 1: Gus Hansen
Seat 2: Vanessa Rousso
Seat 3: J.J. Liu
Seat 4: Clonie Gowen
Seat 5: Beth Shak
Seat 6: Erica Schoenberg
Match 29: Love at First Raise (Week of May 12)
Seat 1: Jennifer Harman
Seat 2: David Benyamine
Seat 3: Jennifer Tilly
Seat 4: Marco Traniello
Seat 5: Erica Schoenberg
Seat 6: Phil Laak
Match 30: Commentators (Week of May 19)
Seat 1: Mark Gregorich
Seat 2: Chad Brown
Seat 3: Ali Nejad
Seat 4: Robert Williamson III
Seat 5: Phil Gordon
Seat 6: Howard Lederer
Read Full Poker Blog Post
Here's a link where you can read the testimony. I included it below.
Testimony of Annie Dukeon behalf ofThe Poker Players AllianceHouse Committee on the Judiciary"Establishing Consistent Enforcement Policies in the Context of Internet Wagers"
November 14, 2007
Chairman Conyers and members of the Committee, I would like to thank you for the opportunity to testify before your committee. I am doing so as an American citizen who is concerned about personal freedom and personal responsibility. I am also here to express the views of the nearly 800,000 Americans who belong to the Poker Players Alliance.
As a mother of four who supports her family as a professional poker player, I have a personal interest in the outcome of these hearings. I have excelled at my chosen profession, not only supporting my family for 13 years from poker earnings but also becoming the highest female money winner in tournament poker history over those 13 years. Having the right to continue to pursue my profession, wherever I might choose to pursue it, is very important to me from both a financial standpoint but also from the broader perspective of freedom, personal responsibility and civil liberties.
At its most basic level, the issue before this committee is personal freedom -- the right of individual Americans to do what they want in the privacy of their homes without the intrusion of the government. From the writings of John Locke and John Stuart Mill, through their application by Jefferson and Madison, this country was among the first to embrace the idea that there should be distinct limits on the ability of the government to control or direct the private affairs of its citizens. More than any other value, America is supposed to be about freedom. Except where one's actions directly and necessarily harm another person's life, liberty or property, government in America is supposed to leave the citizenry alone. Examples of Congress straying from this principle are legion, but few are as egregious as The Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006, or UIGEA.
To be sure, there are many who believe that gaming is immoral or unproductive. I don't share these beliefs, but I do respect them. What is harder to respect is the idea that just because someone disapproves of a particular activity that they would seek to have the government prevent others from engaging in it.
Of course, opponents of gaming will cite the incidence of compulsive gambling and the possible exposure of minors as reasons to prohibit it. With respect to compulsive gambling, this committee has received expert testimony confirming what most academic studies on compulsive gambling have found: that the incidence of problem gambling in the population of adults who engage in gambling activity is less than 1%. From a similar study in the United Kingdom, we know that the availability of betting over the Internet does not increase it over time. Furthermore, even if one's primary concern were the very small incidence of compulsive gambling, then licensing and regulation offer more effective and less intrusive means to combat it.
Frankly, if the government is going to ban every activity that can lead to harmful compulsion, the government is going to have to ban nearly every activity. Shopping, day trading, sex, chocolate, even drinking water -- these and myriad other activities, most of which are a part of everyday life, have been linked to harmful compulsions. Are we going to move inexorably toward a world where we prohibit online shopping because some people compulsively spend themselves into bankruptcy? Worse, are we going to ask banking institutions to monitor and regulate our citizens' online shopping behavior to determine when a purchase can or cannot be approved? Gambling, like shopping, is the subject of compulsion in a very small percentage of the population - less than one-tenth the number of people who have trouble with alcohol. In terms of the damage to society, problem gambling is orders of magnitude smaller than tobacco, alcohol, fatty foods, sugary soft drinks, and a great many other things that the government does not seek to prohibit. And, let us again remember that compulsive gambling occurs in less than 1% of the population, and that the availability of Internet gaming does not increase that percentage.
