2011 Jan 3

When the poker world looks way back at 2002, one word will suffice to summarize: “Ivey”. Three bracelets in one year gets you your own chapter in the poker encyclopedia. One year later, “Moneymaker” put his own one-word stamp in the history books. When history looks back on 2010, it will have another one-word moniker, and it’s not likely going to be “Duhamel.” Dozens of players, including the French-Canadian Main Event Champion, had breakout, blockbuster years, but it was, without question, the year of “Mizrachi.” Michael will have the most pages devoted to his accomplishments in the end, but the supporting cast that included brothers Robert, Eric, Donny, and even wife Lily, coalesced to weave an epic tale over the year that could just as easily have been fabricated by the studios of Los Angeles (where this little story all began) as cooked up in the sweltering Las Vegas desert.

Michael “The Grinder” Mizrachi arrived on the poker scene at the end of 2004 with two quick quarter-million-dollar cashes to close out the year — one a win in a $2,000 event at the Five Diamond Poker Classic and the other a World Poker Tour final table in Tunica. A month later, in February 2005, he announced himself to anyone paying attention with a big score of $1.8 million and his first major title at the L.A. Poker Classic to dispense with the training-wheel stages quickly. A year later, in early 2006, he was lighting fire to more WPT fields, taking second and first in the consecutive Goldstrike World Poker Open and Borgata Winter Open — both in January. Those scores added another $1.7 million to his bankroll, and the Grinder was on the path to becoming a household name.

As the calendar ticked into January 2010, Michael Mizrachi’s career stat sheet included those two WPT titles, 19 WSOP cashes (one better than Robert’s 18), two WSOP final tables (to Robert’s five), and more than $7.5 million in career earnings. Still, the Grinder was most certainly in the conversations of “best poker player without a bracelet,” and some were even more blunt about his results. It was 2008 when he finally did make his first WSOP final table, and the official release said the following:

Michael “the Grinder” Mizrachi has enjoyed astounding success in poker tournaments in recent years. His career winnings total more than $6 million. But for all his accolades elsewhere, Mizrachi has not fared particularly well at the WSOP. This was his first-ever final table appearance. Unfortunately, he went out in eighth place.

There’s some dramatic foreshadowing in there somewhere. Anyway, things were a little friendlier later that year when the Grinder made his second final table in the $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha World Championship. Coincidentally, Michael was looking to win the bracelet in the same event in which his brother had won his first the year before. Mizrachi could not defend his brother’s title, however, falling in third place and keeping the monkey squarely on his back.

The Grinder did not cash in the 2009 World Series of Poker, but he was back in 2010 with a full load of ammunition. The 41st Annual WSOP boasted an opening event for the ages, the one-off $50,000 Players’ Championship for which the Chip Reese Memorial Trophy was to be awarded. The real prize, however, was the bracelet and the bragging rights, and the new 8-Game Mix drew possibly the most skilled field of 116 players ever assembled. Two of them had the last name Mizrachi as brothers Michael and Robert both took to the felt. Five days later, the ESPN television arena hosted a veritable Mizrachi family reunion as both brothers took their seats at the final table alongside seven strangers.

Poker has seen sibling rivalries creep onto the felt in years past (see the 2004 Tournament of Champions), but never have two family members been battling so brutally for the same golden prize. When Michael eliminated David Baker in sixth place, he and Robert became the highest-finishing pair of siblings in WSOP history. The Grinder was fifth in chips going into the day, but it was Robert who exited next in that fifth place. And it was his little brother doing the deed. A short-stacked Robert took his stand with Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi, and the Grinder’s Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi outdrew him with a crushing jack on the turn. Robert hung around to sit in the Grinder’s cheering section, and it proved to be a long night in camp. Many, many hours later, the Grinder hoisted the trophy and closed the clasp on his first gold bracelet — and a big one, at that. The Grinder had won one of the most prestigious events ever held, but neither he nor anyone there could imagine to what extent his WSOP was just beginning, and how the rest of his family would continue to play a central role in his success.

