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 In a statement on its corporate blog, PokerStars lamented the upcoming closing of the Atlantic Club Casino Hotel, hinting that things may have turned out differently had the casino owners not "walked away from" the acquisition agreement with PokerStars and instead waited several months "for the regulatory approval process to be completed."

Eric Hollreiser, PokerStars' Head of Corporate Communications, revealed that PokerStars is "saddened" that the Atlantic Club will close on Jan. 13 following bankruptcy proceedings that saw the Tropicana and Caesars submit an approved joint bid of $23.4 million. The new owners will strip the casino for parts, reducing the number of casinos on the Jersey shore to 11.
Some 1,800 casino workers will begin the new year in the unemployment line, putting the hurt on an already struggling New Jersey economy. PokerStars made a deal to purchase the casino about one year ago for $15 million, which it claims could have saved those jobs and injected "new blood, new technology and new finances" toward Atlantic City's revitalization.
Considering that the online gambling bill in New Jersey had not yet been signed when the deal to acquire the Atlantic Club was first brokered, Hollreiser stated that PokerStars took a huge "leap of faith and commitment of significant investment" by agreeing to bail out the struggling casino. Remember too that PokerStars shelled out $11 million of that $15 million purchase price to keep the casino afloat "in the dark days following Hurricane Sandy and the seasonally slow winter months."
Indeed, the claim that PokerStars made a tremendous leap of faith and investment is spot-on. There's no doubt that license approval from state gaming regulators would have permitted PokerStars to take over the casino, open a new live poker room, operate a number of online gaming sites, and make a go at reversing the struggling fortunes of the Atlantic Club.
However, considering that PokerStars' application for licensing in conjunction with their partnership agreement with the Resorts Casino Hotel has been suspended, it is somewhat hard to see how the Atlantic Club closing was "avoidable." Hollreiser claims that the Atlantic Club walked away from the deal "in hopes that the improved economic picture could lead to more rewards" following the enactment of online gambling legislation.
It may be more likely that the Atlantic Club owners walked away more because it was obvious to them that PokerStars was not going to get approved due to founder Isai Scheinberg's staus as a fugitive from justice regarding the Black Friday charges. The two-year suspension of the review of PokerStars' license application by the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement bears this out.
It appears that the only way the Atlantic Club closing would have been "avoidable" is if PokerStars gained regulatory approval. With Scheinberg not yet answering the charges against him, it's likely that the regulatory approval process to purchase the casino would have turned out the same way as did PokerStars' application to partner with Resorts -- not completely denied, but not approved either.
In any event, that won't be the last of PokerStars' attempts to set foot in the U.S. market. Hollreiser further stated that the company "will continue to pursue our goals and remain confident that we will have a strong presence and positive economic impact in the American market in 2014, whether that is in New Jersey or another state seeking the benefits of being home to a world-class online gaming company."

 Sunday's match is the biggest poker moment ever for at least one of the challengers.

BENDER118, a 28-year-old from Russia whose real name is Andrey, has been playing poker since 2010 and got his start playing on Full Tilt.
He said winning this freeroll was the greatest thing that's ever happened to him as a poker player.
“I chose to play against Gus Hansen because I like his style and enjoy watching him play on TV,” said Andrey.
46-year-old German chris_munich was the shortstack when he reached the final table of the qualifier, and is now getting ready for a chance at the biggest payday of his poker career.
He'll be taking on Viktor Blom and said he's been playing poker for the last 10 years. He started as a blackjack player but preferred poker once he gave it a try.
“I watched a lot of high-roller games on Full Tilt before just for fun and I'm sometimes really wondering how these guys play, in a good and also bad way,” said Chris.
“But its always easy to give comments as a spectator. The situation changes completely as soon as you play on your own.”
None of the qualifiers said they have a concrete plan but everyone agrees that playing for $50,000 against one of the best players in the world will be an experience to remember.
Aleksleon, a 33-year-old from Russia named Aleksander, was a man of few words but wished his opponent Gus Hansen a happy new year and good luck in Sunday's matches.
When we asked BENDER118 if he had a message for Gus he said simply, “Be gentle.”
Tune in to Full Tilt Poker on Sunday at 12pm ET to watch Round 1 and check back here on Monday for the results.

 The ranking of the top ten online poker rooms and networks was jostled a bit last week, with re-positioning occurring near the bottom of the industry's leading poker sites.

