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	<title>Gambling News Blog &#187; Casino</title>
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		<title>Poker Room Review: Sandia Resort and Casino, Albuquerque, NM</title>
		<link>http://thrombosite.com/poker-room-review-sandia-resort-and-casino-albuquerque-nm.html</link>
		<comments>http://thrombosite.com/poker-room-review-sandia-resort-and-casino-albuquerque-nm.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 30 Mar 2008 09:03:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Poker News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Albuquerque]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Sandia]]></category>

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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://thrombosite.com/wp-content/uploads/poker-room-review-sandia-resort-and-casino-albuquerque-nm-0.jpg" alt="Poker Room Review: Sandia Resort and Casino, Albuquerque, NM" title="Poker Room Review: Sandia Resort and Casino, Albuquerque, NM" align="left"/" alt="Poker Room Review: Sandia Resort and Casino, Albuquerque, NM" title="Poker Room Review: Sandia Resort and Casino, Albuquerque, NM" align="left"/>    There are many poker rooms in the Albuquerque-Santa Fe area.  Each has its charms and special qualities.  All are worth visiting if you have the time to do so.  That being said, there is only one room in the area for the serious mid-stakes or high-stakes player.   That room is the Sandia Resort and Casino poker room. </p>
<p>I first visited Sandia when it was a smoky hell of a place, back in the old days in the older casino that was little more than a Quonset hut.  I&#8217;ve been back a couple of times since they moved into their picturesque, full-service casino on the other side of Interstate 25.  Though this isn&#8217;t the equal of the biggest and best poker rooms in California, Nevada or Connecticut, it&#8217;s surely<br />
    as close as you will come to a major poker room in New Mexico. <br /><span id="more-177"></span><br />Sandia is home to 15 modern comfortable poker tables &#8211; tables that are often full and loud and busy.  There are well-cushioned chairs; there is excellent lighting, a well run board, new or relatively new chips and cards, and a bustling atmosphere that promotes action.  Unlike other rooms in the area, you never have to worry about not finding a game at Sandia.  If the room is open (and it is from 10 AM until 4 AM during the week and 24 hours on weekends) there will be at least a few games going. </p>
<p>The games include all of the low-stakes affairs that you&#8217;ll find in the other rooms &#8211; the $1/2 no-limit game and the $2/4 and $3/6 limit hold&#8217;em.  But this room offers more.  While I was there on a Sunday afternoon they were spreading $4/8 with a half kill, $10/20, and $20/40 limit hold&#8217;em.  They also had a couple of $2/5 blind no limit games and a $4/8 with a half-kill Omaha-8 game.  They never have stud &#8211; though they added, as all rooms do, that they&#8217;d gladly spread it if they had the players.  A pot-limit Omaha game goes off sometimes, I was told, as well as a $10/20 Omaha-8 game, but neither was going while I was there on three different occasions during the week. </p>
<p>I played a total of six or so hours of no limit in the $1/2-blind game, and about three hours of $4/8 Omaha-8.  I played at all hours &#8211; at 9:00 AM one day, 4:00 PM another day, and at 2:00 AM yet another.  I found the five tables I played at during those visits to be very similar.  Typically there were three or four very poor players, a couple of retirees grinding out the game timidly, and then a couple or so players who seemed to know what they were doing.  (The only game with a slightly different line up was a $4/8 w/ kill Omaha-8 game &#8211; where all of the players but one were pretty awful). </p>
<p>Here&#8217;s an interesting hand of no-limit hold&#8217;em that I played.  There was a brand new dealer (most seemed to be veterans).  It was the second hand I played on my first visit &#8211; on a Sunday evening.   I was sitting five to the left of the button and was dealt two Jacks.  There were two folds after the big blind.  I raised to $14; a guy did this on the previous hand and got one caller.  I got three callers including the small blind.  The flop was a king and two blanks.  The small blind checked; I checked, the next player checked, but before the final player could act the dealer turned a nine.  The last player objected, saying that he was going to bet.  The other players said that he could bet if he wanted to.  No one called the floor.  No one seemed especially upset by any of this.  The original objector whined and said it was okay &#8211; and let the fourth street card stand. (Nothing like &#8220;players get to decide what is done&#8221; rules).  Everyone checked the turn to him.  He bet $25.  Everyone folded.  He flashed us all a king and a smile. </p>
<p>Sandia has the same rake structure as the other casinos in the area &#8211; 10% with a $3 maximum.  They also have a $1 drop for the bad beat jackpot which stood at $50,000 or so.  You needed aces full of jacks beaten to qualify, with both hole cards playing.  I got the sense that there were at least a handful of folks who were there for no other reason than to be at the table when the bad beat was hit.   </p>
<p>They offer some player point promotions, awarding comps based on points earned at the table.  But the points are so minuscule that it isn&#8217;t worth considering, on the order of a few cents an hour. </p>