The Grinder followed that win with three more cashes and two more final tables, both in $10,000 Championship events. He took sixth place in the Seven-Card Stud World Championship, then finished eighth in the Limit Hold’em World Championship — all in June. Already the proud owner of one gold bracelet from that 2007 Pot-Limit Omaha World Championship, brother Robert had a similarly successful 2010 WSOP. After that opening run in the Players’ Championship, Robert picked up four more cashes of his own, final-tabling a H.O.R.S.E. event and a Pot-Limit Omaha event before summer’s end. When the Main Event arrived at the start of July, the poker world got to gaze upon all four brothers side by side. Michael, Robert, Eric and Donny each put up their $10,000 to play, embarking on one of the most widely followed and discussed poker journeys in recent memory.

The brothers Mizrachi all survived their opening days, a feat in itself considering the minefield that is Day 1 of any Main Event. Day 2 also came and went with all four Mizrachis still standing. The chip average ticked up close to 200,000 by the end of Day 3, and Eric was the only one of the four below that mark heading into Day 4 bubble day. He rode his shortening stack into the small money before finally succumbing in 718th place, taking home $19,263 and taking over a new role as Mizrachi family cheerleader for his three brothers still in contention. Donny fell next on Day 5, cashing $36,463 for his 345th-place run. That left Robert and Michael to return for Day 6, the latter just outside of the top 25 in chips with 205 players left. It was already quite an accomplishment for the brothers who had begun their 2010 WSOP together.

The Grinder began Day 6 of the Main Event in 30th place and finished the day in second. Over the course of play that afternoon, he was in and out of the chip lead as he took big pots off Duy Lee, Brock Bourne, Matthew Schreiber, and Randy Dorfman. Across the room, though, things were beginning to spiral downward for Robert. Coming into the day with a dangerously short stack, Robert did manage to find two early double ups. First, his Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi held against Robert Pisano’s Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi; then his Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi outran Manuel Davidan’s Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi. The second of those doubles put Robert back into contention, but he could not hold onto those chips until the dinner break. He was down under 10 big blinds when he moved in with Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi against Josue Sauvageau’s Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi, and a board of Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi sent Robert (1176th place, $57,102) to join brothers Eric and Donny on the rail. The Grinder was left waving the family flag, alone at the table but by no means alone in the room.

He was certainly up to the task, but Day 7 was a grind. Trends were all downward to start his day, and he was a million chips lighter every time his stack was updated. He was all the way down to just 1.51 million when he got it all-in with Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi against William Thorson’s Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi. The board ran out Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi to double Mizrachi back into contention, and he moved back over 7.5 million when he turned a straight to ship Cory Emery and his set out the door with 32 players remaining. Grinder was in 16th place when the final 27 players retired for the final overnight break of the summer session. For two-thirds of them, a small paycheck. For nine, life-changing money and a seat at the final table in November.

On Day 8, Michael picked up Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi to win a small pot on the first hand, and those cowboys would continue to factor heavily in the deciding day. Once more, nothing came easily, and early upward trends for Grinder were soon erased by big pots in the loss column. One of them came when his ace-eight granted a double up to Hasan Habib’s Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi, the cowboys biting Mizrachi this time. That left Mizrachi as the shortest stack left with 15 players remaining. The pocket kings would redeem themselves soon thereafter, though, when the Grinder’s Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi doubled through John Racener’s jack-nine on a jack-high flop. A couple of orbits later, he was back over 8 million, and he was fortified by his thunderous cheering section as the night dragged on into the twilight hours. Finally, just before sunup, Brandon Steven lost a flip to exit in 10th place, and Mizrachi’s seat in the November Nine was set. Unbelievable.

The hype surrounding Mizrachi’s November return to the felt was unlike anything the poker industry has ever seen as the faces of he and his family were scattered throughout major print media and television news shows. When the Grinder did make his grand reentrance in November, he was in seventh chip position, but it wasn’t long before there were just seven players left and he was the chip leader with more than 50 million in front of him. It happened nearly that quickly. He even had the eventual champion Duhamel all in and flipping for his tournament life on the 150th hand of the night. Duhamel’s Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi outflopped Mizrachi’s pocket threes, however, wrestling away close to half of Grinder’s stack. The two tangled again 19 hands later with Duhamel’s Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi getting the better of Mizrachi’s Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi on a Top Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of MizrachiTop Ten Stories of 2010: #1, The Year of Mizrachi board. That took another 12 million from Mizrachi’s stack, and the remainder of his chips wouldn’t last much longer. One hundred eighty-five hands into the final table, Duhamel’s pocket aces laid Mizrachi’s dreams to rest, but the Grinder’s legendary run earned him a solid place in the discussion of the best to ever play the game.

