Double or Nothing: How Two Friends Risked It All to Buy One of Las Vegas' Legendary Casinos (12 page)

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Authors: Tom Breitling,Cal Fussman

Tags: #===GRANDE===, #-OVERDRIVE-, #General, #Business, #Businessmen, #Biography & Autobiography, #-TAGGED-, #Games, #Nevada, #Casinos - Nevada - Las Vegas, #Las Vegas, #Golden Nugget (Las Vegas; Nev.), #Casinos, #Gambling, #-shared tor-

BOOK: Double or Nothing: How Two Friends Risked It All to Buy One of Las Vegas' Legendary Casinos
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The idea of firing more than 50 percent of the staff stunned us.

“Oh, my God,” was all I could say.

“We wouldn't be able to overcome that now,” was all Tim could add.

But Steve wasn't through yet.

“My brother was going to Swarthmore College, and I put him in charge of the parking lot. When you came inside with your parking ticket, you could validate it, and you got two hours of free parking.

Well, some people didn't bother to validate their tickets. They just paid. We discovered that after the people left, the valets would stand in front of the cage and punch all the tickets on the machine until they equaled the entire cash of the night. Then they took the extra cash out of the box and turned in all the tickets as if they'd been free.

So my brother said to the guys, “Okay, no more stealing. You've got to turn in the money when the customers pay.”

And the guys who were working in the parking lot said, “Just a minute. This isn't fair. If you don't let us take this
money, we can't make it.” They were so entrenched in the stealing that they challenged him.

The guy who'd been running the place was an honest fellow. But, I'll tell you something my father taught me as a kid: the minute you stop watching a person in gaming, money sticks in the hands of angels. If you're not diligent, you make thieves out of honest people.

Talk about lasting impressions. There was no need for videotape. These stories were forever etched into our minds.

After awhile the executive chef brought a birthday cake to the table. We presented Steve with a full-page newspaper ad that his employees had taken out two decades earlier to wish him a happy birthday—neatly wrapped in a bow. But there was no gift that could come close to measuring up to what Steve and Elaine had given us. Elaine had been there with support when we needed it during the gaming hearings. And as we said goodbye and watched Steve head off, we definitely felt we had his blessing.

Our evening ended over drinks and cigars in Tim's office. Looking back, it might have been the first moment that we really had a chance to stop and reflect upon exactly where we were—in the office that Steve Wynn had once occupied.

The opening days had been a blur. Television crews lined up for interviews. Congratulations ringing off the hook. The slam of meetings. Boxes of documents to sign. Walking the floor and trying to meet all of our employees. I hadn't even gone home yet—and wouldn't for another week or so. I was grabbing a few hours of sleep every night at The Nugget.

Now that we had a quiet moment to sift through every detail of the dinner, we got a clear view of what was in front of us.

How would we attract everybody's eyes? And at the same time keep our eyes on everybody?

P
eople in the know were truly scared for us. If they didn't tell us at the time, they admitted it later.

To understand why, you need to know what it's like to look down on a casino from the eye-in-the-sky.

There's a huge perception that The House has every single player under constant surveillance. That the casino cameras will catch somebody the instant he steals a chip or counts cards.

That's simply not true. Thousands of people might be in motion simultaneously on a casino floor. But there are only a few sets of eyes scanning the monitors. The surveillance room couldn't possibly keep up.

The cameras are in place to verify suspicions—which means you need the right people on the floor to be suspicious. Robert De Niro sums it up pretty well as the guy in charge of the joint in the movie
Casino
.

In Vegas, everybody's gotta watch everybody else.

Since the players are looking to beat the casino, the dealers are watching the players.

The box men are watching the dealers.

The floormen are watching the box men.

The pit bosses are watching the floormen.

The shift bosses are watching the pit bosses.

The casino manager is watching the shift bosses.

I'm watching the casino manager.

And the eye in the sky is watching us all…

It's beautiful, watching De Niro gaze out upon the casino floor through the haze of his own cigarette smoke. In fact, if you asked Tim what it felt like to be in his casino at The Golden Nugget, he'll point you to that scene, twenty-one minutes and seven seconds into Martin Scorsese's film. But Tim had it better than De Niro. He wasn't acting out a few takes and going to a trailer. Tim was living his dream, 24/7. Not only that, but he upped the ante on Scorsese.

The way he was running our casino,
he
was gambling. In the beginning, even he didn't realize what could be lost.

His notion of how to run the joint came from a pure and simple place. He treated the players the way
he'd
like to be treated if he were the player. One of the first things he did was double the amount you could bet on craps.

When we took over The Nugget, the formula behind an initial bet was 3-4-5. That formula was the industry average. It meant that if you put down $1,000 on the pass line and your point became 4, you could bet up to three times your initial wager that you'd roll another 4 and win before you rolled a 7 and crapped out. If you did roll your 4, your payoff is 2-1, which meant a $3,000 wager would win $6,000. Plus, you take
in $1,000 on your original bet. So rake in $7,000. That's what you'd collect up and down The Strip.