<p>Sandia is home to a few weekly and some large special tournaments. They have sit-and-goes every Monday and Wednesday and then regular no-limit hold&#8217;em, pineapple, and Omaha tournaments on Tuesday and Sunday.  When I was there they had a larger tournament than their weekly events – a $300 &#8220;Play with the Big Dogs&#8221; no-limit hold&#8217;em tournament.  There were 134 players with a $25,000+ first-place prize.  None of the other rooms have action like that. </p>
<p>A few other things to consider about this nice room: The high ceiling and lack of cigarette smoke give the place an airy feel.  There are free drinks.  And though the food surely isn&#8217;t free, there is a cheap snack bar near the poker room with hot dogs, nachos, soup and sandwiches for only a few bucks each.   </p>
<p>They don&#8217;t allow reading at the table (which always strikes me as an insult to we poker writers) but you can listen to a headset. </p>
<p>All in all this is a very good room, clearly the best place to play serious poker in the area.  I recommend it highly.  </p>
<p><i>Sandia Resort &#038; Casino <br />30 Rainbow Road NE <br />Albuquerque, NM  87113 <br />505-796-7500 <br />800-526-9366</i></p>
<p>pokernews.com</p>
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		<title>Poker Room Review: Isleta Casino and Resort, Albuquerque, NM</title>
		<link>http://thrombosite.com/poker-room-review-isleta-casino-and-resort-albuquerque-nm.html</link>
		<comments>http://thrombosite.com/poker-room-review-isleta-casino-and-resort-albuquerque-nm.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Mar 2008 12:03:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Poker News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Albuquerque]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Casino]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Isleta]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">?p=229</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://thrombosite.com/wp-content/uploads/poker-room-review-isleta-casino-and-resort-albuquerque-nm-0.jpg" alt="Poker Room Review: Isleta Casino and Resort, Albuquerque, NM" title="Poker Room Review: Isleta Casino and Resort, Albuquerque, NM" align="left"/" alt="Poker Room Review: Isleta Casino and Resort, Albuquerque, NM" title="Poker Room Review: Isleta Casino and Resort, Albuquerque, NM" align="left"/>    The Isleta poker room, located about ten minutes south of downtown Albuquerque, right off Interstate 25, is one of the oldest rooms in New Mexico.  I first played there in 1998, well before the huge poker boom and the resulting expansion of rooms in the state.  It was a small, stable, &#8220;locals&#8221; room then – and it remains so now. </p>
<p>There have been a few changes.  First of all, the room is now non-smoking, as are all of the poker rooms in New Mexico (except Sky City – which isn&#8217;t even in its own room).  However, though players may not smoke in the room, they may smoke adjacent to it.  Since there&#8217;s no wall or other barrier between the rest of the very smoky casino and the poker room, smoke drifts in.<br />
    I had the displeasure of sitting right next to the opening at the end of the room.  Maybe this is an indication of my over-sensitivity – but it annoyed me. <br /><span id="more-165"></span><br />The room spreads $2–6 spread-limit hold&#8217;em, $2/4 limit hold&#8217;em, and $1/2 no-imit.  I played in the spread-limit and no-limit games for a few hours on a Saturday afternoon.  I found them to be relatively sedate affairs – with a lot of calling, little raising, and a mix of mostly &#8220;calling station&#8221; locals and a couple of strong amateurs.  Most of the serious players tend to hang out at the Sandia Casino on the other side of Albuquerque, where there are bigger games and more variety.  But there were a couple of winning players in my game, and I was not among them! </p>
<p>The room has a $3 maximum, 10% rake, with a $1 bad beat jackpot.  It was up to nearly $100,000 while I was there, requiring aces full of queens to be beaten with all hole cards playing in the hand.  There are also two daily tournaments, at 2:00 and 7:00 PM.  I always recommend that players call the room first to confirm, since tournament schedules change so frequently. </p>
<p>There is a four-raise maximum (as opposed to the three-raise max in most non-Las Vegas rooms these days).  This came as an unpleasant surprise in the $2–6 hold&#8217;em game when I thought I was dramatically capping the raise on the flop when I had kings, only to have someone come over the top of me.  The size of the pot seduced me into calling his bets all the way until the river.  His set beat my kings up.  Alas. </p>
<p>Sadly, there is no stud in the room.  There used to be, back in the &#8217;90s.  But though the room manager insists he&#8217;ll spread stud if there&#8217;s sufficient interest, there just don&#8217;t seem to be enough stud players around to get up a game here.  É Tu Isleta? </p>
<p>My experience in the room was disheartening.  Without boring you with bad beats, let me just say that my aggressiveness with top pair pre-flop was insufficient to drive out hoards of callers &#8212; one of whom always caught up and won the hand I was in.  And I wasn&#8217;t in many.  The net result was that after three hours I was down $200.  Ouch! </p>
<p>I tried drowning myself in food – my typical solace after a tough session.  I was fortunate in that the menu was fairly inexpensive.  There was a pretty good taco salad for about $4.  Sandwiches were in the $4-6 range.  Drinks were about a buck.  Nothing fancy.  But then, I didn&#8217;t merit anything fancy. </p>