MPN was booted out of the top ten, now finding itself in 12th place globally. As predicted in last week's update, the defection of Ladbrokes to the iPoker Network meant that Microgaming's MPN would likely take a tumble. That tumble amounted to 100 cash players in a weekly average.
Also losing ground was Bodog/Bovada, falling one slot to ninth place. Winamax moved up to eighth in PokerScout's rankings, outpacing the estimated player traffic at Bodog by 100 players or so.
PokerStars.fr has claimed sole possession of tenth place after being tied with MPN for that position last week. Industry leader PokerStars operates four of the top ten-ranked poker rooms, as PokerStars.it and PokerStars.es hold down sixth and seventh place, respectively.
The top five poker rooms and networks retained their positions from the previous week, with 888poker continuing to enjoy its end-of-year push into second place. The iPoker Network and Full Tilt remain in third and fourth, with iPoker's 2,600 average weekly cash players only 100 behind 888. Likewise, Full Tilt's 2,500 average players trails iPoker by 100, as well.
PartyPoker has fallen off the pace a bit in fifth place, with a seven-day average of 2,100 cash players. But in New Jersey, Party's partnership with Borgata continues to dominate that market. As of this writing, Party Borgata averages 240 cash players weekly, while WSOP-NJ clocks in at 150.
The New Jersey market is being watched intently by other states, as a few more may regulate online poker in 2014. That is purely speculation at this point, however, as some states may decide to wait and see how things progress in New Jersey over time before making the plunge.
Also being watched closely among U.S.-facing poker rooms is one of the newest kids on the block, the Equity Poker Network. Since launching for real-money on Nov. 8, EPN has slowly added players. Only 60 cash players are found playing there on a weekly average, but that is considerable progress for being up and running less than two months.
Another site for U.S. players to watch in 2014 and beyond is Infiniti Poker. The bitcoin-friendly poker room soft launched earlier this month and will begin the new year with its hard launch.
It appears as though 2014 may be another exciting year in online poker, with the possibility of regulation spreading in the U.S. An industry-wide trend toward attracting recreational players has also been underway, with more of the same expected in 2014. We here at PokerUpdate would like to take this opportunity to wish a Happy New Year to all of our loyal readers!

 Every year the high-stakes online poker games provide some of the best stories of the year.

This year didn’t disappoint with Niklas “Ragen70” Heinecker putting on one of the most dominant performances in years while Gus Hansen imploded in spectacular fashion.
2013 also marked a pivotal shift in how online poker results are recorded.
The excellent HighStakesDB allowed players to opt out for the first time ever and numerous players decided to regain their anonymity including Alex “PostflopAction” Kostritsyn and Kyle “Cottonseed1” Hendon who were both crushing mid-way through 2013.
That means that this year’s results are missing some of the biggest winners and losers.
 
Top 10 Online Poker Winners in 2013
German Niklas “ragen70” Heinecker was simply off-the-charts in 2013.
He crushed nearly every big session he played and ended up finishing with an astounding $6.3 million profit.
To put things in perspective Heinecker nearly doubled Ben “Sauce123” Sulsky’s high-stakes leading $3.5 million in 2012.
Heinecker easily recorded one of the most profitable years in the history of online poker.
Once you include the $4.5 million he made playing the live tournament circuit, Heinecker suddenly appears to be one of the richest players in the game with over $10 million profit in 2013.
Ben Tollerene would have likely taken top spot if it wasn’t for Heinecker’s ridiculous run. The underrated Tollerene continues to consistently grind out huge profits from his poker pad in Vancouver.
Some of the other interesting winners in 2013 included Hac “trex313” Dang. The Dang brothers have started a restaurant back home but Hac apparently found the time to travel and play some online poker. Picked up $1.8 million. No big deal.
Finally Patrik Antonius should have always stuck to his FinddaGrind alias. After several losing years on his “Patrik Antonius” account, the Finn switched back to his old handle and won $1.7 million in 2013.
 
1. Niklas “ragen70” Heinecker: +$6.3 million
2. Ben “Bttech” Tollerene: +$2.9 million
3. Alex “IReadYrSoul” Millar: +$2 million
4. Odd_Oddsen: +$1.9 million
5. Hac “trex313” Dang: +$1.8 million
6. No_Ola: +$1.8 million
7. FinddaGrind: +$1.7 million
8. Tight-Man1: +$1.4 million
9. proudlikeagoat: +$1.3 million
10. Follow The Hawk: +$985,000
Honorable mentions:
Tom “durrrr” Dwan, who has been criticized for not playing as much online poker these days actually recorded 68,144 hands and profited $750,000 so he can apparently still hang with the big boys, as long as it’s not Dan “jungleman12” Cates.
Viktor “Isildur1” Blom finished with a $586k profit, which seems good until you realize he was up over $5 million in the early stages of 2013. At least he didn’t go into the red.
 