Of course, prohibitionists point to the possibility of children betting online as the other justification for prohibiting it. In fact, most people who seek to restrict individual freedom invoke protection of children as their motivation. I suspect they find that that argument has more resonance than what is often their real motivation -- to treat adults like children, and manage their choices for them.
The reality is it is very hard for a child to lose money gambling on-line -- one needs to either have a credit card or a checking account to do so -- cash cannot be used. The concern many point to is a child using their parent's credit card to sneak online and gamble. First of all, in that scenario, the parent will nearly always decline the charge -- and successfully. For that reason, internet gaming sites have a large incentive to ensure that their players are who they say they are, and that they are of age, in order to avoid expensive charge-backs. Furthermore, presumably the first time the parent sees an Internet gambling charge on their statements, one would hope that at minimum a very serious chat would ensue with the child. As a mother of four, however, I feel the need to make this point: if a child is stealing a parent's credit card and gambling on-line, that family probably has much more serious issues than Internet gambling. I monitor my children’s online activity, and, frankly, that is my job, not my government's. Of all the things I and other parents worry about happening to our children on line, gambling is pretty far down on the list.
Still, if one's primary concern is preventing minors from betting on-line, as opposed to preventing adults from doing so, then licensing and regulation again provides a more effective and less intrusive solution than prohibition. We will hear other expert testimony demonstrating that there are highly effective identity and majority verification technologies available.
Again, though, I have to express my skepticism that that concerns about children are really what is driving this debate. By that, I mean that I doubt that there is anyone who is opposed to Internet gaming because of children who wouldn't still be opposed to Internet gaming for adults, even if it could be proven to them that children can be protected. However, if there are such people on this Committee, or in Congress, I would urge them to look at the regulatory systems being set up in the U.K. and other European nations, as they are highly effective. To reiterate: if your concern in this matter is about children, there are solutions available. If, instead your interest is in treating adults like children, then there are not.
What is remarkable to me about the UIGEA is that while it allows games of pure luck, like the lottery, it prohibits a game of skill like poker. For nearly 200 years U.S. presidents, generals, members of Congress, Supreme Court Justices and average citizens have enjoyed the challenge and the fun that is poker. I have no doubt that tonight, somewhere not too far from the U.S. Capitol, groups of friends and family will open a deck of cards and play some poker. This scenario will be replicated in almost every city across the U.S. That is because poker is an American pastime, it is woven into the very fabric of American history. Poker typifies Americana just like baseball or Jazz and has become a positive ambassador of American culture throughout the world.
Surveys have shown that more than 70 million Americans play poker at least once in a while. And, within the past several years, an estimated 23 million Americans have begun playing with people from all over the world via the Internet. Remarkably, though, some in Congress have insisted that when you put the word "Internet" in front of poker, this American tradition and the people who play it become suspect. I don't believe that the government should be preventing consenting adults from enjoying poker just because it has moved from the kitchen table to the computer table.
Poker is a great egalitarian game. Anyone who is willing to learn, regardless of race, creed, color or gender, can succeed at poker. And playing on the Internet gives millions of Americans the freedom to enjoy the game in the comfort of their homes, when it would be otherwise impossible to get to a casino, or gather others to play in person. As a mother of four young children, I don't have the liberty of being away from home every day or at night when my children return home from school. The ability to play on the Internet allows me more time with my family.
But my situation only represents a small section of the online poker playing community. Each day the Poker Players Alliance receives emails from its members detailing why Internet poker is important to them. Many of these emails detail a person's physical disability and why they are unable to get to a casino, and in some cases suffer from muscular diseases which do not allow them to hold cards or poker chips and the virtual game is the only way for them to play. Other emails describe how they are caring for sick loved ones who are home-bound or bed ridden and the few hours they get to play poker in the comfort of their home is their escape from the monotony of their day. There are countless stories, of every day law-abiding Americans who play Internet poker, and for whom the proposed ban on poker would have tragic unintended consequences.