<p>There&#8217;s a great entertainment center in an adjacent building.  They have huge TV screens, a large bowling alley and many pool tables.  Though of course I wouldn&#8217;t do this with <i>my</i> kids, I could see a poker-playing adult guiltlessly dumping his family next door.  They&#8217;d be entertained for many hours. </p>
<p>The room is open 11:00 AM until 4:00 AM every day except weekends when it goes 24 hours.   </p>
<p><i>Isleta Casino and Resort <br />11000 Broadway SE <br />Albuquerque, NM  87105 <br />1-877-7-ISLETA</i></p>
<p>pokernews.com</p>
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		<title>Massachusetts House Defeats Casino Bill Banning Online Poker</title>
		<link>http://thrombosite.com/massachusetts-house-defeats-casino-bill-banning-online-poker.html</link>
		<comments>http://thrombosite.com/massachusetts-house-defeats-casino-bill-banning-online-poker.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 Mar 2008 12:03:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Poker News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Banning]]></category>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://thrombosite.com/wp-content/uploads/massachusetts-house-defeats-casino-bill-banning-online-poker-0.jpg" alt="Massachusetts House Defeats Casino Bill Banning Online Poker" title="Massachusetts House Defeats Casino Bill Banning Online Poker" align="left"/" alt="Massachusetts House Defeats Casino Bill Banning Online Poker" title="Massachusetts House Defeats Casino Bill Banning Online Poker" align="left"/>    The controversial Massachusetts bill that would allow three resort-style casinos while criminalizing online gambling was defeated by a House vote of 106-48 on Thursday.  Defeating the proposed bill by Governor Deval Patrick had become the <i>cause celebre</i> for influential House Speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi, who opposed to it both on moral grounds and what he believed were unrealistic estimates of the casinos benefits to the state.  But it turns out that the provision to criminalize online gambling may have played a pivotal role in the bill&#8217;s defeat.  Thursday&#8217;s House vote ensured that the bill could not come up again for debate until next year at the earliest. <br /><span id="more-166"></span><br />On Wednesday, the House Joint<br />
    Committee on Economic Development and Emerging Technologies voted 10-8 to reject the bill prior to sending it to the House floor.  Without a vote of support from the committee, the bill would face an uphill battle in a full House vote.  The narrow margin was a result of key abstention by Democratic Representative Robert L. Rice Jr.  Prior to the committee vote, Rice had been considered a supporter of the bill by those lobbying in its behalf.  To some extent they were correct; Rice does indeed support some type of casino gambling in the state.  But for Rice, the devil in this particular bill was in the details and one of the details he was uncomfortable with was the provision to criminalize online gambling.  &#8220;I didn&#8217;t disagree with the concept; I disagreed with the specifics,&#8221; said Rice.  &#8220;I thought that by abstaining, it would give me flexibility to do what I&#8217;m doing.&#8221;  During the six hour debate on the House floor, Rice attempted to introduce an amendment that would remove the online gambling criminalization provision, but by that time, the momentum to defeat the bill in any form was already too strong.   </p>
<p>The Boston Globe asked Rice about the pressure he had been under, considering the power of influence and contention between the bill&#8217;s two opposing forces.  Rice replied, &#8220;There wasn&#8217;t any undue pressure from either the governor&#8217;s office or the speaker&#8217;s office.  I&#8217;m going to be 60 years old.  I&#8217;m kind of immune to certain pressures.&#8221;     </p>
<p>pokernews.com</p>
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		<title>Massachusetts Casino Bill Receives Negative Committee Recommendation</title>
		<link>http://thrombosite.com/massachusetts-casino-bill-receives-negative-committee-recommendation.html</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 21 Mar 2008 13:03:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://thrombosite.com/wp-content/uploads/massachusetts-casino-bill-receives-negative-committee-recommendation-0.jpg" alt="Massachusetts Casino Bill Receives Negative Committee Recommendation" title="Massachusetts Casino Bill Receives Negative Committee Recommendation" align="left"/" alt="Massachusetts Casino Bill Receives Negative Committee Recommendation" title="Massachusetts Casino Bill Receives Negative Committee Recommendation" align="left"/>    Wednesday, the Massachusetts House Joint Committee on Economic Development and Emerging Technologies voted 10-8 to reject Governor Deval Patrick&#8217;s proposed bill to build three casinos and criminalize online poker in the state.  The committee&#8217;s vote followed Tuesday&#8217;s marathon hearing, which included an hour-long plea by Patrick, and tips the scales towards the bill&#8217;s ultimate defeat by the state&#8217;s House of Representatives.  The Massuchusetts House may vote on the bill as early as Thursday.  If defeated, the bill won&#8217;t be able to come back before the House again until next year. <br /><span id="more-154"></span><br />Acknowledging the likely defeat of the bill, Governor Patrick told the committee, &#8220;I have no illusions about the plans in<br />
