GiG Signed Head of Terms with Land-Based Operator in Ontario

Mansion and Playtech Strengthen Deal via Ontario Launch


Provider of platform and media solutions to the iGaming industry, Gaming Innovation Group (GiG), announced it has signed a head of terms agreement with an established land-based operator in Ontario.

The head of terms agreement with the unnamed land-based operator in Ontario will see GiG deliver its award-winning platform, sportsbook and omnichannel solutions in the Canadian province.

Commenting on the announcement, Ben Clemes, general manager of GiG North America, expressed his contentment at the opportunity to team up with an established land-based operator in Ontario.

“I am really excited to sign the head of terms with a land-based partner that has been successfully operating in the Ontario market for many decades,” Clemes said, outlining that the operator’s land-based presence will present GiG with the “opportunity to showcase the power” of its proven omnichannel solution and “full product catalog,” including casino, sports and its frontend solution.

GiG and the land-based operator expect to sign a full partnership contract in the coming months, projecting to initiate operations under the partnership in the first half of 2023.

The head of terms agreement is the latest development around GiG in Ontario after more and more operators choose the company’s products and services to drive their brand in the province, lured by GiG’s leading technology and flexible architecture.

Following the supplier license granted to GiG by the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) in July, GiG already launched with two operators the latest of which was the online casino brand SpinAway, and is preparing to go live with a third. The other was the LuckyDays brand operated by L7 Entertainment, a company that partnered with GiG for a launch in Sweden earlier in the year.

Market Gaining Traction

Since its launch in April this year, the gaming market in Ontario is attracting more and more operators as it is expected to grow to over $2 billion in gross gaming revenue over the next three years, according to H2 Gambling Data.

In October, iGaming Ontario released market data for the second quarter, showing that the market has grown by nearly C$2 billion ($1.48 billion), posting a 48% increase. Without accounting for the promotional wagers, Ontario operators registered C$6.04 ($4.46 billion) billion in total wagers in the quarter.

The number of operators grew from 18 in Q1 to 24 in Q2 and gaming websites increased from 31 to 42, active player accounts grew by 27.6% to 628,000, and the average amount spent per player account went up from C$113 ($83.48) in Q1 to C$142 ($104.9).



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PointsBet’s BetCast to Broadcast Four Games of the 76ers

PointsBet’s BetCast to Broadcast Four Games of the 76ers


Australian-based sportsbook PointsBet extended an existing partnership with NBC Sports Philadelphia and NBC Sports Philadelphia Plus to re-launch a series of sports betting presentations during regular season games of the Philadelphia 76ers.

Extending NBC Sports Philadelphia Collaboration

The new edition of BetCast will broadcast four games on the 76ers which will be featured on NBC Sports Philadelphia Plus starting December 2 with the matchup with the Memphis Grizzlies in Memphis, Tennessee.

Broadcasting the games from the 76ers season in the NBA was made possible after an agreement PointsBet signed with NBC Sports Philadelphia and NBC Sports Chicago in March to present an alternate NBA sports-betting telecast that will simultaneously air in both markets was extended.

Game coverage of the first dual-market sports betting telecast of NBC Sports Regional Networks started with the matchup between the 76ers and the Chicago Bulls on March 7.

Besides the Grizzlies matchup, BetCast will cover the 76ers games against the Detroit Pistons, Orlando Magic and Indiana Pacers, as game coverage is set to continue until March.

During the telecast, sports fans will have access to on-screen live odds, future odds and player props powered by PointsBet, appearing on an enhanced graphic overlay surrounding the regular live-game coverage, while alternate announcers will provide game analysis and sports betting commentary to make the live events even more exciting for the audience.

Deeper Roots of the Partnership

NBC Sports and the listed on the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) gaming operator teamed in August 2020 after a five-year agreement with NBCUniversal saw PointsBet become the official sports betting partner of NBC Sports.

The partnership provided PointsBet with year-round media and marketing opportunities across multiple platforms and the networks’ unmatched portfolio of events.

PointsBet received game day integrations across the eight NBC Sports Regional Networks, became an official partner of the NBC Sports Predictor App, gained odds integrations into NBC Sports’ fantasy and sports betting digital property Rotoworld, as well as multi-platform integrations with NBC Sports’ leading consumer golf brands Golfnow.

In addition, PointsBet gained access to Hispanic sports fans via Telemundo Deportes and Telemundo broadcast stations, and exclusivity to provide odds, props and trends for NBCSN and GOLF Channel and their digital properties, as well as NBCUniversal’s new streaming service, Peacock, and NBC Sports Podcasts.

Affiliated to NBC Sports Regional Networks, NBC Sports Philadelphia also features live-game coverage of the other professional teams from Philadelphia, the NFL’s Eagles, NHL’s Flyers, and MLB’s Phillies, while its scope covers Delaware and Southern New Jersey, besides the greater Philadelphia area.



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Dara O’Kearney: So You Want to Be a Sponsored Poker Pro….

