Jeff Simpson of the Las
Vegas Sun sees dangerous
trend in Nevada's inaction
on growing online action
Nevada gaming regulators
need to get tough, in a
hurry.
The state's Gaming Control
Board takes great pride in
being strict enforcers of
the rules that govern Nevada
gambling.
And they are - for the most
part.
But the meteoric growth of
the poker business has
blinded the gaming
industry's cops, and they
seem unable to deal with the
new realities that have
accompanied the rise of
Internet poker.
Playing poker online for
money is illegal in Nevada,
according to state law, and
the federal government says
it is illegal everywhere in
the United States, a stance
the online poker business
hopes the courts will
overturn.
Nevada gaming regulators
originally took a tough
stand against Internet
poker.
They forced prospective
gaming license applicants to
sell their ownership stakes
in online casinos. They
prohibited poker tournaments
in state casinos from
licensing online poker rooms
to conduct official
satellite tournaments that
send winners to play in
Nevada events.
They did so because almost
every top Web poker room
accepts bets from the United
States, including Nevada.
Regulators considered the
poker Web sites to be
lawbreakers.
That was when the online
poker business was still
relatively small. But after
Tennessee accountant Chris
Moneymaker parlayed his $40
PokerStars satellite victory
into a (non-officially
sanctioned) entry into the
2003 World Series of Poker
championship event at
Binion's Horseshoe and took
down the top prize of $2.5
million, the online business
exploded.
Online poker sites ran
countless commercials on the
dozens of hours of televised
poker shows available each
week.
The revenue stream fueled
more poker TV shows. With
Moneymaker's win and the TV
exposure, Web poker boomed,
as did revenue in Las Vegas
poker rooms and the
tournaments they held.
The World Series of Poker
championship event drew 839
entries in 2003, a number
that jumped to 2,576 in
2004, 5,519 last year and is
expected to reach 8,000 or
more this year.
Those skyrocketing numbers
have been driven by online
sites.
One week ago PokerStars held
a single online satellite
tournament that will send an
incredible 234 players into
this year's WSOP
$10,000-entry championship
event. Dozens of other sites
will send thousands more
entrants.
What I find astonishing is
that the Gaming Control
Board allows the properties
hosting major poker events
to ally themselves so
closely with poker Web sites
that invite players to break
the law.
At the WSOP, now under way
at the Rio, Harrah's sold
official hospitality rooms
just steps away from the
poker competition to several
online poker rooms: Doyle's
Room, Bodog and Ultimatebet.
Other sites rent luxurious
suites at the host hotel,
the Rio.
. . .
From the felt tops of the
WSOP poker tables, which
feature a PartyPoker logo,
to World Series media
director Nolan Dalla, also a
top spokesman for PokerStars,
the incestuous relationship
between legal Nevada casino
poker and illegal online
poker has never been
clearer.
Harrah's can get away with
the close partnerships
because the online operators
use their Web sites' "dot
net" suffix, meaning that
they call themselves by the
names of their "educational"
sister sites that offer free
play instead of poker for
money.
Ultimatebet.com, where you
can bet, with a wink becomes
Ultimatebet.net, where you
can't. So Harrah's isn't
technically partnering with
illegal operators, and
regulators aren't
technically allowing a
rule-breaking partnership.
Control Board Chairman
Dennis Neilander says the
distinction between the dot-coms
and the dot-nets matters and
that regulators don't see a
problem with the dot-net
marketing at the WSOP.
He's wrong. The dot-net
distinction shouldn't make a
difference. Nevada casino
operators shouldn't be
partnering with illegal
online casino operators - or
their shadow sites.
It's time for Nevada
regulators to say enough is
enough and prove they still
have the backbone to stand
up to the big money of
online casinos.
Jeff Simpson is business
editor of the Las Vegas Sun
and executive editor of its
sister publication, In
Business Las Vegas.