    the House for this legislation.  I am simply asking that an open debate begin, rather than end, today.&#8221;  After being notified of the committee&#8217;s rejection of the casino bill, Patrick attributed the defeat to pressure from House Leaders and in particular, House Speaker House Salvatore F. DiMasi.  DiMasi has been the bill&#8217;s most outspoken critic, calling into question the bill&#8217;s job-creation and revenue estimates. </p>
<p>The hearing was standing room only, rivaled only by the sea of the bill&#8217;s opponents and supporters standing their ground outside the State House.  Approximately three dozen poker players representing groups such as the Poker Players Alliance (PPA) and Global Poker Strategic Thinking Society (GPSTS) joined the throngs, motivated by the bill&#8217;s proposed criminalization of online poker.  &#8220;I don&#8217;t think filling our expensive jail cells with poker players is what Massachusetts voters had in mind when they elected Deval Patrick,&#8221; Harvard Professor and GPSTS founder Charles Nesson said.   </p>
<p>Earlier this week, Nesson had an article in the Boston Herald recounting his unfulfilled quest to find the source of Massachusetts&#8217; online gambling ban verbiage.  So far, no one has copped to the inclusion of this narrow provision in the casino bill and it has now has been added to the many mysteries surrounding the crafting and passage of gambling legislation in the US.  PPA Executive Director John Pappas said of the provision, &#8220;We believe taking the extreme step of criminalizing online poker would be a strike against personal freedom, would tarnish the reputation of Massachusetts as a progressive state, and be opposed by millions of poker players around the country and world.&#8221; </p>
<p>Critics of the bill can&#8217;t rest just yet, but with the committee&#8217;s vote of nonsupport, they may rest easier when the full House of Representatives votes.     </p>
<p>pokernews.com</p>
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		<title>Poker Room Review: Camel Rock Casino, Santa Fe, NM</title>
		<link>http://thrombosite.com/poker-room-review-camel-rock-casino-santa-fe-nm.html</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Mar 2008 21:03:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Poker News]]></category>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://thrombosite.com/wp-content/uploads/poker-room-review-camel-rock-casino-santa-fe-nm-0.jpg" alt="Poker Room Review: Camel Rock Casino, Santa Fe, NM" title="Poker Room Review: Camel Rock Casino, Santa Fe, NM" align="left"/" alt="Poker Room Review: Camel Rock Casino, Santa Fe, NM" title="Poker Room Review: Camel Rock Casino, Santa Fe, NM" align="left"/>    I&#8217;m spoiled.  Back in New England, New York, New Jersey, Nevada, and California, where I play most of my poker, when there&#8217;s a poker room open, it&#8217;s open seven days a week, 24 hours a day.  Not so in New Mexico, where rooms keep more selective hours.  Some are open whenever the casinos are open, from 8:00 AM until 4:00 AM.  Some are open by 11:00 AM.  And some, like Camel Rock Casino, located about 30 minutes northwest of Santa Fe, don&#8217;t open until 2:00 or 3:00 in the afternoon. <br /><span id="more-132"></span><br />Here&#8217;s a story of those limited hours and a decent New Mexico poker room.   </p>
<p>I drove up to Camel Rock from Bernalillo, just north of Albuquerque.  For an eastern boy such as myself, this is a gorgeous drive.<br />
    I spent one hour or so passing high desert countryside with buttes and mesas and rock face and Indian pueblos along the way.  I took in the scenery.   The route is also littered with signs for casinos.  Some, like Santa Ana and Cities of Gold, have poker rooms.  Others, like the Hollywood Casino, do not.  But Hollywood had a nice little diner-style restaurant where I stopped for some Indian &#8220;fry bread&#8221;.  It was an Indian version of what we carnival and state fair attendees generally know as fried dough.  For the $1.95 I was expecting something relatively small.  Instead I got a piece of round fried dough the size of an entire pie plate.  I confess that though I had already had breakfast, I ate it all.  I used the honey they gave me for it, too.  It was delicious.  And even though there was no poker room, I got myself a nice free travel mug and $10 just by signing up for a player&#8217;s card while I was there.  Not a bad deal. </p>
<p>I finally arrived at Camel Rock at 10:30 on a Sunday morning. </p>
<p>Camel Rock has a small room that barely fits three tables.  It opens to a hallway that passes right by, separating it from a small snack bar.  Unfortunately, though the casino itself was open, the poker room was closed and not scheduled to open until 2:00 PM &#8212; with a tournament scheduled at 3:00.  No matter.  I drove off to visit points west and north (ending up in the Colorado birthplace of boxer Jack Dempsey, of all places), only to return at 2:30, figuring to play a few hands before the tournament went off. </p>
<p>The room was not empty when I arrived.  There were four staff and two players hanging around waiting for the 3:00 tournament.  I asked if they would have any live action before the 3:00 event.  &#8220;Before the tournament?&#8221; the room manager asked me, incredulously.  &#8220;No, I don&#8217;t think so,&#8221; he concluded. </p>
<p>I made my way over to the Camel Rock promotions desk and got a player&#8217;s card.  It came with $10 of slot play &#8212; but you could only redeem it after you played $10 on the slots.  So I went to the nearest $5 machine, played the maximum two bets at one time, won $10, and cashed out $10 to the good.  Sweet! </p>