Happy man signing a contract as his wife looks on


A common request

I get roughly 50 unsolicited messages a day about poker from people I don’t know, or just barely know through social media. The vast majority of these fall into one of three categories starting with “S.”

The first category is strategy: generally hands where people want an opinion, which I’m always happy to give, sometimes after some solver work. The second category is staking: usually after some polite pleasantries, my correspondent wants to know if I still stake people, and specifically will I stake them. I’m hoping people thinking of doing this will read this blog because I can say here the answer these days is always no. 

most professional and many recreational players crave to be a sponsored player

The final category is sponsorship. Whether they admit it or not, most professional and many recreational players crave to be a sponsored player. Some because they see it as free money, and others because they see it as some sort of validation or recognition from the industry. In reality it’s neither, but that’s a topic for another day. In this article, I want to give whatever practical advice I can to players interested in being sponsored one day.

How do you get a deal?

Unibet is my third deal. I basically won the first one in a special promotion. A now-defunct Irish skin of the also now-defunct Cake poker network was sponsoring the Irish live rankings at the time, and they decided to have a special tournament for the top-ranked players, with the winner getting a six-month sponsorship deal. When we got down to three in what was winner take all, chop talks broke out. We all thought chopping the equity was best, but couldn’t agree on who would officially take the deal. Now you might be thinking yeah that makes sense, everyone wants to be the sponsored pro. In reality, none of us did, for two reasons which probably only make sense to that most rational and least romantic of creatures, the poker pro.

the poker pro mindset reduces everything to pure EV

While recreational players dream of glory and trophies and acclaim, the poker pro mindset reduces everything to pure EV. Therefore, we saw two problems with being the one to officially take the deal. First, it was basically a negative freeroll to pay the other two guys off before a penny was received. Back then, poker sites went out of business even more frequently than they do now. Second, it presumably involved additional effort and duties for no extra compensation. 

I ended up being the one to agree to pay the other two off. I did this partly because a deal was unlikely if I didn’t agree to be that guy, but mostly because I thought the risk and additional effort could be made up for by the possibility, however slim, that at the end of the six months, I’d have persuaded the sponsors it was worth their while to extend the deal.

My line was looking very suboptimal after my first meeting with the sponsors in which they made it clear they had zero intention of extending the deal and they saw it purely as a one-off prize with some one-time PR upside for them over just giving me the cash up front. I’ve never been anything other than stubborn, however, so I did everything I could over the next six months to deliver value and was rewarded by a couple of extensions until they were forced out of business by problems on the Cake network.

they decided I was the man for the job

My next deal was acquired a little more typically: an Irish-facing skin on another network (Entraction) decided they wanted a pro with a high profile in Ireland. By now I had established myself as one of Ireland’s most profitable players both online and live, was contributing strategy to a number of poker magazines, had the most-read Irish blog, and was the first Irish pro on social media, all of which combined to a high national profile, so they decided I was the man for the job.

Once again, I set demonstrating value as one of my main priorities and was rewarded by having my contract renewed a few times until the site was forced out of business when Entraction shut down. 

The wilderness years

Over the next couple of years, my international profile continued to grow slowly. I was touted for a couple of different deals with major sites, but in each case lost out to an Irish rival. My age was generally seen as a major strike against me. I remember being asked at the time by Stars to recommend an Irish pro:

“We need someone who wins online but plays live too. There can’t be any whiff of scandal around them. He has to be able to talk and engage with people. And he has to be under the age of 30, preferably good looking”

This seemed to be the consensus by now among the sites as to what a sponsored pro should look like. They’d moved past hiring someone on the basis of one big bank, having been burned too often hiring someone who turned out to be a surly one-hit wonder with no social skills. 

if I was swimming against the tide of my age, so be it

I remember these years as a time when my hopes of ever being sponsored again not only receded, but also became less important to me. I’m nothing if not a realist, and if I was swimming against the tide of my age, so be it. I’d also reached a point in my career where any supplemental income would necessarily be a smaller percentage of what I earned from poker.

Staking and other interests were flourishing. I also remember this as a period where, rightly or wrongly, I felt some sites were stringing me along to a certain degree, wanting to keep me happy and uncritical. In one episode of “The Chip Race,” Vanessa Kade talked about how leading female players are very incentivized to avoid criticizing anyone in the industry if they hold out any hopes of ever being sponsored. This is undoubtedly true, but also for men, albeit to a much lesser degree and with some qualifications.

It’s much easier for a man to carve out a role and a brand as a squeaky wheel. But that has to be your image from the get-go. David Lappin and I have often remarked that he can get away with saying almost anything about anyone because that’s just Lappin being Lappin, but people seem to get deeply upset if I say anything even mildly critical. There has never been a time when I said something positive about a site or an event that I didn’t believe because I was hoping to curry future favor, but there have certainly been times when I’ve bit my lip and adhered to the maxim that if you have nothing positive to say, say nothing. 

