Las Vegas: In a few days, the multimillion-dollar
set would begin to take form, the players and their posses would
arrive in town, and the hype machine surrounding one of the biggest
gambles in the history of card games would kick into high gear.
But before then, a small thin man who wears pinstripe suits
and paisley ties and doesn’t look anything like a gambler peered
out from a barren stage at the empty 1,000-seat theater in early
November and nodded his approval.
“We’re a long way from Benny’s Bullpen, huh?” said Jeffrey
Pollack, 44, the commissioner of the World Series of Poker,
referring to the squalid smoky room at a dump of a Las Vegas
casino where, in 1970, seven grizzled card players held a little
tournament to crown one of them a world poker champ.
“This is a lot different.”
But as calm and collected as Mr. Pollack and his team appear
— these are poker people, after all — they have a problem. Poker’s
status as pop phenomenon, a game that burst from insular casinos
to become a fixture of cable television and attracted Hollywood
card sharks like Ben Affleck and Tobey Maguire, is in trouble.
Poker is drawing fewer television viewers, and it is drawing
fewer low-stakes players inspired by the big names=2 0to visit
Las Vegas. Television ratings for the poker world series on
ESPN peaked in 2005, with last year’s event drawing 32 percent
fewer viewers than the previous year. The number of players
entering the world series, the game’s most prestigious tournament,
hit a high of 8,773 in 2006. Only 6,844 entered this year, a
22 percent decline. (The championship is to be played on Monday.)
Poker’s golden era of growth was highlighted here by the $7-million
refurbishment of the poker area at the Bellagio hotel and casino
in 2005. But now poker rooms around Las Vegas are contracting;
the one at the Las Vegas Hilton was replaced last year by 36
Wheel of Fortune slot machines, and the one at the Excalibur
was replaced with dealerless electronic poker tables.
“Poker became this cultural phenomenon, and since then it’s
certainly leveled off,” said Jeff Haney, a gaming columnist
for The Las Vegas Sun. “I don’t think I’d call it a crash, but
there were clear signs the market was oversaturated with goofy
poker shows on TV.”
Enter Mr. Pollack, an executive with experience promoting
Nascar and the National Basketball Association, who decided
that this year the World Series of Poker would halt midway through
the tournament to allow for four months of building suspense
before the finals. So in July, once the thousands of entrants
were whittled down to nine players, those finalists left t o
promote themselves as poker ambassadors. They have now returned
here for a two-day finale to compete for a $9.1-million top
prize.
In years past, the tournament was completed all at once and
broadcast on ESPN in the fall, by which time most enthusiasts
already knew who had won. This time, the so-called November
Nine are to play down on Sunday to two competitors, who face
off Monday.
ESPN plans to edit a two-hour show about the final two days
of play, which will be broadcast on Tuesday at 9 p.m. Eastern
time. (Nevada law prohibits broadcasting live gambling events
in progress.)
“I don’t know how it winds up being received, but I think
they’re really smart,” said Steve Lipscomb, chief executive
and founder of a competing poker series, the World Poker Tour,
which puts on high-stakes tournaments around the world. “I don’t
think it’s a market changer — that all of a sudden everyone
does it,” he said, referring to the four-month timeout in the
world series. “Then it gets silly. But any innovator has to
cringe and do something different.”
Mr. Pollack learned much of what he knows about developing
sporting franchises at the knee of the N.B.A.’s legendary commissioner,
David Stern, for whom he worked in marketing. He later spent
five years as chief of broadcast and new media for Nascar.
“The goal20is to make the World Series of Poker more popular
than ever and more relevant,” said Mr. Pollack as he gave a
tour of the trailers backstage, where, he said, 90 ESPN technicians
will handle the final feeds.
This year’s schedule has been controversial. Explaining the
logic behind it, Mr. Pollack said of the event: “It was developing
a level of awareness in the pop culture that was very significant.
But we stopped to ask, ‘If this were taking place on a basketball
court or football field, how would we grow it?’ ”
The pause is aimed in part at turning the final nine players
into poker-world celebrities, which has not been the case in
recent years. The starting field of players is now large, and
it has been seven years since a well-known poker star has made
it to the Final Table, leaving poker fans without a Tiger Woods
or Michael Jordan to root for.
“You’ll never see a real pro win the tournament again — a
recognized pro, let’s put it that way,” said poker’s elder statesman,
Doyle Brunson, 74, who has won more than $5.3 million in tournaments,
including 10 different world series events. “I just go in and
try to play well. But the magnitude of the numbers makes it
impossible. It’s like I got a bull’s-eye on me. Every one of
those players wants to break me. I have to overcome so many
obstacles that it’s not r ealistic to think I can win.”
The nine finalists this year have each approached their break
differently. All have landed sponsorships from Internet poker
sites and the like, with the chip leader, a 53-year-old truck
salesman named Dennis Phillips, of St. Louis, also landing a
deal with Ford. The company is believed to be the first automotive
sponsor of poker. Mr. Phillips and his opponents, four of whom
are from foreign countries, have all been profiled by their
local newspapers and TV stations and have been invited — expenses
paid — to play in tournaments around the world.
For making it this far, they have each won at least $900,670,
which they have already received. One of the final group is
Kelly Kim, currently in ninth place with such a low number of
chips that he acknowledged he is likely to be knocked out early
when play resumes. He said the four months in limbo have been
nerve-wracking but also financially rewarding because he is
enjoying attention that usually comes only to the champion.
“I understand why they’re doing this, and I’ve probably benefited
more than anyone considering where I am, but I’m really sick
of my situation,” said Mr. Kim, 31, a poker pro from Whittier,
Calif.
Mr. Pollack views the lack of transcendent poker stars at
the Final Table as the charm of the tournament, not a problem.
“You can’t buy your way on to an N.B.A. court,” he said. “You
can’t buy your way onto an N.F.L. field. You can, however, enter
the World Series of Poker and potentially walk away as a world
champion.”
His organization recently wrapped up its second year of a
European edition, with offshoots planned for Latin America and
Asia. The World Poker Tour, too, is expanding overseas, having
recently struck a deal with the Chinese government to produce
a televised nongambling version of tractor poker, a popular
Asian card game, as “a means of getting people comfortable to
do card games on TV,” Mr. Lipscomb said.
“It’s a big world,” he said. “An awful lot of places are exploding
right now. Just not as much in the U.S.”