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Inaugural tournament already breaking records
Jeremy Evans
April 28, 2005

Not only has the first tournament at Lake Tahoe's World Series of Poker Circuit Event made someone $31,000 richer, it also vaulted the area into the poker record books.

A record 542 players signed up for Wednesday's $200 buy-in, No-Limit Hold'em tournament at Harveys Resort and Casino. It was the largest turnout for a single-day tournament in Northern Nevada history.

"It has been great," said Vince Contaxis, Harveys' Poker Room Manager. "This has far exceeded any of our expectations."

First-place payout for the tournament is $31,563, with final table action scheduled for today at 4 p.m. On Tuesday, more than 200 people played two rounds of Super Satellites. These are low buy-in games that eventually lead to its winners earning their way into the $10,000 buy-in No-Limit Hold'em main event, scheduled for May 8-11.

Seven players were awarded seats into that event based on Tuesday's action. The 228 entrants into the Super Satellites also set a WSOP Circuit Event record.

Three other venues have already hosted circuit events: Atlantic City, San Diego and Las Vegas. There is one more circuit event held in New Orleans from May 18-28 before the WSOP Tournament of Champions begins on June 2 in Las Vegas.

While the tournament is breaking area records, the live poker room inside Harveys is also bustling. Seventeen tables, ranging from low-limit games to no-limit games, were spread across the room Wednesday afternoon. At that time of day, there usually would be seven games going.

"Frankly, it doesn't surprise me at all," said Nolan Dalla, WSOP Media Relations Director and avid poker player. "There are a lot of dedicated poker players in this area. It's been long overdue for Lake Tahoe to get an event like this."

The Lake Tahoe WSOP Circuit Event is the largest poker tournament to be held at South Shore. From 1982 through the late 80s, the Super Bowl of Poker was held at Caesars Tahoe. At the time, it was the second largest poker tournament in the world.

"In terms of volume and number of people playing, these circuit events are bigger than the WSOP Tournament of Champions was even five years ago," Dalla said. "Poker has just exploded with all the television coverage.

"For the next two weeks, Lake Tahoe is going to be at the center of the poker universe. Anybody who's anybody in the poker world will be in Lake Tahoe. Doyle Brunson, Chris Ferguson, all the big names will be here."

Final game coverage of the main event will be televised on ESPN.






Poker boot camps put two South Florida men in the chips

By Nick C. Sortal
Staff Writer
Posted April 28 2005

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Photo



Knowing when to hold 'em
See larger image
(Sun-Sentinel/ Josh Ritchie)
Apr 28, 2005


Steve Berman and Ron Rubens scribbled notes back and forth as the rest of their synagogue board continued its business.

Poker boot camp? Rubens wrote.

Berman's heart fluttered as he replied.

AN AMAZING IDEA!

Now, nine months and a thousand phone calls later, the Plantation men have quit their regular jobs, hooked up with the World Poker Tour and filled three 50-person poker instructional "boot camps," at $1,495 per player. The fourth boot camp, also sold out, is this weekend at the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood.

They fly to Las Vegas for research, dine with World Poker Tour sage Mike Sexton and, equally as important, pull in more than enough to pay their mortgages and feed their families.

Can you say American Dream?

World Poker Tour broadcasts on the Travel Channel set off poker's big bang in March 2003, and Rubens and Berman were among the viewers. The shows, taped at resorts and casinos around the world, benefited from a new lipstick-sized camera that revealed every player's hole cards. Earlier TV poker attempts were akin to watching bowling without seeing the pins.

The shows became the Travel Channel's signature program, as poker pros Sexton and Vincent Van Patten supplied breathless commentary and spread the Texas Hold 'em lexicon of flops, all-ins and short stacks.

Now on television at almost any hour, you'll likely see at least one poker tournament in progress, and as many as four, including on ESPN and regional sports networks. College students have adopted Texas Hold 'em as their game of choice. Casinos and racetracks keep adding poker rooms. And the number of World Series of Poker entrants has gone from 839 two years ago to 2,576 last year to an expected 5,000 or so this year.

Meanwhile, Rubens and Berman have gone from being fans outside the tournament ropes to being introduced to the crowd at World Poker Tour events.

"I'm working with people that part of me wants to get an autograph from," Rubens says.

The pair are small-time poker players, not experts. But they know where to find them: Clonie Gowen, who emerged as a top player on a "Ladies Night" telecast, is the lead instructor this weekend. Sexton is the instructor June 4-5 in New York City.

Learn by doing

The boot camp teaches how to analyze hands, calculate odds and decide on the right amount to bet, including the biggie: when to put all your chips on the table and go all-in.

Players also sit in poker labs, where they are given particular cards, chips and information about their opponents. Then they must make a decision -- fold or bet -- which instructors review and analyze.

"It's a very situational game, so it's difficult to learn just by watching a video or reading a book," Rubens says.

The clientele includes Internet poker players looking to move into the casino game, veteran players yearning to improve their skills and just regular poker lovers. This weekend, two popular South Florida athletes that Berman didn't want named also are among the 50 registered. Hint: the Marlins and Heat are in season and hockey players don't have $1,495 to blow.

Rubens and Berman book sites for the boot camp and market it. They also line up the instructors and oversee the details. They own the boot-camp business, River Gaming, LLC, but the WPT gets a cut for lending its (very) big name. They have needed no other advertising, Berman says.

"It's a natural extension of the relationship with our viewers," WPT founder Steve Lipscomb says. "It became evident to us they were seeking the next level of instruction."

Rubens, 38, ran an information technology training company in Sunrise for six years. Berman, 41, was vice president of a Boca Raton company that developed security devices for slots and table games.

"It's an obvious analogy, but if you're an entrepreneur you have to be a risk-taker, and if you're a poker player you have to be a risk-taker," Berman says.

Raking it in

The pair say Berman is the creative guy and Rubens is the grounded one. Berman set the vision in motion the next day after Rubens passed that momentous note. He called the WPT CEO and suggested the boot camp idea.

"I never would have made that phone call," Rubens says.

That was last August. By September, in the midst of four hurricanes, the pair worked out the deal. Two weeks later, they quit their day jobs.

"At first we thought this would be just a part-time deal, maybe with a stamp of approval from them," Berman says. "We kept thinking the other shoe was going to drop, but it never did."

They hung out with Sexton and other WPT sluggers, such as WPT telecast associate producer Alex "The Insider" Outhred, who has seen every hand played -- and folded -- on the shows.

"I'd probably have been more comfortable going up to Tom Cruise," Rubens says. He plays in local tournaments, but neither he nor Berman consider themselves an expert.

They expect all 12 of this year's boot camps to sell out.

"Things are good and they're on the verge of spectacular," Rubens says.

But they're not done yet. Berman says a secondary -- and larger -- boot camp product is in his head, to be launched in August. It involves more poker and Las Vegas. Tough life.



2006 Poker News Articles

2005 Poker News Articles

2004 Poker News Articles






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