Poker News
Poker draws major attention
StevenM@LVPress.com
When Harrah's Entertainment anted up $50 million last month to rescue
the Horseshoe Casino from bankruptcy, the casino operator was after a
pair: the Horseshoe brand name in Nevada but also the World Series of
Poker (WSOP).
Less than two weeks after the purchase, Harrah's announced that the
renowned WSOP tournament would continue this year, including the
broadcast rights to cable television network ESPN, and even enhanced,
with more than $20 million in official prize money.
The reason for Harrah's quick action is that poker has become one of
the hottest commodities on television, even drawing attention from
network giants. When NBC recently aired the Travel Channel World Poker
Tour's (WPT) Battle of Champions opposite the Super Bowl pre-game show,
the poker tournament drew the second highest ratings in the time slot
behind the quintessential football event itself.
In fact, the WPT has become the major driver behind the resurgence in
poker, an even more astounding feat considering that the phenomenon was
virtually non-existent one year ago. While the exposure and promotional
possibilities were the real bait for Harrah's purchase of WSOP rights,
the WPT has proven that poker tournaments could become lucrative
themselves, with the company expected to show profits this year.
Although poker has been pushed to the side in most casinos over the
years because of its lower margins to make room for higher-yield video
and slot machines, the burgeoning interest in the game via television
could have implications for the casino floor. That will turn on whether
the current poker sensation moves from pop fad to market trend.
"One year ago today, no one had seen the WPT and ESPN hadn't really done
poker in three years," says Steve Lipscomb, creator, producer and CEO of
the WPT. "When we aired in March, 2003 on the Travel Channel, ESPN
quickly picked up the WSOP. Everyone has seen what we've done with it
and jumped on board. We've started something crazy."
Launched on the Travel Channel last March and airing regularly on
Wednesday nights, the WPT has consistently been the cable network's
number one rated series. While televised poker games weren't new at the
time, the WPT revolutionized the production values by using 13 different
camera angles, allowing viewers to see the hold, and highlighting the
drama of the competition, using commentators and concentrating on the
players instead of the play alone.
"You know it's a success when someone hits their forehead and says.
'I can't believe this has not been done before and that I didn't do
it,'" says Lipscomb. "I hear that slapping across America. WPT has
established itself as the dominant player in poker. Quite frankly, we've
established poker as a sport ... We've established the sport and the
franchise."
That success generated the interest from NBC. Faced with the
insurmountable task of competing against the Super Bowl, NBC vice
president of sports programming John Miller decided to test the poker
phenomenon by airing the WPT's Battle of Champions filmed at the
Bellagio against the football spectacle.
Pitted against the Super Bowl pre-game show, the WPT scored an
impressive 3.0 rating. With each rating point equal to slightly more
than one million television households, the WPT attracted an estimated
10 million viewers.
"It didn't have to do huge numbers to be a big success," says
Lipscomb. "Most networks give up and don't compete against the Super
Bowl. It was a low risk and the potential upside was huge. None of us
can watch six hours of pre-game show. I think NBC did pretty well
selling the advertising and it was late in the game (December) when it
was announced."
If the WPT claims that it established poker as a sport, that doesn't
mean it invented the idea. ESPN began airing poker the WSOP in 1993,
adding other tournaments, such as the U.S Poker Championships and the
World Poker Open, along the way.
In June last year, ESPN Original Entertainment finalized a five-year
agreement with the Horseshoe Casino for broadcast rights to the WSOP.
The ESPN subsidiary decided to spruce up its poker content and used the
WPT model.
"Poker has always done pretty well for us," says ESPN publicist Keri
Potts. "Last year was the first year that our guys, with their fingers
on the pulse, decided to take it in-house and make a story of it. We
decided to focus on the entire event and not just the [championship].
It's taking off and still climbing. The WSOP, it's the Super Bowl of
poker. We realize that and see expanded coverage."
With the new emphasis, ESPN began airing the WSOP last July as a
series. The improved structure was reflected in the ratings. While
previous poker tournaments had scored minimally, receiving a 1.0 rating
or better only twice in 10 years, the new production, aired on Tuesday
nights, averaged a 1.2 overall rating and peaked at a 1.94 rating.
According to Potts, the repeats have been doing almost as well.
Although ESPN made its contract with former Horseshoe owner Becky
Binion Behnen, Harrah's will honor the deal. The 2004 WSOP will start on
April 22 and culminate with a $10,000 buy-in, no-limit, hold'em
championship at the downtown casino on May 22. ESPN will film the entire
event to run as a seven-part series consisting of about 20 one-hour
episodes.
That kind of exposure, which would cost millions of dollars if
purchased, is exactly what Harrah's had in mind when it went after the
WSOP. "It generates enormous publicity and brings people from all over
the world," says Harrah's spokesman Gary Thompson. "We always want to
introduce our brand to as many people or venues as we can. It is an
opportunity to get a lot of publicity."
