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Hockey Knight in Vegas Episode 72: The Trade Deadline, the Arms Race, and the Stretch Run

Hockey Knights in Vegas is BACK!


Once again, the Mc’s (Kelly McCrimmon and George McPhee) broke the NHL on trade deadline day! This year (in order), Anthony Mantha, Noah Hanifin, and the bombshell that no one saw coming, Thomas Hertl, joined the VGK.

According to Lindsey, Chris, and Eddie, the VGK had already won the trade deadline before the Hertl trade, but seconds before the noon PST deadline, the VGK ended any and all speculation.

After a deep dive on the three new Knights, the gang moves onto the Western Conference arms race. All of the contenders made moves, but … Who improved? Who didn’t? And who needed to do more?

Finally, the episode closes with a breakdown of the VGK’s recent play, their slump, and and analysis of the stretch run. Are the VGK in danger of not making the playoffs? Is it time to push the panic button?

Episode 72 of Hockey Knights in Vegas is fast paced. You don’t want to miss all the hot takes!

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A’s: Pretty pictures and B.S.; Glebocki’s back

Onward goes the fan dance that is the Oakland Athletics‘ long-running tease of the Las Vegas Strip. After spending months tantalizing Clark County officials with promises of a new stadium design, A’s brass finally dropped a veil in the form of a set of project renderings for a gull-winged ballpark that looks suspiciously like the Sydney Opera House. More of that anon. What’s of more interest to us is the sleight of hand being performed by A’s owner John Fisher to make this change be mistaken for progress. It’s becoming questionable whether Fisher has two nickels to rub together, as he’s been elaborately silent on whether he can pick up the $1.5 billion tab for the vanity park. A credible financing package would be more impressive than all the renderings in the world but we’re no closer to that. It gets worse …

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CELEBRITY GAMBLERS: HITTING THE CASINOS WHILE OFF SCREEN

This post is syndicated by the Las Vegas Advisor for the 888 casino group. Anthony Curtis comments on the 888 article introduced and linked to on this page.

AC says:

This is a light read discussing the gambling proclivities of five celebrities. We’ve written about all five in the Las Vegas Advisor and these portraits ring true. The word is that Ben Affleck is a good blackjack and poker player, though his described blackjack betting style could use some subtlety. The “syndicate” Ashton Kutcher refers to is most likely the Billy Walters group; Kutcher’s involvement (using aliases) is chronicled in the book The Smart Money. Barkley is pretty much considered a hot mess when it comes to his casino escapades, but he’s always been up-front about it. Floyd Mayweather, Jr. likes to Tweet out his winning tickets, but you never see the losers. Tiger Woods has been labeled as a somewhat notoriously bad tipper. With regard to Affleck’s over-tipping, we wrote the following in 2003: “The gossip rags love it, but the pairing of actors Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez hasn’t been well-received by Las Vegas dealers. It seems that Lopez, who is commonly referred to as ‘J.Lo,’ has put the clamps on Affleck’s legendary toking largesse. Ms. Lopez is now referred to in the dealing community as ‘Pay-Lo.’”

This article was written by Michael Kaplan in association with 888Casino.

CELEBRITY GAMBLERS: HITTING THE CASINOS WHILE OFF SCREEN

Gambling is a great leveler. Whether rich or poor, famous or anonymous, we all like to have a little something riding on the turn of a card or the outcome of a sporting event. In that regard, celebrities are just like the rest of us – albeit, to a degree. They like to gamble, they deal with ups and downs, they do everything in their power to win. 

That said, things get different when you factor in sums on the line and notoriety attached to their wins or losses. Wagers are eye widening and reports of money on the line make headlines. Here then are some of the world’s most famous people who like to gamble big, what they play and how they handle outcomes.

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Oscar odds and fearless forecast

Thanks to the epic throwdown between Greta Gerwig‘s Barbie and Christopher Nolan‘s Oppenheimer, bettors are out in force in seven states as the Academy Awards derby comes down to the wire. Bookies.com analyst Bill Speros bluntly told Reuters, “You have two movies that everybody’s seen.” FanDuel is even taking prop bets (color of dresses, etc.) in Canada. At the moment, though, it looks like Oppenheimer will virtually run the table while Barbie is struggling to not get shut out. Virtually the only significant suspense is whether Emma Stone (Poor Things, +125) pulls a narrow upset over Lily Gladstone for Best Actress, thereby validating the National Board of Review jinx. Meanwhile, Barbie is a lock for nothing except Best Original Song. Since the odds are pretty consistent at this point, we’ll go with Covers.com‘s set (plus some averaging by ourselves) and take it away …

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You Have to Choose Your Battles

Bob Dancer

I’ve played at Caesars properties for a few decades and generally play up to Seven Stars status. If Bonnie and I didn’t enjoy cruising, we might not play here. But we do, and we do.