2015 was a pivotal year. My biggest live score moved me to a point financially where chasing sponsorships didn’t seem like a productive use of my time. I maintained a high profile by starting “The Chip Race” with Lappin, and I stayed active on social media, but the goal wasn’t to get another sponsor. The following year’s EPT Barcelona was another turning point. As I wrote at the time, the festival was a new low in recreational player experience, and I despaired for the future of live poker if this was the new normal. A Stars insider told me that it was: owner Amaya was pushing a paradigm that insisted profit in all things, to the detriment of customer experience and acquisition.

I had in any case come to the conclusion that I was being strung along with promises of a deal

At the end of the festival, over late-night tapas and wine with Lappin, I told him I’d decided to go into full attack mode, sacrificing any chance I might have of ever being sponsored by them. I had in any case come to the conclusion that I was being strung along with promises of a deal “next year for sure” to encourage me not to say anything overtly critical of Stars. I therefore told my co-host I’d made the decision to write a full and frank criticism of what I saw as the problems with Stars live events and warned him to be ready for some crossfire. Lappin not only agreed with my vision, but said he was planning to pen his own critical piece, so we were burning bridges together. 

After the blogs went viral, some unexpected things happened, as well as some expected things. People we were genuinely friendly with who worked for Stars felt betrayed. Some industry figures who may or may not have been in the pay of Stars came after us on social media. Recreational players and pros alike were overwhelmingly in agreement with our view. And we attracted the attention of Unibet, who shared our view of how the recreational player experience should be, an alternative vision of the future. To our surprise, a pair of blogs that we anticipated would torch any prospects of future sponsorship ended up leading to a deal with Unibet, which was extended into its sixth year in early 2022.

Shifting paradigms 

When I started in poker, the way you got a deal was you won something big and got a patch and a deal as a bonus. But as I said above, sites quickly found that wasn’t a good approach (strangely this idea that deals should be bonus “rewards” for performances on the felt has lingered among a lot of players: the most common wail I hear from players is “why am I not sponsored already? I won tourney X/win more online than sponsored pro Y”).

New cars lose a lot of their value the moment they’re driven out of the showroom, and new sponsored pros suffer a similar fate the moment the novelty of their signing has passed and all the “Pro X signs for site Y” articles have been published. A Full Tilt employee told me that once the sites realized this, the model switched to one-off deals: sticking a patch on someone who made a big televised final table and giving them a one-time payment. Over time, the sites realized that wasn’t particularly cost-effective either, and in any case after Black Friday, big, televised tables were few and far between. 

I was determined to demonstrate value

The number of sponsored pros dwindled dramatically until the paradigm shifted again with the rise of content. Content creators were suddenly in demand, be they Twitchers, bloggers, vloggers, podcasters, or whatever. Around this time, I was asked by Stars to recommend an Irish Twitcher and I told them they should hop on Fintan Hand, a superstar in the making. When Unibet came knocking, this shift suited us: both David and I had very widely read blogs, produced other written content, and had a podcast we could revive. As in my previous deals, I was determined to demonstrate value, as was David, and we set about being what Pads very kindly described on Twitter once as two of the hardest-working ambassadors in poker. 

But enough about me….how do you get sponsored?

When you ask footballers (soccer players for those of you in the States) what they’ll do after retirement, they nearly all give one of two answers: management or punditry.  The problem is that for every 100 retired footballers, there’s less than one manager and less than one pundit. Poker has a similar dichotomy: almost every successful (and many unsuccessful) player wants to be sponsored, whether they openly admit it or not. 

I’ve written this history of my own sponsorships to give you an idea of what I’ve done to improve my chances in this particular lottery, and also to convey that it’s far from a free lunch these days. So what else can you do to maximize your chances?

1. Create content

We are still in the era of content. A creator that reaches an audience through Twitch, a blog, a vlog, a podcast, social media, or a Facebook group offers far more value to a sponsor than a loud-spoken opinion pro or a genuine crusher. Even if it doesn’t ultimately lead to full sponsorship, sites often offer other rewards and incentives to creators on a more informal basis. 

2. Know your demographic

There are very few genuine superstars in poker who reach and appeal to almost everyone. But that’s ok. Someone who reaches a small but loyal niche audience is more useful from a marketing perspective for a site than someone everyone knows about, but nobody cares much about. Players are generally signed to appeal to a specific demographic. Here, some players have a natural advantage. It’s better to be from Brazil than Latvia. It’s better to be female than male and it’s an advantage to be younger. Tournament players are much more likely to be signed than cash game players. Hold’em players have a wider reach than mixed-game players.

When they ask me for advice, I tell them to work on increasing their profile.

It’s a big advantage to speak English if you come from a non-English speaking country. One thing though: you need to remember recreationals are not only the lifeblood of the game, but also the people sponsors are trying to reach. I know a number of big-name pros who constantly express bewilderment that they haven’t been signed yet. When they ask me for advice, I tell them to work on increasing their profile. They usually counter that “everyone” knows them already. When asked to elaborate on who everyone is, it generally turns out they mean other pros. When suggested they might want to expand the definition to include some recreationals, they look horrified.