Top 10 Online Poker Losers in 2013
As Heinecker soared, Gus Hansen fell like a lead brick in 2013. You would have been better off buying BlackBerry stock than a piece of the Great Dane this year.
Hansen plummeted to an eye-popping loss of $8.4 million in 2013. It’s one of the biggest losses in the history of online poker.
It’s tough to see a bona fide icon of the game like Gus Hansen struggle like he has this year, which was why we made it the single worst poker moment of 2013. Now is the time for Hansen to rebound with $10 million profit in 2014 and show us all how it’s done.
While not quite in the same category as Hansen, the account MalACEsia took a huge beating in 2013 to the tune of -$3.7 million. Widely rumored to be one of the Malaysian businessmen who play in Macau, the account can likely handle a bit of damage.
Perhaps the most surprising player in the top 10 biggest losers this year is Phil “Polarizing” Ivey who lost -$2.4 million.
It’s rumored that prior to 2013 Ivey had never recorded a losing year of online poker. Despite the loss Ivey remains the biggest all-time winner online with nearly $20 million in profit before the original Full Tilt Poker closed down.
Ben “Sauce1234” Sulsky also recorded a surprisingly off year, losing $1.4 million. He should be OK considering he won $3.5 million in 2012.
 
1. Gus Hansen: -$8.4 million
2. MalACEsia: -$3.7 million
3. samrostan: -$3.4 million
4. Phil “Polarizing” Ivey: -$2.4 million
5. punting-peddler: -$1.7 million
6. Ben “Sauce1234” Sulsky: - $1.4 million
7. patpatpanda: -$1.3 million
8. Scott “mastrblastr” Seiver: -$1.2 million
9. Rui Cao: -$1 million
10. davin77: -$1 million
 

 MPN has dropped to 12th place in PokerScout's global poker rankings, leaving third place iPoker as the only poker network within the top ten.

Despite having the ability to increase liquidity by pooling players from any number of skins, the popularity of networks within the online poker industry is seemingly at an all-time low. The network model appears to be losing favor among poker site operators and may be facing its demise as the calendar turns the page to 2014 this week.
MPN's recent loss of players was brought about by the defection of Ladbrokes to iPoker on Dec. 21. However, perhaps more indicative of things to come within the industry may be a transition by poker site operators to go it alone and avoid network policies and other disadvantages associated with being part of a network.
While the main advantage of being one skin among others is the increased pool of players, a huge disadvantage to the whole network system is the smaller skins whose aim is to poach players from other poker rooms within the network. This is often accomplished by rakeback deals that many in the industry would perceive as overly generous.
Networks such as iPoker have made moves in an effort to strengthen the overall ecology of the network by requiring skins to sign up a minimum number of new players monthly. But many wonder if such policies, combined with segregating weaker players from the pros, will be enough to nurture a viable business model.
Some poker sites, such as Unibet, are betting against poker networks in the future. Unibet has made the decision to leave MPN in the early part of 2014 and offer its players a standalone poker site.
“The environment in the online poker industry has changed over the years and we have come to the insight that being part of a poker network is not sustainable for Unibet in the long term,” said Daniel Eskola, Unibet's head of gaming.

 Just weeks after it was told its online gaming application in New Jersey had been suspended, PokerStars’ parent company Rational Group is still expecting to make considerable progress in the US in the upcoming year.

