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Panino

In August, Yelp issued a list of the Best Sandwich Shops in All 50 States and Nevada’s was Panino, an Italian deli on S. Decatur and Sunset Road. We have to admit, the selection abashed us a bit, since we’d never even heard of it! Then again, we’re not familiar with every little mom-and-pop eatery in town and this is definitely one of those.

Of course, it went on our list. We got there a couple of months later and now we know why it earned the lofty distinction over such Vegas favorites as the Goodwich, Capriotti’s, All’Antico Vinaio, Earl of Sandwich, and plenty of others.

Panino (“Sandwich” in Italian) is a flagship of a small local fleet of eateries owned and operated by an Italian-Argentine and his wife; the Zucchiatis have lived in the U.S. for 20 years and in Las Vegas since 2017. Food-industry veterans, they know exactly what makes a great sandwich. First and foremost, the bread. Here, Italian hard rolls, French-style baguettes, and marble rye are baked fresh every morning and Panino smells like it, along with the distinct aroma of a great deli, which hits you when you enter. Second, the meats, cheeses, veggies, and sauces are top-notch and third, the bread and ingredients all work together in perfect harmony.

Panino being an Italian deli, we were compelled to try the classic meatball sub, the first item on the extensive menu. The meatballs came in thin slices and there was just enough marinara to make it tasty; it wasn’t sloppy or hard to eat. The toasted roll was crisp and crunchy on the outside, but not too hard, pillow soft on the inside, and held up well to the marinara. Exceptional chew! And here’s the clincher: Half the sandwich was plenty for us, but we kept eating till we finished. We couldn’t stop!

It was also the least expensive sandwich on the menu at $15.95. The most expensive is the Philly cheesesteak at $18.50. Even the pastrami melt, which comes with a pound of meat, plus cheese, peppers, onions, lettuce, tomato, pickles, and garlic sauce, is only $16.50. Other interesting combos include the chicken pesto, chimichurri-drenched steak, pulled pork, French dip, spicy Italian, and turkey, cranberry, and cream cheese.

Panino also serves soups and salads (Caesar, Cobb, Greek, antipasto, wedge) for $15-$19, pastas (ravioli, tortellini, gnocchi, lasagna) for $14-$16, 10 flavors of housemade gelato, plus cannolis, tiramisu, and Napoleans. Of course, stuffed to the gills from the sandwich, we’ll have to return to try any of the other offerings.

The storefront is casual, cluttered, and busy; while we ate at one of the seven tables, a steady stream of mostly working guys arrived for a hearty and affordable lunch.

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Codfather

This fish & chips joint (a.k.a. “chippy”) opened in July 2020 out in Henderson during the dark days of the pandemic. It flew beneath our radar until it made a little news by closing last July due to problems with the building it was leasing, then reopening in October in a larger space in the same shopping center.

Our go-to spot for fish & chips is, of course, Crown & Anchor, so we thought we’d compare the Codfather’s with our tried and true.

Owned and operated by a native of Sheffield (in the north of England around 40 miles south of Leeds), the Codfather serves a limited menu of Brit faves that are nothing if not authentic. You have your choice of breaded (gluten-free available) and deep-fried cod, catfish, and vegan ($14.95) or haddock ($16.50) with hand-cut chips (fries). These are big fat juicy and tasty pieces of white fish. Get a side of gravy for your chips or curry sauce for your fish, along with cole slaw and the classic British side dish, mushy peas ($2.75). Codfather also offers clam chowder ($4.95/$6.95), mushy pea fritters ($4.95), poutine, cod butty (sandwich), and the Kevin (vegetarian pot pie), all around $10.

We sampled the cod and chips and mushy pea fritters and all we can say is, “In Cod We Trust!” Everything, including the fries, was as good as we’d hoped. We thought one of the individual condiment packages that came with it was ketchup, but it turned out to be malt vinegar and that was even better. The Codfather’s wares definitely stack right up there with Crown & Anchor’s.

Our bill came to $21.57 with tax and that fed two of us for lunch. Though it’s a trek out to the location on Green Valley Parkway near Sunset, we weren’t sorry we made the effort.

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Fearless Oscar forecast

If you feared an Emilia Perez sweep after its staggering 13 Academy Award nominations, fret not. This year’s Oscars looks like it’s going to be one of those years where there’s a little something for everybody, unlike last year’s Oppenheimer juggernaut. Indeed, Emilia Perez has gone into a spectacular odds eclipse and will be hard-pressed to take home more than one or two little gold men. Instead, in a moment of head-shaking WTF, the odds-on favorite for Best Picture is …

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Atlantic City warms up

OK, so sports betting got walloped. Other than that, Atlantic City had nothing to complain about last month. January casino revenues hit $210 million, 2% better than the year before and 18.5% higher than in 2019. Evidently Covid-19 sharpened gamblers’ appreciation for the Boardwalk. iGaming actually outstripped brick-and-mortar casinos with $221.5 million. Are we starting to see a day when iGaming will be so ubiquitous and prosperous that land-based casinos become glorious (expensive) anachronisms? We sure hope not … but take nothing for granted.