If you’re not interested in interacting with recreationals, this is not the gig for you.

3. Don’t be shy

It never ceases to amaze me when players express a desire to be signed or dismay at not having been already, so I ask them for their social media and they reply: “Oh I don’t do that.” That’s their prerogative, but if you want to be sponsored you must do social media. You not only do it, but you do it full-heartedly and you genuinely interact with people. There’s a handful of players who are big enough to not have to talk to people they don’t know, but the rest of us don’t really have that luxury. Here we are back to the small but loyal beats large but fickle idea.

that’s a luxury that largely disappears when you’re sponsored

Players who are seen as relatable and approachable are more valuable. There’s no easy hack for this: it really helps if you enjoy engaging with people, as I do. I get about 50 random messages from people I only know from social media a day and try to answer them all (if I don’t it means I probably missed it so feel free to ping me). I enjoy talking to people at live events and I also enjoy sitting there silently focusing on the game, but that’s a luxury that largely disappears when you’re sponsored. If you don’t think you’d enjoy that sort of attention, or don’t think you can find the time to answer a guy who wants your opinion on a hand he just played, the life of the sponsored pro may not be for you. 

Which brings me to…

Think about who you are representing

I personally would never represent a brand I found reprehensible or a product I felt to be lacking. Not everyone feels the same and think they’d happily shill for anyone if the price was right. But this isn’t a purely ethical question. If you represent a brand that is unpopular or does unpopular things that piss players off, they will tell you.

They will associate you with the actions of your sponsor. They may berate you about them on social media or at the table. Several of my friends signed up to join brands they believed in, but lived to regret it when an unpopular change of direction brought the condemnation of their peers. Others signed up to brands they didn’t really believe in and instantly regretted it. So at the very least ask a few more questions than just “How much?” and “Where do I sign?”

Now, if you will excuse me, I have about 50 messages I have to answer….

The post Dara O’Kearney: So You Want to Be a Sponsored Poker Pro…. appeared first on VegasSlotsOnline News.

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Man Avoids Jail After Stealing Casino Chips to Treat Cancer

Man Avoids Jail After Stealing Casino Chips to Treat Cancer


A 58-year-old male who worked at Grand Villa Casino in Burnaby, Canada and stole thousands of dollars in casino chips avoided prison, a new report reveals.

Man Steals Chips to Help with Brother’s Cancer Treatment

The man stole approximately CA$ 5,000 ($3,700) between January 1 and May 10, 2020, when he was caught and charged with the offense. Kim Shing Leung was the man behind the deed who was fired once the crime was uncovered. But according to a recent report by Burnaby Now, the man avoided jail time because of circumstances related to the crime itself and his commitment to rehabilitating.

Leung’s defense lawyer Julia Hung, revealed what was the reason behind the crime. At the time Leung committed the offense, his brother was diagnosed with late-stage cancer. This pushed Leung to help his brother financially which ultimately resulted in the crime he committed. The sums Leung was caught stealing were used to help his brother with the expensive medical treatment. Despite the efforts to help, sadly, Leung’s brother passed away from the disease.

His older brother was diagnosed with late-stage cancer, and Mr. Leung felt he needed to provide his brother financial support, as the treatments were quite expensive,

said Julia Hung, Kim Shing Leung’s defense lawyer

The Path to Rehabilitation

Upon uncovering the thefts, Leung was fired from the gambling venue. Also, the man was likely to face a conditional sentence or even jail time considering that the offense involved theft. Leung pleaded guilty to one count of theft and agreed to pay back half of the stolen amount, which is CA$2,500 ($1,850), to stay away from the casino and write an apology letter. However, he disagreed with the option for a 12-month suspended sentence.

Crown prosecutor Sharon Preston revealed that Leung has taken “real steps” to make up for the crime. According to Preston, Leung participated in community work for 100 hours voluntarily with the Oceanwise Shoreline Cleanups and the Greater Vancouver Food Bank. At the same time, the prosecutor noted that Leung was impacted by “collateral consequences” which included the loss of his job and a hard time finding new employment.

Judge James Sutherland of the BC provincial court acknowledged that Leung committed a “very serious offense.” However, the Judge took into consideration the consequences Leung suffered from his crime as well as his efforts to rehabilitate. In addition, Leung did not have any previous criminal record, which also helped with Judge Sutherland’s decision to discharge him without jail time. Still, the man had to write an apology letter to the gambling venue, stay away from it and pay back CA$2,500.



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EPIC and INTENTA, Together to Promote Safe and Healthy Gaming for the Youth

EPIC and INTENTA, Together to Promote Safe and Healthy Gaming for the Youth


Mixing expert advice with first-hand experience working with problem gambling harm, EPIC Risk Management aims to take the problem out of gambling. The leading independent gambling harm minimization consultancy has announced it would support an INTENTA campaign meant to promote safe and healthy gambling practices for youngsters. The #MindYourGame campaign consists of a series of educational videos, worksheets, 15-minute mental wellness consultations, mindfulness exercises, forums, and other resources supported by peers. For starters, the campaign will reach students in over 450 schools and esports clubs spread across 40 states in the US.

