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Poker Ban Product of ‘Over Reaction’ by Congress
May 8, 2007

Posted by Sue in : General , add a comment

The Concord Monitor carried a letter to the editor on May 6, 2007 regarding online poker, skill or luck, and the game’s current political problems in the US.

“A competitor of lesser ability, on a lucky day, can beat even the best in the business. It happened on June 6, 1919, when Man O’ War, perhaps the greatest racehorse of all time, lost the only race in his 21 starts. The horse that beat him was a 100-1 shot, and while his name might not be the reason the word appears above some of the biggest stories of all in sports and politics, it was, for the record, Upset.

Luck plays a role in every endeavor. But when it plays a big role, it’s called gambling, which in New Hampshire and many other states is illegal. The law treats games of skill and games of chance differently, but it’s not always easy to tell which is which.

Chess, for example, is considered to be a logical game of skill, poker a game of chance, or at least some mix of skill and luck. But the best chess player in the world could lose to a lesser player if, let’s say, gout attacked his big toe during the match. Luck, that day, would have been with the victor.

Last fall, Congress banned the use of credit cards for online gambling. The law, designed to address increasing reports of gambling addicts losing it all in games played over the internet, exempted horse racing and trading in the stock market. Poker players want a similar exemption, and we say, deal them in. Sure, there’s luck involved in poker, but it’s a game of skill.

Billions of dollars are riding on one bill that would grant poker an exemption and regulate it and another that simply defines poker as a game of skill.

The issue could be settled in academia. Several universities are studying the mathematics of the one-time saloon game and creating computer programs that could do for poker what IBM’s Big Blue did for chess.

A daylong meeting of professors and poker players was recently held at Harvard to discuss the luck-versus-skill issue.

The most convincing testimony, as reported last week by The Wall Street Journal, came from two siblings who grew up in Concord, Howard Lederer and Annie Duke. Lederer is a four-time world poker champion, and Duke is the all-time female leading money winner.

Poker, we’re willing to bet, will be proven to be a game of skill. In fact, mathematicians are close to being able to predict the move with the best odds of winning any given head-to-head contest between two Texas hold ‘em players. Duke cites simpler evidence. Poker has to be a game of skill, she told the Journal, because unlike the lottery you can lose on purpose if you want to.

Her brother played a different card. The “vast majority of high-betting poker hands are decided after all players except the winner have folded,” he said. So if you can win most of the time without even showing your cards, it isn’t because you’re lucky.

Chance will still come into play in the short run. As Lederer argues, making the perfect mathematically justified play every time works only against another great player in a pure situation. The best player in the world could still be beaten by a fish who makes a bone-headed move. But in the long run, skill prevails and fish lose.

Congress should grant poker its rightful status as a game of skill.

Everest Poker Announces Maria Maceiras European Women’s Poker Tournament Winner
May 8, 2007

Posted by Sue in : General , add a comment

In a press release today it was announced that Everest Poker, one of Europe’s leading online poker rooms, has celebrated the final of its first European Women’s Poker Tournament which took place in several countries and culminated in an online finale on April 19th.

Following the success of Everest Poker’s first live women’s event which took place in Paris, France in November 2006, 185 women took part in live tournaments organized in the Netherlands, Germany, Italy and Spain on March 8th 2007 to mark International Women’s Day. The 10 finalists of each of these live events and the French event were invited to pit their wits in an all-female poker tournament finale on www.everestpoker.net.

The winner of this event was none other than MarĂ­a Maceiras, a female player recently selected to be part of the Spanish Everest Poker Team.

She fought a fierce battle against 49 other players from Europe, and came across some surprises as she noticed that some female players had chosen male avatars as part of their technique to clinch the winning seat and be crowned the Everest Poker Queen.

Maria will be taking part in several other live and online tournaments as she represents Everest Poker at national and international poker tournaments.