Marc Weis wins Running Aces “Mayhem” Tourney

Running Aces Harness Park held a $500 “Mayhem” tournament yesterday, and Marc Weis outlasted 111 entrants to take home the $12,457 first place prize.

In addition to the prize pool, Running Aces gave away $2,500 in prize money randomly to the final table.

Tournament players began the day with $25,000 in chips and 40-minute blind levels.

Results:

1st place – Marc Weis $12,475.

2nd place – Jake Rivard $8465.

3rd place - Mike Reich $6237.

4th place – Zach Turcotte $4901.

5th place – Toan Pham $3564.

6th place – Mike Sederstrom $2673.

7th place – Nancy Anderson $2228.

8th place – Tony Swanson $1782.

9th place – Sue Roberts $1337.

10th place – Sean Fikes $890.

3-Card Poker at Shooting Star, paying out almost $20,000

For those interested in changing things up a bit, Shooting Star Casino will be hosting a 3-Card Poker tournament on the 2nd Sunday of each month.  The next one takes place on Sunday, June 13.

The buy-in is only $20 and they are guaranteeing a $10,000 payout to the top 7 spots and $5,000 to 1st!  And they also have ten $100 dollar winners each round with 7 rounds, all semifinalists get $100 as well.  So the total payout is $19,800.  Not only that, each registered guest receives $10 off dining, and every paid entry receives a $15 BJ match play

Registration starts at 2:00, play begins at 3:00 pm.

Check it out, this sounds like a blast and is definitely a sweet deal!

Bryan Mileski is the President and Publisher of Minnesota Poker Magazine, and also the co-founder of the Mid-States Poker Tour. Contact Bryan at bryan@mnpokermag.com

Minnesota State Poker Championship Schedule – Canterbury

Minnesota State Poker Championships
May 19 – 23, 2010

Finals: Sunday, May 23, 10:30 AM
Directly Buy-In at $1000+$100 or Win a Seat through a Qualifying Heat

Finals Structure:  http://www.canterburypark.com/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=y9gnHuLOgbM%3d&tabid=369

Qualifying Heats: May 19 – 22
$220+$30

Each Heat plays down to 20% of entrants who each win a seat into the Finals with no additional entry fee!

Heat #1 Wednesday, 5/19 at 6:30 pm

Heat #2 Thursday, 5/20 at 6:30 pm

Heat #3 Friday, 5/21 at 10:30 am

Heat #4 Saturday, 5/22 at 10:30 am

Heat #5 Saturday, 5/22 at 6:30 pm

Satellite play begins Monday, May 17th

Little Poker League Sending 8 to MSPT-Northern Lights

With the chance to play in prestigious tournaments and for lots of cash, the Little Poker League has been booming and becoming increasingly popular as it is providing players the opportunity to play Texas Hold `em for free.  Players compete in a points based tournament structure, attempting to qualify and play in the Main Event.

They are currently in the middle of thier “Bracelet” series where they will be awarding eight –  $1,100 Minnesota State Poker Tour Main Event seats at Northern Lights Casino in Walker, MN.  That’s right, “8″ seats!

During the “Bracelet” series, LPL will again be playing for a Tournament Entry Chip!

100 TEC’s will be awarded during the “Bracelet” series; players that win a TEC will compete on June 5th in the Main Event.

TEC rules will remain the same as in every previous series:
The TEC cannot be traded, sold, transferred or given away. If a TEC holder cannot make the “Bracelet” Main Event the seat becomes dead. A player can turn the TEC back into the Little Poker League and that chip will be put back into play, time permitting. Players winning multiple TEC’s will have $5,000 added to their starting stack, for every additional TEC won.

The majority of the TEC’s will be awarded in the Final Tournament at the end of each session; as always, additional TEC’s can be picked up through promotional tournaments such as Sit-N-Go Shark or TEC Nights. (TEC Nights include any additional promotional tournaments or used for league expansion)

As previously stated, the top eight winners will receive a seat to the Minnesota State Poker Tour valued at $1,100! There is NO cash option during this promotion.

This is a fantastic opportunity for players to have a shot at large paydays for free. Joe Matheson took home $51K in the most recent MSPT event held at Running Aces.