The Campaign Uses esports to Engage with Young People 

INTENTA’s campaign revolves around esports as a means of engaging young people and convincing them to build and promote safer and healthier connections with the world of gaming. Gaming World, INTENTA’s video content series, is meant to assist young players to get a better understanding of the perks and full potential of the harms associated with gambling and esports.

The videos are also expected to educate viewers on the effects of gaming on the brain, along with the consequences of spending too much while playing and not finding the right balance between esports and gaming. Other topics covered by the same educational videos part of the Gaming World series refer to frequent problems in the gaming world, along with information on how players can build a career from esports and gaming. 

The same videos will be used to spread strategies on how to safely engage in gaming while improving students’ mental health and offering support options to anyone dealing with problem gaming issues. Teachers, parents, and school counselors will all have access to the videos, along with the rest of the resources part of the campaign. The list includes a series of worksheets, free 15-minute mental wellness consultations, mindfulness exercises, forums, and access to peer support. 

Global Expansion Plans for the Campaign

Using EPIC’s support, INTENTA plans to roll out its campaign to more schools and esports clubs in the rest of the US states, while also entering international global markets. EPIC’s director of corporate special responsibility Paul Findlay praised the way EPIC’s “lived experience of gambling harm through loot boxes” is being harnessed with the help of the Gaming World series part of the campaign. He added that EPIC’s expertise will offer crucial awareness of the “potential gambling harm” hidden in gaming and esports.

INTENTA’s co-founder Cam Adair explained that EPIC’s “industry-leading expertise” was an excellent addition to their #MindYourGame campaign. 

At the beginning of November, EPIC Risk Management, the National Collegiate Athletic Association, and Entain Foundation announced their landmark program meant to fight off gambling harm was still going strong after reaching almost close to 8,000 NCAA student-athletes and members. 



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Phil Hellmuth & Patrik Antonius Joining Star-Studded WPT Premier MUG

Phil Hellmuth & Patrik Antonius Joining Star-Studded WPT Premier MUG



If you thought the lineup for the Premier Meet-Up Game at the upcoming World Poker Tour (WPT) World Championship at Wynn Las Vegas couldn’t get any better, you are wrong. That’s because none other than Phil Hellmuth and Patrik Antonius will be joining in on the cash game fun on Dec. 1.

The 16-time bracelet winner and Finnish cash game veteran will be in elite company as the Premier Meet-Up Game: WPT Poker Icons Experience will also feature the likes of Doyle Brunson, Phil Ivey, DJ Steve Aoki, Brad Owen, Andrew Neeme, WPT Executive Tour Director Matt Savage and others.

“This will be my first meet-up game experience with WPT. I’m looking forward to sitting down to play and seeing what all the hype is about,” Antonius said in a press release. “I think what Brad and Andrew have created for the poker community is exceptional.”

“When I heard that Phil Ivey and Doyle Brunson were playing in this MUG, I knew I had to get involved,” Hellmuth said. “I’m excited to play with the WPT family. Hopefully no one gets me with a bad beat.”

Find out more about the WPT Premier Meet-Up Game!

World Championship Festivities

The MUG will get underway at 8 a.m. on Dec. 1 and will consist of 26 tables running $1/$3 and $2/$5 no-limit Hold’em and pot-limit Omaha games in the luxurious Wynn Poker Room. Other notables who will be present at the MUG include Vince Van Patten, Tony Dunst and Ashley “PokerFace Ash” Frank.

“When Andrew and I put the first Meet Up Game together with the vlog watchers who happened to be in town … we never thought we’d see the day poker icons like Phil Ivey, Doyle Brunson, Phil Hellmuth, and Patrik Antonius would be coming to play them,” said Owen. “This MUG is going to be epic. If you are in Vegas, you have to make it to the Wynn.”

WPT Premier MUG
WPT Premier MUG

It is just one of several festivities that WPT has planned for the end of its 20th season, which will culminate with the $10,400 buy-in WPT World Championship with a $15 million guarantee.

On Dec. 6, Aoki will host the WPT Steve Aoki Playhouse Game in the world-renowned DJ’s residence with a pool, foam pit and personalized poker table.

Later in the series, poker commentator Jamie Kerstetter will host a WPT Ladies Meet-Up Game featuring Xuan Liu, Ashley Sleeth and WPT Anchor Lynn Gilmartin that will take place alongside the $200,000 guaranteed Ladies Event.

The always-entertaining Hellmuth seems like a perfect addition to the Premier Meet-Up Game lineup as he prepares for his highly anticipated $1.6 million heads-up match against Jason Koon in the PokerGO Studio.

Phil Hellmuth
Phil Hellmuth

Antonius, a high-stakes cash game legend who appeared on shows like High Stakes Poker during poker’s heyday in the late-2000s, seems like an equally excellent addition.

