For a moment, it appeared Phil Gordon's
efforts to help legalize No-Limit Texas Holdem Poker tournaments in
Minnesota might backfire.
Pitted head-to-head,
champion poker player Gordon and Sen. Dave Kleis played a friendly round
Monday at the Capitol to show the media crowd there was nothing to fear
from the game, or from Kleis' efforts to legalize Texas Holdem tournaments
at bars statewide.
Those efforts depend
on convincing lawmakers that such tournaments do not equal gambling, and
on showing that Texas Holdem is a game of skill, not chance.
"See, we're having
fun. No money, just a little T-shirt at stake," said Gordon, the co-host
of "Celebrity Poker Showdown" on Bravo Television Network. "Just having
fun."
Gordon had come to St.
Paul from Las Vegas to testify on behalf of Kleis' bill at a critical
committee hearing Monday.
Kleis' defeat at the
hands of a man who has won more than $1 million in professional poker
tournaments appeared imminent.
But then a climactic
hand, a dramatic turn of the cards, and it appeared as if Kleis was about
to take most of Gordon's chips. Gordon's smile almost vanished. Could the
St. Cloud Republican — first loser at a demonstration game among
legislators last month — upset a seasoned pro?
As it turns out, no.
When the final card
was dealt, Gordon managed to split the hand with Kleis and avert disaster.
Gordon eventually took
all of Kleis' chips and the St. Cloud State University Huskies T-shirt
that was the prize. And the smile was back.
"Folks, that's how we
do it on the World Poker Tour," Gordon said afterward. "Poker really is
the cruelest game."
While the game may
have been cruel to Kleis, Gordon's appearance helped the bill sail through
the Senate State and Local Government Operations committee Monday.
And while Kleis has
struggled to keep his poker bill separate from discussions about expanding
gambling in Minnesota this session, his efforts have drawn national
attention, including a write-up in the New York Times that Gordon said is
the reason he volunteered to come and testify.
Local enthusiasm
Gordon's appearance
was a chance for Dominic Wirz and Ryan Pruse to meet one of their heroes.
The St. Cloud poker
fans recently started Full Tilt Magazine, dedicated to poker playing in
the Midwest. On Monday, they came to the Capitol and talked poker with
Gordon.
Pruse, 32, mused on
the effects of a state-led raid of a Texas Holdem tournament last year at
Granite Bowl that prompted Kleis' bill. Stearns County Attorney Janelle
Kendall declined to prosecute Granite Bowl owner Dave Bischoff or the
people playing cards, but the raid shook people up, Pruse said.
"There's a lot of
people in St. Cloud who want to play but won't, because they're afraid the
police will walk in on them," he said.
Kleis' bill would
allow bars and bowling alleys such as Bischoff's to sponsor Texas Holdem
tournaments as long as there is no entrance fee, the house doesn't get any
money directly from the tournament and prizes are limited to no more than
$200 total.
Amendments to the
Senate bill would allow local governments to regulate the tournaments and
charge a fee up to $200 to license them, and people younger than 18 would
be prohibited from entering.
Kleis vowed to keep
his bill free of other gambling expansion efforts and to limit it to
adding Texas Holdem to a list of other games people can play in free
tournaments, such as bridge, cribbage, euchre and whist.
"This bill is not in
any way an expansion of gambling," he said.
Expansion plans?
Bischoff has resumed
the weekly tournaments at his establishment and is working with Wirz and
Pruse to expand similar tournaments to at least six other St. Cloud
establishments by next month.
If Kleis' bill becomes
law, Bischoff said he sees his tournament-organizing efforts increasing.
"Eventually, we'd like
to take it statewide," he said. "I'm sure eventually we'll reach a
saturation point, but I think there's a great demand out there right now."
Wirz said he wouldn't
mind eventually expanding the prize options to make Minnesota more akin to
states that offer cruises and cars as grand prizes.
Gordon made it clear
he thinks people should be able to play all forms of poker in tournaments,
though Kleis' bill only touches on Texas Holdem.
"There's really no
reason for social poker to have the stigma of illegality it now
possesses," he said. "Poker is not gambling."
Not that he thinks
there's anything wrong with playing poker for real money.
"Card rooms where they
play for money are legal in just about every state," he said. "But I'm not
here trying to legalize poker for money. That's a different issue."
On the Net
Follow SF317/HF519
throughout the legislative session at: www.leg.state.mn.us/leg/legis.asp.
Meet Phil Gordon
Name: Phil Gordon.
Age: 34.
Home: Las Vegas.
Marriage status:
Single, no children.
Height: 6'9".
Started playing
poker:Age 7.
Professional career:
Seven years, about $1.1 million in tournament earnings.
Professional
highlights: Fourth-place finish, 2001 World Series of Poker championship;
won $360,000 purse in 2004 World Poker Tour's Bay 101 Shooting Stars
tournament.
Related
accomplishments: Host, Bravo Television Networks's Celebrity Poker
Showdown; author, "Poker: The Real Deal."
Education: National
Merit Scholarship finalist at 15; received computer science degree from
Georgia Institute of Technology at 20.
Business experience:
Founding member and programmer for Netsys Technologies until its
acquisition by Cisco Systems.
Travels: Has traveled
solo to more than 50 countries on six continents, primarily during a
five-year backpacking tour that began in 1997.
On celebrity poker
players:"Toby Maguire is the best celebrity playing poker today, but he
hasn't been on our show yet. Ben Affleck's probably the best player who's
been on the show."
On skill versus luck
in poker:"I've been playing competitively for 13 years, professionally for
seven. I lost a lot in those first six years, and I haven't had a losing
season since. Top poker players are not the luckiest, they are the most
skilled at what they do."