The vast majority of Internet poker players are doing so for recreation and entertainment. On average, a person spends $10 a week playing online poker. 10 dollars! You can't even get a movie ticket for that price where I live! But with poker not only do you get the satisfaction of engaging in a skillful endeavor, you actually walk away with something more than a ticket stub! You walk away with keener mathematical and negotiation skills.
I don't believe that poker and the people who play it should be lumped into the category of gambling or be called gamblers. For me, and for other professionals, this is a job, and some of us are better than others. Whether a professional is playing with someone for whom poker is an avocation does not change the question of whether the game itself is one of skill. Yes, for the majority of Americans playing poker is hobby. This is how these people choose to spend their hard-earned dollars and they should have the right to choose how to spend their discretionary income, whether it is on poker or anything else.
There is critical distinction between poker and other forms of "gambling" which is the skill level involved to succeed at the game. I cannot stress this point enough: in poker it is better to be skillful than lucky. I ask anyone in this hearing room to name for me the top five professional roulette players in the world or the number one lottery picker in America. It is just not possible (my apologies to one obvious candidate, Congressman Sensenbrenner). We can however have a real discussion about the top five professional poker players, just like we can have a discussion about the top five professional golfers.
Few can debate the skill elements involved to be successful at poker. From mathematics and probability to psychology and money management, numerous authors and academics have drawn analogies between poker and other endeavors that involve strategic thinking. John Von Neumann regarded as the greatest mind of the first part of the 20 century used analysis of the game of poker in his seminal book on game theory, "Theory of Games and Economic Behavior" as a method of modeling decision-making under incomplete information. When asked why he did not use chess he deferred to the skill elements of poker which encompass all aspects of human intellect, calling chess not a game but merely an exercise in calculation.
Everyone agrees that the betting elements and hand selection involved in poker are skill elements. But I hear people say all the time that poker is only a game of skill for good players and the vast majority of recreational players are playing a game of luck. This is as absurd as asserting that bad golfers are playing a game of luck while only the pro golfers are playing a game of skill. If we all agree that puffing and driving and other elements of golf are skill components then whether someone is a good putter or a bad putter doesn't change whether putting is a skill or not. It is the same in poker. If someone is poor at betting or good at betting has no bearing on whether the betting component of the game itself is a skill component.
Go into any bookstore in America and you will likely find a display table covered in books about how to play poker and poker theory. The fact that one can learn poker and get better over time is clear evidence that skill is a dominant factor in the game.
I will concede that chance does play a role in poker. But it is true that chance plays a role in every human activity. Chance plays a role in getting through a traffic light safely. We know that is true because people who exactly follow the rules of the road get in accidents every day across America because of chance. And yet no one is claiming that driving is a game of chance and not a skill! Poker is a game of skill with an element of chance. But to call poker pure chance is just pure ignorance.
To further explain this point, let me try to illustrate it in two ways. If I could program a robot with the rules of poker, when to decide to check, raise, fold, etc. -- but gave it no "skill" so that it made these decisions randomly, that robot would lose nearly 100% of the hands in which it participated.
For those not content with the example of the robot, let me try another approach. One defining characteristic of games of skill is this: a player or team can intentionally lose. If I suggested that you should play slots, roulette, baccarat, or lottery and seek to lose, you could no more make yourself lose than you could make yourself win, as long as you continued playing. However, at golf, tennis, baseball or other games of skill it is entirely possible to lose on purpose. Losing on purpose is playing in defiance of the concept of skill, and thus proves the existence of the skill element in the game.
Several analogies can be made between playing poker and crafting public policy. But millions of poker-playing Americans were stunned last year when politicians decided that playing Texas Hold 'em over the Internet was so pernicious that the government must deputize financial institutions to prohibit personal financial transactions to certain forms of online gaming.