<p>I walked over to the restaurant, located next to the poker room, to check out their menu.  They&#8217;re open Monday through Saturday from 11:00 AM until 9:00 PM and then on Sunday from 9:00 AM until 2:00 PM for brunch and 3:00 PM until 9:00 PM for dinner.  Their menu ranged from reasonable on the high end (a great seafood buffet on Friday nights with sushi, clams, Alaskan King Crab and the like for $16.99) to an enormous bargain on the lower end, with &#8220;green plate specials&#8221; for $7.00.  I returned later in the day, after the tournament was over, and had a T-bone steak with all the trimmings for $7.77.  By my plebian standards it was excellent. </p>
<p>The poker room is non-smoking but it abuts a large smoking area, so cigarette smoke wafts in.  A sensitive nose would detect the cigarette smoke even without active smokers.  When there are folks congregating outside the poker area it becomes very annoying to anyone (like me) who doesn&#8217;t like cigarette smoke. </p>
<p>The tournament itself was part of the Heartland Poker League.  The League is two and a half years old and includes eight casinos.  Competitors win not just cash but points that can be used to qualify toward regional tournaments with large fields, large cash prizes, television coverage, and great fame and notoriety to the winners. </p>
<p>Our event attracted 14 people.  The entry was $80, with $60 going to the players and $20 going to the house.    </p>
<p>Three hours after it began there were three of us remaining.  We agreed to a chop.  Seeing as they could only award points to the final two contestants, and seeing as I would not be playing in any other league events since I was returning to Boston that week, I agreed to officially finish third while they fought it out for the points.  We each won $280.  I also got a nice Heartland Poker Tour hat. </p>
<p>After the tourney I played some $1/2 no-limit with a $300 max buy-in.  The house provides a $2/hour comp for players and rakes the standard 10% with a $3 maximum.  There&#8217;s also $1 taken out of the pot for the bad beat. </p>
<p>In general, the level of play was pretty poor, though there were two players who seemed to know what they were doing.  No one was too serious about either the cash game or the tournament. </p>
<p>The room itself was crowded, the lighting pretty poor, the chairs about average in comfort, the table, chips and cards relatively new.  It was one step up from the truly crummy poker room at Cities of Gold Casino, about five minutes down the way from Santa Fe.   </p>
<p>The main problem for me at Camel Rock would be making sure that there was a game when I wanted to play.  I&#8217;d suggest calling ahead whenever you were thinking of playing there. I&#8217;d play again if I were in the area.  And the area is so beautiful that I relish a return before too long.  Oh, and if you can, try to be outside during sunset.  It is truly a spectacular site to behold. </p>
<p><i>Camel Rock Casino <br />17486A &#8211; Hwy 84/285 <br />Santa Fe, New Mexico 87506 <br />(800) GO-CAMEL    <br />(800) 462-2635</i></p>
<p>pokernews.com</p>
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		<title>New Year Brings Casino Business Updates</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jan 2008 05:01:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://thrombosite.com/wp-content/uploads/new-year-brings-casino-business-updates-0.jpg" alt="New Year Brings Casino Business Updates" title="New Year Brings Casino Business Updates" align="left"/" alt="New Year Brings Casino Business Updates" title="New Year Brings Casino Business Updates" align="left"/>Dubai World Increases Stake in MGM</p>
<p>Dubai World has increased its stake in MGM Mirage by five million shares, which it purchased from the Lincy Foundation, a charitable organization founded by Kirk Kerkorian.  The acquisition by the investment arm of the Dubai government brought its holdings to 19.5 million shares or 6.5% of MGM Mirage stock. </p>
<p>Dubai World and MGM Mirage entered into a joint venture back in August relative to the development and ownership of MGM Mirage&#8217;s Las Vegas CityCenter.  As part of that deal, Dubai World was slated to purchase 14.2 million shares of MGM Mirage stock.  In October,<br />
    Dubai World tendered an offer for the shares at $84 but was unable to get more than 350,000 shares under the offer.  According to a recent SEC filing, the purchase price of the Lincy shares was $84.80.  The SEC filing also stated that pending regulatory approval, Dubai World would be seeking to designate a member of MGM Mirage&#8217;s Board of Directors.   <br /><span id="more-47"></span><br />Harrah&#8217;s Buy-Out Imminent </p>
<p>On Christmas Eve, Harrah&#8217;s Entertainment issued a press release announcing that it had cleared the last regulatory hurdle associated with its proposed acquisition by private equity firms Apollo Global Management, L.P. and TPG Capital.  While the National Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC) is still finalizing its review, they notified Harrah&#8217;s that they had sufficient information to give the go-ahead for the buyout.  Harrah&#8217;s operates a number of casinos on Indian lands which fall under the regulatory purview of the NIGC, an independent federal regulatory agency of the United States.  The Nevada Gaming Commission had given its blessing to the deal late last month leaving the NIGC as the last regulatory hoop for the Harrah&#8217;s acquisition.  Harrah&#8217;s has been targeting early 2008 for completion of the sale; analysts now believe the sale could become final before the end of the month.     </p>
<p>pokernews.com</p>
