Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ballyhooed bets boost D owner’s bottom line

- JOHN KATSILOMET­ES

WHETHER Derek Stevens cashes a $1 million ticket on the NCAA Tournament is something of a side issue.

Regardless of how much, or even if, the owner of the D Las Vegas and Golden Gate collects because of his beloved Michigan Wolverines, he’s already a winner.

Stevens has gained priceless promotiona­l value with his NCAA Tournament gambit. Before the tournament, the aggressive­ly loyal Michigan grad bet $25,000 on the Wolverines to win the championsh­ip at 40-1 odds. He placed the wager at rival downtown resort Golden Nugget, reportedly the largest bet ever taken at the hotel’s sports book.

Stevens effectivel­y hedged the bet in Saturday’s Final Four semifinal matchup between Loyola-chicago and Michigan, making two bets totaling about $52,000 on Loyola. If the Ramblers had won, Stevens would have won, too.

He’s flamboyant, not stupid. Stevens is going to hedge again in the championsh­ip between Michigan and Villanova. “I’m still working on it, but I won’t announce until just before tip-off tomorrow,” he said Sunday. The Wolverines opened as a 6.5-point underdog, and the line quickly moved to 7.

On Saturday, the D hosted a watch party at Longbar that was livestream­ed on the VSIN gaming network. Stevens was there with his wife, Nicole, to his left. To his right sat a Pope Francis bobblehead

— a ‘bobblepope,’ if you will — inside a glass box, blessing Stevens’ $25,000 ticket.

This was a box-and-one defense against Loyola’s Sister Jean, the 98-year-old nun who was an inspiratio­n for the 11th-seeded Ramblers through their series of tournament upsets. Derek and Nicole shared their epiphany of how to combat Sister Jean’s sway over the tournament.

“Nicole and I realized that for us to win this, we had to go to a higher power,” said Stevens, his face sweaty just after the Wolverines’ 69-57 victory. “That’s why we have the pope. You see him blessing the ticket, right?”

Yes. And the encased bobblepope will be back at Longbar for Monday night’s championsh­ip. Stevens is not moving the party to a hotel ballroom or its second-floor showroom. He’s had luck at Longbar.

“This has been a roller coaster, for sure,” he said. “I’m not going to get too superstiti­ous, but I’m going to be back at seat 1 at the Longbar. This is going to be something special.” It already has been.

Jillette’s Fremont Street experience

Magician Penn Jillette has been hanging around Fremont Street over the past several days working on a book. The follow-up to his 2016 “Presto!” which tracked his 100-plus-pound weight loss, is to focus on the famed promenade.

“I hadn’t been on Fremont Street in years, and it’s nothing like the Strip,” Jillette said during his latest “Penn’s Sunday School” podcast. “The Strip is false classiness, this horrible gold-pillared classiness that is not really classy. But Fremont Street is just in the funk of it. It’s a freak show, street performing — but not like San Francisco street performing, which is clean and good-natured. Fremont Street is dirty and funky.”

Penn has tipped $20 for a photo with some of those performers only to be asked by those buskers if they can take a picture with him. One woman hammers a nail up her nose and walks on broken glass. “I know a little bit about this,” Jillette, a veteran street performer, said to the woman. He offered her a $20 tip. She said, “Can you staple that to me?” And he did, over her right breast. Once a carny, always a carny.

‘Harry-oke’ unleashed!

Veteran comic and club operator Harry Basil has stitched together a groovy little late-night hang in the green room at Laugh Factory at Tropicana. This is “Harry-oke,” a sing-fest for Basil stand-up friends, at midnight on select Saturdays. This weekend, Basil and his wife, Laura, were joined by such profession­al funny people as Laugh Factory headliner Jamie Kennedy; Carl Labove and Allan Stephan of the new “Stripped” comedy show at Windows at Bally’s; frequent Vegas headliner Shayma Tash; Geechy Guy of “The Dirty Jokes Show” at Hooters; street-joke specialist Rick D’elia; and a Laugh Factory comic from this weekend, Kristi Mchugh.

Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Free Bird,” as recited by Laura Basil and Tash, was among the highlights.

“Harry-oke” is a private party, so far. But it is entertaini­ng enough to put onstage, at least as a one-off. Someone should get on that.

Hsieh, Hsieh, Hsieh

That indeed was Zappos founder Tony Hsieh singing along to MC Hammer’s “U Can’t Touch This,” played as house music at the end of Jewel’s performanc­e at Encore Theater on Friday night. He’s wearing a Mohawk these days, but he can’t escape this guy’s eyes.

John Katsilomet­es’ column runs daily in the A section. Contact him at jkatsilome­tes@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ johnnykats on Twitter. As of 9 p.m. Sunday:

1. Woman wins $1.4 million slot jackpot at Las Vegas Valley casino

A local woman won a $1.4 million jackpot at Green Valley Ranch Resort this weekend, according to a spokeswoma­n for the resort’s owner, Station Casinos.

2. Undergroun­d house part of Nevada Preservati­on Foundation’s gala

The famous Las Vegas property called The Undergroun­d House,

3970 Spencer St., will get a rare public viewing on April 28 as part of a celebratio­n of the city’s architectu­ral history hosted by the Nevada Preservati­on Foundation.

3. What could go wrong on the Las Vegas Raiders Stadium project?

It’s a sprawling, $1.8 billion project on a tight deadline and has been a point of contention for more than two years.

4. Another Harrison on the way for ‘Pawn Stars’ family

“Pawn Stars” mainstay Corey Harrison and his wife, Kiki, are expecting their first child, to be named Richard Benjamin Harrison.

5. Pedestrian dies in crash near Strip

A vehicle hit a pedestrian in the eastbound lanes of Sahara Avenue at Industrial Road on Saturday night, according to the Nevada Highway Patrol.

 ?? Sam Morris ?? Las Vegas News Bureau Derek Stevens, CEO and co-owner of D Las Vegas, reacts with his wife, Nicole, center, and daughter Whitney while watching alma mater Michigan take on Loyola-chicago on Saturday at the D.
Sam Morris Las Vegas News Bureau Derek Stevens, CEO and co-owner of D Las Vegas, reacts with his wife, Nicole, center, and daughter Whitney while watching alma mater Michigan take on Loyola-chicago on Saturday at the D.
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Las Vegas Review-journal
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