They used to have Seven Stars lounges at each property. While each property did these lounges differently than the other properties, generally you could get free food and beverages for the price of a tip. The company was sold several times, went through a bankruptcy or two, and now Seven Stars lounges are called Laurel Lounges — and basically don’t exist.

Still, each property modestly rewards their Seven Stars customers with respect to food and beverages. Whenever we go to a different Caesars/Harrah’s/Eldorado property, we check out how the system works there. In Las Vegas, Seven Stars players get four drink coupons and one $10 food voucher daily. (Diamond players get the drink coupons but not the $10 food voucher.) The drink tickets can be used for any beverages which cost $25 or less — and at a significant number of restaurants and bars across town. Each property also has bars and restaurants that don’t accept these food and beverage vouchers.

There are some glasses of wine that cost $25.99 available at these bars and restaurants. It seems obvious that your $25 voucher would cover most of that, leaving you with a small overage to pay for using a different means. But obvious answers aren’t always correct. Here if you order that glass of wine, you can’t apply a voucher at all. It’s over $25 and that’s that. The restaurant servers don’t like this rule, but they have to abide by it.

In late February, Bonnie and I had some Seven Stars visitors and so we all went to Gordon Ramsay Pub & Grill inside Caesars Palace. Bonnie and I each get 10 annual $100 “Seven Stars Celebration” Dinners, from February 1 to January 31. We’re not big eaters and, including our $10 food vouchers, can easily order enough food for $120 to satisfy both of us. Our friends had their own vouchers.

I was not playing anymore on this day, so I ordered a glass of wine. My first choice of wine would have been a $25.99 glass, but I knew the rules and ordered a glass for $21.99. While I was ordering, Bonnie took her ID and Player’s Card to one outlet where she can get 750 ml bottles of Diet Pepsi for her tickets. While I’m sure diet soda isn’t healthy for her to drink, and have told her as much, she enjoys them, and she uses two of her drink tickets each time we go there to get soda to take home. She knows how I feel about diet soda, figures that I’m probably right healthwise, but it’s not a battle either one of us want to fight repeatedly. She’s 80 years old. That’s one of her pleasures in life. Let her be!

Until recently, one of the fast-food outlets, DiFara Pizza, sold liter bottles of Fiji water at a hotel price of $9.99 apiece. Any extra drink tickets that are not spent elsewhere go towards this water. They seem to have done away with this water, and now 700 ml bottles of Aquafina are the biggest you can get. Still, we always need portable water in a desert.

On this particular night, Bonnie got two bottles of Diet Pepsi, I had one glass of wine charged to her drink tickets, and so we stopped to pick up five bottles of water on our way to the car. Somehow, though, the system showed that I indeed had four drink vouchers to spend, but Bonnie didn’t have any. Either the outlet where she got the soda or the restaurant over-charged her. 

I suppose we could have spent 15-20 minutes and figured out exactly what happened and gotten it rectified, but we’re talking about a bottle of water here. Probably costs $4 at Walmart – although certainly more than that here. 

I did mention to the server that it’s not fair that we don’t get that fifth bottle of water. The server was polite enough, but unbudging. If her computer doesn’t tell her that Bonnie has another bottle of water coming, we weren’t going to get one. So, we let it go. Another battle not worth fighting. 

Both Bonnie and I were slightly irritated — but that feeling passed quickly. We’re fortunate that we’re able to shrug off these things and not sweat the small stuff.

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Bobby Vegas: How Stacking Works

Bobby Vegas: Friends Don’t Let Friends Play Triple-Zero Roulette

Stacking is a concept born from mad coupon grocery shoppers who scour multiple offers to get free food. You’ve probably heard of folks getting grocery carts full of food for pennies. We use that concept to maximize the value on standing casino offers and coupons. Combining them in order is the key and every one of these techniques lowers or eliminates the house edge.

Here are some examples using signup promotions and the MRB free play, matchplay, and food coupons (Plaza, The D, Golden Gate, Downtown Grand, El Cortez, Ellis Island, etc.).

Take the free play first. Run a $10 coupon, for instance, once through a good video poker machine, ending up, hopefully, with $9.50 or so. Use that money to pay some or all of a matchplay coupon. A second option is to use it for a 2-for-1 or 50%-off food offer.

Example: The D always gives me some free play and food comps. I like their low-key Circa book upstairs by Bar Canada and the Circa outlet next to Rainbow in Henderson, where I play, a lot. The comp minimum can be as low as $5 or $10, or higher depending on play. Use the free play and MRB free play to pay for the $25 or $50 matchplay.