Anticipating about 3,000 people at this year's WSOP, Thompson adds,
"When you look at it in the context of hundreds of thousands of viewers
by showing it on TV, it gets other people interested and gets them to
come to Las Vegas."
That interest could push the WSOP out of the Horseshoe. Started in
1970 by legendary operator Benny Binion, the growth of the WSOP has been
restricted by the limited size of the Horseshoe's poker room. Thompson
noted that some slots and video games could be moved to provide extra
space this year, but Harrah's might look for a new different venue next
year.
The irony is that Harrah's properties here, the Rio and Harrah's Las
Vegas, do not currently have poker rooms, making the Rio's convention
center the most likely contender.
"TV will tell us what they need," says Thompson. TV won't, however,
dictate but merely provide the opportunities Harrah's will get from the
WSOP. With the high visibility of the WSOP, Harrah's can cross-promote
the poker tournament at its other operations to produce a perpetual
motion machine.
"We have 28 properties, so we might want to run events," says
Thompson. "I can see promotions to get a seat at the WSOP at those
properties."
While Harrah's is looking to generate interest in its properties, the
WPT is showing that poker itself can generate revenues. Last month, the
company entered into an agreement with New York-based Brandgenuity LLC
to license products ranging from T-shirts and card decks to video games
and poker self-help kits with the WPT brand.
The WPT has already been approached by numerous manufacturers and
vendors seeking to apply the company brand to their product. With
clients including Snapple, Sports Illustrated, TV's This Old House and
Meow Mix, Brandgenuity will be the agent sorting out the lucrative
potential for an undisclosed percentage.
"I saw a guy next to me on a plane with Harley-Davidson tattoos all
over him," says Lipscomb. "[Brandgenuity] are the geniuses behind that
... The revenues from licensing are impossible to predict in dollars. We
are just beginning to go through this and how to take it to market ...
But it could be a huge revenue stream."
Lipscomb has a 20 percent stake in the WPT, with the other 80 percent
owned by Lakes Entertainment, a Minnesota-based casino management
company with agreements with four Native-American tribes. The licensing
deal, along with expanded TV coverage, is expected to take WPT from the
"red to the black" by the middle of this season.
Does the potential for profit and the promotional value make it a
takeover target? "We have created a tremendous amount of value," says
Lipscomb. "And my phone number is ..."
That value has not passed unnoticed. Competitors are rushing to fill
the proven demand for televised poker, but Lipscomb says the market
should limit the growth to protect the integrity of the sport, as
occurred with baseball, football and basketball, before it turns into
wrestling.
"They're rushing to the marketplace that we've already established,"
he says. "Our model is similar to the NFL or NBA. I'm not sure how much
space there is."
Which leaves the first and the biggest, namely the WSOP and the WPT.
By not going head to head, neither Harrah's nor the WPT consider each
other competition while both sides say the other complements their
efforts and could seal the sport from becoming degraded. Lipscomb and
Harrah's executives have met to discuss their poker operations, although
neither would reveal the contents of their meeting.
"I don't know if they're rivals," says Thompson. "[Harrah's president
and CEO] Gary Loveman had discussions with the WPT that I wouldn't
characterize [as competitive]. A lot of people love poker. The WPT is
extremely successful and drawing enormous attention to poker and the
WSOP is one of a kind. We work in conjunction with each to promote the
sport."
"Two big players is good for both of us," adds Lipscomb. "It makes it
difficult for others to come in ... I can only imagine, they being
Harrah's and having the WSOP, that they're pretty happy how we've
revolutionized [televised poker]."
The heat is being fueled by the media attention on the poker
sensation. Potts noted that media inquiries about televised poker have
actually surpassed those for the NFL and the NBA recently.
"The other thing is the other [sports] have been around a lot
longer," she says. "But we've had more calls in the last 2-3 months
about our poker show than when they were originally aired." Targeting
males between 18 and 49, poker has become a hot topic, "kind of water
cooler talk," according to Potts.
Thompson believes poker's popularity has rebounded because anyone can
play. "You can't play with Tiger Woods and have a chance to win," he
says.
The poker boom could have big implications for Las Vegas. Brian
Gordon, principal at research firm, Applied Analysis, believes the
immediate impact of poker's recent rise is to attract new visitors who
have seen and enjoyed televised poker, not poker players, to the city.
"Serious poker players are already in Las Vegas," he says. "Overall,
these types of advertising and publicity events just drive the market as
a destination."
Although the appeal of poker is up, the earnings potential of the
actual game for casino operators are limited. In fiscal year 2002, poker
and pan tables in 52 casinos statewide produced $60 million, a mere 0.7
percent of total gaming revenues.
"It will have to continue awhile on TV," says Gordon. "The TV [poker]
concept goes along with the 'reality' TV concept. But there is not a big
push to open poker rooms." But Thompson thinks that may change. "With
the reemergence of poker, that might be changing," he says.
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