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		<title>Poker Room Review: Tropicana Casino and Resort, Atlantic City, NJ</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 03 Jan 2008 05:01:42 +0000</pubDate>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://thrombosite.com/wp-content/uploads/poker-room-review-tropicana-casino-and-resort-atlantic-city-nj-0.jpg" alt="Poker Room Review: Tropicana Casino and Resort, Atlantic City, NJ" title="Poker Room Review: Tropicana Casino and Resort, Atlantic City, NJ" align="left"/" alt="Poker Room Review: Tropicana Casino and Resort, Atlantic City, NJ" title="Poker Room Review: Tropicana Casino and Resort, Atlantic City, NJ" align="left"/>    I visited the Tropicana Casino and Resort during Veteran&#8217;s Day weekend of 2007.  It was the second stop on a marathon poker-playing trip in Atlantic City when I had planned to walk from casino to casino on the boardwalk, trying out each poker room in turn. </p>
<p>It was a beautiful, cloudy, windswept November morning as I walked down the boardwalk from the Hilton to the Tropicana – a five- to ten-minute stroll depending on one&#8217;s pace.  It was refreshing to breathe in the salt air and take in the sights – helping me relax before my playing session.  It&#8217;s one of the things I like best about playing in Atlantic City.  It&#8217;s easy and invigorating to get the easy change of scene that comes from hopping from<br />
    room to room. <br /><span id="more-45"></span><br />The Tropicana, known as the &#8220;Trop&#8221; to those who play in Atlantic City, was one of the first places (along with the Taj Majal and Resorts) to open a poker room when poker was legalized in New Jersey in the mid-1990s.  The Trop&#8217;s poker room itself is set away from the casino floor – with two sections.  They used to use one for smoking and one for non-smoking.  But now they are all non-smoking – as stud games tend to congregate at the end of the larger room, while the smaller room tends to get the middle-limit games.  There really is no high-limit action here. </p>
<p>The place was not what the players would describe as busy when I entered mid-morning on Saturday of the Veteran&#8217;s Day weekend.  There were only eight tables going (out of 40 or so).  There were five &#8216;flavors&#8217; of poker games being spread: $4/8 limit hold&#8217;em, $2/4 limit hold&#8217;em, $1/2 no-limit hold&#8217;em, $2/5 no-limit hold&#8217;em, and $3/6 stud.  This was the standard compliment.  The only games missing were the $5/10 no-limit game that they sometimes get later on Saturday and a $5/10 limit stud game that usually goes as the day progresses.  When I asked the floor if they ever get bigger limit or no-limit games the floor told me, &#8220;Nah, these are generally all retired folks playing little games&#8221;.  I think he was mistaken about his demographics.  But I&#8217;m sure he knew what stakes he spread.  Later calls to the room never turned up anything bigger than $4/8 limit or $2/5 no-limit. </p>
<p>Unlike other poker rooms in the area, players at the Trop buy their chips at the table for the most part (though one can buy them at the cashier too if he prefers).  The five dealers I saw while I was there were all extremely competent – quick, efficient, informative when asked questions, but not chatty or intrusive to the game.  They&#8217;d announce action, keep their eye on the game, keep play moving, and answer any questions.  In this they were the best dealers I encountered during my time in Atlantic City.  They kept their own tips, as opposed to pooling them.  It showed. </p>
<p>I played some $1/2 no-limit – the only game that had an empty seat when I arrived.  There is a cap on the buy-in – no less than $60 and no more than $300.  That&#8217;s pretty much the standard in public poker rooms these days – though a few places cap the buy-in at $200 or even $100.  The days of midget stacks seems to have passed – fortunately. </p>
<p>Players are raked at the standard amount of 10% with a $4 maximum.  Unlike many other rooms in Atlantic City, there is no bad-beat jackpot.  I prefer that.  I don&#8217;t like having money taken out of the pot for what amounts to a lottery.  And when a player wins the money, it doesn&#8217;t stay on the table.  It often doesn&#8217;t even return to the poker economy – as players take their enormous jackpot winnings (in excess of $100,000 sometimes) and spend it on things other than poker – like paying their bills or buying non-poker merchandise.  (Geez, people, where&#8217;s your sense of priorities?)  The one advantage to a bad-beat jackpot is that it tends to draw players to a room.  But from what I&#8217;ve seen, players who come just for the jackpot tend to be rocks – giving very little action as they just try to stick around long enough to be present when the jackpot hits.  They may keep an otherwise weak game alive – but they surely don&#8217;t contribute much to the bottom line of the serious player. </p>
<p>As in nearly all of the Atlantic City casinos, there is tableside waitress service, drinks are free (though only a real freeloader doesn&#8217;t tip at least a dollar per drink), and food can be delivered to the poker table – though it isn&#8217;t free.  There are discounted poker rates in the hotel for players – though no one quite knew what they were.  &#8220;You get about 20% off of whatever they feel like telling you the regular rate is,&#8221; one wag offered, not-so-helpfully.   </p>
