Her Name Is Rio

Filed Under: *the rumble, AAA, ACC, Ask, Betting, CA, CES, Casino, Casinos, Dr. Pauly, Gladiators, Harrah’s, Inter, Las Vegas, Lost Vegas, News, Nolan Dalla, Object, Other, PLO, Poker, PokerNews, Pokerati, Que, Quest, Rio, Roma, Rumors, TV, WSOP, Wor, ads, b, betfair, blogs, book, burn, d, days, director, eve, event, express, final, google, harrah, horse, hot, hotel, ing, interview, jpg, main event, media, modern, morning, new, people, press, reading, reason, reviews, s, sale, spring, style, summer, the rio, time, vegas, writing by: admin

Rio All-Suite Hotel and CasinoToday my review of Paul “Dr. Pauly” McGuire’s Lost Vegas appeared over on the Betfair Poker site. For those of you who haven’t picked up a copy yet, check out the review to learn what the book covers and my overall take.

Book reviews are always a bit challenging to write, for a variety of reasons. One problem I always end up facing is having to choose between several different points I want to make about the book. That is, I can’t reasonably share every little response or observation I might have had while reading the sucker, so I have to be selective and often end up setting aside certain points in order to keep the review at a manageable length.

One point about Pauly’s book I had written down but didn’t end up including in the review regarded his account of the 2005 WSOP, in particular his description of Binion’s Horseshoe where the Main Event was concluded — the last time the WSOP was played there.

As is the case throughout Lost Vegas, Pauly doesn’t shy away from telling it like it is when it comes to describing Binion’s, noting how the place had deteriorated by then into a less than desirable destination for anyone traveling to Vegas, let alone for the WSOP.

However, as Pauly notes, “What Binion’s lacked in class, it made up for in character.” Here Pauly ends up writing a nifty little elegy to the Horseshoe, a tribute of sorts to the birthplace of the WSOP focusing on the moment the WSOP left it for good. Rather than go on at length here, I’ll let those of you who have picked up the book read what Pauly has to say about how “Benny’s Bullpen was a post-modern version of the Roman Coliseum where gladiators fought to the death.”

Like I say, I ended up leaving that comment about Pauly’s discussion of Binion’s out of my review. I was thinking about it again this morning, though, as I read some of the rumors about Harrah’s having finally sold the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino.

Some are saying the deal has been done, and thus the WSOP will necessarily be looking for a new home in 2011. Pokerati’s short blurb about the sale a couple of days ago appears to have gotten the rumor mill churning in earnest this week. However, the official word from the WSOP appears to be that as far as its concerned the Rio remains a Harrah’s property and thus plans for the 2011 WSOP — at the Rio — continue to proceed.

Actually, rumors about the WSOP leaving the Rio began back in the spring, and there was a lot of talk this summer about where it might possibly go. When I interviewed Nolan Dalla, the WSOP Media Director, for Betfair last month, I asked him about the rumors, knowing full well that even if he knew anything he wouldn’t be able to tell me one way or the other what was up.

Dalla’s answer to me was nevertheless forthright. He said to me that “anybody who thinks they know the answer to that question [then, in early July] doesn’t know what they are talking about.” He added that the issue would be examined by Harrah’s soon after the WSOP concluded, but that “those discussions really haven’t started that much yet.”

Whatever happens with the WSOP in 2011, I think it is interesting to compare what people are saying about the WSOP perhaps leaving the Rio with the often nostalgia-tinged sentiments expressed back in 2005 when the Series left Binion’s.

Of course, for me the WSOP and the Rio will always be closely associated, given that I’ve never had the chance to see it played anywhere else. I haven’t any particular fondness for the place, but it has seemed to me a suitable enough location to accommodate the spectacle the WSOP has currently become.

Will be curious, though, to see what happens next for the WSOP. And — if it does leave the Rio — what sort of “elegies” (if any) will be written about the WSOP during the Rio years.

27238395 7675590267052582010?l=hardboiledpoker.blogspot Her Name Is Rio

 Her Name Is Rio

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2010 WSOP First Event Gold to Hoai Pham

Filed Under: 2010 WSOP, CA, California, Casino, Casinos, Object, Other, PLO, Poker, SEC, WSOP, Wor, ads, b, book, bracelet, champion, d, eve, event, gold, history, hot, ing, jpg, morning, new, poker-champion, race, return, s, vegas, winner, world, world series of poker by: admin

photo by flipchip • lasvegasvegas.com
2010 WSOP event 1 winner Hoai Pham
Poker Champion Hoai Pham takes down WSOP gold bracelet #1 for 2010

At daybreak Sunday Morning the 2010 World Series of Poker handed the first gold bracelet to event #1 winner, Hoai Pham. He will be returning to his home in Mission Viejo, California with the new trinket, $71,424 in cash, and knowing his name will always be in the WSOP history book.

photo by flipchip • lasvegasvegas.com
Arthur Vea
Arthur Vea received $44,079 for second place

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Hooray for Boeree; Remembering Richmond

Filed Under: *high society, AAA, ACC, APT, According, Annette Obrestad, Articles, Ask, CA, CES, Casino, Cowboys Full, EPT, European Poker Tour, Events, Gamblers Book Shop, General, Inter, James McManus, Kathy Liebert, Linda Johnson, Liv Boeree, NAPT, NBC, News, Object, Other, PLO, Poker, Poker Tips, PokerNews, Positively Fifth Street, Preston, Que, Richmond, Tournaments, UB, Vera Richmond, WSOP, WSOP Bracelet, Wor, YES, ads, article, b, blogs, book, books, bracelet, burn, cast, champion, championship, d, draw, europe, eve, event, exchange, field, folks, google, history, ing, jpg, ka, london, main event, national, new, offer, past, people, players, poker championship, race, reigning, resistance, river, s, spa, style, surprising, thoughts, time, tour, tournament, wbo, winning, women, work, wsop main event, wsope by: admin

Liv BoereeYou’ve no doubt heard by now that Liv Boeree took down that European Poker Tour San Remo event yesterday, coming out on top of a huge field of 1,240 players to claim the €1,250,000 first prize. Lot of folks excited about it. Boeree becomes the third woman to win an EPT Main Event, following Vicky Coren (EPT London 2006) and Sandra Naujoks (EPT Dortmund 2009).