Eric Hollreiser, Head of Corporate Communications for PokerStars, in a post on the company’s blog stated that PokerStars is “confident that [it] will have a strong presence and positive economic impact in the American market in 2014.”
The New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement (DGE) has stated that it will “reactivate the application if significantly changed circumstances are demonstrated,” however Atlantic City is not the only place PokerStars is looking build a home for its US operations.
Though not excluding New Jersey, Hollreiser made it clear that the world leader in online poker is exploring other states in which to plant its US roots which would include a sizeable economic investment for the local economy.
Last December, news that PokerStars was nearing a deal to purchase the Atlantic Club Casino emerged with confirmation coming from PokerStars in January that it intended to invest in the struggling Boardwalk property securing up to 2,000 jobs in the process.
But after New Jersey legalized online gaming in February, and in spite of millions of dollars it invested into keeping the casino open, officials for the Atlantic Club terminated the deal in April.
At that time, Michael Frawley, COO of the Atlantic Club stated that the casino was “committed to the aggressive pursuit of the opportunities presented by online gambling.”
Failing to find a replacement partner to pursue its share of the newly approved online gaming market in New Jersey, the Atlantic Club was forced to file for bankruptcy.
Eventually a deal for $23.4m that will lead to the dismantling of the Atlantic Club was approved.
Tropicana Entertainment will acquire the gaming equipment and Caesars get the building when the casino is closed for good on January 13.
Hollreiser stated that PokerStars was “saddened” by the news and called the casino closing “avoidable.”
 

 On December 15, after nearly 49 hours of continuous play, I was declared winner of the first-ever Asia Poker Tour – Resorts World Manila (APT-RWM) Iron Man Poker Challenge. When all was said and done, I had been engaged in continuous play from 8:30pm Friday night until 9pm Sunday night, with only bathroom breaks away from the table. This uniquely structured tournament, with its accompanying lapses of consciousness and reason, represented one of the most challenging undertakings of my poker career. It was also one of the most satisfying.