The poker media and the community of fans have learned in recent years to be careful with the words “never happen again.” Feats of poker might are duplicated and surpassed with great regularity nowadays as players get younger, richer, and braver. Still, it’s hard to imagine finding four siblings to do what the brothers Mizrachi managed to do this year, and we can confidently say that Michael’s accomplishments are not likely to be seen again in this modern era of poker. For one thing, the Players’ Championship is not likely to return in 2011 or anytime soon. The 2010 WSOP essentially was essentially a crown with three jewels: the Players’ Championship, the Main Event, and the Player of the Year. The Grinder took care of the first of those with relative ease, and he was within a couple of lucky coin flips of conquering the other two as well. Any normal grinder would be happy with accomplishing those three things within their lifetime, but The Grinder nearly pulled off the Triple Crown in the same year. That’s certainly got our vote as the crowning achievement of the 2010 calendar year, and the decade will have to step up its game in a hurry if it wants to top the Year of Mizrachi.

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2011 Jan 3

Coming into 2010, the poker industry was looking to advance the cause for official legalization and licensing. From the beginning of the year, everyone was involved in a giant waiting game, and no one really knew what to expect when June 1, 2010, would roll around. That was the date the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act was set to kick in.

Most of those involved in poker in one way or another cared and followed the headlines but were often tossed back and forth between positive and negative. First, the thoughts of legalized intrastate Internet poker were brought up in New Jersey and kept hopes alive, but those were again lost when Republican Scott Brown proved victorious over Obama-backed state Atty. Gen. Martha Coakley in a special election to fill the deceased Ted Kennedy’s U.S. Senate seat. Then California became a player in the legalization of intrastate Internet poker and things swayed back toward positive.

Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) was one of those thought of to be on the fence about Internet gaming. In February, it was revealed that the Senate Majority Leader appeared to have his legs dangling over the edge favoring online poker. He supported the delay of the UIGEA and this came to the attention of the Poker Players Alliance. The PPA was so encouraged that the organization began donating money for the Senator’s reelection, something previously only done with Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), who introduced the Senate bill to license and regulate poker.

More toward the end of February, legislation to license and regulate Internet gambling has been tied to a bill with larger implications. That bill was the Bipartisan Tax Fairness and Simplification Act introduced by Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Judd Gregg (R-NH). As advertised, the bill would simplify and reform the U.S. tax code. To pay for the tax cuts outlined in the bill, a provision to license, regulate and tax the Internet gambling industry was made. Two things were very important about this move. First, the bill was introduced by a member of each party, which gave a lot of encouragement to many. Second, it set a precedent for Internet gambling legislation to be attached to other interests, much like the UIGEA got through the Senate in 2006, which caused this entire mess. This was great news to those in poker as it meant that if legislation to license and regulate Internet gambling can continue to be attached to other bills as a way to generate the revenue needed for a larger plan, it only takes one successful vehicle for online poker to gain official legalization in the U.S.

Moving forward to the next month, the hopes of poker advocates took another hit when, according to Congressman Barney Frank, the UIGEA regulations would not receive another delay from the Treasury Department. Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) made a power play to block President Obama’s Treasury nominee from taking office and it worked. The UIGEA would come into effect on June 1, 2010. The compliance date for the regulations had already been delayed once for six months but wouldn’t be allowed a second extension.

What was the PPA going to do about this? After successfully petitioning for the delay that extended the compliance deadline on UIGEA regulations to June 1, the PPA would now focus its efforts going forward not on delaying,but on refining the final version.

Others were working during the month of March, as well. Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) reintroduced his Internet Gambling Regulation and Tax Enforcement Act toward the end of the month. The bill wasn’t said to be one that would compete with Frank’s legislation, but rather one that the two Congressman worked on together. The plan would be to combine both this newly introduced bill and Frank’s Internet Gambling Regulation, Consumer Protection and Enforcement Act in Internet gambling legislation were to come to a vote in the House.