For more information on participating in the Little Poker League, visit:
www.LittlePokerLeague.com

For details on where to play, visit:

http://www.littlepokerleague.com/index_files/Page359.htm

Bryan Mileski is the President and Publisher of Minnesota Poker Magazine, and also the co-founder of the Mid-States Poker Tour. Contact Bryan at bryan@mnpokermag.com

MSPT Northern Lights just around the corner…

For anybody planning on heading up to Northern Lights Casino in Walker, MN for the June 9-13 Minnesota State Poker Tour event, be sure to check out hotel offers and a full event schedule.

Last time Bryan and I “invaded” Northern Lights, we came equipped with beer pong tables… Just throwing it out there…

So far, the the winners of the previous three MSPT events — John Dragich, Jeremy Dresch, and Joe Matheson — have taken home $34,000, $36,000, and $51,000 respectively.

Players can enter for as little as $60, and the two-day Main Event provides 50-minute levels and 15,000-chip starting stacks.

Feel free to email myself or Bryan with any specific questions.

Phil Mackey is a sports radio personality at 1500 ESPN Twin Cities. He's also the editor and publisher of Minnesota Poker Magazine, and the co-founder of the Minnesota State Poker Tour. Contact Phil at phil@mnpokermag.com

Leave the gamblers alone!

An interesting article defending poker and gambling.

From TownHall.com
By John Stossel

Some of us like to gamble. Americans bet a hundred million dollars every day, and that’s just at legal places like Las Vegas and Indian reservations. Much more is bet illegally.

So authorities crack down. They raided a VFW branch that ran a poker game for charity. They ban lotteries, political futures markets and sports betting. They raid truck stops to confiscate video poker machines. Why?

On my Fox Business News show tomorrow night, Chad Hills of Focus on the Family (www.focusonthefamily.com/) says: “These machines have been shown to be extremely addictive. That’s a huge concern, primarily for kids, because it’s hard to keep them away.”

Well, I certainly agree kids shouldn’t gamble, and some people do wreck their lives. But why can’t adults be left to do what we want to do?

Hills and Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., both eager to ban gambling, talk about “addiction” leading to bankruptcy, crime and suicide.

I’m skeptical. People are responsible for the consequences of their bad habits. I thought Focus on the Family and conservatives like Kyl believed in self-responsibility.

On my show, professional poker player Andy Blochpoints out that, legal or not, gambling already goes on everywhere. Prohibition doesn’t rid society of an activity. It drives it underground, where it’s less visible and less subject to respectable social conventions.

As for people getting into trouble, Bloch noted that after online gaming was legalized in the United Kingdom, “they found that there was no significant increase in the number of problem gamblers.”

Hills, on the other hand, claims that a 2006 anti-Internet gaming law reduced gambling. “People say this drives gambling underground,” he added. “I’m like, good, drive it underground.”

I point out that people still find the gambling sites.

“But it makes it extremely difficult. You have to be fairly desperate to do it.”

I doubt that anyone who wants to gamble illegally has trouble doing it. And let’s not forget the official corruption that black markets encourage. Law-enforcement people take bribes to look the other way. It’s an old story.

Hills claims that the 1999 National Gambling Impact Study concluded that 15 million Americans are problem and pathological gamblers. But like many people who want to ban things, he distorts the data. The study’s 15 million “problem gamblers” included people who might get in trouble.

“Ninety-nine percent of the American public has no problem with gambling,” Bloch says. “They should have the freedom to gamble if they want to gamble online. There is no casino that is being forced into people’s homes.”

By the way, Hills said he’d oppose legal gambling even if it weren’t associated with wrecked lives. Why? “Gambling is the art and the science of deception that feeds on the exploitation of human weakness for the sole purpose of monetary gain.”

To that, I say, so what? Will they ban the stock market next? Filmmaking is the art and science of deception. Poker is just a game where deception and bluffing are the skills.

For self-responsible adults, gambling can be fun and harmless. A free country is supposed to treats adults as though we are self-responsible. Government should let us learn from our mistakes rather than treat us like children.

Despicably, while government outlaws private gambling (at least that which competes with the well-connected casino interests), it runs its own gambling operations: state lotteries. And what a scam they are! States offer terrible odds. The evil casinos take about 1.4 percent of each bet at the craps table. State lotteries take 50 percent of each bet. Compounding the damage, states spend tax money to promote their lotteries to the poor, who are led to believe that the lottery, rather than hard work, is the route to becoming millionaires. Rich people buy few tickets.

