Las Vegas Sun

May 19, 2024

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Comments by user: bjbigplayer

Wait until New Jersey starts with sports betting later this year and see how much serious (high volume) sports wagering moves from Nevada to New Jersey. Wait until the inevitable day that online sports wagering is legal everywhere...most sportsbooks in Vegas had might as well close their doors at that point and they will have nobody to blame but themselves. For the record, Cantor gaming has been fairly open about taking action from anyone and paying them off without hassles. The only negative about them is that they now run almost every sportsbook in Vegas...how is that not an anti-trust violation?

Many of these NV sportsbooks are very sore losers using unscrupulous techniques like posting a line then refusing your action or changing the line before you bet depending on who you are and what side you want to bet on.

Players should be able to wager anonymously as long as they keep the size of their bets low enough to meet the various legal requirements for currency transactions.

(Suggest removal) 6/24/12 at 4:13 p.m.

Why can't they ban the panhandlers and their dogs? Surely they can invent a crime to charge them with...they do it to card counters all the time. Loitering? Vagrancy? Trespassing? Remaining after Forbidden? Safety Hazard?

(Suggest removal) 1/3/12 at 12:25 p.m.

The complaint here is that other casino companies spent a lot of money to build their own arena's (MGM Grand and Orleans). Now Harrah's wants taxpayers to fix the situation they've found themselves in because they spent all their money on an ill fated buy-out.

(Suggest removal) 5/12/11 at 2:20 p.m.

Really, this place had the tightest games and worst buffet. Six deck games with 6/5 payoffs?? This place deserved to close just on that account. Complete lack of creativity.

Riviera is next!

(Suggest removal) 3/12/11 at 5:19 p.m.

CTR's are filed in the background by the casino without your knowledge whenever you buy-in or cash-out for more than $10,000. It has nothing to do with whether you win or lose. It is not fraud to play under a phony name, but it can be fraud if you KNOWINGLY buy-in for more than $10,000 and KNOWINGLY allow the casino to rely on that phony name and SSN when filling out required government forms. Sometimes the casino screws up and says you're in for more than $10,000 when you really aren't, in that case you can just refuse to give the info and walk out. Of course that name will be banned from further play but it's better to piss off the casino when they make a mistake than to piss off the government. When playing under an alias you had better be damned sure you don't violate any laws that require your real identity. Unfortunately casinos, in their continuing quest to mine data on it's customers, put enormous pressure on players to give a name when some players would rather, for a variety of reasons that have nothing to do with the law, keep their gaming activities private.

(Suggest removal) 11/4/10 at 5:17 p.m.

What a craphole. And for the first poster above, Riv isn't screwing their creditors...their creditors simply made a bad investment and screwed themselves.

(Suggest removal) 7/13/10 at 3:02 p.m.

Absent a collective bargaining agreement, the employer is who determines tip policy and how they are split. Bartenders tip out barbacks, waitresses tip out bartenders. Management always has the final decision on the percentages at each place. Management can even decide not to allow dealers to accept tips at all if they wish. (although they'd have to make up the difference in salary if they want to stay competitive with regards to hires). If the employees don't like it they can always use their union voice and go on strike.

Of course the Wynn Dealers want to keep all their tips...they'd probably also prefer to keep their own rather than pooling. They don't get the final say...Mr Wynn does as it's his casino.

(Suggest removal) 7/12/10 at 4:13 p.m.

They should let all of us players who have been thrown out of there go back and and spread $25-2x$1000 at single deck for a few hours and put them out of their misery. Maybe they could do another match the competitor coupon deal.

Seriously, I'm sorry to see them go, I used to play very politely there and thought their SPA, Hotel, and Restaurants were all some of the best in Reno. Sometimes a basically good product can be done in by a bad business plan and initially Sienna did not have a clue on the marketing side as to who to go after. They totally eschewed local business and only wanted higher end tourists. This was a mistake from which they never fully recovered.

(Suggest removal) 7/1/10 at 10:17 a.m.

Sorry Peterp to disagree with you.

You said "A $5 bettor playing 6/5 will lose less per hour, on average, than a $25 player at a 3/2 table."

Hate to break it to you, but a $5 bettor playing perfect basic strategy at 6/5 will still lose MORE per hour, on average than a comparable 3/2 game. The House edge at a typical 6/5 single deck game is 1.45%. A typical 3/2 shoe game on the strip at $25 bet levels has a house edge of 0.26%. The $25 bettor loses on average $3.90 per hour and the $5 bettor on a 6/5 single deck loses $4.35 per hour. The $25 bettor also gets better comps.

(Suggest removal) 6/21/10 at 4:15 p.m.