Patrik Antonius
Patrik Antonius

The WPT team is currently in Florida for the 2022 Rock ‘N’ Roll Poker Open (RRPO) at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, where a final table of just six players remains in the $3,500 Main Event, including defending champ Gediminas Uselis and recent Five Diamond winner Chad Eveslage.

PokerNews is on-site and documenting the RRPO action, including six wild hands from the Main Event that attracted 1,541 entrants and has a top prize of $778,490 awaiting the eventual champion.

Read more about what could be the most stacked final table in World Poker Tour history.





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Dutch Legal Protection Minister Speaks about Gambling Payment Processing

Dutch Legal Protection Minister Speaks about Gambling Payment Processing


Franc Weerwind, the Minister of Legal Protection in the Netherlands, recently participated in a discussion with the MPs Michiel Van Nispen from the country’s Socialist Party (SP), as well as Mirjam Bikker, who is a part of the Christian Union (ChristenUnie). In the latest discussion, Weerwind spoke about the importance of payment transaction speed for gambling operators and reverse withdrawal requests.

Gambling Operators Need to Process Payments without Delay

Speaking about the speed of payments, Weerwind acknowledged that gambling operators process withdrawal requests from customers within different timeframes. He pointed out that licensed gambling operators need to adhere to anti-fraud and anti-money laundering regulations, which creates a different timeframe for depositing the funds into the customers’ bank accounts.

At the same time, Weerwind outlined that the standard for processing withdrawals for Dutch customers should be “without undue delay.” Additionally, Weerwind pointed out that the speed of processing those transactions can be increased by the gambling regulator in the country, the Kansspelautoriteit (KSA). Still, he acknowledged that currently, there is no need for the regulator to intervene and try to further reduce the withdrawal speed for customers.

The speed with which payment is made depends on the circumstances of the case. For example, it may be necessary to carry out a check for fraud and money laundering or a check in which the provider checks bonus conditions before a bonus can be paid. One gambling provider may be faster than the other.

Franc Weerwind, Minister for Legal Protection in the Netherlands

Looking at cases with consumers that experienced delays, Weerwind reiterated that there is no need for the KSA to probe into those individual cases further. He said: “The standard remains “without undue delay,” supervised by the KSA as described above. There is currently no reason to intervene.”

Gambling Companies Need to Protect Their Customers

A separate topic discussed by Weerwind involved reverse withdrawal requests and the options for banning them. According to Weerwind, banning those transactions may not be needed as gambling licensees are obligated to spot signs of gambling harm and take appropriate actions.

Part of being able to take control yourself is also the possibility to still be able to cancel a payment order. As indicated earlier … the risk of someone playing on for too long is counteracted by the implementation of the duty of care by providers,

added Weerwind

He revealed that gamblers need to be in control of the amounts they gamble, and this may also involve canceling a payment order. However, Weerwind stressed that gambling companies need to be on the lookout for customers that are showing signs of problem gambling. He added that one canceled transaction might not raise a red flag, but operators still need to be on the lookout for how frequently their users cancel withdrawal payment requests.



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Can Chad Eveslage Take Over the WPT Season 20 POY Points Lead Today?

Can Chad Eveslage Take Over the WPT Season 20 POY Points Lead Today?



Chad Eveslage is on fire!

A month ago, he topped a 569-entry field to win the World Poker Tour (WPT) Five Diamond World Poker Classic at Bellagio for $1,042,300. He did so by defeating Steve Buckner in heads-up play.

It marked his second WPT title in as many years as in the summer of 2021 he bested 1,199 entrants to win the $5,000 WPT Venetian for $910,370.

On top of it all, Eveslage also captured his first World Series of Poker (WSOP) gold bracelet this past summer when he took down Event #8: $25,000 High Roller for a career-high $1,415,610.

Check out our feature profile on Chad Eveslage here!

Eveslage, who doesn’t do much self-promotion but recently appeared on the PokerNews Podcast, currently sits third on the WPT Season 20 Player of the Year leaderboard with 1,475 points behind the aforementioned Buckner (2,150 points) and Ray Qartomy (1,775).

However, Eveslage is one of six players remaining at the final table of the WPT Rock ‘n’ Roll Poker Open (RRPO) at Seminole Hard Rock Hollywood. The $3,500 RRPO Championship attracted 1,541 entries. The final table gets underway at 2 p.m. ET on Wednesday with Eveslage sitting second in chips. He’s guaranteed $167,000 in prize money and at least 425 POY points.

Eveslage needs to finish third or better to take the lead, while a fourth-place finish would put him just 25 points behind Buckner headed into the last stop of the season – the WPT World Championship at Wynn Las Vegas. If he can notch back-to-back Main Tour wins within the same season, he would become the third player to do it alongside Anthony Zinno (Season XII) and Darren Elias (Season XIV).