<p>The Trop runs regular poker tournaments during the week at 10:15 AM and 7:15 PM, with only the evening ones running on Saturday and Sunday.   The Saturday, Sunday, and Wednesday PM tournies are $100 &#8212; $15 of which is the entry fee, $85 of which goes to the prize pool.  Though a 15% seems high, especially when live games are raked at 10% &#8212; it&#8217;s actually a little better than the 20% or higher that I&#8217;ve seen at most small tournaments in other casinos.  Players get $10,000 in chips – with blinds starting at $25/50 and going up every 20 minutes.  That gives the player about as much play as I&#8217;ve seen.  The AM tourney is half the buy-in for half the stack.  There are also $85 tourneys on Mondays and Thursdays and a $120 tourney on Tuesday and Friday night. </p>
<p>I had one especially memorable hand while I played at the $1/2 no-limit table.  I was dealt K-10 suited in the cutoff.  An early, overly aggressive player raised to $10.  Two players called him; I guess they had typed him as overly aggressive, too.  Normally, I toss K-10 into the muck with a raised pot.  But the combination of my position, the number of callers in front of me, the type of player I read the raiser to be, and the fact that my cards were suited caused me to call.  The button and the big blind also called. </p>
<p>The flop was the near-miraculous A-10-10 (suits didn&#8217;t matter).   The early-position raiser bet $30.  No one called in front of me.  I raised to $90.  The player after me called.  The first bettor folded after a very long pause, saying &#8220;I&#8217;m folding a monster&#8221;.  The turn was a queen.  I did not think that the button would have played K-J for $90.  I put him on an ace – maybe A-Q.  I went all in for my remaining $200 or so.  The button called me.  The river was an unhelpful deuce.  My opponent turned over 10-9.  He was stronger than I thought but not strong enough to win; I stacked him because my king kicker played.  Sweet! </p>
<p>Shortly thereafter I noticed that a seat had opened up in the $3/6 limit stud game.  I left my no-limit hold&#8217;em game up a couple of hundred, and sat down to play some stud.  Every player in the stud game had gray hair &#8212; those that had any hair, that is.  Though I had just recently turned 50, I estimated that I was the youngest player by at least 30 years. </p>
<p>The structure was deadly.  There was no ante, just a $1 forced bet from the low card, and then $3/6 limit.  Or maybe it was just the combination of the structure and the style of play of the stud players that caused the game to be so dreadfully boring.  I don&#8217;t write this just as an outsider.  The players themselves were carping about how the Trop never should have switched the regular stud game from $1-5 spread-limit to $3/6.   On the other hand, I imagine that when the game was $1-5 spread-limit the players carped about changing it to $3/6.  It&#8217;s just the nature of being a regular poker player.  We like to complain! </p>
<p>In any event, I played for about an hour.  I must have seen fifteen hands that went the same way.  The low card brought it in for $1.  A player raised to $3.  Everyone folded.  Or, a little less frequently, but still common, a player brought it in for the dollar.  Six players called.  The dealer dealt fourth street.  One player bet $3 and everyone folded. </p>
<p>As bad as the game seemed for the players, it must have been torture to be a dealer.  I can&#8217;t imagine that they make much in tips in a game where the average pot is $1! </p>
<p>All of the players agreed that the $5/10 game, which wasn&#8217;t going when I was there but which they said would almost surely go off later on Saturday, was much better.  It has a $.50 ante with a $2 forced bet. </p>
<p>Somehow, I managed to win $7.00 during my hour or so at this table.  I had one contested hand – at least until fifth street when my two opponents folded– and I picked up a few forced bets and some loose calls on third street – who folded when I raised to $3.  I&#8217;d like to say that the experience was pleasant &#8212; because the players were all so sweet – but I really was itching to leave. </p>
<p>The Trop is a smaller and more subdued version of the Trump Taj Majal, known familiarly as &#8220;The Taj&#8221; – a popular and busy room that attracts some of the young players that fill up so many poker games today.  Even at full bore – on Saturday night, when I&#8217;ve visited in the past – The Trop is a pleasant place without the loud raucousness of the Taj.  I always enjoyed playing $5/10 and $10/20 stud here at the Trop – and I&#8217;m sure I&#8217;d enjoy playing $1/2 no-limit, $2/5 no-limit and $5/10 limit stud here in the future.  But sweet though those retirees were at the $3/6 no-ante game – I&#8217;d have to pass on that game during my next visit to the room. </p>
<p><i>Tropicana Casino and Resort  <br />Brighton and the Boardwalk  <br />Atlantic City NJ, 08401 <br />1-800-THE-TROP</i></p>
<p>pokernews.com</p>
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		<title>Poker Room Review: Atlantic City Hilton Casino Resort, Atlantic City, NJ</title>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 23 Dec 2007 18:12:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://thrombosite.com/wp-content/uploads/poker-room-review-atlantic-city-hilton-casino-resort-atlantic-city-nj-0.jpg" alt="Poker Room Review: Atlantic City Hilton Casino Resort, Atlantic City, NJ" title="Poker Room Review: Atlantic City Hilton Casino Resort, Atlantic City, NJ" align="left"/" alt="Poker Room Review: Atlantic City Hilton Casino Resort, Atlantic City, NJ" title="Poker Room Review: Atlantic City Hilton Casino Resort, Atlantic City, NJ" align="left"/>    I drove down to Atlantic City, New Jersey from my home in Boston, Massachusetts to see how the poker scene was playing out in this East Coast gambling mecca.  I left at 3:00 AM on a Saturday morning, stopped only briefly for coffee and a short nap, and arrived refreshed and ready for action at 9:00 AM. </p>
