The rules for the 2010 World Series of Poker were released this week and two rule changes/additions are getting a fair bit of attention and I think are worth bringing to your attention. The first change isn’t exactly a change at all, it’s more of an acceptance of the world as it is–cell phones, iPhones, Blackberries, Palms etc can be used at the table for texting/Twitter purposes. Last year there was a rule prohibiting players from using their communication devices at the table but with the explosion of Twittering that rule quickly went by the wayside.
You still can’t talk on the phone unless you’re one table-length from your seat but tweeting is now OK. Texting people at your table, however, is still strictly verboten. A lot of instant news came out of the WSOP via twitter and made social-media superstars out of Doyle Brunson, Erik Seidel and Joe Sebok (who has more (deleted) Twitter followers than you can count). And this year, as will last, you can follow the Absolute Poker twitter feed for news and pics and other info from the Amazon Room floor.
The other rule should make for some interesting times for the floorpeople. Rule 37 deals with Player Conduct, and one of those rules deals with something of a delicate subject–hygiene. As in, bad hygiene, and how it will no longer be tolerated. To quote directly:
All participants are entitled to expect civility and courtesy from one another at every Tournament table and throughout the Tournament area. Any individual who encounters behavior that is not civil or courteous — or is abusive in any way — is encouraged to immediately contact a Tournament official. This shall include, but is not limited to, any player whose personal hygiene has become disruptive to the other players seated at their table.
If you’re personal hygiene can be accurately described as “disruptive” I think it’s fair to say that this should be addressed. Quickly. It is something of a cliche that poker players are a malodorous lot and one I think is somewhat overstated. Most players, the vast majority even, are Irish Spring fresh. Or, close enough that you wouldn’t worry about getting in an elevator with them. Still, when you get 3,000 people in one room, and they’re in that room for 12 hours or more, under high-pressure situations, you’re gonna get the odd person who smells a bit funky. And, on occasion, you’ll get the guy who shows up at noon looking like he slept under a bridge and smells like he crawled out of a landfill. These are the people this rule will address and, having sat next to a couple of stinkers in my day, I think this is a wise move.
Whether Tournament Director Jack Effel and his staff will be equipped with Wet-Naps (or fire hoses) remains to be seen, but it’s good to see Harrah’s once again gently tweaking the rules to deal with situations that rule-abiding players just shouldn’t have to deal with.
Each time I think of 2010 I get this tingly feeling in my stomach. I have an amazing feeling about this New Year and I hope each one of you is blessed with good fortune and happiness. Anyone make any poker resolutions? How many said to become a better player? I know I did! So I decided to share my experiences and hopefully some great results going into the World Series of Poker 2010. I’ll be posting a series of blogs in the upcoming weeks on tips to help you keep those poker resolutions. I’ll also be doing the same for fitness and health on my website www.LaceyPoker.com
Maybe I have something here…if I have to post… I’ll have to stick to it!
Bonne chance,
Lacey
With 2009–and the decade–winding down it might be nice to peer in the rear-view mirror and look at some of the more interesting photos I took during the year. Unfortunately I can’t show the MOST interesting pics in my archives, many of them taken during the parties at the Aruba Poker Classic, but various morality clauses and extortion laws prevent me from doing so. Alas. Still, hope you’ll find some of these enjoyable:






Just a quick glimpse of the photos I took during the year. If you’d like to see more of the shots I took during the World Series of Poker or the Aruba Poker Classic just click the links and enjoy.
Long time no blog! How’s everyone’s holiday season so far? I’m doing quite well and finally have a chance to catch up and say hello. I’ve been working pretty hard the past few months and very soon all my hard work will have paid off. There are so many great projects and jobs I’ve been blessed to be apart of this year. One of them that some of you may know was hosting the WSOP final table for the Main Event. I had such a great time and can’t wait to show you the interviews, photos and even a few things you only get to know behind the scenes. I’d like to say a big Congratulations to Joe Cada! Yes many people are saying how lucky he was, but a lot of people didn’t watch every hand that was played out. Seeing only 1 hour of the ESPN table doesn’t even come close to what really happened at that final table. I was very impressed how Joe switched gears once they were down to four and how well really knew the table. Well played kid. From that final table I made it to my own final table in Costa Rica a few days later, but I’ll save that fun story for my next post.