Remaining WPT RRPO Payouts

Place Prize POY Points
1 $785,800 1,300
2 $525,000 1,050
3 $390,000 850
4 $290,000 650
5 $219,000 525
6 $167,000 425

Move to Florida a Wise Move

Chad Eveslage
Chad Eveslage

Originally from Indiana, where he recently passed the late, great WPT legend Mike Sexton for second place on the state’s all-time money list with $6.7 million in earnings according to the Hendon Mob, Eveslage relocated to South Florida. It’s proved to be a wise decision as he’s had no shortage of success.

He won the $25,500 High Roller at the 2021 WPT Seminole Hard Rock Poker Showdown in Hollywood for $767,576 and is known for grinding juicy Florida cash games.

“Indiana doesn’t really have much as far as poker,” Eveslage previously told PokerNews. “Especially when I just moved down here, Florida was really popping. There (were) a bunch of really good cash games and stuff. And I didn’t really want to live in Vegas. So yeah, I just ended up settling on Florida. And I have some friends down here, too. So, it made sense.”

He added: “The credentials are nice because they give some validation to people outside the poker world, but the pros within the poker world know that it’s mostly just variance from the big tournaments. Over a long time, sure, there can be some patterns, but this heater I’m on right now, it’s not like the best poker players in the world are like, ‘Oh, Chad must be super sick.’ They realize it’s just (that I’m) running very good.”

Is This One of the Most Stacked Final Tables in WPT History?

Current WPT Season 20 POY Leaderboard

Steve Buckner
Steve Buckner

Place Player POY Points WPT S20 Earnings S20 Cashes WPT S20 Final Tables
1 Steve Buckner 2,150 $1,038,500 4 2
2 Ray Qartomy 1,775 $621,300 3 2
3 Chad Eveslage 1,475 $1,060,825 3 1
4 Naj Ajez 1,425 $316,169 3 1
5 Mark David 1,400 $1,000,300 1 1
6 Alexander Yen 1,400 $975,240 1 1
7 Mike Vanier 1,400 $661,800 4 1
8 Chance Kornuth 1,350 $511,300 4 1
9 Robert Mizrachi 1,300 $894,100 1 1
10 Darren Elias 1,300 $683,050 3 1

Did You Know the World Poker Tour is Online?

WPT

The launch of WPT Global means that poker players around the world now have the chance to win their way to WPT events, win prizes and enjoy exciting games such as Poker Flips. As one of the world’s largest cash game poker networks, WPT Global is available in over 50 countries and territories around the world.

WPT Global offers a large deposit match bonus: 100% on deposits up to $1,200 (using any payment method). New players depositing a minimum of $20 automatically receive this match bonus which is unlocked in $5 increments (credited straight to the cashier) for every $20 of rake contribution.

Both tournaments and cash games count towards bonus unlocking; new players have 90 days from the date of first deposit to unlock and claim their full bonus amount.

Listen to more about the WPT World Championship on the new PokerNews Podcast!

*Images courtesy of WPT/Drew Amato.

Name Surname
Chad Holloway

Executive Editor U.S.

Executive Editor US, PokerNews Podcast co-host & 2013 WSOP Bracelet Winner.





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AGA Worried with the Size of Illegal Betting and Gaming Market

AGA Worried with the Size of Illegal Betting and Gaming Market


A survey of 5,284 US adults conducted on behalf of the American Gaming Association (AGA) revealed that 49% of the bettors who wagered in the past year have placed a bet with an illegal operator and 48% of online slots or table game players have played with an illegal online casino.

Stunning Figures

Stunned at the size of the illegal gaming market in the US, the AGA published a report titled “Sizing the Illegal and Unregulated Gaming Markets in the US,” estimating that Americans spend $511 billion each year gambling with illegal sportsbooks, online casino websites and unregulated gaming machines.

Commenting on the findings, AGA president and chief executive officer Bill Miller raised concerns about the threat posed by illegal operators to the regulated market.

“Illegal and unregulated gambling is a scourge on our society,” Miller said, outlining that it is “taking advantage of vulnerable consumers, skirting regulatory obligations and robbing communities of critical tax revenue for infrastructure, education and more,” convinced that the report shows “just how pervasive” the illegal market is.

The report estimates that due to illegal gambling state governments have been robbed of $13.3 billion in annual tax revenue, $2.5 billion more than what legal operators generated in 2021, siphoning $44.2 billion in annual revenue from the legal gaming industry – almost half of what combined commercial and tribal revenue was last year.

Sports Wagering

AGA’s report estimated that US bettors spend $63.8 billion wagering with illegal bookmakers and offshore websites, depriving legal sportsbooks of $3.8 billion in gaming revenue and states of $700 million in taxes.

AGA further claimed that illegal operations are projected to capture nearly 40% of the US sports betting market in 2022, based on a $100 billion total market projection.

Previous AGA research showed that more than half of those who wager with illegal operators or websites believe they are doing it legally.

Online Casino Gaming

AGA stated that Americans wager an estimated $337.9 billion with illegal iGaming websites, resulting in a loss of $3.9 billion in state tax revenue. Estimating the size of the illegal iGaming market of $13.5 billion annually, the gaming industry representative body concludes that it is nearly three times the size of the legal iGaming market estimated to be $5 billion this year as currently there are only six states in which online casino gaming is legal.

