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MNPokerMag to Extend Reach, Dakotas and Wisconsin

Since inception in mid-2009, Minnesota Poker Magazine could be found in every poker room in the state of Minnesota as well as Diamond Jo Casino in Northwood, Iowa and St. Croix Casino in Turtle Lake, Wisconsin.

That reach is about to get a little longer.  Starting February 1, MNPokerMag will be shipped to:

Dakota Magic Casino, Hankinson, North Dakota

Dakota Sioux Casino, Watertown, South Dakota

St. Croix Casino, Danbury, Wisconsin

Welcome to the covenant!

White Oak Casino – Updated Tournament Schedule

Sundays: CLOSED 

Mondays: CLOSED

Tuesdays: $25 Multi Table Tourney $2000 starting chips Sign-Ups 10am Tourney starts 12pm. The Poker Room is closed Tuesday Nights.

Wednesdays: $500 Guaranteed Multi Table Tourney. $30 Buy-In $3000 starting chips (1 $10 Add-On for $1000 more in chips Optional) Sign-Ups 5pm Tourney starts 6pm. Limited to first 33 players with alternates taken through first 2 rounds.

Thursdays: CLOSED

Fridays: High Roller Tourney $50 buy-in $8000 starting stack sign ups 5pm starts 6pm

Saturdays: Double Stacker Multi Table Tourney $30 Buy-In $4000 in starting chips Sign-Ups 5pm starts 6pm

White Oak Casino

Deer River MN 56636

Phone: 218-335-4339

December issue of MNPokerMag: Senti Wins MSPT Canterbury

IMPROBABLE: SENTI WINS MSPT CANTERBURY
One month after finishing seventh in the WSOP Main Event, Jason Senti came home with a splash
 
            What a way to announce his return.
            In his first live tournament since a seventh-place finish at the World Series of Poker in November earned him $1.3 million, St. Louis Park’s Jason Senti was crowned Minnesota State Poker Tour Champion at Canterbury Park on December 13 for $38,540.
            Senti outlasted Drew Johnson in a two-hour heads-up battle. 
            The storyline is pretty extraordinary. Senti has become, by nature, the face of Minnesota poker over the last few months. He has a charismatic, likeable personality to go along with a lethal poker game, and he rarely turns down a media request.
            On Day 1 of the two-day, $100,000 guaranteed MSPT Main Event, Senti showed up near the beginning of level two. With 136 players already registered — a blizzard nearly wiped out two days of qualifying that would likely have bumped the field up over 200 — Senti was mistakenly turned away from the registration table.
            “They said I was too late,” Senti laughed. “But they wound up letting me in anyways.”

And it’s a good thing he wound up playing. The $38,000 pales in comparison to $1.3 million, but there’s just something special about winning a big tournament in his home state.
            “Winning a tournament is always a good feeling, and this was especially true as it was the first tournament I have played in the midwest since making the November Nine last summer,” Senti said on his blog at BlueFirePoker.com. “I am glad I was able to make a good showing.  It wasn’t that long ago that I was screwing around in 2/4LHE and trying to satellite into the $1100 tourneys at Canterbury Park.  Its amazing to think how much everything has changed for me with regards to poker in the last 4 years.”
            Senti sat down with MNPokerMag to talk about the other ways his life has changed since November.

            Phil Mackey: What has your life been like since finishing seventh in the WSOP?