Get ready for more blogs from me on this site and on my personal website www.LaceyPoker.com I’m going to be writing an end of the year wrap up there and will show previews here on Absolute. It’ll be filled in with tons of pictures, videos, and all my adventures I have yet to share with all my friends. I hope everyone is having a wonderful end to this 2009. Best wishes and Good Luck at the tables!
Lacey

November 18th, the biggest day in poker television history (since Lacey Jones was born, that is), was the day Poker2nite launched it debut episode. The hosts Scott Huff, otherwise known as “the hardest working man in poker media”, is the front man for the show. I think Scott describes himself best: “Being the funniest guy in poker is sort of like being the tannest albino, but hey, as long as I’m not the LEAST funny person in television, I’ll take it.” Joe Sebok plays the smartass sidekick there to add some extra wit. Joe and Scott’s combined sarcasm and extensive poker knowledge brings a dynamic to a news show like no other.

A familiar TV sitcom face, Dana Workman presents a segment each week titled The Weekly Misdeal, while Lacey Jones will hit the road as roving reporter in a regular spot We’ll Do It Live!, which deals out the scoop on the real men and women in poker’s land based pro circuit.
They’ve combined The Soup, The Daily Show and the best game in the world to entertain poker players of all levels. Poker2nite had it’s debut episode on FSN at 11pm ET, and the show was so well received that it will now be shown in 19 countries worldwide through Pokerchannel Europe. The show has weekly guests including recent appearances by Lon McEachern, long-time WSOP announcer on ESPN as well as Andy Bloch; poker player, blackjack savant and owner of about a dozen advanced degrees. Poker2nite is not the typical poker reality TV show or high stakes game, it brings its viewers the most exciting, clever and relevant poker news in the online poker and live event arena. Check out the Poker2Nite videos and watch the first two episodes to get a taste of what’s to come in the future of poker TV.
When you cover poker tournaments the one thing you don’t want is a reputation as a cooler. If you wander over to check the action or snap a few pics you don’t want the players scowling because they look at you as they would a black cat crossing their path. Now, I wouldn’t say that I have world-class cooling powers; not like my friend and fellow-blogger AlCantHang, who all-by-his-lonesome could’ve iced Jamie Gold’s epic hot streak during the 2006 Main Event. Seriously, no matter how thermonuclear you’re running, if Al saunters over be prepared for quads under quads or some other nightmare scenario.
But as a noted philosopher once said, “With great power comes great responsibility”. No, wait, that was Spider-Man. Heck, these days that counts as the same thing. Anyway, being a cooler isn’t entirely a bad thing. If an event is running a bit long and you’re waiting for just one player to bust before play ends for the night having a bona fide cooler on hand can be a positive boon. Oh, how many times did we tell Al to go check out a final table and, after waiting just a few minutes, hear a rousing ovation as some stricken soul was sent to the rail?
I don’t think my cooling powers are anywhere near Al’s level, but I am capable of destroying a promising tournament run just by showing my face. My first year in Aruba I wrote a post detailing the progress of a half-dozen players and, near the end of play, I made my rounds to see how they were doing. Within a few minutes five of them busted in turn–I walked over, saw a hand playing out, and seconds later my subject was morosely standing up and watching his chips ship across the table. I remember walking over to where player/author Matthew Hilger was sitting and I didn’t even reach his table before he was standing up and shaking hands. For a few minutes I had the Power, and I didn’t like it.
I had one memorable cooling episode during the most recent WSOP. I was following Day 2 of an event and happened to notice that in a Hold-Em tournament that had started the same day Adam “Roothlus” Levy and Brandon Cantu were among the early chipleaders. I walked over to the Brasilia Room and quickly found Brandon for a few pics. I couldn’t find Adam at first (something that’s normally easy to do) but after making a second orbit of the room I found him standing up as he and another player contested a huge pot. I squeezed off a shot or two before noticing the upturned cards on the table, and that’s when I saw that Adam was way behind in the hand. He saw me and said, “NOW you come to take my picture,” as he failed to catch up and the majority of his stack relocated across the felt.
