Brett Favre returns to play for the Vikings this Sunday

Filed Under: Brett Favre, CA, Casino, Football, Gambling, Minnesota, Minnesota Vikings, NBC, NFL, NFL Betting, NFL Football, NFL Football Betting, NFL Futures, NFL Playoffs, Object, Oddjack, Other, PLO, Que, Quest, Sports, Sports Events, Tournaments, Vikings, Wor, World Events, ads, b, d, december, express, football season, game, ing, jpg, national, past, press, retirement, rookie, s, season, spa, team, time, wbo by: admin

e8e6b9a7dajack 1 Brett Favre returns to play for the Vikings this SundayI can’t say I’m surprised.

After putting us all through the ”will he or won’t he charade all over again, Brett Favre decided that he will postpone retirement and play for the Minnesota Vikings for the 2010 NFL football season after all.

And just to show how sure he was this time, he expressed a desire to play in Sunday’s preseason game at San Francisco a day after rejoining the Minnesota Vikings. On Friday, coach Brad Childress said that wish will be granted.

You read it, Brett Favre will play a series or possibly two during the nationally televised prime-time game on NBC. Childress said ideally the first series would go 10 plays for Favre because, “that’s what he needs right now and all he’s ready for right now.”

d64d4a3d3dfavre5 Brett Favre returns to play for the Vikings this Sunday“I think he’s doing a good job of rounding into” form, Childress said. “He has been throwing the football, there is no question about that. Just conditioning his legs. … He’s versed in our system and our calls.”

Tarvaris Jackson will take over for Favre and play past halftime and then be replaced by Sage Rosenfels. Childress said he does not know whether rookie Joe Webb will get in the game. The rest of the first-team offense will play the first quarter.

Middle linebacker E.J. Henderson, who suffered a fractured femur last December, will make his first appearance this preseason and play with most of the defensive starters in the first quarter.

The rotation at the cornerback spots will be a bit different…

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Competitions, Cards, and Crapshoots

Filed Under: *shots in the dark, AAA, Ask, CA, CES, Casino, Casinos, Craps, Events, Final Table, Inter, Las Vegas, Object, Other, PLO, Perspective, Poker, Que, Quest, Rio, Stan, UB, Vera Valmore, WSOP, Wor, YES, ads, b, background, bands, blogs, burn, cards, competition, d, days, dressage, eve, event, express, final, google, ground, horse, ing, jpg, main event, opinion, people, press, prima, rock, s, spa, style, summer, things, time, training, usa, vegas, weekend, work, world, world series of poker, world-series, wsop main event by: admin

Diagram of a dressage arenaHad a fun weekend with Vera Valmore at a horse show. It was a lot of fun to get away and be off the “grid” for a couple of days.

I’ve written before about how Vera competes in dressage, that equestrian sport that involves training a horse to perform various gaits and movements — e.g., walk, trot, canter, passage, piaffe, pirouette, etc. Sometimes dressage gets referred to as “horse ballet” or compared to gymnastics, although the judging (in my opinion), while necessarily subjective, is much more heavily technique-based. (That’s a diagram of a dressage ring, by the way.)

Vera had a couple of nice rides this weekend, although her competitiveness and drive necessarily caused her to think she could have done better. We were at the show with some other riders, one of whom did particularly well in her two rides, netting a couple of high scores and first-place finishes in her classes. After her first ride, our friend came away expressing surprise that she had scored so well.

“It’s such a crapshoot,” she said, although I think she was being mostly humble.

Like I say, the scoring is somewhat subjective — it has to be, to some extent. But I do think that since the scoring is so carefully managed by a detailed score sheet on which judges mark the quality of every prescribed movement in a given ride, it really isn’t as much of a “crapshoot” as is the case in other kinds of competition.

That said, like in poker, there is definitely a “chance” element that can have something to do with how riders end up doing. At this particular event, one of the rings in which riders rode was unfortunately close to a nearby highway. Thus would the passing of a loud truck or some other traffic noise potentially startle the horses, and thus perhaps negatively affect a ride. Even just a stray rock stepped on by the horse during a ride can upset things in a significant way.

We were all talking at the show at one point when someone mentioned poker. I had brought some cards and a chip set, and eventually had fun teaching one of the other husbands there how to play no-limit hold’em. Without knowing what I’ve been up to this summer or over the last few years, the woman who had had the good rides then mentioned how her employer had gone to Las Vegas recently.

“Yeah, he played in this… what was it? World Series or something? World Series of Poker?”

I laughed and nodded. Did he play in the Main Event, I asked? She wasn’t sure. Was it a $10,000 buy-in event? Yes, it was. Indeed, he’d played in the ME, busting on one of the Day Ones.

I told her how I’d been there reporting on the Series, and while I didn’t recognize her employer’s name from the thousands who’d played the ME, I told her how he and I may very well have crossed paths at some point when he was there.

She went on to say how her understanding was that he is a very good player, although his credentials primarily consisted of his being a card counter. “He was even banned from one of the casinos because he was so good,” she said. I didn’t explain how card counting wasn’t so relevant in poker, but assumed that indeed the fellow probably had at least some acumen when it came to poker.