The survey which was conducted by The Innovation Group examines past-year gambling behavior with both legal and illegal operators of the participants and incorporates publicly available data on the size of the legal US gaming market.



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Join PokerNews in the Czech Republic for the 2022 EPT Prague Festival

Join PokerNews in the Czech Republic for the 2022 EPT Prague Festival



The PokerStars European Poker Tour (EPT) stops off in the Czech capital, Prague, this December, and PokerNews’ live reporting team will be on the ground throughout the festival, relating all of the action from the schedule’s biggest and most-prestigious events.

Prague has long been one of the most popular stops on the EPT, and has grown in popularity since combining the EPT Prague events with the Eureka Poker Tour. Since 2013, each EPT Prague Main Event has attracted more than 1,000 entries, with a record 1,190 players turning out in force the last time the EPT dropped anchor in the picturesque Czech city.

The 2022 edition of EPT Prague runs from December 7-18, during which time a staggering 53 numbered tournaments are crammed into the bustling schedule. PokerNews is providing unrivaled coverage from ten of those tournaments, including atrio of €25,000 buy-in events, the €50,000 EPT Super High Roller, and, of course, the €5,300 EPT Prague Main Event.

Follow the biggest EPT Prague Events here!

Follow These EPT Prague Events in the PokerNews Live Reporting Pages

Dates Event*
December 7-8 €10,200 Mystery Bounty
December 8-12 €1,100 Eureka Main Event
December 9 €25,000 NL Hold’em I
December 10 €25,000 NL Hold’em II
December 11-12 €2,200 Eureka High Roller
December 11-13 €50,000 EPT Super High Roller
December 12-18 €5,300 EPT Prague Main Event
December 14-16 €3,000 EPT Mystery Bounty
December 16-18 €10,300 EPT Prague High Roller
December 17-18 €25,000 NL Hold’em III

PokerNews‘ EPT Prague coverage kicks off with the €10,200 Mystery Bounty event, the first such tournament at a Prague stop. From there, we’re bringing you all of the action from the €1,100 Eureka Main Event, which Alejandro Lococo won last time out for €417,820.

Two €25,000 NL Hold’em Single Day High Rollers follow, before we switch our attention to the €2,200 Eureka High Roller. Spain’s Jose Manuel Gonzalez outlasted 1,148 opponents, including Pedro Marques, at the last EPT Prague stop, capturing the €343,750 top prize.

Will Timothy Adams be in the Czech Republic to defend his €50,000 EPT Super High Roller title? Find out from December 11. A day later, our EPT Prague Main Event coverage begins, with the €3,000 EPT Mystery Bounty, €10,300 High Roller, and the third and final €25,000 High Roller running alongside the Main.

Online Qualifier Grzegorz Glowny Wins 2021 EPT Prague Main Event (€692,252)

Past EPT Prague Main Event Champions

Date Buy-in Entrants Prize Pool Champion Prize
March 2022 €5,300 1,190 €5,771,500 Grzegorz Glowny €692,252
December 2019 €5,300 1,154 €5,596,900 Mikalai Pobal €1,005,600
December 2018 €5,300 1,174 €5,693,900 Paul Michaelis €840,000
December 2016 €5,300 1,192 €5,781,200 Jasper Meijer van Putten €669,300
December 2015 €5,300 1,044 €5,063,400 Hossein Ensan €754,510
December 2014 €5,300 1,107 €5,368,950 Stephen Graner €969,000
December 2013 €5,300 1,007 €4,883,950 Julian Track €725,700
December 2012 €5,300 864 €4,190,400 Ramzi Jelassi €835,000
December 2011 €5,300 722 €3,501,700 Martin Finger €720,000
December 2010 €5,300 563 €2,730,550 Roberto Romanello €640,000
December 2009 €5,250 586 €2,842,100 Jan Skampa €682,000
December 2008 €5,250 570 €2,764,500 Salvatore Bonavena €774,000
December 2007 €5,000 555 €2,530,240 Arnaud Mattern €708,400

The first EPT Prague Main Event took place in December 2007, which was the fourth season of the European Poker Tour. Popular Frenchman Arnaud Mattern emerged victoriously that day, and returned home with €708,400 in cold, hard cash.

Since Mattern’s victory, the likes of Roberto Romanello, Martin Finger, and World Series of Poker Main champion Hossein Ensan have got their hands on the winner’s trophy. It was in Prague that Mikalai Pobal became only the second two-time EPT Main Event champion.

Poland’s Grzegorz Glowny is the reigning EPT Prague Main Event champion, having triumphed in the delayed 2021 edition in March 2022. Glowny navigated his way through a record 1,190-strong field, and banked €692,252 after a four-way ICM deal involving Andrea Cortellazzi, Symeon Alexandridis, and Gab Yong Kim.

Stay tuned to PokerNews as we bring you all of the action, as it happens, from the 2022 PokerStars EPT Prague festival.





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