It’s no fun to cooler someone when you don’t mean to, but in every big hand there must be a loser as well as a winner, and those moments of conflict is when compelling drama is made. I was again walking around Brasilia one day when I saw Lacey Jones playing in what I think was the $1,500 H.O.R.S.E. event. She was involved in a hand with James Van Alstyne, who, during the 2009 WSOP, won one H.O.R.S.E event and came second in another. Lacey looked to be a bit short on chips and this Stud hand could be a decisive moment, one that deserved my attention. There was also the fact that most people know Lacey as an always-smiling and always-sunny spokesperson and on-air personality. This was Lacey the Poker Player, and she was in a tight spot.

That’s Van Alsyne’s hand setting out chips for a bet, a bet that Lacey called. Though not until after some agonized deliberation:


After Lacey called the dealer tossed her the four of clubs, and I thought, “Uh, OK, maybe that gives her a flush draw??” I don’t recall if Van Alstyne bet again but he and Lacey saw sixth street and this time Lacey was dealt the ten of spades, which didn’t seem much better. “Straight draw?” I wondered a bit optimistically. Van Alstyne bet out and Lacey looked at her cards with an understandable lack of enthusiasm:

This time Lacey folded, not looking happy about it, and I meekly moved along. That’s one of the more delicate parts of covering poker tournaments, you don’t want to linger over someone else’s misfortune. And it doesn’t pay to have Lacey Jones think you’re a bad luck charm. Now of course I know there’s no such thing as luck, there’s no such thing as a cooler, that’s all mindless superstition and nonsense. Mindless superstition and nonsense…that lots and lots of people believe in, at least at some level. Think I’m gonna start remembering all the times players WIN big hands when I wander by. Good information to have handy the next time I’m accused of being a cooler.
If you asked your typical poker player “Do you think you’re a lucky, or unlucky” I’d bet that the vast majority would pick the latter. Poker players tend to remember their bad beats and not their brutal suckouts. Also, if you admit that from time to time you’ve been luckier than you deserved that is a de facto admission that you weren’t playing that well. And poker players tend to overestimate their skill about as often as they underestimate their good fortune.
I thought about poker players’ unusual relationship with luck as I watched Joe Cada win the World Series of Poker Main Event. Cada is obviously a good poker player, with years of solid results behind him (despite the fact that he’s just (expletive deleted) 21 years old). But there’s no denying that he got lucky at that final table. Very lucky. Like, freakin’ UNBELIEVABLY lucky. After losing a huge pot to Jeff Shulman with A-J to Shulman’s A-K Cada was down to a bit more than 2 million chips. That was about 1% of the chip in play, not even three big blinds, I think. He was toast. Done. Hit the bricks, pal.
But there’s that poker aphorism we’re so fond of repeating, “All it takes is a chip and a chair”. It’s odd to think of a 2-million stack being little more than table scraps; players started the Main Event with 30,000 chips and so that’s like combining the stacks of 67 long-dead donkeys. But Cada was down to the felt, dead in the water. To come all the way back would be a miracle.
Which is just what happened. Cada survived a race with Phil Ivey when his pocket fours held on against Ivey’s A-8. And then came the two hands that changed the course of poker history, as Cada doubled with pocket threes and pocket deuces against Shulman’s Jacks and Antoine Saout’s Queens, respectively. Twice Cada was all in and thoroughly crushed by his opponent’s overpair, and twice he flopped sets. A bit later, racing against Saout’s pocket eights with Ace-King, Cada rivered a King to sent the Frenchman out in third place to set up the heads-up battle with Darvin Moon. Which, of course, Cada won, along with the title, the bracelet, and $8.5 million dollars.
I’m not saying that Cada played these hands poorly, by the way. We could discuss the merits of pushing with small pairs all day and all night but it’s hard to make a pair in Hold-Em and, considering that these hands are drawn from a sample of 364 played at the final table I don’t know how much insight we can draw from them. But twice Cada found himself all-in and in jail, and twice the flop saved him. And as I watched his stack rise from the dead and these incredible reversals I wondered how that might’ve affected Cada’s psyche. Do you start to believe that you’re invincible, that the cards won’t let you lose no matter what? Do you start to believe in Destiny, that you have been touched by otherworldly powers in order for you to do great things in the future? Or, perhaps, do you worry that this is merely the setup for the soul-crushing fall that’s about to take place (and indeed that’s what I was thinking when Moon dominated heads-up play early on and seized a 3-1 chip lead). Or is Cada, even at his age, experienced enough to accept such good fortune in stride, even when it’s happening at the final table of the Main Event?