Boeree’s win also comes on the heels of Vanessa Selbst’s NAPT Mohegan Sun victory less than two weeks ago. And a month before that, Annie Duke took down the NBC National Heads Up Poker Championship — not an “open” event, but still one in which men had only prevailed in the past.

Some object to assigning too much importance to women winning events such as these, arguing that doing so reinforces the significance of a player’s sex and thus suggests another kind of inequality in the way one views women players as opposed to men.

There’s something to that argument, I suppose. But still, it is hard not to recognize the uniqueness of women succeeding in these big buy-in, “big bet” tourneys, especially given the small number of women entering them as compared to men.

Woman Poker PlayerBy the way, even before Selbst’s win at the NAPT Mohegan Sun, Jen Newell and I chose the topic of women & no-limit hold’em tourneys for our April “He Said/She Said” columns over at Woman Poker Player. There we were separately responding to a chapter in James McManus’s Cowboys Full in which he offers a few thoughts about why men seem “biologically inclined to sign up for” NLHE tourneys.

As we were working on our articles, Selbst won her NAPT title, and so we both ended up making reference to her win. You can see what else we said about McManus’s ideers here: He Said / She Said.

Last week I also wrote a post here called “Women and the WSOP.” There I mentioned how even though 12 different women had won open WSOP events, none had done so in a NLHE event (aside from Annette Obrestad’s 2007 WSOPE Main Event title). In that post I included a list of women who had won WSOP bracelets in open events, with Vera Richmond being the first to do so back in 1982 in the $1,000 buy-in Ace-to-Five Draw event.

Curiously, when people discuss this topic many tend to overlook Richmond’s victory and cite Barbara Enright’s 1996 bracelet in the $2,500 pot-limit hold’em event as the first by a woman in an open-field WSOP tourney. In fact, when it comes to poker history, Richmond is probably better known not for her WSOP bracelet but for her involvement in that story in which Amarillo Slim Preston allegedly said he’d cut his own throat if a woman ever won the WSOP Main Event — another story the accuracy of which sometimes gets skewed.

According to the story, at the 1973 WSOP Main Event, Richmond — who according to this had to have been the first woman ever to play in the Main Event — enjoyed the chip lead for a time, and during a break took the opportunity to tell Preston she intended to win the sucker. Preston (the reigning champ) responded by telling Richmond that if she were to win the tourney, she could cut his throat with a “dull knife.”

The exchange later got retold in such a way as to suggest Preston had threatened to cut his own throat, and that his threat referred to any woman winning the event (not just Richmond). Preston himself later would exploit the apocryphal version of the story, such as in 2000 when both Annie Duke and Kathy Liebert made deep runs in the Main Event, as recounted by McManus in Positively Fifth Street.

(EDIT [added 1:00 p.m.]: Actually there are other problems with this story, including the fact that Richmond didn’t play in the 1973 event at all. Hat tip to Kevmath here, who points us to an article by Susie Isaacs that suggests Barbara Freer was the first woman to play in the WSOP ME in 1978.)

That was about all I recalled about Vera Richmond, too, other than the fact that she always gets described as a “brusque cosmetics heiress” in histories and on the web. There was, however, a reference to Richmond not too long ago on the Gamblers Book Shop podcast (episode 63, 3/19/2010).

There guest Linda Johnson — the third woman to win a WSOP in an open event (1997, $1,500 Razz) — noted how Richmond “never got credit for her win,” referring to what I mentioned earlier about how Enright tends to be more readily cited as the first woman to win an open WSOP event.

Host Howard Schwartz asked Johnson why that was the case. “Well, she wasn’t very popular,” answered Johnson. “She was kind of mean and nasty… spoke like a truck driver, and nobody liked her. And so when she won her event, she never got credit for it, which isn’t right because plenty of asshole men have won and they are in the record books.”

Kind of interesting — and not that surprising — how the story of the first woman to win a WSOP open event appears to involve ideas of traditional “gender roles” as well as (in the Amarillo Slim story) men showing some resistance to the idea of women playing and succeeding.

Times have changed, certainly. The general enthusiasm about Boeree’s win yesterday — from both men and women — is evidence of that.

27238395 960951433594066516?l=hardboiledpoker.blogspot Hooray for Boeree; Remembering Richmond

 Hooray for Boeree; Remembering Richmond

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Premier League Results: Manchester United win, Chelsea lose

Filed Under: 100 Premier League, CA, Casino, Comeback, Fail, Manchester United, Object, Other, Poker Tips, SEC, Sports, arsenal, b, book, business, chelsea, d, field, ing, invalid, premier, premier-league, results, s, style, traded-as-low, united, white by: admin

Having traded as low as 1.13 for the title earlier today, Chelsea are now out to 1.77 after their shock defeat at White Hart Lane….

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Premier League Results: Manchester United win, Chelsea lose

Filed Under: 100 Premier League, CA, Casino, Comeback, Fail, Manchester United, Object, Other, Poker Tips, SEC, Sports, arsenal, b, book, business, chelsea, d, field, ing, invalid, premier, premier-league, results, s, style, traded-as-low, united, white by: admin

Having traded as low as 1.13 for the title earlier today, Chelsea are now out to 1.77 after their shock defeat at White Hart Lane….

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