            Jason Senti: Right after I finished the final table I went out to L.A. to play in the North American Poker Tour event out there at The Bicycle Casino. Nothing special happened. I busted at the end of Day 1. And then I stayed and played a bounty shootout of some sort that wound up on TV a few days later. I busted pretty quickly there, but it was a lot of fun. Got to play with some very cool players.
            Then I came home and I tried to take it easy for a little bit, but before long — my wife and I have been looking for a new house for quite a while now. We’ve really been strongly considering it for over a year. Obviously doing well at the World Series this year made that a lot easier. So when we got back, there was a house we had our eye on for four months that we didn’t pull the trigger on necessarily because I had so much going on, and it was still available. So we ended up buying a house.
            PM: Been able to play much poker lately?
            JS: I’ve gotten to play some poker online. Not as much as I’d like.
            PM: Tournaments or cash?
            JS: Mostly cash. Because it’s my standard day-to-day, but I have played some tournaments. Pretty much I’ve just done a few Sundays, when they have the biggest ones. I played the USCOOP on PokerStars… I did not win that event.
            Actually, I’ve been running kind of mediocre at cash games. Not that I expect anybody to feel bad for me. But it looks like I’m still running red hot in tournaments.
            PM: How much has life changed for you over the last few months?
            JS: In ways it’s been way more than I expected, and in other ways not so much. The first four months right afterwards, I mean it was completely nuts, compared to what I was used to. The interview requests were just non-stop, every day, and I did almost all of them. I had a lot going on and I barely played poker, outside of traveling to Europe and some things. It was different than I expected.
            Since coming back, I’m kind of starting to get used to occasionally being recognized and all that. I was shocked again when I went to the (WSOP) final table — and when you’re in Vegas during or around November 9, a lot of people were there to watch, so I was stopped a lot there. But since coming home, it happens here nad there. For the most part life’s kind of similar, except I haven’t really gotten to settle into a normal groove yet, where I grind poker, play with my band, do whatever.
            PM: Any sponsorship stuff you want to touch on? Still rocking BlueFire gear.
            JS: I am, I’m still wearing BlueFire and love it. I’ve been working at BlueFire Poker now for two years. Great site. It’s a video poker training site, run by Phil Galfond. Then you should check out PokerStatic.com — Phil Galfond’s poker radio site. I do a free strategy show with Phil that people should check out. It’s really good. And if you don’t like ours, there’s also (a show) with Dang Brothers — ‘Urindanger and Trex313 online. They’re high-stakes, nosebleed, huge winners online for many years, and they do a strategy show. All that content on PokerStatic is free.
            As far as everything with PokerStars goes, they were great to me during the Main Event and it’s possible something will change long-term, but as of right now I am at least going to be going to a few tournaments for them. We’ll see where things go from there — the PCA in January.
            PM: What’s it like to sort of be the face of Minnesota poker?
            JS: Honestly, I’m really, really happy to win this event. It’s the first time I’ve played locally here since I even made the November Nine, so quite a while. Every year I like to come out and play the Fall Poker Classic, and last year I played the Great Minnesota Freeze-out and last year’s MSPT event at Canterbury.

            But I couldn’t play the Fall Classic this year because I had interviews, so I at least came out and watched. So yeah, to be able to come back, and the first one I play here I end up winning, it’s pretty awesome. I don’t even really know what to say. I’m very happy to be in this position, and I kind of wish there was more good, local events. Just more good poker in Minnesota.  
            PM: Do you like the ambassador role?
            JS: I don’t know, I’ve never really thought about that. I know I probably should have. More or less, I have no problem talking in interviews and doing whatever; smiling and kissing babies and all that, so if that’s what being an ambassador means, I’ll do that. I just know that I like playing poker a lot, and if people want to ask me what I think about it and what life’s about, I’m cool with that.
            PM: Do people ever get weirded out when you try to kiss their babies?
            JS: Usually people get a little frightened. It’s mostly because I grab random babies. If it were friends’ babies it might be different.

Online Poker Legislation: The Year in Review

2010 December 30, Matthew Kredell

www.pokernews.com

It was a roller-coaster year politically for Internet poker in 2010. The first half of the year was like a slow climb of anticipation up the track, then came the steep drop in June, a new high in July, another plunge in September and a series of loops in the final month.

Poker players got off the ride a little dizzy, slightly confused and standing virtually in the same place they got on.

There is no doubt that Internet poker made more progress on Capitol Hill in 2010 than ever before. Yet, it could easily be argued that the industry is worse off now than when the year began.

The gains were more symbolic in nature. You might say poker got in scoring position for the first time, but the runner was left on base. Nothing was put up on the scoreboard.

That’s not to take away from the accomplishment in July when the House Financial Services Committee approved Barney Frank’s bill to license and regulate Internet poker. To think that there was a positive vote on Capitol Hill to legalize the industry when four years ago the legislators were trying to shut it down shows how much progress has been made.

Another hearing on Internet gambling took place in the House Ways and Means Committee, indicating that Congress was serious about considering the possibility of regulation.

