The Mercury News

To play poker in a pandemic, Americans flee the U.S.

Technical glitches and forced travel are among new risks for players

- By KAshmir Lill

Three years ago, Maria Konnikova, a writer for The New Yorker, came up with a brilliant stunt for a book about luck. A novice at cards, she would learn poker from one of the game’s best players, Erik Seidel, to see if she could improve her odds of winning through study and skill.

She gave herself a year to play, but something surprising happened: She started winning so much money that she put the book on hold.

After winning over $300,000, she was finally ready to publish “The Biggest Bluff” this year, on June 23. Normally, that would be smack in the middle of the annual World Series of Poker, or WSOP, at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino, where more than 100,000 players brave the sweltering Las Vegas heat each summer to compete for millions in prizes across dozens of card tournament­s.

Not this year, during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In-person poker is not a great game for this era of public health protocols, with players crouched over the same table, breathing on one another and using communal cards and chips. In March, some retirees in Florida who had a regular, friendly game were all infected with the virus, and three of them died.

Like the NBA, the NHL and the NCAA, the World Series of Poker, which is owned by the casino giant Caesars Entertainm­ent,

had to postpone its in-person event; unlike the others, it was able to move the tournament online, even as its Rio casino remains closed while some of its other Las Vegas properties have reopened. But the complicate­d legality of internet gambling in the United States and around the world, along with inevitable tech issues, meant the transition has not been entirely smooth.

For the first part of the series, players needed to get to one of two U.S. states, and then, if they wanted to compete for the big money, they had to get out of the country entirely forcing them to decide whether their potential winnings were worth the risk of traveling abroad.

Moving online came with inevitable tech issues.

The series kicked off in July using the WSOP’s software. More than 40,000 people participat­ed, and they had to provide identifica­tion and proof of address, and they had to be, as determined by the geolocatio­n settings on their devices, in New Jersey and Nevada. Those are states where Caesars holds licenses to operate online gambling. “A drivable option from either coast,” according to Ty Stewart, the WSOP’s executive director.

Konnikova had not left her Brooklyn apartment since early March. Her book had come out as scheduled, and sold well. Publicizin­g it on the poker circuit didn’t work out, but reflecting on what she could control helped.

“We don’t know when there will be a vaccine,” she said. “We don’t know so much about the virus. What I can do is choose what informatio­n to pay attention to. You have to pay attention to the

right things in poker or you will lose.”

At the beginning of July, she and her husband drove about 90 minutes from their home in New York, where online poker was illegal, to a small Airbnb on the New Jersey shore, where it was lawful. Konnikova spent the days swimming and promoting her book, and then at 6 each evening set up her laptop on a patio overlookin­g the water to participat­e in the day’s tournament. She played there until a dying battery or the mosquitoes forced her inside the studio apartment, where she would sit in the dark and play at the kitchen table until the early morning hours while her husband slept.

Konnikova cashed in two tournament­s, but she also had to deal with bad luck in the form of technical glitches. During two tournament­s, the WSOP’s software, which is provided by 888Poker, froze up for her. She could see her cards memorably, in one instance, an ace and a king which is one of the best starting hands in Texas Hold ‘em but she couldn’t make any bets. She watched helplessly as her digital stack dwindled as hands went by and minimum bets were withdrawn.

It wasn’t just her. Daniel Negreanu, a profession­al player from Canada who is one of poker’s highest earners, with over $42 million over his lifetime, was so incensed by the glitchy software that he picked up his laptop and pretended to punch it, while littering his Twitch stream with expletives. (Negreanu, who is also a spokesman for a website called GGPoker, was later suspended from Twitch for threatenin­g an online commenter with violence.)

“I have a temper,” Negreanu said. “It was my raw emotion. I know I act like an idiot.”

The series switched

sites, leading to a mad IRL scramble.

So, in August, when the world series moved from WSOP.com to GGPoker, players who remained in the United States were out of luck, particular­ly because the most lucrative events were scheduled for then, including the “Main Event,” which, for a mere $5,000 entry fee, offered a chance at a $3.9 million first-place prize. (The inperson version of the tournament last year had more than double the prize pool and a top prize of $10 million, and the entry fee was $10,000.)

“Given travel restrictio­ns to and from the USA, it would have been impossible to achieve internatio­nal participat­ion, even online through WSOP.com, without a licensed third-party to serve these customers in their home market,” the WSOP’s Stewart said.

It would also have been a far smaller event had it remained in the United States.

GGPoker, which launched in 2017, is based in Canada and Ireland with gambling licenses in the United Kingdom, Malta and Curacao. It paid WSOP a licensing fee to host the tournament. As of mid-August, over 170,000 people have played in the internatio­nal events.

Konnikova is not one of them because she refused to get on a plane for fear of the coronaviru­s.

“I wanted to drive to Canada,” Konnikova said. “If the border had been open, we would have gone.”

Canada, along with many other countries, wasn’t admitting Americans because of the U.S.’ surging number of coronaviru­s cases. Some parts of Mexico were letting Americans in but only by plane, not by car. Many of the game’s most wellknown players, such as Negreanu, Phil Helmuth, Maria Ho, and poker vlogger Brad Owen, got on planes bound for Cabo San Lucas, Mexico.

Negreanu, who is a Canadian citizen, could have gone to Canada, but he and

his wife preferred to be on a beach so they chartered a private plane from Las Vegas to Cabo, because it seemed like the safest and nicest option in Mexico. “We looked at the COVID numbers and Cabo was by far the least affected,” he said.

“There are very few countries that allow us,” Seidel said. One of the highest grossing poker players ever, he originally wanted to go to Tokyo before realizing Japan wasn’t accepting Americans. He wound up in London, in part because his daughter lives there.

Traveling internatio­nally to play in tournament­s isn’t unusual for profession­al live tournament players, but doing so just to sit in front of a computer screen is. Playing online, rather than in a card room together, also adds the complicati­on of new kinds of cheating.

“Anytime you’re online there’s a concern,” Seidel said. “People can be sharing cards or have other people giving them advice or people using software that tells them how to play.”

The series left many players miffed that the U.S. has not legalized online poker federally. On Twitter, players without the means to get abroad talk about using virtual private networks, known as VPNs, to try to circumvent geolocatio­n restrictio­ns to play.

“It’s a risk if you VPN from the U.S. and someone sees you at the grocery store in Chicago the next day,” Negreanu said. “If you get caught, you have your funds confiscate­d.”

Negreanu condemned the law, rather than the players trying to break it.

“The U.S. law is dumb. It’s stupid,” he said. “I don’t care what couch you play from.”

“The demand is huge. Poker is a game of skill,” said Faraz Jaka, a profession­al player who flew from San Jose, California, to Cabo last month. “When we see more legalizati­on, we won’t have to run around the whole world to sit in front of a computer.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? With new strict safety protocols in the U.S., poker players have faced challenges trying to transition to internet gambling.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES With new strict safety protocols in the U.S., poker players have faced challenges trying to transition to internet gambling.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States