Poker Forum > General Discussion
The Crockfords / Phil Ivey Case
AAroddersAA:
If you are not aware of it the story is here
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/oct/12/poker-casino-phil-ivey-gambling
What is peoples opinion. I have been surprised that most poker players and general gamblers seem to think Ivey should have won the case and Crockfords should have paid. I would have said he knew the rules and knew what he was doing was against the rules so he should not have been paid. He was cheating.
Do you think this should damage Phil Iveys reputation? I would be thinking twice about playing any kind of gambling game with somebody who is confirmed as a cheat.
Thoughts?
Big Club:
There is an interesting point that I"ve not seen anyone raise yet in that what would be the view of the poker community had he found a similar defect in the cards while playing in a poker tournament. I would hope, and believe he would, have divulged this information to the powers that be to ensure they were not used. However, there may be others that wouldn"t.
Is the moral dilemma different when playing against a faceless casino that has a mathematical edge in every hand played rather than playing against the poker community where there is only a perceived edge.
Also one would think that the reaction from the poker community would be very different if it was the poker community he was "stealing from"
As it was, I for one don"t think that what he did is "cheating", He was using a flaw that he had noticed, not engineered, to obtain an edge against an organisation designed to take your money with a guaranteed edge in the name of entertainment. The casino were also incredibly naive in the sessions where Ivey and his partner were asking for the cards to be turned due to superstition. At no point did Ivey or his partner touch or interfere with the cards in any way.
An interesting case but one where the casino industry finally got their fingers burnt and still managed to close ranks and become the injured party.
duke3016:
Why do they use asymmetrical cards anyway?
"Cheating" is a strong word - however Big Club makes a great point about Man v Man and Man V Casino, are Casinos the bad boys who take your hard earned money and "deserve" to be done over? Not an easy answer. Is it in the same frame as card counting and was he just using the situation to his advantage?
I for one do not think he should have "engineered" it....
Swinebag:
Ivey shouldn"t worry about his reputation being tarnished."1
Didn"t he scam THM in a golf bet where his handicap was fiddled.
AAroddersAA:
--- Quote from: Big Club on October 13, 2014, 17:32:24 PM ---
There is an interesting point that I"ve not seen anyone raise yet in that what would be the view of the poker community had he found a similar defect in the cards while playing in a poker tournament. I would hope, and believe he would, have divulged this information to the powers that be to ensure they were not used. However, there may be others that wouldn"t.
Is the moral dilemma different when playing against a faceless casino that has a mathematical edge in every hand played rather than playing against the poker community where there is only a perceived edge.
Also one would think that the reaction from the poker community would be very different if it was the poker community he was "stealing from"
As it was, I for one don"t think that what he did is "cheating", He was using a flaw that he had noticed, not engineered, to obtain an edge against an organisation designed to take your money with a guaranteed edge in the name of entertainment. The casino were also incredibly naive in the sessions where Ivey and his partner were asking for the cards to be turned due to superstition. At no point did Ivey or his partner touch or interfere with the cards in any way.
An interesting case but one where the casino industry finally got their fingers burnt and still managed to close ranks and become the injured party.
--- End quote ---
Good post.
It is actually very surprising that a flagship casino did not pick this up. They should surely know about edge sorting and must know who Phil Ivey is, it"s not like they are a small local casino.
I would consider what he did cheating though, it is clearly against the rules off the game and you are not allowed to manipulate the games in a casino. If you choose to play you accept the house edge, card counting is considered cheating by casinos and as I understand it (which is not that well admittedly) what Ivey has done here gives a much bigger edge than card counting.
Interesting discussion point though.
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