<p>My first stop was the Hilton – the southernmost poker room on the strip known as the boardwalk.  My plan was simple.  I parked on the street next to the Hilton at a meter – for about $4 in quarters.  I would then play successively at each poker room, from one end of the boardwalk at the Hilton, to the other end at the Showboat.  In between I would hit, in order, the Tropicana, Caesar&#8217;s, the Wild<br />
    West, Bally&#8217;s, Resorts, and the Trump Taj Majal.  If I had any time remaining during my first day I would take a jitney to the marina area of Atlantic City – about two miles or so from the boardwalk, and play at Harrahs and the Borgota, before returning back to my car at the Hilton by jitney. <br /><span id="more-18"></span><br />I kicked things off at the Hilton, remembering that two years earlier, when I had played there, the place was just kicking off huge plans to expand and upgrade the room.  The room had been rocking back then – all newly renovated and overlooking the Atlantic Ocean from the impressive casino&#8217;s second floor.  There were over a dozen tables in full action including limit hold&#8217;em and stud besides no-limit hold&#8217;em.  The future looked bright indeed. </p>
<p>Alas.  I was hugely disappointed to find that the upstairs room was no more – though players talked about returning to some smaller new space that was under renovation.  Today, and for the past few months, they were downstairs, next to some blackjack tables.  Their once proud, bursting room had been reduced to one table on this Saturday morning of Veteran&#8217;s Day weekend.  And though the floor person said this was a slow time, knowing players told me that there might be one or two other tables as the day progressed.  My, how the mighty had fallen. </p>
<p>Even so, my playing experience was relaxed and pleasant.  The room is a peaceful alternative to the other rooms in Atlantic City.  The patrons at my table eagerly told me why they liked it here.  &#8220;It&#8217;s not full of hot shot kids and drunks,&#8221; said one poker player.  &#8220;It&#8217;s more quiet than the big rooms,&#8221; added another player helpfully. </p>
<p>And so it was. </p>
<p>The room has the standard rake of 10% up to a maximum of $4.  There is also a bad beat jackpot of $1 taken from the pot.  Aces full of jacks beaten qualifies you for it – and you have to have two aces in your hand to hit it. </p>
<p>There was a $1/2 no-limit game when I was there.  They expected maybe another table – of $2/4 limit.  They never get higher than this, said a player, though another added that they sometimes get a $2/5 no-limit game.   </p>
<p>The comps are generous by any standard I&#8217;m familiar with.  Players earn $2 an hour in the $1/2 game, $3/hour at the $2/5 game and, officially, $5/hour at the $5/10 game that, apparently, never is spread (but if it were that would that be the highest player comp I&#8217;ve ever seen). </p>
<p>The poker room spreads a monthly tournament with a $250 buy-in and there&#8217;s also the annual New Jersey State Tournament.  They also list daily tournaments, but I was told by regular players that they only go off on the weekends.  The rest of the time the room is pretty much dead, as it was on this Saturday morning.  Things pick up a little for Friday night.  And Saturday night is their busy time – maybe with three or four tables going at once. </p>
<p>The level of play while I was there was, as advertised by the players, pretty subdued.  Players tended to be loose and passive pre-flop.  Then they all tightened up.  One player would come out for $10 and the rest would usually fold – perhaps with a brave soul calling and then folding on the turn to a $20 bet.   </p>
<p>In the hour or so that I played I saw maybe three rivers – usually in hands that were not bet on the turn or river.  As I said, it was indeed a subdued no-limit game.  I lost $15 pretty much just watching all but one hand.  I raised in late position with A-J after three players had called the $2 big blind.  I had folded all of my hands until then and hoped I might steal the pot.  I got called by one player in early position who bet the flop for $30 when the board was Q-Q-10.  I quickly folded and he showed me a queen.  As I said, nice relaxed game. </p>
<p>The physical playing conditions were okay – surely nothing special.  Wedged in next to table games wasn&#8217;t annoying in the morning – with the other games still relatively quiet.  But I imagine that ambient noise and passing traffic might be distracting and bothersome as the general attendance picked up later.  The chairs were general-issue banquet chairs – thinly padded but not uncomfortable.  The lighting was about average, surely acceptable though not nearly as nice or bright as some rooms designed for poker.  The dealers were all competent, helpful, and skilled… and unobtrusive.  The floor was friendly but knew less about the room than most of the players, and couldn&#8217;t answer any questions about the rake, player comps, or games being spread. </p>
<p>All in all, I&#8217;d come back to kill some time or if I had business on this end of the boardwalk.  If I lived in the area and wanted a nice place to come regularly, earn comps, and relax, I&#8217;d surely consider making this my regular room.  But as a tourist, craving action, I think I&#8217;d tend to gravitate toward the bigger, more lively places down at the other end of the boardwalk. </p>
<p><i>Atlantic City Hilton Casino Resort <br />Boston Ave &#038; The Boardwalk <br />Atlantic City, NJ 08401 <br />(609) 347-7111</i></p>
<p>pokernews.com</p>
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