When Tim doubled the industry average from 3-4-5 to 6-8-10, you could bet
$6,000
behind your initial $1,000 wager in that same situation, and if you rolled your 4 and made your point, you'd win $12,000, plus your initial $1,000 bet. That would give you $13,000. The exact same scenario would unfold if your point were 10. You could bump your $1,000 initial bet to $8,000 if the point was 5 or 9, or to $10,000, if your point was 6 or 8.

Like all bets, you've still got to win. But to big-time dice players, 6-8-10 was tasty chum. If you did make your point, you took in twice as much as you did at a corporate casino on The Strip.

The day Tim ramped up that formula, he knew every serious craps player in America would be getting a phone call. He knew that because of a trip he'd once taken to check out a riverboat casino in Tunica, Mississippi. Calling it a riverboat was a stretch. The river looked like a swamp, and the boat was no more than a floating warehouse. It was the worst casino Tim had ever seen. There were steel girders running across the floor. And there was nothing around for miles. Yet the riverboat was so crowded that people actually paid to get onboard and gamble. If you offer the best game around, Tim realized, the true players find you no matter where you are.

A million-dollar player might get flown in on a private jet to a 5,000-square-foot luxury suite on The Strip. He might be feted with $7,000 bottles of Chateau Petrus and be extended complimentary front-row seats to the best shows in town. But Tim was offering the best
game
in town. We were only twenty minutes from The Strip. We set The Golden Nugget logo on a custom gold Rolls Royce to add a little panache to the trip, picked up players on The Strip, and dropped them back off. At
first, other casino execs thought we were crazy to try to lure in their huge players. Who the hell was going to bet millions near signs advertising 99 cent fried Twinkies? But soon that gold Rolls was gleaming all over The Strip. And it wasn't long before execs on The Strip were coming to The Nugget to see what the buzz was about—and gamble themselves.

Tim lured in the biggest players—the whales—by bringing in some of the best hosts. Steve Cyr had seventy players in his database who'd throw $100,000 on a craps table as casually as if paying for dinner—and fourteen who'd play up to $5 million. The swimming pool and tiki hut in Cyr's backyard were tips from his players. Richie Wilk was buddies with the cast of
The Sopranos
. Marsha Hartman was a screenplay waiting to be written—call it
Princess of Whales
. And Johnny D.? Our master of marketing.
Everybody
knew Johnny D. Michael Jordan knew Johnny D. Nicole Kidman knew Johnny D. When Wall Street guys couldn't get into a restaurant at home, they called Johnny D. out in Vegas to get them a table in New York!

It wasn't long before we had the buzz going. But that created a problem.

Tim thought that once we got the big-money players, the math would work itself out and the games would take care of themselves. Sure, smashing the corporate formulas would open us up to some volatile swings. But the rules of the games still stacked every deck of cards in our favor. There were just a couple of variables Tim hadn't factored in: the dealers—and the people watching them.

Think about it. Where does a dealer get started? Does he or she learn at a $1,000 table at the Bellagio?

No, a dealer starts out at a $2 table. At the $2 table, The House doesn't blow a gasket if a rookie makes a mistake. And where are the $2 tables? You won't find many at a hotel on The
Strip that has dancing water fountains on a man-made lake, that's for sure. Many of the $2 tables are downtown. Downtown was for grooming. Downtown was the minor leagues for The Strip.

The dealers work for tips, so naturally they don't want to hang around long at $2 tables. As they get more experience, they move from the $3 table at the El Cortez to the $25 table at The Golden Nugget. Long before we took over, there was a natural progression from The Nugget to the major leagues—Treasure Island, the Mirage, and, ultimately, the Bellagio.

Some of the dealers we inherited were inexperienced. Others had been around for a long time, which made you wonder why. Either way, inexperience and complacency are not what you want on the floor after you've rolled out the red carpet for every shark and whale in the country.

We didn't realize the effect the new clientele would have on our dealers, but it was like handing competent school bus drivers the keys to a Formula One race car. There were bound to be some crack-ups.

Even the keenest minds in the industry with billions in corporate backing and the sharpest dealers at their disposal could have problems in their casinos. Soon after the Bellagio opened, a player dobbed the deck with a dot of grease from his hair and used the marked cards to take the casino for $100,000. When this ruse at the blackjack table was discovered, management decided no longer to deal cards to players faced down. As long as every card was set on the table faced up, their thinking was, the players would have no need to even touch them.

Which was fine, except one particular blackjack pit was very close to the poker room. The poker players are the savviest card players around. They'd step outside of their own games for a break, stand behind the blackjack pit, and count the cards
down. As soon as the deck was rich with cards favorable to the players, they'd jump in the game, make an easy score, and then walk away when the count turned or the cards were shuffled.