Just ten minutes before my arm was raised by Iron Man Poker Challenge tournament director Lloyd Fontillas in a euphoric moment that I was barely alive enough to enjoy, my opponent of the past four hours Choi Byung Kyoo had announced in raspy, barely audible English, that he was going all-in on every hand from here on out.
Forget strategy, in a game where deals were not allowed and the difference between first and second was more than $7,000. My worthy opponent, like many others before him, had a compelling reason for this decision––a business flight to Korea that he was in danger of missing. Moreover, he was in imminent danger of dropping flat on the table, felted by biological necessity after some 20-odd grueling rounds of continuous poker.
A little bit about myself––originally from California, I have lived on and off in the Philippines for the past two years. I left the world of online poker following the Full Tilt debacle of 2010 (I was admittedly fighting withdrawal symptoms for quite some time), and have been strictly a brick-and-mortar player since. Poker in the Philippines’ provincial second city is an often vocal affair typically involving locals, Western expats, and Koreans. Life here in the horse latitudes seems a couple decades behind the times, and that is a part of the appeal. A freelance writer by trade, rather than trying to support myself through poker, I have focused on studying players and the way they act in certain situations––with an ultimate goal of becoming a major tournament threat.
The APT events always bring together a few familiar faces from Cebu, as well as a host of Manila grinders, and poker aficionados from throughout Malaysia, Korea, Singapore, and Japan. The competition level is surprisingly intense, with many of the best Asian players exceptionally aggressive––their unrelenting willingness to put it all on the line with nothing but an ice cold stare makes a suck-out (or three) inevitable over the course of any tournament. Prior to the Iron Man, I had never won any of the APT events, but had made the final table in some side tournaments, earning a certain amount of respect among regulars.
I came into the Iron Man with not the slightest idea of what the event involved, except that it was nominally about Guinness Book of World Records glory. I was also vaguely aware that it mirrored a worldwide trend in extreme workouts (CrossFit) and obstacle courses (Tough Mudder) and would have a significant quotient of pain involved. I can now report that the structure has its roots in a 2009 tournament designed by sicko Commerce Casino tournament director Matt Savage. The aim was to bring a bit of suffering and privation to today’s coddled players, who can only dream about life as a Road Warrior, traveling the backroads of oil-boom Texas, looking at their cards bleary-eyed down the barrel of a shotgun.
If inflicting maximum pain was the intent, I can attest that the 2013 Iron Man exceeded all expectations. Players in the inaugural 2009 event were given a paltry 10,000 chip starting stack, with play lasting a respectable (but less-than-incredible) 19 hours and 21 minutes. In 2012, a new record of 36 hours, 34 minutes was set at the Delaware Park Ironman Poker Challenge. Not to be outdone, the Machiavellian schemers at the APT concocted a structure-to-end-all structures: 100,000 starting chips with 25/50 starting blinds. One hour levels replaced by 1.5 hour levels after the 10th round, and 2 hour levels beyond the 20th round.
The event was recorded for posterity and had a number of officials on hand (including mute observers with “witness” signs hanging from their necks) to ensure integrity of the game. Also on hand was a table of paramedics, presumably to ensure rapid response should a player lose consciousness or go into pizza-induced cardiac arrest.
I sat down at 8:30pm, about halfway through the first round, having done my best to catch some zzz’s that afternoon. The first shock was the stack size: I had come to the tournament unprepared for a stack and blind structure designed specifically (as it gradually dawned on me) to extend play as long as humanly possible. Play was tentative at first, with players sussing each other out and preemptively yawning, stretching, and grumbling about how late the tournament had started. As the song goes “you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.” This was the quiet before the storm, with players still not battle-tested at the front lines of sleep deprivation. With 100,000 chips behind, even major hands represented only 5 to 10 percent of any given player’s stack.
As the mornnight (as they call it in the Philippines) wore on, I transferred to a much more active table of mostly locals who seemed intent on bluffing off as many chips as possible. When they inevitably started discussing strategy in the local lingo following every major hand, I asked half-jokingly if I could join the club.
Playing tight to the vest, I had 80,000 behind at around 4am when I finally doubled up. Having raised AJ pre-flop and gotten a call from a crafty Singaporean player (who had won a previous APT side-event), I bet out when an ace hit the flop. My opponent’s smooth call alerted me that I was quite possibly behind. I checked the turn and my foe put in a pot-sized bet of 10,000. I talked myself into a marginal call I could not have afforded in a normal tournament. If I failed to hit a jack, I still had 50,000 behind (about 100 big blinds) and an easy fold.
When a jack peeled out on the river I shoved all-in. After surprisingly little thinking time, the Singaporean called and showed AK. Thirty minutes later he was out of the tournament, the victim of his own pre-river timidity and post-river overvaluing of AK. In the next couple hours, I brought my stack up to a very respectable 200,000 simply by calling down bets with “bluff catcher” second pairs against my overly aggressive table mates.
Moving to another table around 6am, I was fortunate to catch a couple Korean players in the throes all-encompassing fits of rage and tilt. Whatever history underpinned the bad blood at the table, I was glad to play the role of neutral mediator and relieve them of their chips. The cobwebs of the early morning dissipated with a few sets of pushups and energy drinks, and I was humming along with a rather sizable stack when I moved to a new table around noon.
This table had a distinctly British accent and, over the next few hours, there were quite a number of small-stacked players to be pleasantly picked off (sorry, old chap). There was also a major hand in which I had KQ, and flopped KQ on a Q-K-10 board. I called a major raise by my super-aggressive Singaporean opponent and hit a boat with a king on the turn. After the expected pot-sized bet, I pushed all in. My opponent eyed me down for 10 minutes or so before ultimately folding, claiming that he held a Q-10.
Whether it was indeed Q-10 or air, I was not surprised to see him fritter away his substantial stack shortly before we got into the money, coming away with nothing to show for 20 some-odd hours on the felt. Take away––super aggressive play may get you far in tournaments where blinds are exerting major pressure, but will kill you within an Iron Man-type structure where (much like cash play) patience is rewarded.
Another noteworthy mid-tourney hand involved a little posturing on my part that (literally) put the fear of God into opponents. While I did not sell my soul to the devil, I was not above using underhanded tactics to enhance my image on the felt. When 6-6-6 came out on the flop, I casually commented that the tourney had commenced on Friday the 13th. I may also have let it slip in the same breath that my name is Damon. It is a peculiar happenstance that the American pronunciation of “Damon” corresponds with how Filipinos pronounce “demon,” and I frequently get startled glances from laundry shop clerks and Starbucks baristas in heavily Catholic Manila. Knowing that this would have its desired effect on at least a few of the players at the table, I remember taking a hefty pot with a well-timed raise in this particular pot.
In the hours leading up to the money (top 18), I wound up at an extremely challenging table. Key among my opponents was Samad Razavi, a girthy English fellow who was crowned APT Player of the Year for 2013, his second time to win the coveted award. His charming wife Maria Carmen Esdaile (who was quite pregnant) also played the Iron Man and was Player of the Year runner-up. I had knocked her out a few hours ago after some enjoyable chat, while she nursed a dwindling stack.
Anyway, this fellow turned out to have a gladiatorial style and threw chips onto the table with an almost physical force that made each round of betting seem like a throw-down. He and his cohort Howard Ang Lee (affectionately known as “Howard the Duck”) had been at the table together for quite a while and had an effective system of large raises from UTG (with air), designed to take chips from timid players who were afraid of landing outside the money.
At first I held back and sussed Mr. Razavi out, and then I began to take stabs at pots, and finally to fight fire with fire. The bubble is no time for meek play and with the blind structure the way it was, anything between the 300,000-700,000 chips I fluctuated within was enough to make a serious run at the money. As it turned out, active play was the correct strategy, as it took us more than an hour to make it down from 19 players to 18. Particularly surprising was the resilience of the short stack at the next table, a rail-thin German guy whom everyone kept expecting to bust out. Sandro Simon somehow hung in there and the next time I encountered him was on the final table, where he was one of the chip leaders.
At around the 30th hour the bubble finally burst and we consolidated to two tables. Stacks were still enormous relative to the blinds, so we would expect to see some tight play to the bitter finish, right? Actually, nothing could be further from the truth. With the next nine payouts ranging from $1320 to $1870, players decided en masse that just a few hundred dollars reward for the equivalent of four days work was about right. I don’t know about other countries, but in the U.S. that kind of money is slightly above minimum wage.
Despite an incentive for cool, calculated play, the two tables folded to one in a record 2.5 hours. Player after deep-stacked player succumbed to the rookie mistake of overplaying marginal hands into all-in shoves and calls. It was as if need for sleep convinced people that leaving with just a little money in their pockets was fine, as long as they got some much needed zzz’s. I nearly fell into the same trap, as my head was beginning to feel as if it was swimming in a fishbowl. Money, what is that really compared with a hot shower and a nice warm bed?
The wreckage at the other table was far greater, as a young Singaporean Zhang Quaosheng, who had seemed conservative and rational 12 hours ago, went all in repeatedly with marginal hands. His excuse was that he had a flight to catch and work to prepare for, although I chalked it up (as with nearly everything at this befuddling tournament) to lack of sleep. Amazingly, Zhang donked out against three or four players in a row, in the process earning chip leader status. Failing to shift gears, his downfall was just as rapid and he was ultimately sent home packing in 12th place. To his credit, Zhang took it all with a cosmic shrug––which I could not say for Samad Razavi, who nearly knocked everyone’s chips off the table when he was felted in 11th. I could not entirely blame him––when you have invested a full day of your life in a tournament, to land outside of the real money and take home a few hundred dollars feels like a crushing defeat.
Just prior to hitting the final table, I had one pivotal hand, in which my JJ held up against the all-in of a player with AK, with 50 percent of my stack at stake. This hand boosted me up to about 1.5 million chips and ensured that I would be one of the larger stacks as we moved toward the real money.
 