But with representatives concentrating on campaigning for the November election, the issue stalled there. It looked like that would be it for poker’s prospects in 2010, and then came the post-Thanksgiving news that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid was pushing for an Internet poker bill during the lame-duck session and the crazy weeks that followed.

Reid’s attempt to attach a poker bill to legislation extending Bush-era tax cuts didn’t materialize, and we’ll probably never know for sure how much of a chance Reid actually had to make it happen. But, for the first time, there was a buzz in the poker community that legalization was perhaps imminent.

We also got to see a preview of the sort of unpopular issues that players might have to endure to make legalization a reality. Leaked drafts of Reid’s proposal included a 15-month dead period for the industry to reset and at least a temporary separation of the U.S. and international player pools.

Even if Reid’s push never went far enough to justify the hype it received, it’s safe to say that December 2010 was the closest we have come to federal licensing and regulation of Internet poker.

On the state level, New Jersey’s State Senate became the first legislative body in the U.S. to pass legislation to legalize Internet gambling in November. Unlike at the federal level, the bill will maintain that progress heading into the new year, when it will go in front of the State Assembly.

Although the victories of 2010 have yet to bear any fruit, the defeats left visible damage.

First the long-delayed Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act finally went into enforcement in June, nearly four years after it was passed by Congress. On the one hand, the UIGEA has been ineffective in that it is intended to stop the funding of offshore poker sites, yet people are still playing online. However, the UIGEA has limited the ways to deposit and caused delays in withdrawals, while also encouraging the Department of Justice to become more brazen in going after payment processors.

In September, the Washington State Supreme Court upheld a 2006 law, overturning an appeals court ruling, making Washington the first state to specifically criminalize the play of online poker. PokerStars and Full Tilt Poker responded by withdrawing from the state, making Washington the first state in which the major sites are not accessible.

The November elections changed the configuration of Congress, and not in a good way for poker. Everyone likes to say that online poker is a bipartisan issue, and there are Republicans who support the rights of people to play the game. But the main opponents of poker are also Republicans, the religious right Republicans who oppose any form of gambling on a moral level.

It remains to be seen how the new Tea Party Republicans entering Capitol Hill respond to poker. But the Tea Party movement has given power to poker’s opponents, like Rep. Spencer Bachus (R-Ala.), who was named as the replacement for poker ally Frank as chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.

There are positives to come out of 2010. Major media was increasingly supportive of people’s right to play poker, additional congressmen saw the light that regulation is better than prohibition and the highest ranking member of the Senate — once an opponent of online poker — went public with his intention to push for legislation.

That the negatives left more of a mark just goes to show that the status quo can’t be maintained. The online poker climate will continue to get worse for U.S. players until legislation to license and regulate the industry is in place.

