Luckydog Poker: WSOP Floor Supervisor Seeks Respect for Poker's Traditions
Russ Scott
Spend a little time with Don Naifeh, and you'll be struck by his
passion for poker, golf and the traditions linked to both games.
Indeed, if you have played in a qualifying satellite at the World
Series of Poker, or if you read golf books, you may already know these
two things about Naifeh (pronounced NAY-fee):
-- As a World Series floor supervisor, he perhaps has welcomed more
players to poker's biggest party than anyone this decade. "My 'Welcome
to the WSOP' speech sums up my feelings about enjoying the game and
its traditions," he said.
-- His life-long dream of playing Scotland's mystical courses came
true through a poker room friendship forged with writer Michael Konik,
who spun their overseas adventure into the compelling 2004 book, "In
Search of Burningbush."
Not bad for a guy born with a broken arm 54 years ago who learned to
keep his life moving forward despite suffering from brittle bone
disease -- a rare, incurable disorder which causes extremely fragile
bones.
"I can remember at least 12 fractures in my life, but I've been told
the actual number is 15 to 20," Naifeh said. "I was lucky to have a
pretty mild case of the disease."
The disorder restricted outlets for his competitive drive growing up
in Tulsa.
"My older brother was a star athlete, and I was almost always
recovering from some kind of injury, unable to do what the other kids
were doing," recalled Naifeh, who recently had hip replacement surgery
and is scheduled for knee replacement next week "so I can keep working
the WSOP and playing golf."
Although contact sports were out of the question as a youth, he gave
golf a try at age 10 at a par-3 course in Tulsa -- while in a
wheelchair recovering from a fracture.
He gave up on the seventh hole.
"I was mad and frustrated. I remember being in tears. I wheeled myself
all the way back to the clubhouse where my mom was going to pick me
up, just totally done with the game of golf. Some 20 years later, I
made the only hole-in-one in my life at that very hole," he said.
With limited athletics options, he gravitated toward games.
"While manager-trainer of the football team, I was the guy running the
penny-ante poker game between summer practices. I'd make $4-$5 a day
from the players," he said with a laugh.
Naifeh's pursuit of poker took hold after studying journalism at the
University of Oklahoma in the early '70s.
"My grades were OK, but I was having a hard time mainstreaming in
college," he said. "I never quite settled on a career path, so I left
in the spring of my senior year. I ran away, I guess you'd say. I ran
straight to Vegas to play and deal poker."
There were some detours along his poker trail, including a stint
teaching golf to kids at Pebble Beach's Spyglass course and five years
as a retail broker on Wall Street. "Once I burned out on that, I came
back to Vegas in 1986, where I had kind of established myself before,"
Naifeh said.
He reconnected with poker as a dealer and floor supervisor, but not
long before Konik's book came out he got into a frustrating battle
with the people running the World Series at Binion's Horseshoe.
"They were trying to get dealers to work for slave wages. I just got
fed up with poker," he said.
Meanwhile, the Scotland experience had rekindled his desire to teach
golf again, said Naifeh, who carries a single-digit golf handicap.
"I really wanted to teach with the First Tee program for kids or do
special-needs coaching using my experience as an injury-prone golfer
who could play the game at a fairly decent level," said Naifeh.
Although the perk of playing free at some of the world's best courses
was great, the pay wasn't. Moreover, amateur Chris Moneymaker's
improbable 2003 World Series victory had ignited the poker boom, and
Naifeh was missing out.
"I had to pay the bills, and the WSOP was the only place I knew I
could make a living," he said.
He's also trying to make a difference.
"The game of poker is progressing, and I'm doing my best to keep up,
but there are some traditions in the game that need to be given
respect," he said. "I don't want to see the WSOP someday being played
on the Internet. I want it played with professional dealers in the
box, running the game as they should be."
Right now, he said, "the WSOP is doing great. But we must pay
attention to the intangibles such as the entertainment value, the
food, tournament presentation and so on -- what I call the wow factor
-- that make the overall experience for the customer a genuinely
memorable one."
Don Naifeh, ever mindful of poker's traditions, is doing his part to
make that happen.
E-mail your poker questions and comments to russ@luckydogpoker.com for
use in future columns. To find out more about Russ Scott and read
previous LuckyDog Poker columns, visit www.creators.com or
www.luckydogpoker.com.
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Copyright 2009 Creators Syndicate Inc.
This news arrived on: 10/20/2009
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