On June 1, 2010, the UIGEA regulations were to be in full effect. In the days prior, much of the poker world was descending on Las Vegas in preparation for the long haul of the World Series of Poker. Many played poker online in the U.S. and were anxiously awaiting this compliance date. When it hit, things didn’t exactly turn into the desolate wasteland that everyone feared. Instead, our own Matthew Kredell reported at one point that over 41,000 were playing cash games on PokerStars and another 17,000-plus on Full Tilt Poker. Many pros and online poker enthusiasts breathed a sigh of relief within the confines of the Rio All Suite Hotel & Casino walls knowing it was going to be just a big, dried-up desert on the virtual felt. Still, a lot might change for the worse over the next couple of weeks.

About one month after the UIGEA took full effect on the online poker world, not much had changed. The games were still going on the sites with thousands and thousands of players playing poker. What had changed was that the UIGEA was preventing U.S. citizens from depositing to online sites. Still, players found ways around it and the money went into the games. The PPA even reached out to its members and asked them to notify the organization if they were having problems withdrawing funds. John Pappas, executive director of the PPA, said that the organization hadn’t received many complaints. After all, the UIGEA was only supposed to impact transactions to the poker sites.

In July, poker players in California received some good and bad news as the online poker legislation for the state was back on the board. State Sen. Rod Wright, who introduced the California Online Poker Law Enforcement Compliance and Consumer Protection Act, surprisingly announced that he had withdrawn the bill at a June 29 hearing in the Governmental Organization Committee he chaired. Wright still planned to pursue Internet poker legislation, but wanted to sit down with interested parties to craft a bill that would receive broader support. The good news was this wasn’t the bill players were looking for, making the derailment from its path a positive.

On July 28, 2010, the House Financial Services Committee passed Frank’s Internet Gambling Regulation, Consumer Protection and Enforcement Act by a 41-22-1 vote. This was big for online poker, but not because it meant the legalization of online poker was imminent. It was big because it showed how far the fight has come. Four years prior, Congress voted 6-1 against Internet gambling in supporting the UIGEA. On this key day of the year, the committee voted nearly 2-1 in favor of the cause.

After the passage of Frank’s bill, much of the poker community was excited. Plenty were even talking about the imminent federal legalization that was next to come. Even despite this important step in the movement, there was still plenty of work to be done and a very long road ahead before Frank’s bill could become law.

At the end of August, the PPA called for action for its members to sign a letter urging Commerce Casino to change its position on Frank’s bill to federally license and regulate online poker. Commerce had representative Tom Malkasian testify in opposition of the bill during a hearing in front of the House Financial Services Committee in July. Although the bill still passed through the committee, Commerce allied itself on the side of poker enemies such as Rep. Spencer Bachus (D-Ala.) and Focus on the Family. Over 10,000 people had signed the letter including prominent professional poker players Annie Duke, Tom Dwan, Barry Greenstein, Greg Raymer, Huck Seed, Patrik Antonius, Ted Forrest, Phil Hellmuth, Phil Ivey, Vanessa Rousso, Doyle Brunson, Gus Hansen, Jennifer Harman, Howard Lederer, John Juanda, Mike Matusow, Chris Moneymaker, Phil Laak, Erick Lindgren, Chris Ferguson, Daniel Negreanu, Eli Elezra and Allen Cunningham. In that testimony, Malkasian compared operators like PokerStars and Full Tilt to a drug cartel, stating that if Congress were ever to decide to legalize marijuana, “certainly no one would suggest that the first federal permits to sell it should go to the Tijuana drug cartel since they have the most money and experience in marketing and distributing the product.”

Moving into the final part of the year, the people’s right to play poker had seen an unprecedented amount of progress. Even though Frank’s bill passed the House Financial Services Committee back in July, and it was now September, the progress doesn’t carry over from year to year. The next step was for McDermott’s Internet Gambling Regulation and Tax Enforcement Act to advance through the Ways and Means Committee. The PPA asked its members who live in the districts of Ways and Means representatives to send a PPA form letter asking for their congressmen to push for a markup and support the legislation.