As we all know, in the closing hours of the last Congress, behind closed doors, Senator Bill Frist managed to slip the UIGEA into the Port Security bill. That law seeks to deputize financial institutions, and have them function as the Internet morality police. Ironically, however, that law did nothing to clarify what actually constitutes an unlawful Internet wager. It exempted certain favored forms of gambling from that bill's enforcement mechanism, but it clarified nothing as legal or illegal.
Instead, Internet gaming is the subject of a hodgepodge of antiquated laws that were intended to govern brick-and-mortar operations. The governing federal statute, The Wire Act of 1961, has been found to only apply to sports betting, beyond that we have a morass of state laws which, for the most part, did not contemplate the Internet. Nevada, North Dakota and Virgin Islands have all taken steps to license non-sports betting, only to be told by the DOJ that even intra-state Internet wagers are illegal.
In the proposed rule issued by the Department of the Treasury and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, the regulators come right out and say that they cannot and will not tell the regulated community what constitutes an unlawful Internet wager. Let me emphasize -- the posture of the Federal government is, "We are going to create a new federal crime, but we will not tell you what it is." In the proposed rule, the regulators explain their refusal to resolve this by saying that to do so would require them to examine the laws of the federal government and all 50 states with respect to every gaming modality, and that this would be unduly burdensome. Yet that is exactly what they are requiring the general counsel of every bank in the country to do. The committee has received testimony from the association representing providers of pure skill games, such as chess and Tetris, complaining that unless the UIGEA regulations clarify what they are supposed to cover, they will be unable to hold chess tournaments where people can win money, because, in the absence of clarity, banks will simply block any transaction where people pay a fee to compete and win money.
Poker players believe that the UIGEA regulations should not apply to games where players compete against each other and not against "the house" and where success is predominantly a function of skill. Such games include poker, bridge, mahjong and backgammon, among others. However, because neither UIGEA itself nor the regulations seek to address the issue, we cannot make that case.
Instead, PPA supports certain other legislative initiatives which we believe are more rational. We support H.R. 2046, Rep. Frank's bill to license, regulate and tax Internet gambling, but which allows states to opt out of the federal licensing system with respect to any and all forms of gaming. We support H.R. 2610, Rep. Wexler's bill to clarify that poker and other games predominantly determined by skill are outside the ambit of the federal gambling statutes, provided that they incorporate adequate protection against compulsive play, minor play, and money laundering. We also support H.R. 2140, Rep. Berkeley's bill to commission a National Academy of Sciences study on how to deal with Internet gaming, because we believe any rational examination will verify that licensing and regulation makes more sense than prohibition. However, we believe that the experience of the U.K and other countries can provide the same evidence.
Mr. Chairman, I would like to close with the point I started with: this issue is about personal liberty and personal responsibility -- the freedom to do what you want in the privacy of your own home. I suspect that some on this committee support freedom, except where individuals would use that freedom to make what they believe to be bad choices. "Freedom to make good choices" is an Orwellian term for tyranny-- the governments of China, Cuba and Iran all support the freedom of their citizens to make choices that their governments perceive as good. For those whose religious or moral beliefs hold gaming as abhorrent, I fully support their right to live by those beliefs. I support their right to choose to not gamble. What I do not support, and what this Committee and this Congress should not tolerate, is an effort by those people or anyone else to prevent me and the millions of people like me from playing a game we find stimulating, challenging and entertaining. However you might feel about gambling on the Internet, I would suggest that gambling with freedom is far more risky.
Again, Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, I thank you for the opportunity to address you today. I look forward to the testimony of my fellow panelists and the opportunity to engage with you during the question and answer period.
Read Full Poker Blog Post
If playing poker itself wasn't difficult by itself, there are still other factors to consider. One daunting factor is your partner. Not your poker partner that I told you to get a while back. Your boyfriend, girlfriend, wife or husband. This person can effect your game.
If you have a significant other who doesn't want you to player poker, you're in for a long, long relationship. Or, a short one.