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Change in Point Structure

Bob Dancer

The ROW casinos, the Caesars Rewards properties in Reno, recently changed their point structure. For some of the machines that contain the loosest video poker, Tier Credits (TCs) and Reward Credits (RCs) are now earned at one point per $20 coin-in versus the former $10 coin-in. Although the ROW consists of the Eldorado, Silver Legacy, and Circus Circus equally, for practical purposes this new rule only affects the Eldorado because that’s where the loosest video poker machines are. 

They did a similar change about two years ago. Many players boycotted these casinos because of the change and after two or three months, the former $10-per-RC system was reinstated. It’s possible this will happen again, I suppose. We’ll see. These casinos seem to struggle to attract players. Tightening the slot club can’t possibly be the way to attract more players.

Although this specific change only affects one property, and most of my readers are not players at this particular location, similar downgrades happen at other casinos all the time. The question becomes: How does a player evaluate whether to continue playing there or not?

The Caesars Rewards system is complicated — and each property has slightly different rules than its sister properties. The difference between RCs and TCs is not quickly grasped by many players. In many cases they are earned at the same rate, but they aren’t the same. RCs may be redeemed for comps, sports bets, or, at a two-for-one rate, free play. TCs can’t be redeemed, but determine whether you are Platinum, Seven Stars, or any of the other tier levels. 

The old $10-per-point system made RCs earned by playing video poker worth 0.1% in comps. Cutting that in half means that they are now worth 0.05% in comps. That’s not a big change. If you normally play $20,000 in coin-in in a day, the $20 in comps you previously earned now becomes worth $10. If you redeemed the RCs for free play, the $10 in free play you used to get now becomes worth $5. Other than being ticked off that it’s not as big as before, that’s not enough of a difference to cause most players to quit playing.

But what about if they had 5x or 10x points? Well, that could be different. This casino used to have Mystery RC multipliers every Monday, with a limit of 30,000 RCs. Whatever multiplier you receive, it will now take twice as much play to earn that limit. Time will tell if that is going to be cut back on this promotion or not. 

There are TC multiplier promotions as well. In addition, there are daily TC bonuses. Players earning 1,000 TCs in a day get a 1,000 TC bonus. Players earning 5,000 TCs in a day get a 10,000 TC bonus. That’s the biggest daily bonus offered. Whereas it used to take $50,000 coin-in in video poker to earn the maximum daily bonus, it now takes $100,000. For most players, this is out of the question.

If you play enough to earn a lot of TCs, for every 250,000 you earn, you receive one Seven Stars Experience Credit. There are a number of things you can redeem these for. The most attractive to me is $450 in free play at properties in Las Vegas or Cherokee. For the same play, Reno video poker players will end up with fewer Seven Stars Experience Credits in 2025 than they earned in 2024.

The basic Seven Stars target of 150,000 is harder to get. I find it valuable. The major benefits are five $100 food credits, one $1,200 travel to any other Caesars property including $500 in resort credit, and a highly discounted 7-day cruise for two on Norwegian Cruise Lines. Most properties have some sort of a daily benefit if you have Seven Stars status. 

These properties all have monthly mailers giving you free play, rooms, and resort credits (which are not the same as Reward Credits.) These are generally based on your average daily theoretical. If $1,000 worth of play gives you the same ADT as it did before (even though it gives you half as many RCs and TCs), then the mailers shouldn’t change. We’ll see.

The bottom line, for me anyway, is not the number of dollars coin-in required to get a RC. It’s the promotions and the mailers. If the promotions and mailers stay the same, I’ll continue to play at the ROW, at least sometimes. If they get slashed as well, I won’t. 

The change in the rate of RC and TC being earned is a much smaller change than reducing the pay schedule by one unit. I’ll put up with NSU Deuces Wild with the lesser rate, but if they cut that game by 0.8% to the pNSU game, I’ll likely stop playing there.

It’s the package of benefits (the game, the slot club, the promotions, the mailers) that matters to me, not the individual components of it. Any reduction in benefits is unwelcome, but small reductions are not necessarily showstoppers.

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A January thaw

Inclement weather notwithstanding, Americans turned out to gamble last month. A late-2024 softening in casino takings firmed up with the new year, as play continued at levels so elevated they are sometimes hard to credit. For instance, Illinois had the first gains we could believe in quite a long time. Casinos won 10% more than early last year and even 1% more than in 2019, on a same-store basis. When new, hit Wind Creek Southland was factored in, winnings shot up 21% year/year and an astounding 52% from 2019.

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Buoyant Boyd, solid Station

Today, something non-controversial AND quantifiable. Boyd Gaming was the first major casino company to report 4Q24 earnings and no wonder why: The numbers impressed Wall Street. Even before the earnings call, Jefferies Equity Research analyst David Katz opined that “the breadth of development projects in its pipeline, which we anticipate will generate growth over time, and focus on capital returns should provide a catalyst for shares.” As the value of Boyd’s 5% stake in FanDuel continues to accrue, he wrote, and year/year comparisons in Las Vegas ease, Boyd will continue to outperform its rivals, especially with its project pipeline in Virginia and Sin City.

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