Player of the Year Update

Rank Player POY Points # of POY Cashes
1 Everett Carlton 202.5 11
2 Bruce Vang 171 9
3 Tom Burandt 135 11
4 3 Putts 118.5 10
5 Todd Melander 116.5 14
6 John Alexander 116 12
7 Chad Lashinski 108.5 3
8 John Morgan 106 7
  Doug Fink 106 9
9 Franco Cupello 102.5 2
  Mario Hudson 102.5 3
10 Robby Westrom 101.5 4
11 Mark Dunbar 97.5 4
12 Jeremy Dresch 93 4
13 Marinela Selseth 90.5 3
  Blake Bohn 90.5 8
14 Darren Hendrickson 89 5
15 Matt Leshovsky 75 3
16 Toan Pham 73 9
17 Jerry Starr 72 10
18 Yen Pham 68 2
19 Kou Vang 67.5 1
  Joe Matheson 67.5 1
  Kuong Yek 67.5 2
20 Bill Criego 65.5 5
  Kevin Marcotte 65.5 6
21 Curtis Vierstraete  65 1
  Brian Schallhammer 65 2
22 Chris Dolan 64.5 7
23 Jeff Havenor 64 6
  Rob Wazwaz 64 2
24 Tom Stenvig 63 2
25 Joshua Bersch 62.5 2
  Dashiell Saenz 62.5 1
26 Ron Imgrund 62 11
  Dan Dow 62 6
27 Leroy Martin 61.5 10
  Pete Baker 61.5 4
  Scott Heiligman 61.5 6
28 Ronn Winkler 60 2
29 Wayne Martinson 59 8
30 Patricia Clark 58.5 2
  Matt Hyland 58.5 4
31 Mark Herberg 57.5 1
32 Tony Moses 55 1
33 Shawn Aaberg 54 3
34 Tony Hartmann 53.5 4
35 Zach Turcotte 53 2
36 Jason Senti 52.5 1
37 Bill Sather 52 3
38 Jason Sell 51.5 2
  Mark Sandness 51.5 3
39 Eric Hinz 51 3
  Adam Dahlin 51 3
40 Pete Bigelow 50 3
  Drew Johnson 50 1
  Clayton Findley 50 1
41 David Marlow 49.5 2
42 Hank Mlekoday 49 6
  Al Ahmann 49 6
43 Thao Thiem 48 2
44 Bill Weber 47.5 8
  Andy Sjolund 47.5 2
  Dave Jeno 47.5 1
  Marc Lome 47.5 1
45 Steve Bissett 47 6
46 Ray Bendijo 46 4
47 Jason Banfi 45 2
  Robert Beedle 45 2
  Chinh Quatch 45 1
  Lance Harris 45 1
  Franceco Miceli 45 1
  Ryan Swanberg 45 1
48 David Mandt 44.5 10
  Brian Gabrielle 44.5 2
49 Mike Lingenfelter 44 2
  George Amon 44 10
50 Dan Favreau 43.5 9
51 Aaron Johnson 43 11
52 James Nytes 42.5 1
  Brian Halik 42.5 1
  Brad Feldman 42.5 1
  Matt Kirby 42.5 3
53 Terry Glarner 41.5 9
54 Bryan Mileski 41 2
  Dmitri Soudakov 41 2
  Brian Ward 41 3
  Stanley Bratten 41 2
55 Leo Fussy 40.5 2
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

Running Aces Paying Players to Play

Starting in January, Running Aces will pay its’ players for playing Live poker.  Earn $5/hr Monday – Thursdays all day in January.  You can cash out your earnings anytime, with no minimum.  Promotion starts at 12:01am on Monday morning and goes through midnight on Thursday each week. 
 
With earning $5 every hour, you don’t need a second job, just play poker at Running Aces.

Random Thought 6.0

There can be a direct correlation between the way you play (or perhaps more accurately, the length of time you choose to play) and the distance you must drive to get to the casino.

This is a strange phenomenon, but I find it to be somewhat accurate.  Oftentimes, if the player must travel a long distance to play, he or she will decide to play longer than otherwise.  It’s a mental mind-game, perhaps feeling as though you’re “getting your money’s worth.”  If you have to drive a long distance, it doesn’t make sense to hit and run.  You drove two hours, stay and play!  This can, of course, work to one’s detriment.  If you get up $300 in the first twenty minutes, reaching a goal of sorts, you are less likely to exit.  You may continue to play, thinking “Hey, I drove all this way for twenty minutes of play?”

It is also possible to lose your entire bankroll in less than an hour.  Then what?  Four hour round trip, and an hour of unequivocally unsuccessful playing?  That sounds horrible!  So, we continue to play, dipping into the wallet for another unanticipated buy-in.

This is not to say, necessarily, that the player who lives next door uses the best judgement either.  Oftentimes this player will go to the card room far too frequently.  He need not get his money’s worth!  He lives next door!  He can lose hundreds of dollars without much concern for travel, he can simply go back the next day!

This correlation does not universally hold true.  An experience card player will overcome this mentality.  But I, myself, have succumb to this silly thinking!  Losing four hundred dollars and driving home three hours is a lot better than losing a thousand dollars and driving home three hours!  Far too much time to think… and regret…

Jacob "Jaymind" Westlin is a semi-professional limit hold'em player with a strong, sarcastic wit. Jaymind also frequently contributes to Minnesota Poker Magazine's monthly publication. Email Jaymind at jayjay083@hotmail.com

The Great Minnesota Freeze Out

The next major tournament in Minnesota will occur January 26-30 at Canterbury Park, The Great Minnesota Freeze Out.  Qualifying heats for $250 will take place Wednesday through Saturday.  The $1,000 + $100 Main Event will go down on Sunday, January 30th starting at 10:30 AM.