Daniel Negreanu recently announced in his
poker blog that he is getting a divorce from his wife, Lori, after two years. If you read the blog, you will see there wasn't anything terrible either of them did to the other. She didn't stop him from playing poker, she didn't tell him to not stay out all hours of the night. He didn't yell or scream at her. They seemingly have a pretty good relationship, even now.
However, he does note that once he got married he stopped playing poker os much as he used to on the tournament trail because he couldn't give equally in the personal side and the business side of his life.
He hasn't cashed in a tournament since this summer's World Series of Poker events and only cashed in three events all year.
But things are different.
There's nothing like getting your mind off life than sitting at a poker table and smashing your opponents. Negreanu did just that. Last week, he placed 14th in a World Poker Tour event (he only got about $96,000).
I wish them the best of luck, but I don't think people are going to be excited to see Negreanu back at the tables. Because now he is ready for action.
CHECK OUT MY OTHER cactus i.v. POKER BLOGS
HERE
Read Full Poker Blog Post
Check out this story from The Press of Atlantic City. It's pretty long, so if you don't want to read it here is the summary. The Trop has to sell the casino and are looking buyers. One group that has emerged is the Mohegan tribe of Mohegan Sun fame in Conn.
A lot of the other stuff is just background info.
---------------------------
Mohegan tribe may purchase Atlantic City's Tropicana
By ERIK ORTIZ Staff Writer, 609-272-7253
Tropicana Entertainment announced a deal with lenders Friday to keep the company out of bankruptcy until it can sell the Atlantic City casino, which has attracted another possible suitor, the Mohegan tribe of Connecticut.
The deal keeps Tropicana Entertainment from defaulting on the terms of a $1.3 billion bank loan for as long as one year. The company was owner and operator of the Tropicana Casino and Resort until state gaming regulators denied it a license Dec. 12.
Now a trustee for the casino must identify a new owner.
The Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority, the agency that operates the $1-billion-per-year Mohegan Sun Casino, has indicated the Tropicana could be a potential property for the expansion of its casino empire.
Jeffrey Hartmann, the authority's chief operating officer, said he's been in contact with Linda Kassekert, chair of the New Jersey Casino Control Commission, about the casino.
"I think our brand is well-established with many of the customers that visit Atlantic City today," Hartmann said in a telephone interview Friday. "We like the regulated environment, and I think we can be a good addition to the Atlantic City market."
In July, Mohegan executives in Connecticut hosted a delegation of Atlantic County officials. The company had been studying Atlantic City as part of its growth potential on the East Coast, a Mohegan executive told The Press of Atlantic City.
The Mohegan Sun Casino is undergoing a major expansion plan costing about $925 million.
"The property generates a lot of cash flow," said Dennis M. Farrell Jr., a gaming analyst for Wachovia Capital Markets. "It can be a strong strategic move to diversify that cash flow."
Among the other developers to show interest in the Tropicana is David Cordish, chairman of the Baltimore-based Cordish Co., which created The Walk.
A formal application process for buyers is being devised, the Casino Control Commission said.
Tropicana Entertainment, an affiliate of Columbia Sussex Corp. in Kentucky, lost its license after weeks of negative publicity, meaning it cannot own or operate the casino.
Under the leadership of CEO William J. Yung III, the company laid off about 900 employees, or almost a quarter of the casino's work force. In hearings with the commission, customer complaints surfaced about dirty rooms and inadequate service, which casino officials said were fixed.
The commission also fined the casino $750,000 for failing to install an independent auditing committee as required under the Casino Control Act.
Since then, Gary S. Stein, a former New Jersey Supreme Court justice, has been serving as trustee and conservator of the Tropicana. He oversees the casino hotel's operations and must find an appropriate buyer to be approved by the commission in 120 days, unless an extension is needed.
When a sale does occur, Columbia Sussex will receive no profit. It will get either the current market value or the price it originally paid for the casino, whichever is less, the commission said. Anything left over will funnel into a state fund to aid senior citizens and the disabled.