Poker players can track exactly which cards have been played. They understand the possibilities that exist with the cards in their hands and the cards remaining in the deck. And they understand the percentage of chance they're taking relative to what they've bet. They have to be that good. If they're not, they don't eat.

These are the sorts of minds we were inviting into our home. When you extend that kind of invitation, your people have to be as adept at catching the counters as the counters are at counting. Your dealers have to be as comfortable handling chips worth $100,000 as the players putting them on the table. The odds may be on your side when the game starts. But if your dealers are inexperienced, if they get nervous, if they screw up, then it's a different game—a game with odds tilted toward the players.

Later on, we could see how this problem flew by us. The Nugget was making $30 million a year when we took over. Its business plan was working well. The dealers on the floor looked professional. So there didn't appear to be a problem.

Plus, our minds were in a lot of other places. Tim was negotiating to bring Larry Flynt to The Nugget. Would The House give Larry $50,000 to make his first bet? How much of a discount would Larry get if he lost? And I was trying to bring Tony Bennett to our showroom. We were doing our best to meet every employee and greet as many customers as we could. Super Bowl madness was upon us the week after we took over. Then we were getting set for Valentine's Day. We were always running off to a meeting, talking with the press, feeding the reality TV cameras. There were so many demands on our time that our lives began to feel like a ball on a spinning roulette wheel. Only
one night, when the wheel stopped, the ball happened to land next to the dealers at a private craps table.

It happened after Tim flew to Reno to have dinner with a million-dollar player in the hope of bringing him to The Nugget. The guy took a liking to Tim right away. Tim didn't even wait until the evening ended to extend an invitation. He invited the guy to hop on the jet with him and check out The Nugget while the night was still young. What the hell, the guy decided, let's go. Tim got on the phone during the plane ride and took care of all the particulars. He asked for a top-of-the-line suite, a private craps table, and our best dealers.

Craps is a tough game to keep up with. There are more than a hundred different bets that have different odds. If a player puts down $3,284 of chips and wins at 6-5, the dealer's got about four seconds to figure out the correct payoff. There are mental tricks that the dealers use to convert large numbers. They sure need them at a table where twenty people are going nuts at once. But that didn't seem to matter in the case of the guy who flew down from Reno. At a private table, he'd be rolling alone.

Well, the guy who flew down from Reno started firing bets all over the table. Problem was, the dealers couldn't keep up with him. They were getting confused and delaying the game while Tim stood behind them with his arms crossed—which had to make the dealers even more jittery and hesitant.

The guy who flew down from Reno was drinking. After a while, he started getting fidgety, and demanding the dice.

“Just pay him!” Tim hissed in a whisper. He was more concerned about not pissing off the guy who flew down from Reno than putting out the right payoffs. If we pissed the guy off, Tim was sure, we'd never get him back. If we made mistakes and overpaid him by $100,000, then at least we had a chance of taking it back the next time.

It was as if Tim's eyelids had been sprung open by a wake-up call that was two hours late. The casino manager got fired over that one and more. If Tim's eyes were opened by moments like that, you can imagine how the behind-the-curtain realities of running a casino struck me. You'd never think it from the outside looking in, but a single, innocent mistake by a dealer could cost a casino millions.

It's like the time one of our players came to the table with a million-dollar credit limit. He was having a rough go of it, and, after awhile, got down to his last $25,000 chip. With that single chip, he rallied, won all his money back, and then took a million of ours. Now, we didn't know if the dealer made a mistake in this particular case. But let's say the dealer
had
made an error. Let's say he made a payout that was more than it should've been while the player was spiraling down to that last chip. That one error would be responsible for placing that last chip in his hand. Without that last chip, the player never would've had a chance to win his money back—not to mention a million of ours.

You can be sure that if a dealer makes a mistake against the player, the player is going to catch it and ask for the correct amount. But if the dealer makes a mistake in the player's favor, how many times do you think the player's going to say a word? And these are just honest mistakes. What about when things get a little shady? One low-cut blouse can compromise a game. Let's say a woman with a nice set of melons sits at the blackjack table and draws a couple of 8s. She splits them right underneath her melons. The dealer pulls up a 7 and places it on top of the first 8. That gives her 15. Hit me again, she says, hoping for a card that will land her at—or keep her just under—21.

The dealer draws a 10, which bumps her over. But…

Instead of placing that 10 over the 8 and 7 and busting her, the dealer casually sets the 10 over the
other
8. Now, she's got two
hands in play—one of them with an 18. It looks legit in the surveillance room. Unless the guys watching the monitors are honed in on every move of that particular dealer, they'll never catch it. And who knows? Maybe they're staring at the melons, too.

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