Unfortunately, the bill would not get a markup in the House Ways and Means Committee prior to the November elections, according to a spokesman for the congressman, who cited a lack of time in the committee schedule. The markup was seen as the next big step toward federally licensed and regulated online poker but not getting the markup done before the end of the regular congressional schedule just adds to the already long odds for federal Internet poker legislation to pass through both houses in the little time remaining this year.

Also in September, Washington upheld a 2006 law that makes it a felony to play online poker in the state. Lee Rousso, the PPA Washington state director, challenged the law, but the judges ruled against him. Rousso had challenged the law as a violation of the commerce clause of the U.S. Constitution, which prohibits states from passing legislation that discriminates against interstate commerce. Rather than attempting the challenge the ruling in the U.S. Supreme Court, Pappas believed a legislative route to be the best chance to overturn the law. When the law was passed in 2006, the PPA was in its formative stage and there was no organized poker lobby, leading Pappas to believe the PPA could help block such legislation if it were introduced today. After the ruling, the two most prominent sites, PokerStars and Full Tilt Poker, stopped serving people in the state.

On the opposite side of the coin as Washington state, the New Jersey Senate passed the Internet gambling bill in November by an impressive 29-5 margin. The bill would license and regulate online poker within the state and even though this movement seemed stagnant for the past few months amidst everything else that was going on, was a big step forward. Shortly after the bill passed in New Jersey, California looked as though it was ready to follow in the same footsteps.

With a month left to go in 2010, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid did his best ability to get a law passed to legalize, license and regulate Internet poker. Reid had been working hard on a behind-the-scenes deal with Senate and House leaders to attach an Internet poker bill to larger legislation guaranteed to pass in the lame-duck session the way poker’s opponents attached the UIGEA to the SAFE Port Act in 2006. According to Pappas, if the bill is attached to a larger bill, that is a sign the deal has been reached in both houses and that government-sanctioned Internet poker will become a reality.

The rumors that were floating around all year about Reid’s move to support online poker seemed to be true now. Still, the bill wasn’t going to be perfect, and a lot of poker players were worried about one big thing: a proposed 15-month blackout period before the first licenses would be granted. This is meant to give time for U.S. casinos and other companies that want to be involved to get their websites together and to essentially reboot the Internet poker industry so that all sites begin on a level playing field. This worried a lot of people and made plenty of them question whether or not they would want the bill passed.

Will it pass? Won’t it pass? Back and forth it went. But then in mid December, the effort of Reid took a fatal blow, but no one could really put a finger on to why it died. Many even believe that because of the various leakings of the bill every few days it had more life on poker message boards and news sites than it ever did on Capitol Hill.

Reid’s push to insert anything into the bill for online poker was severely limited because ofcPresident Obama’s handling of negotiations for the Democrats. This makes it hard to believe that this bill had any leverage still alive when the word got out. Rather, it was likely dead by the time the poker community got word of it.

Our own Mathew Kredell reported that Obama announced Monday, December 6, that an agreement had been reached with Republican leaders to extend the Bush-era tax cuts. On December 8, the Las Vegas Sun quoted Reid as saying “we’re not able to” in response to being asked if he would be adding legalization of online poker to his objectives during the lame-duck session, then later that day withdrew the story because a Reid spokesman had called and said it was still on his agenda and that the quote was in response to another question, though there were no other questions audible on the Las Vegas Sun reporter’s tape. It’s possible that Reid really had already thrown in the towel, but his aides pointed out that he shouldn’t say that publicly and make it look like he’s not putting in the effort for the casinos that contributed hundreds of thousands of dollars to fund his re-election campaign.

Pappas told PokerNews in the middle of December that Reid’s negotiations on the bill broke down late December 9 after House Democrats made it clear they would not pass a tax bill that included any attachments. So, at the very least, poker media and message boards were keeping the bill alive for nearly a week after Reid had waived the white flag.

The most important factor to come out of this saga is that Harry Reid, the highest ranking member of the Senate, finally came out publicly behind licensed and regulated online poker. That’s something to build on for the future, especially moving into 2011.

On the other hand, the poker community had a wild, up-and-down ride in 2010 when it comes to online poker legislation. If 2010 is any sign of what’s to come in the future for online poker, the only thing that is really for certain is that the road is a long, bumpy one and the legalization of online poker will be very difficult to come by.

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