Vanessa Rousso: Poker Babe
Hollywoood Casino at Penn National Poker Room
Hollywoood Casino at Penn National Poker Room annouces bad beat jackpot to start February 1, 2012.
Details to follow as they become known.
In poker, bad beat is a subjective term for a hand in which a player with what appear to be strong cards nevertheless loses. It most often occurs where one player bets the clearly stronger hand and their opponent makes a poor call that eventually “hits” and wins. There is no consensus among poker players as to what exactly constitutes a bad beat and often players will disagree about whether a particular hand was a bad beat.
Borgata Poker Open
Borgata Poker Open is underway.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Poker And A Wedding?
Atlantic City, the top spot for a poker weekend may soon be the top spot for a quickie wedding.
Read more here.
Hollywood Casino Penn National Poker Report
Hollywood Casino Penn National Poker Report
Played the daily tournament today. The buy in is $80 and 24 players were on hand. The dailys’ usually have 30 +/-, so todays turnout out was light.
Hollywood Casino at Penn National Poker Report
Hollywood Casino at Penn national holds daily poker tournaments.
Monday through Friday at 12:15. Monday’s buy in is $60 for 5000 chips. Tuesday through Friday $80 for 6000 in chips.
Tuesday through Thursday at 7:15 there is also an evening tournament with a $60 buy in for 5000 chips. Rounds last twenty minutes with a break every four rounds.
Daytime tournaments average around 30 players, in evening the average is probably 45.
Hollywood Casino at Penn national has a well-run poker room with 16 tables. The largest turnout they had was the Monday after Christmas, 127 poker players sat down to test their luck and skill at Texas hold-em.
I increased my stack to about 14,000 by the first break. When we went to the final table I was above average and third or fourth in chips.
We were down to six when I got pocket queens, blinds were 500-1,000. I raised to 3000, the short stack went all in for 2700, the big stack called my 3000.
The flop 2-5-7 off suit, I went all in.
The big stack snap called and flipped over his pocket kings.
They held up and that ended my day, two spots off the money.
Internet Poker in 2012?
From Lancasteronline.com:
Gambling opponents are not pleased with the Obama Justice Department’s recent legal opinion that in-state Internet gambling does not violate federal law.
In an opinion issued last month, the department opened the door for states and their lotteries to bring online gambling to residents, as long as it does not involve sports betting.
At the same time, gambling backers likely will increase pressure on Congress to codify the DOJ opinion into law.
The Justice Department says the federal Wire Act only prevents gamblers from wagering on sports outcomes online and that other in-state bets, such as poker, would be permissible.
Nevada is acting quickly to capitalize on the DOJ opinion, approving rules that allow companies in the state to apply for licenses to operate poker websites.
Meanwhile, a Democratic state legislator in New Jersey says he wants his state to be “the Silicon Valley of Internet gaming.”
Can Pennsylvania be far behind?
Cash-strapped states are desperate for money to pay for a myriad of concerns — education reform, transportation funding, bridge-and-road repair, police protection.
At the same time, states are under enormous pressure from the public to hold the line on taxes.
Online gambling, therefore, has emerged as a hot new revenue source.
Yet there is almost no thought given to the dark side of gambling, and that online gambling surely will make things worse.
Gambling states like to talk about all the good done by money raised through lotteries and contributed to senior citizen programs and other good causes.
But few states, if any, fully appreciate the human misery — broken marriages, child neglect and lost homes, lost jobs and, sometimes, lost lives — associated with addiction to gambling.
Even the economic benefits of gambling by states tend to be overstated. Nor do they necessarily solve states’ budget problems.
The Obama Justice Department legal opinion is just that — an opinion. It can be withdrawn. Courts can intervene and render it void.
That should give gambling opponents some hope that a change of heart — or administrations — will result in Obama’s controversial legal opinion eventually being reversed.






