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G1 Tipping Comp 2013
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My daily ratings.
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$125,000 To The Winner G1 Sandown Cup
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£150,000 To The Winner English Greyho...
£150,000 To The Winner English Greyhound Derby
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€153,000 G2 Mehl-Mülhens-Rennen - Ge...
€153,000 G2 Mehl-Mülhens-Rennen - German 2000 Guineas
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US$200,000 G2 Vagrancy Hcp
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US$300,000 G2 Dixie Stakes
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US$150,000 G2 Marjorie L. Everett Hcp
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US$500,000 G2 Black-Eyed Susan Stakes
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S$1,000,000 G1 KrisFlyer Internation...
S$1,000,000 G1 KrisFlyer International Sprint
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S$3,000,000 G1 Singapore Airlines Int...
S$3,000,000 G1 Singapore Airlines International Cup
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¥202,160,000 G1 Japanese Oaks
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€770,000 G2 Derby Italiano
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US$1,000,000 G1 Preakness Stakes
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G1 JLT Lockinge Stakes
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121Sports
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Online poker coming back to the states?
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Arnold Palmer  Joined: 9/24/2005 Posts: 14,347 Location: Vegas Baby!
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After 15 months of speculation, frustration, and general inertia, the former online poker players of America finally heard the good news on Tuesday. A deal had been struck between the online gaming sites Full Tilt Poker, PokerStars, and the Department of Justice. Another deal between the DOJ and Absolute Poker was reported with details forthcoming. The early details are startling: PokerStars, one of the three companies shut down last April, will purchase its former competitor, Full Tilt, and pay the U.S. government $547 million to settle a civil lawsuit the government brought against Full Tilt. A portion of that money will be used to reimburse U.S.-based Full Tilt players who had their accounts frozen during the shutdown. PokerStars agreed to directly pay back another $184 million to non-U.S. customers to settle their outstanding balances.
The agreement signaled the imminent return of online poker in the United States after a lengthy hiatus that damaged the poker industry with dropping television ratings, waning interest, and a litany of lawsuits against sites like Full Tilt. Nobody thinks that PokerStars would have invested $731 million without some certainty that online poker would soon be legal in the United States.
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Steve Redgrave  Joined: 1/12/2007 Posts: 8,114 Location: isle of man
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fuckem. .
Well behaved women do not make history
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Steve Redgrave  Joined: 1/12/2007 Posts: 8,114 Location: isle of man
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some sums, jokerstars buying 150,000 plus clients,750 million, 500 dollars a client, they give that and more in new client bonuses. not to mention a big chunk is THEIR fine for illegal activity, plus theyve bought a way to regain THEIR own 200,000 plus american clients back, fuckin peanuts to what the next 10 years will yield. .
Well behaved women do not make history
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Steve Redgrave  Joined: 1/12/2007 Posts: 8,114 Location: isle of man
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askyourself this, if pokerstars dealt a straight game, how come theres no insurance option, they would make a killing acting as insurers at skimmed odds, all automated, it would yield more than rake, IF the deal was random, it would certainly create more income tan anyy casino game they offer, they dont offer because it would and could be exploited. insurance on the turn and river at 15 percent skimmed prices, would yield a fuckin fortune. if i was dead to a 2 outer after flop cards up, and was offered 9/1 and 18/1 on a big pot, i would insure, and so would millions of people, it would truly generate more income than rake in ring games. but a straight deal would mean tourneys would take twice as long, and thats why they deal a proportion o contrived hands, the good online players learn to avoid playing those situations/hands imo.. .
Well behaved women do not make history
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121Sports
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Online poker coming back to the states?
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