For more information and structures, visit:

http://www.canterburypark.com/Poker/TournamentSchedule/GreatMNFreezeout2/tabid/274/Default.aspx

Bar League Standings

Minnesota Poker League    
Sin City Showdown Leaders as of 12/28/10    
       
  Player   Points
1 Jeremy Berger    2,828
2 Lee Price    2,662
3 Jennifer Wilson    2,367
4 Ricky Johnson Jr.    2,304
5 Tom Venne    2,148
6 Pete Wachsberger    1,974
7 Peter Konig    1,943
8 Craig Morningstar    1,906
9 Dallas Dewitt    1,820
10 Jess Buske    1,772
       
       
Chippy Poker League    
2010 Season 4 standings as of 12/28/10    
       
  Player   Points
1 Morten Arneson   612
2 Sharon Arneson   554
3 Troy Andren   537
4 Michael O’Kelly   374
5 “Gerry T”   346
6 Kristine “Lean & Mean” Lehet   308
7 Royce McCoy   302
8 Douglas “King Bee” Behrens   290
9 Michael A Flasch   277
10 Kim Griffith   248
       
       
WPT – Amateur Poker League    
Southern MN 2010 Regional Leaderboard as of 12/28/10  
       
  Player   Points
1 Bob Watson   14,954
2 Al Daugherty   12,687
3 Laurel Bahn   11,432
4 Anthony Lorinser   10,736
5 Debbie Arens   8,969
6 Wally Behr   8,634
7 Allan Litwin   8,617
8 Timothy Smith   8,456
9 David Dorn   8,397
10 Tom Lacrosse   8,154
       
       
Straight Flush Poker Tour    
Winter 2011 Leaders as of 11/14/10    
       
  Player Wins Points
1 John Shively 1 524
2 Jose Rivera - 491
3 Brandon F 1 490
4 Amy Hilsgen - 453
5 Al Childs 1 445
6 Dave Fadness 1 401
7 Greg Wiley - 398
8 Ivan Sisto - 370
9 Kathy Caron - 369
10 Tim Bouffleur - 333
       
       
Little Poker League    
Season: 14 “10K Session 3″ as of 11/14/10    
       
  Player Wins Points
1 Shane Quiram 4 1,460
2 Will Fisher 2 1,025
3 Sheila Lindell 5 825
4 Gary Anderson 2 750
5 Rich Hoiland 6 740
6 Sam Johnson 3 675
7 Justin Loy 4 670
8 Kathy Swenson 3 670
9 Rowdy Schipper 2 645
10 Kirk Kuznia 3 610

Nels Peterson Wins National Championship

Story courtesy of Minnesota Poker League

Nels Peterson did it. The hottest player in the Free Poker Network continued his amazing run and padded his already impressive league resume with a National Championship, outlasting the 24 players who gathered for the exclusive $20,000 cash finale at the Golden Nugget in downtown Las Vegas. Nels cherished the moment when he realized it was all over, clutching the national championship trophy and taking a moment to let it sink in. For Nels, nothing but first place was his goal, having come so close in the past (2009 Fall Spectacular Runner Up – WSOP Circuit Caesars Palace).

The exclusive field of 24 players had a total of 10 representatives from the Minnesota Poker League, the most by far from any other region in the Free Poker Network. Minnesotans captured $11,050 of the $20,000 prize pool!

Nels got off to a great start in the tournament and some good karma may have helped him. With 20 players left, Nels called Jeff Steiner’s (from Missouri) 3k preflop push with pocket tens to Jeff’s pocket Queens. Nels ended up making quads and the high hand of the day award simultaneously. Feeling bad for Jeff, he gave $50 high hand prize back to Jeff, who then immediately proceeded to win $700 in the 1-2 No Limit game!

Anthony Thompson from White Bear Lake showed aces 5 times in this tournament! He rolled to the final table and came up just short, placing 3rd for $1,750.

MNPokerMag 2009 - 2013 MNPokerMag Admin