We got some insight into Cada’s thoughts when he posted a brief (and somewhat incoherent) note over at Two Plus Two. “Lets first by saying if anyone thinks I’m denying I got lucky at the final table then im not,” Cada wrote. A bit later he says, “Did I get extremely lucky during the final table of the main event? Yes I did, but as an extreme critic to my self play I was not mad about how I played any hand even though I got lucky.” And that is a salient point, both about the WSOP Final Table and about poker in general. You can make the reasonable play, the perfect play, even, and still lose. Ask Kevin Schaffel, who got all his chips in with pocket Aces to Eric Buchman’s pocket Kings and saw Buchman flop a set and turn quads. What can you do? Cada seems to make the same point here–the hands played out in a reasonable fashion and, most of the time, Cada would’ve found himself headed to the rail. Instead, against the odds, he’s the World Champion.
Every player who makes it to the final table benefits from good luck along the way. Whether it’s your table draw or you get action with your big hands or you simply suck-out in some egregious way, the massive Main Event field takes probability and psychology and twists them together in fascinating ways. Is getting incredibly lucky reason to feel ashamed, or superior to your vanquished foes? Poker players like to say that in the end the luck evens out, but how long does it take for that balancing to occur? I’ve heard quite a few professional players say that one lifetime isn’t enough for luck to find it’s equilibrium, that no one plays enough to give a true and final accounting of luck’s effect on the game. We understand the math, the statistics, and we know that in the long run luck doesn’t matter. But human beings live in the short-term, and it’s possible that the “short-term” covers everything from one hand to one’s career. How poker players deal with luck, how they even define it, will always be one of the most interesting aspects of the game,
I just wrote a little post over at the UB Blog about the action at the WSOP Final Table yesterday/today and one thing I’ve found myself wondering about is how well poker works as a spectator sport. I’ve covered a fair few final tables and, sure, there’s lots of action and tons of money and/or prestige at stake. The Main Event is one of the largest sporting events in the world, with a player-generated prize pool that dwarfs even the biggest events in golf, tennis, auto racing, and the four major team sports.
But playing a final table to its conclusion can take a long time. A very long time. Yesterday the November Nine started playing at noon Vegas time and finished up at six…AM. That’s 18 hours and we haven’t even crowned the champion yet, as Joe Cada and Darvin Moon will go toe-to-toe for God knows how long before finally deciding things. And that’s a long time to for a fan, no matter how ardent, to watch anything. Think about it, is there ANYTHING you would voluntarily do for eighteen consecutive hours. No matter how much you love Family Guy, no matter how much you love drinking beer and watching football, no matter how much you love having unlimited credit in a strip club, after three-quarters of a day you’ve probably pretty much had it. At the very least you gotta sleep, sometime.
To be sure there was a lot of excitement outside the Penn & Teller theater yesterday, as each player brought his own rooting section along. And there were hundreds of rabid poker fans wanting to see history in the making. This video from Raw Vegas should give some idea what the scene was like before the doors were opened:
But as day turned to night, and then day again, the crowd thinned and the energy in the room dwindled. This was perfectly understandable, as many fans left when their favorite was eliminated and others left as sheer exhaustion took hold. As I followed along with the coverage and read the Tweets of my friends covering the final table it was obvious they were all on their second, third, and fourth wind. Endurance is an important quality for poker players and that’s also the case for poker fans.
So does poker have a future as a spectator sport? There were huge lines winding through the halls of the Rio yesterday, they could’ve packed more people in if they had the space. Greg Raymer was quoted before play started that he hoped someday you might see a poker tournament played out in a football stadium, the stands packed with tens of thousands of cheering fans. I think that’s a bit optimistic, even the most popular players don’t have fans as, well, fanatical as sports teams. But as I thought about it the sport that kinda resembles poker when it comes to a spectacle is…cricket. Like poker, cricket matches can go on and on an on…heck, they have test matches in cricket that last weeks. You have constant activity in cricket, but not always decisive action. The ball gets bowled, the batter decides not to swing, the ball is bowled again…and this goes on all day. Sometimes the batter takes his whack and there’s running and scrambling, but there are long stretches where nothing much goes on.
