POKER EDITOR CRITICISES WSOP MANAGEMENT
24 July 2009
November Nine survivor has his own plans if
he wins the biggest bracelet in poker
Gathering momentum in the wake of the 40th World Series
of Poker this week are critical comments made by one of
the main event final tablers - the November Nine - who
has his own plans for the most coveted bracelet in
poker....if he wins it.
Card Player magazine
President and COO Jeff Shulman put on an impressive
display of poker playing talent to win through from an
original field of 6 494 players to the final nine who
will decide who is the 2009 champion when they reconvene
in November this year. He is currently on a chip count
of 19,580,000 - fourth in line behind chip leader Darvin
Moon on 58,930,000 (see previous InfoPowa reports).
Shulman caused some raised eyebrows when he said
that if he won the main event this year he would consign
the bracelet to the trash can, and he has since
elaborated on his views in his own publication at
http://www.cardplayer.com/poker-news/7213-jeff-shulman-explains-controversial-wsop-comments
.
“Some people are reporting that I’m upset
because the World Series canceled a media deal with Card
Player,” he is quoted as saying this week. “My comments
have nothing to do with that, and everything to do with
my disappointment in how the World Series is run. It
used to be run by people who loved and really cared
about poker, and had the players in mind, first and
foremost. That mission’s been derailed by a few
executives who now head the Series.
“This year,
the WSOP locked out players who flew in from around the
world to play in the main event, charged nearly $3
million in entry fees for the main event alone,
continued to create an uneven playing field by giving
special treatment to some, and, in general, display bad
attitudes and make inaccurate decisions,” he continued.
“Look, I love poker and entered with the hopes of
winning,” he says. “But, more importantly, I support
making the industry stronger and better for the players,
and to do this, there needs to be some major changes to
the way the World Series is run at the highest level.
“Hopefully, by doing something like this, people
will start talking about those changes.
Shulman
dismisses the assumption that his disdain stems from a
lack of media access for Card Player magazine and
CardPlayer.com at the Series.
“Card Player and
the World Series had a media deal in 2005 and 2006. Our
opinion was that the event should be open to all media,
but the World Series made a decision that only one media
company would get access, and that company would have to
pay for it.
“Card Player and the World Series had
disagreements on the media coverage from day one, and we
chose not to even bid on the deal in 2007. It wasn’t
worth it, and they sold it to someone else. We were glad
to get rid of it.”
“Harrah’s made the decision to
auction off the media rights to cover the World Series
to the highest bidder, not us. Do we like it? Absolutely
not.”
Shulman added that he stood by his
decision, and rather than trashing the bracelet is
considering a number of alternative uses for it should
he win. He is also open to suggestions. So far, he is
looking at an auction in aid of charity or using it as a
prize in a special tourney for those controversially
shut out of the WSOP main event this year.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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