So governments push their own inferior games while outlawing better ones run by private business. That’s insane. People gamble anyway, criminals get involved, and by forcing Internet gambling offshore, America loses a $12 billion industry.

In “On Liberty,” John Stuart Mill wrote, “Over himself and over his own body and mind, the individual is sovereign.”

Sovereign. Hear that, busybody politicians?

Phil Mackey is a sports radio personality at 1500 ESPN Twin Cities. He's also the editor and publisher of Minnesota Poker Magazine, and the co-founder of the Minnesota State Poker Tour. Contact Phil at phil@mnpokermag.com

May Feature: A “farm” system for the big leagues?

Mike, Ken, and Jess -- co-founders of RRPL

A “Farm” System for the big leagues?
The River Rat Poker League is a monthly home game dedicated to sending players to HPT and MSPT events

From the May issue of MNPokerMag

Three hours northwest of Minneapolis, in a little town called Verndale, Mike Lovelace, Jess Geesey and Ken Hamilton have put together possibly the finest home poker game in the entire state.

Ten-thousand-chip starting stacks, 30-minute blind levels, and most importantly, a wide-ranging pot-luck food spread that is totally out of this world.

The River Rat Poker League — a monthly home game consisting mostly of out-state players that primarily awards tournament seats into HPT and MSPT events.

“It mainly started as a way to get seats into the Heartland, just because nobody could really dish out the money to play in those events,” says Mike Lovelace, who owns Lovelace construction and purchased his current home — the site of the RRPL — in 1979. “So you spend $30 or $40 at a time in our tournaments and have a chance to win your seat.”

The RRPL, which was co-founded two years ago by Lovelace, Geesey and Hamilton, draws from a pool of approximately 120 out-state players, rarely drawing fewer than 40 for an event. The idea of a satellite-based home game dawned on Lovelace after he qualified for an HPT event through a home league in Fargo, ND.

“The chance of getting big money kind of intrigued me,” he said. “There’s a lot of players around here and in the Free Poker Network (bar league) that want to go to the next level. So we just talked about it for three or four months, and we put it together hoping to get 20-25 people. The first event we had over 50.”

The tournaments award points based on results, and prizes are handed out for both individual events and for seasonal stretches. The biggest prizes are typically buy-in packages to an HPT or MSPT event of the player’s choosing.

“We have players that nobody’s really heard of that are really decent players, but they’re known well throughout this area,” Lovelace said. “And I think that’s why we’re so successful. With our structure we have, and the quality of play we have, it’s kind of like poker 101 — We set our structure so people know what to expect when they’re in an ante tournament, how to play against good players.”
Geesey says RRPL events help players prepare for that next step.

“Probably at least 80% of our players had never played in an ante tournament until our events. Antes change your play up a lot, so you’ve got to get used to how much to bet pre-flop, etc.”
Lovelace estimates that River Rat players have earned approximately $16,000 in HPT events over the last two years, including Brian Niemann, who final tabled the HPT Red Rock event in Las Vegas earlier this year for $6,925.

Not a bad return on investment.

Phil Mackey is a sports radio personality at 1500 ESPN Twin Cities. He's also the editor and publisher of Minnesota Poker Magazine, and the co-founder of the Minnesota State Poker Tour. Contact Phil at phil@mnpokermag.com

Harrah’s leads list of online poker lobbyist spenders

So far in 2010, more than $5 million has been spent on online gambling lobbying, which is interesting considering the UIGEA is set to officially kick in on June 1.

Topping that list, according to a recent report (thanks to Pokerati for organizing this into a coherent post), Harrah’s has spent $1.2 million, followed by the Poker Player’s Alliance ($785,000), the UC Group ($717,000) — which is a voice for European payment processors — and others.

Considering Harrah’s hired former Party Gaming CEO Mitch Garber in April, 2009, it only makes sense that they would be leading the charge locally to regulate online gaming. Harrah’s could see huge returns if and when the World Series of Poker launches a U.S.-based online gambling business.

For more on the online poker lobbying pie, click here.