 The French government has rejected a call by the country’s leading gaming regulator to allow French online poker player pools to join forces with gaming pools of fellow European countries in order to increase liquidity.

ARJEL, the gaming regulator of France, put forward the idea after constant decreases in player numbers and overall gross revenues for French-based online poker and gaming operators. However, that idea was rejected outright by the country's government, which contains a number of figures who are against online gambling.
One of those figures is young rising star Razzy Hammadi, who holds an influential position in the government’s Committee for Economic Affairs. Hammadi has voiced his staunch opposition to online gaming in France in the past and he used a hearing on the French player pool proposal to reiterate his anti-online poker views.
“There are two ways to understand the tightening of the market,” he said. “We could simply realize that despite significant investments in advertising and development, poker has now gone a little out of fashion, or we could at the same time consider that the need of an everyday greater liquidity is part of online poker’s economic structure.
“As a rapporteur, I am against that as it brings to my mind the idea of online poker becoming an uncontrollable ogre eating one market after the other.”
A sharp decline in revenues in the French online poker market came about in 2013, as well as the online gaming markets in the vast majority of European nations. Overall, online poker revenue in France decreased by 17 percent in the third quarter of this year, with the previous two quarters also marking similar declines.
It is currently unclear what the numbers for the last quarter of the year will be, but expectations are that it will be much of the same. France’s southern neighbour, Spain, also had double digit declines in its online poker revenues this year.
Pooling France's online players with countries such as Spain and Italy may have led to greater numbers of players wanting to engage in online games such as poker as there would have been increased competition.
The idea of pooling online poker players among countries was also viewed favourably by Spain’s online gaming regulator. However, with the French government throwing out any possibility of such a plan, it is highly unlikely that the idea will get off the ground in the future.

 PokerStars' $27 million December festival concluded last Sunday, putting an exclamation point on another banner year at the world's leading poker site.