“Small world,” I thought, additionally considering how people from all sorts of backgrounds and locations go to Las Vegas each summer expressly to compete in the WSOP Main Event.

On the way home, I chatted some with the fellow to whom I had taught hold’em this weekend about how the ME worked. He was surprised to learn that only the top 10% of finishers got paid.

“Kind of like buying a lottery ticket, huh?” he asked, and I had to agree that in some respects it was. Though I did go on to explain that while one did probably have to get lucky to get all of the way to the final table and the millions of dollars waiting there, like with dressage, it wasn’t quite right to call it a complete “crapshoot.”

Then again, I guess just about anything — especially any competitive endeavor — could be regarded as a “crapshoot,” depending on one’s perspective.

27238395 2460944774587872883?l=hardboiledpoker.blogspot Competitions, Cards, and Crapshoots

 Competitions, Cards, and Crapshoots

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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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Interviewing the Interviewer

Filed Under: *the rumble, 2010 WSOP, 311, AAA, Andy Bloch, Ascot, Ask, Barry Greenstein, Betting, Bloggers, CA, Casino, Dennis Phillips, EPT, FullTilt, FullTiltPoker, General, High Stakes Poker, Ilya Gorodetsky, Inter, James McManus, Kara Scott, Kevin Mathers, LIPS, Lou Krieger, Matthew Hilger, News, Object, Other, PLO, PartyGaming, PartyPoker, Poker, Poker Tips, PokerNews, Que, Quest, Relationship, Shows, TUF, TV, Team Party, Television, Tournaments, Victoria, Victoria Coren, WSOP, Wor, World Poker Tour, ads, b, betfair, blogs, boxer, burn, cards, d, eve, event, experience, full tilt, full tilt poker, fulltiltpoker.com, game, gaming, google, green, ing, interview, interviewing, interviews, january, jpg, ka, london, main event, new, november, october, over-on-betfair, party, pics, players, poker shows, s, stuff, style, team, things, tilt, tour, tournament, weekend, work, world, wsop main event by: admin

Interviewing the Interviewer0I think I might have mentioned something last week about having had plans to interview Kara Scott, the poker player who has appeared as a host or presenter on numerous poker shows, including currently on “High Stakes Poker.” We did get a chance to talk this week, and the interview can now be read over on Betfair.

I asked her about various topics, including how she got into poker and poker TV, “High Stakes Poker,” the recent PartyPoker Big Game IV in London, her joining up with team PartyPoker, and her own play, in particular those two deep runs in the WSOP Main Event she has had over the last couple of years (finishing 104th and 238th).

As was the case last week with Matthew Hilger, I had a lot of fun talking with Kara, especially regarding her experience at the 2008 WSOP. I was also surprised a little about the story of her having trained as a Thai boxer (and that being an avenue to television for her). I guess I had heard that about her at some point along the way, but had forgotten.

Kara ScottThere was one question I didn’t ask her which didn’t occur to me until later on, a question having to do with her new affiliation with PartyPoker. She mentioned how there would be some television work there for her with Party — the Big Game IV was an example. I remembered afterwards that PartyGaming had purchased the World Poker Tour last year, so I might’ve asked if she knew anything about the future of that relationship (including the TV side of things).

We also talked a bit about interviewing players, generally speaking — something with which Kara has a lot of experience. Speaking of, I mentioned last week I was thinking of compiling a list of poker-related interviews I’ve done, so here that is:

Dennis Phillips (October 2008)
Barry Greenstein (April 2009) — Part 1 & Part 2
Andy Bloch (May 2009)
James McManus (November 2009)
Victoria Coren (January 2010)
Kevin Mathers (February 2010)
Lou Krieger (February 2010)
Ilya Gorodetsky (March 2010)
Matthew Hilger (April 2010)
Kara Scott (April 2010)

Have other fun stuff coming up over on Betfair Poker in the near future, including involving contributions from some of your favorite poker bloggers regarding the good-gawd-is-it-less-than-five-weeks-away-that-can’t-be-right-I-guess-it-is 2010 WSOP. (Stay tuned!)

Meanwhile, enjoy the weekend, all! Don’t forget the BBT5 continues over on Full Tilt Poker (details here).

27238395 3277841555381418818?l=hardboiledpoker.blogspot Interviewing the Interviewer

 Interviewing the Interviewer

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The Championship Betting: Play-off places still up for grabs

Filed Under: 127 Championship, Betting, Billy Davies, Blackpool, Bristol City, CA, CES, Casino, Championship Betting, Gary Johnson, Ian Holloway, Keith Millen, Nottingham Forest, Object, Other, Preston, Que, Quest, Richard Walker, Teams, The Championship, West Brom, b, blue, blues, book, champion, championship, d, field, ing, middlesbrough, north, peterborough, promotion, reading, s, team, united, walker, weekend, winner, winners by: admin

With automatic promotion from the Championship now decided, Richard Walker has chosen to concentrate on the teams still in with a chance of making the play-offs in his quest for winners this weekend.

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