Phil Mackey is a sports radio personality at 1500 ESPN Twin Cities. He's also the editor and publisher of Minnesota Poker Magazine, and the co-founder of the Minnesota State Poker Tour. Contact Phil at phil@mnpokermag.com

Shades or No Shades?

I don’t hear this subject come up often which is surprising actually…but I read a blog by Daniel Negreanu that he recently did for PokerNews.com and I found it interesting to think about.

Should wearing sunglasses at the poker table be banned? 

I guess I’d lean toward banning them (since I don’t wear them) though I have worn them in the past.  From time-to-time if I’m running bad or on a cold streak I may put them on just to change things up.  It can sometimes help me to focus more, blocking out things around me, it can feel like I’m in my own little world and nobody can see me.  If I do use them I use them more for my own concentration than I do to not give off tells.  People tend to talk to me less about random topics if they can’t make eye contact.

Its much more difficult for players to keep it together when in a big pot if they can’t hind behind shades.  We’ve all been in that uncomfortable situation where our opponent is staring us down and we’re trying to figure out where and how to look so we don’t give the wrong signal (or the right signal).  If you’re wearing sunglasses, its easy to sit behind them and not give off any tells.

Here’s what Daniel Negreanu had to say:

I can’t wait to play poker tomorrow! I’m so freaking excited about this show. I put in a decent amount of work on my 6 handed game online and I feel really good about it. That, plus I had a bit of an epiphany poker wise while in Monte Carlo. All signs to me doing well, but we shall see.

One thing I love about our show, is that FINALLY there is a rule in place where you can’t hide like a chicken behind sunglasses! I swear every TV producer should ban sunglasses entirely from any televised event. They are so bad for poker on so many levels. Poker wouldn’t be on TV if everyone wore hoodies and sunglasses to hide their eyes.

I’m so happy when I see online guys like Tom Dwan, Patrik Antonius, and Phil Galfond man up by not hiding behind shades. The majority of the best players in the world DO NOT wear sunglasses. One of the biggest differences between live and online poker is the ability to see your opponent. Eyes and all. Doyle Brunson doesn’t wear shades. Phil Ivey doesn’t wear shades.

If anyone wants to start a petition to ban them in any form of poker whether it’s tournaments, cash games, or televised events I’d do whatever I could to help. If you wanna wear shades when you play online, go for it! If you wanna play on The PokerStars.Net The Big Game then you’ll just have to man up and take those silly things off! There are other key reasons why sunglasses should absolutely be banned at a poker table, but I won’t get into that.
Let’s just say that guys like Russ Hamilton would appose such a ban. I heard Durr say it on High Stakes Poker last week and he is absolutely right. You should always be uncomfortable playing high stakes poker against someone wearing sunglasses. I’m not making this up, it’s just a fact. Banning sunglasses helps to protect the integrity of the game against cheating. For that reason alone, they should be completely outlawed from poker. No other sport or organization would allow competitors a device that makes it easier for them to get away with cheating.

Bryan Mileski is the President and Publisher of Minnesota Poker Magazine, and also the co-founder of the Mid-States Poker Tour. Contact Bryan at bryan@mnpokermag.com

Another Minnesotan makes SCOOP final table

‘DAG55555′ from St. Cloud, Minnesota finished ninth in the $150,000 guaranteed PokerStars SCOOP event #14-M, limit Omaha eight or better event on Friday night.

The $530 buy-in event drew 429 players. ‘DAG’ earned $3,560 for his efforts, with ‘DaMurdera3′ winning the event for $36,892.

For full details of the event, check out the PokerStars Blog write-up by fellow Minnesota poker player/blogger David Aydt.

$150,000 Guarantee SCOOP Event #14-M Limit Omaha Eight or Better Results:
*denotes part of two-way deal
1. DaMurdera3 (las vegas) *$36,892.50
2. J. Steindl (Vienna) *$33,892.50
3. what is 7×6 (aventura) $21,986.25
4. culibrk1 (praha) $16,731.00
5. kjust (Cambridge) $11,797.50
6. deannadd (Long Beach) $9,116.25
7. plplaya (London) $6,971.25
8. Katja Thater (Hamburg) $4,826.25
9. DAG55555 (Saint Cloud) $3,560.70