Pros
Hit Poker Classic
By
Jeff Simpson
/Las
Vegas Gaming Wire/ - LAS VEGAS - Las Vegas reclaimed its position
at the center of the poker universe Wednesday when the Five-Star
World Poker Classic opened at Bellagio.
The first-year
tournament begins a two-month stretch when the poker world's top
pros will be in Las Vegas, culminating with the World Series of
Poker at Binion's
Horseshoe. "All of the top pros will be here in Las Vegas,"
said Jack McClelland, Bellagio
poker host and tournament director. "It helps our economy,
not L. A.'s, not Paris' or anywhere else."
Bellagio's
13-event tourney is highlighted by the $25,300 buy-in World Poker
Tour Championship, a no-limit hold'em competition that crowns the
Travel Channel-televised tour's inaugural year. The buy-in is the
biggest in multi table tournament history, and McClelland predicts
120 to 160 players will fork over the cash, generating a prize pool
of as much as $4 million and a first-place prize of almost $1.5
million. The
$1,570 buy-in limit hold'em event on April 2nd had 203 entries;
the final table is slated to begin play at 4 p.m. April 3rd, with
the winner to collect about $118,000, he said.
Mirage Resorts
Chief Executive Officer Bobby Baldwin, a former World Series of
Poker world champ, arranged for the tournament to be played in Bellagio's
table game pit, near the poker room, to allow the room's regular
array of low-, mid- and high-limit cash games to be played at the
same time as the tournament.
MGM Mirage poker
operations director Doug Dalton said the set-up is unparalleled.
"It's the prettiest setting for a poker tournament in the world,"
Dalton said.
McClelland said
the war in Iraq hasn't stopped overseas players from entering the
Bellagio
events. "We've had very few cancellations; none because of
the war," he said.
The former World
Series of Poker tournament director ran poker's top event when Jack
Binion operated the Horseshoe.
McClelland said
Bellagio
is rooting for the poker world series to have another record-setting
year. "We're
happy when they're successful," he said, noting that when
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