And there’s a more laid back attitude in the stands. People have tea. They bring a book along. I watched a match once and there was a young couple sitting off by themselves who were engaged in a a serious make-out session. I’m not saying that you wanna have THAT kind of diversion going on in the stands but fans need to be able to get up, walk around, get something to eat, and come back to find some available seats. For a huge event like the November Nine you might see people willing to sit there all day, but if poker is going to attract big live audiences for more than the biggest prize in poker it can’t be a sit-there-all-day thing.
There’s also the fact that I don’t exactly know the rules of cricket, and many casual fans don’t exactly know the rules of poker. A more laid-back atmosphere in the stands could allow for discussion and debate about the hands as the play out. I concede that poker fans are unlikely to take such a genteel attitude towards the game, but a more laid-back attitude in the stands might lead to them being filled to the rafters more often.
Back to work after a week of wedding maddness with my little sister getting married on Sunday. I’ve been working so hard the past few months that even though last week was busy, it was nice to stop and focus on what really matters in life… family. It was so amazing to see all my family and long time friends all in one place to share my sister’s happiest moment. It’s these events that really get your head back on and show you who you really are and where you came from. You can read more about this special day on my website www.Laceypoker.com which by the way has just recieved a new facelift and will be fully relaunched in the coming days. So excited!
This week is filled with a few surprises that I wish I could let everyone in on, but will be quite evident what’s about to happen in the next two weeks. Finally all the hard work is begining to pay off and just in the nick of time! Don’t you hate that feeling of doing so much and never seeing any progress? Never give up people! Never.
What I can talk about is the WSOP’s November 9 and how excited I am to be doing the bust out interviews again. All this week I’m getting ready for my questions and would love to hear back from you guys on any specific ones you might like me to ask. I can’t promise that I’ll be able to use all of them, but I really would like my Absolute Poker community to have a sense of connection while watching this final table play out.
Wish me luck for the next coming weeks. It’s going to be a fun ride. See y’all at the tables!
Lacey
Its been kind of slow the past few months after the WSOP, but thats the way I like it. I have been involved in a lot of stuff thats coming up in the next few months which i am really excited about.
I just looked at houses about an hour ago here in Vegas. Every house had aspects I loved and aspects I didnt. I am basically looking for a house with a big backyard with trees and a pool/spa and some sort of waterfall. I love the ocean, and since the nearest ocean is a 4 hour drive, I have to settle for a nice waterfall when I am here in Vegas. I found one great house with the perfect backyard, but had a few interior problems, then I saw a house with a perfect inside, but the backyard was lacking. But it was my first time going out and looking so im sure I will find my dream house soon. The market is great in Las Vegas right now, and since I spend alot of time here it makes sense to buy.
I picked up a nice win in poker over the weekend too. Taking down a 100 dollar buyin for approx 13k. It had about 640 players. Let me tell you, theres no greater feeling in poker for me then taking down a big tournament, especially on a sunday which was when this one was. When I won I let out a huge “Yesssssss” and my roomate was like what happened? It feels so good to get a win because it gives me great confidence coming into September and October which are both big months for poker culminating in the Aruba Poker Classic.
The Aruba Poker Classic is my favorite tournament of the year, its lush greenery, an ocean, drinks, great people, and plenty to do on the island. What more can you ask for? I urge anyone to try to get there any way you can. Fly, drive a car-boat, or even swim from Miami. Last year I went scuba diving at a reef and saw some amazing fish. Including one that resembled a snake which kind of caught me by surprise. I also went golfing, and ate at some great steakhouses. (If you love steak, they get their beef from Argentina, which has by far the best steak if ever tasted) If you dont want to direct buy, theres a great satalite happening september 13th on Ultimate Bet, which guarantees 50 seats, thats a great way to win your way in cheap.
Thats all for now, good luck at the tables!
-Matt Vengrin
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