Despite getting shut out of the U.S. marketplace in New Jersey for the time being, a lot went right at PokerStars in 2013. Although the globe's most popular poker room may not be entering the U.S. space in the near future, it's likely only a matter of time until U.S. players are one day able to log onto a site operated by PokerStars.
Nobody knows exactly when that day will be, as practically the entire country remains shrouded in uncertainty regarding the spread of online poker throughout the states. It's coming, but in the absence of federal legislation, the state-by-state patchwork promises to be a slow process.
In the meantime, let's take a look at some PokerStars 2013 highlights. The 100 billionth hand celebration played out in June as PokerStars reached a phenomenal number of hands dealt since flipping on the virtual switch in 2001. A whopping $5 million was given to players in the "Road to 100 Billion" promotion that saw action at the PokerStars cash tables skyrocket as the ultimate milestone hand approached.
It was during this promo that PokerStars broke the Guinness world record for the largest poker tournament ever held. A total of 225,000 players kicked in $1 and competed for a guaranteed $300,000 prize pool, with PokerStars providing the $75,000 overlay. The previous record of 200,000 was set in late 2011 by, you guessed it, PokerStars!
Other online achievements include the Spring Championship of Online Poker (SCOOP) 2013 taking the crown of richest Internet poker festival by awarding over $75 million in prize money. Fifteen days of outstanding tournament action saw the $40 million guaranteed prize pool nearly double.
While SCOOP set the online record for prize money, PokerStars also set a record for the most popular online poker festival two months earlier. That distinction was earned during MicroMillions 4 when Zoom Poker tournaments were introduced. PokerStars' fast-fold variant played a huge part in a record 1,527,760 entries during the MTT series.
On the live poker scene, PokerStars launched new poker rooms in Madrid, Macau and London. Strong showings at PokerStars-sponsored Main Event tournaments also were realized in 2013, as 1,099 entries bought in at UKIPT London; 1,315 at the Eureka Poker Tour Prague; 1,798 at ESPT Barcelona; and a PokerStars record of 2,446 entries at the BSOP Millions in Sao Paulo.
Several Team PokerStars Pros also had big years. Daniel Negreanu took home titles at the WSOPE High Roller and the WSOP APAC Main Event. KidPoker also landed at the final table at EPT Grand Final and WPT World Championship events. Negreanu recently tweeted his 2013 overall results that included cashes of $3,203,423 on buy-ins of $1,211,833 for a net profit of $1,963,500. He calculated his hourly rate of pay for the year at $3,200.
Yet another PokerStars Pro, Vanessa Selbst, won the $25k High Roller at the PCA in January to become the highest-earning female player of all-time. Selbst has over $8 million in cashes
So 2013 turned out to be a fine year for PokerStars overall. You can expect more of the same in 2014.

 It is the time for Christmas cheer and we at PokerUpdate hope all of you are celebrating it with full merriness.

Christmas is often marked as an opportunity to spend quality time with family and friends by giving, sharing and smiling. Some people even go one step further at this time of year by giving, sharing and smiling with those unknown to them, often those in need who are unable to spend the festive season with those close to them.    
One poker player has been the recipient of such Christmas goodwill after a cab driver returned $300,000 – that’s right, $300,000 – that was mistakenly left in his cab earlier this week.
The yet unnamed owner of the cash, who the Washington Times described as a “well-known poker player,” left the bag of money in the back seat after the driver, Gerardo Gamboa, dropped him off at the Palms Place in Las Vegas.
It was only two passengers later that Gamboa realized just what was contained in the bag after initially believing it may have been a box of chocolates. A seemingly honest man, Gamboa alerted his superiors about the unexpected find and a search immediately was underway to find its rightful owner.
Apparently, it did not take long to find the player, although the player's lack of identification meant the process to verify him as the rightful owner of the stash of cash took a little while longer. At the end of it all, though, the player was found to have indeed been the owner of the $300,000 and was dutifully reunited with his cash.
The player is said to have personally thanked Gamboa for doing the right thing and reporting the misplaced cash, and also planned on rewarding the driver for his commendable actions. For Gamboa, however, it seems that he doesn’t mind whether or not he receives any material thanks, having said he reported the cash because it was the honest thing to do.
"If he doesn't give me anything, that's OK," Gamboa told the Sun. "I'm not waiting for any kind of return. I just wanted to do the right thing, and I appreciate what the company did for me."
A fitting poker-related story of kind-heartedness for this special day of the year.
 
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