Columbia Sussex's bank debt helped finance the $2.75 billion needed to buy the Tropicana property in Atlantic City in January, along with purchasing the Tropicana in Las Vegas and the Casino Aztar in Evansville, Ind.
Without a license, Tropicana Entertainment could have been ordered to pay back its loan to lenders almost immediately.
The company announced earlier this week that it will use the proceeds from the sale of Tropicana in Atlantic City, as well as the sale of Casino Aztar and the Horizon Vicksburg Casino in Vicksburg, Miss., to pay off debt.
"We are pleased to have reached an accommodation with our senior lenders and the trustee overseeing the Tropicana Atlantic City so that we can proceed with the orderly sale of our properties in Atlantic City, Evansville and Vicksburg, retire our senior credit facility and position our company for long-term growth," William J. Yung III, president and CEO of Tropicana Entertainment, said in a statement Friday.
In addition to giving Tropicana Entertainment flexibility in the sale of those properties, the new deal with lenders still allows the company to borrow under a $90 million revolving loan commitment, which was reduced from the original $180 million amount. Lenders also can require a faster accumulation of interest payments.
Overall, the deal is good news to the financially shaky Tropicana, Farrell said.
"It provides them more time, as opposed to having to go into restructuring right away," he added.
Meanwhile, Columbia Sussex's troubles outside of New Jersey have been mounting.
After complaints about the company by Evansville's mayor for laying off more than 90 workers, Indiana gaming officials have been looking into Columbia Sussex's actions, although a state commission spokeswoman has said their investigation may be dropped since the casino is to be sold.
Gaming officials in Louisiana, where Columbia Sussex owns two riverboat casinos, have not announced whether they will investigate the company, although under state gaming law, a company can be denied its license for five years if it is lost in another state.
Nevada gaming officials do plan to look into whether Columbia Sussex can still hold a license there, now that the company's been disciplined in New Jersey.
Columbia Sussex had plans to expand the Las Vegas Tropicana into the largest casino hotel in the world with more than 10,000 rooms. That possibility is now on hold.
"For everything that's unwound with the company, away from Las Vegas, (Yung's) lost a lot of equity value with his remaining assets," Farrell said. "No one really knows what he's going to do."
Read Full Poker Blog Post
Everyone these days wants to be a poker player. Who can blame them? Watching poker players splash around chips like it was nothing has its appeal.
Former tennis champ Boris Becker is throwing himself into the mix. The 40-year-old international star has been training to become a tournament poker player. Either his training is paying off or PokerStars has a little too much many because the world's top online poker site has named Becker one of its ambassadors.
"When I was still playing tennis, I learned to play poker casually in between matches because it helped me to improve my concentration. Now I want to develop my poker skills," Becker told Gary Trask of the Casino City Times.
His first big competition will be the PokerStars European Poker Tour next January and the Grand Finale in Monte Carlo in April.
Becker is a six-time Grand Slam winner and became the youngest player to win Wimbledon when he was 17. His ruthless aggression should help him be a good poker player, especially in tournament play.
"Thanks to his commitment to fighting for every point on [the] court, he perfectly embodies the competitive spirit at the heart of all good poker players," said Tamar Yaniv, Director of Marketing for PokerStars to Trask. "And now PokerStars is giving their players who have always dreamed of facing Boris Becker at Wimbledon the opportunity to compete with him in Dortmund."
CHECK OUT MY OTHER
cactus i.v. POKER COLUMNS
HERE.
Read Full Poker Blog Post
The World Series of Poker Circuit championship event is down to nine players at Harrah's. The final table will begin at 5 p.m.
Among those at the final table is Joey Brooks, a local Internet pro.
Check out all the action live here at the WSOP official site and Internet broadcast provided by Bluff Magazine.
Here's how the chip counts stand as the tourney heads into the (hopefully) final day.