(Also the “Southwest Show Your Ticket” and the “ Mention Mike” for additional matchplays. The D, Golden Gate, and Circa also give you non-expiring chips. Others, like Downtown Grand and Plaza, give you a 24-hour matchplays.)

When you have a series of, say, three chips, play them one after the other. Craps pass line is the best bet. You’re making a 50/50 bet with a 2-for-1 payoff. Bet $50 to win $100 and your bet back. It doesn’t get much better than that — playing on their dime, their time.

Then, depending on how hungry you are, try the pizza at the Plaza, shrimp cocktail at Fremont, burgers at Binion’s, or a Coney dog at the D (or meals at Four Queens’ Magnolia, Siegels 1941 at El Cortez, Freedom Beat at the Grand, or many others.)

I use my comp and money from free play or matchplays and my food MRBs … on the house!

Here’s na old example of extreme stacking. Ellis Island had a placemat offer for $10 in food or free play for a sign up and $10 for you if you brought someone in. I brought in a dozen or so people over time. Then I played 9/6 JOB, cashed out, and had their killer steak dinner for $8.

But wait! I used the MRB coupon for 50% off and on points. I called it “Free Steaks Forever.”

Info found at VPfree2 lists every casino’s player club points calculations and the best video poker.

Thank me later or buy a Bobby Vegas T-shirt. One says, “So many casinos, so little time.”

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Hockey Knights in Vegas Episode 71: Lumpy Oatmeal, Jack’s Back, and What To Do with $9.5 Million?

Hockey Knights in Vegas is BACK!

The VGK’s play has been pretty inconsistent over the last stretch of games, like the consistency of lumpy oatmeal.

Lindsey Brown is back in the mix and gets right after what’s happening between the pipes for the VGK. How much of the recent issue in goal is on Adin Hill and Logan Thompson? How much of the recent struggles are on the rest of the team’s performance?

The VGK did get some great news up front with Jack Eichel returning to full practice. In the past, that indicated a player was just days away from returning to the lineup. Will that be versus Buffalo on Saturday night, Columbus on Monday, or when Vancouver visits on March 7? Only Jack knows. But when it happens, it will be a huge boost for the VGK.

Episode 71 concludes with a spirited debate on what the Mc’s (George McPhee & Kelly McCrimmon) will do the millions of cap space they are getting for Captain Mark Stone missing the regular season. No one can replace Stone, but a number of intriguing options are available for a team that loves to make a splash at the trade deadline.

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Tony Luke’s (Rio)

Tony Luke’s (Rio)

Last month we wrote about the good chicken fingers at Tender Crush, one of the outlets in the Rio’s Canteen Food Hall. This month we tried Tony Luke’s at Canteen. Billed as “The Real Taste of South Philly,” it’s been operating there since 1992 and now has outlets in several states. The Rio’s is the first in Nevada and farthest west. Hours are 11 a.m.-10 pm (11 p.m. Friday and Saturday).

Sandwiches

There are a dozen cheesesteaks and hoagies on the menu, made with steak, chicken, or pork, plus a veggie option. The cheesesteaks come with choice of American cheese, Kraft Cheez Whiz, or mild provolone. The roast pork comes with sharp provolone and broccoli rabe or spinach. We’re not from Philadelphia, but we think that’s the way they’re supposed to be made. They’re $13-$15, but extras might push that up. For example, a traditional cheesesteak is $13, but if you want mushrooms, it’s $2 additional (the peppers are standard). We tried the traditional cheesesteak with mushrooms ($15). We also had the steak hoagie ($14).

Verdict

In Philly it’s “Pat’s or Geno’s.” In Vegas we make our cheesesteak comparisons with Capriotti’s. We still like Caps, but it’s close. We didn’t get the hoagie; it’s a cheesesteak with vegetables and Mayonnaise. We weren’t thrilled. Paying for the add-ons is buzz kill, but it’s a food hall after all. 

This makes it two for two thumbs up at the Canteen (tenders and cheesesteak). Our next target? Either Sushi or Ramen (we can’t decide).

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Golden gleams; Trump’s casinos revisited

What might have been a disappointing quarter for Golden Entertainment was redeemed in Wall Street‘s eyes by the initiation of stock dividends. Golden will be paying $0.25/share on a quarterly basis. This has been made possible by the wholly laudable reduction of the company’s debt to 2X cash flow. “We believe the decision to institute a dividend, more so than the dividend itself, speaks to the optionality and flexibility of the Company at this stage,” applauded Deutsche Bank boffin Carlo Santarelli.

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