1. Eric Buchman $870,00
2. John Racener $780,00
3. Adrian Velez $755,00
4. Feming Chan $690,00
5. David Fox $535,00
6. James Nelson $470,00
7. Joseph Brooks $450,000
8. Thomas Fee $255,000
9. Samuel Skolnick $80,000
Here's an article on Day 2 of the event by Poker News. And here is Day 1.
Read Full Poker Blog Post
Here's is Mike Sexton's profile piece on Chip Reese for Poker Player Newsletter. It's a nice little piece put together and shows that many people in the poker community have been effected by this loss.
Our hearts and prayers go to the Reese family.
Read Full Poker Blog Post
This is a couple of weeks old, but here is the video of Annie Duke while she spoke to Congress about playing poker on the Internet. She makes some interesting points and I hope Congress takes a note of what she has to say.
Read Full Poker Blog Post
Event #4 No-Limit Hold 'Em Buy-in: $500+$60
Entries: 312
About the winner: Tae Ho Baik usually plays $75-$150 stud, but picked up no-limit about three years ago due to the popularity of the game. He learned the game quickly and won his first circuit event. Baik and Massoud Nikjouian had 66 lead-changing hands of heads-up play. This isn't his first tournament win. He won an event at the Borgata Winter Open for $152,960.
1. Tai Ho Baik (Leonia, NJ) $48,360
2. Massoud Nikjouian (Woodbridge, NJ) $24,960
3. Charlie Townsend (Dagsboro, De.) $12,480
4. Anthony Stopper (Williamsport, Pa.) $$10,920
5. Dean Schultz (Akron, Oh.) $9,360
6. David Fox (Caram, NY) $7,800
7. Bob Van Syckle (Spring Lake, NJ) $6,240
8. Harrison Commisso (Marlton, NJ) $4,680
9. Dan Lyle (Kittanning, Pa.) $3,120
10. Ray Ho Lin (New York, NY) $1,872
11. Ali Navid (Centreville, Va.) $1,872
12. Eliano Mesquita (Long Branch, Ct.) $1,872
13. Andrew Kloc (Naugatuck, Ct.) $1,560
14. Trien Phong (Montreal, Canada) $1,560
15. Steven Rodriguez (Staten Island, NY) $1,560
16. Laurence Goldstein (Farmingdale, NY) $1,248
17. Andrei Kisselev (Long Island City, NY) $1,248
18. Leo Whitt (Louisville, Ky.) $1,248
Read Full Poker Blog Post
No-Limit Hold' Em Buy-in: $500 + $60
Entries: 376
The final table lasted nearly six hours with five different players holding the chip lead.
About the winner: Jeffrey Neuman credited his win to Collin Moshman, author of Sit N' Go Strategy, who personally tutored him. He's only been playing for 2.5 years and this is his third circuit.
1. Jeffrey Neuman (Glenela, Md.) $58,280
2. Pete Damatos (Cherry, NJ) $30,080
3. Jose Borges (Oakhurst, NJ) $15,040
4. Robert Jackowski (Bellerose, NY) $13,160
5. Dimitri Haskaris (Bayside, NY) $11,280
6. Michael Stovall (Oxford, NC) $9,400
7. Jonathan Gosnell (East Windsor, NJ) $7,520
8. Caywood Vanstratum (Cookeville, Tn.) $5,640
9. Agustin Mendez (Atlantic City, NJ) $3,760
10. Konstino Peshos (Bayside, NY) $2,256
11. Emerson Wong (Dartmouth, Ma.) $2,256
12. Joseph Barnaba (Robbinsville, NJ) $2,256
13. Thomas Bobbitt (Henderson, NC) $1,880
14. Robert Theis (Debary, Fl.) $1,880
15. Max Almono (Brooklyn, NY) $1,880
16. Gary Semkar (Cleveland, Oh.) $1,504
17. Charles Townsend (Dagsboro, De.) $1504
18. Vinny Radouk (Astoria, NY) $1,504
Read Full Poker Blog Post