The settlement of Pihama, in Taranaki, New Zealand, is about as far away from Las Vegas as you can imagine.
A farming community, five minutes south along the coast from Opunake, Pihama is about 7,000 miles away from Nevada, and a million miles in terms of landscape.


Mount Taranaki in Egmont National Park
Thereâs a pub, but no sky-scraping casinos. No highways, but the coastal path offers stunning views over the ocean one way, and Mount Taranaki the other. The population is tiny in comparison, outnumbered by the cattle grazing nearby.
But there is a poker game. And a Las Vegas connection. Or at least there will be next month.
4AM. IN A FIELD OF COWS
You might have clicked to enter the same AISO for a Red Spade Pass, and followed along intently. And why not? Itâs the prize that will send you, and a guest, on an all-expenses-paid once-in-a-lifetime trip to the Las Vegas Grand Prix.
But Paul Hunn, a self-employed dairy farmer, hadnât.
At least if didn’t occur to him at 5 oâclock one morning. Standing in his paddock. Looking at his phone at a long list of messages from someone called Willie Elliott claiming to be from PokerStars.


The cow shed in which Paul Hunn found out he was headed to Las Vegas
Hereâs where Paul, 39, picks up the story.
âI’d just woken up for milking. I looked at my phone and noticed that Willie Elliott had tried to contact me through email, text, and messenger. He wanted to talk to me urgently, but it was good news.
âWell, me being me I thought this has to be a scam so asked for a little more information.â
If you havenât been to one of our events, Willie Elliot is one of a team of Player Liaisons at PokerStars who serve as a point of contact.
Itâs his job to make players welcome at events â which he does with aplomb. And in this instance, his job was to convince All-In Shootout Winners that his messages are not spam.
âWillie replied, âall I can say is you’ve won… something big, which couldn’t sound more like a scam if I triedâ.”
âI looked at this message and laughed,â said Paul.
A RED SPADE PASS JUST SITTING THERE
Paul carried on with the usual morning routine which, with the help of his wife Cassandra, involves milking 320 dairy cows. Only his mind had begun to drift off elsewhere.
He couldnât help it.
âI went out of the cow shed and logged into PokerStars and looked at my tournament tickets.â
Thatâs when he saw it. A Red Spade Pass Las Vegas ticket. It had been sitting in his account for over a month.
âI googled what it was and that’s when the excitement started to build inside,â he said. âMy mind started going crazy.â
GETTING (AND BELIEVING) THE GOOD NEWS
The cows come first when youâre a dairy farmer. But when all the cows were milked, Paul got back on the phone to Willie.
âHe told me that I was the winner of the All-in shoot out and had won an all-expenses paid trip to Las Vegas Grand Prix. Well, it may not have shown on my face but I was so excited.â


The outdoor life, New Zealand style
The All-in Shootout might not require much poker experience. But Paul is a regular at his local pub game. Even as a working farmer working agricultural hours, with early starts. And two young kids to raise.
Itâs here that his poker career, inspired by watching games on TV, began.
RESULTS ONLINE
âI knew they played this game at the pub every week so I just turned up and asked to buy-in. I’ve been hooked ever since.
Paul describes himself as a low buy-in MTT player online, with a few wins and second place finishes (including another earned while emailing me his story).
âMy best cashes have been second place in the $22 fast Friday and a second place in the $5.50 Daily supersonic.
âMy aim is to do well in some bigger tournaments like the Sunday Million and other special events run by PokerStars. And maybe one day the WSOP Main Event.â
A DIFFERENT KID OF DAILY GRIND
The challenge, like that of a lot of people, is fitting in a hobby like poker around a busy day job. Or a busy morning, day, and night job, as farming can sometimes be.
âI go to the shed about 4.45am set up for milking and head off for the cows,â explains Paul, who started farming after he left school and found he had a knack for it.
âWe start cupping about 5.30am and leave the shed around 7.45am.
âCassandra heads home to get kids ready for school. I lock the cows away and put up a few break fences before heading home for breakfast and to say goodbye to kids at about 8.30am.
âThen I go back to feed out maize to cows and feed out silage bales, shift irrigation and other fences ready for the night milking and next morning milking.
âA few other jobs then home for lunch.
âBack to get cows at around 2pm for 3pm start and finish work around 5.30pm.
âIt is much busier than this during calving time when I can do up to 16-hour days.
âThe hardest part⊠is dealing with the weather. And sick cows, when you lose animals you care about.â
INTRODUCTION TO PUB POKER
The pub game, at the Club Hotel in Opunake, offers some relief from a busy day in the outdoors.
âWe normally have around 8-10 people. Sometimes two tables. We play $30 buy-in with unlimited rebuys for first hour so the pot builds up nicely.


Sunset over the South Taranaki straight
âWe also run a 10-week competition with a final at the end. And good feed supplied by the owner who also loves playing.
âThe people are great and it’s just a fun night of poker, laughs and a few drinks.â
HEADING TO VEGAS
While Paulâs dream is to one day play the World Series in Las Vegas, part of that dream will spark into life this November.
âGoing to Vegas⊠to experience it like this is so exciting. And the best part was it was for two people. So as soon as we ended the call my wife and I started jumping around celebrating saying âwe’re going to Vegas Babyâ.
âI’d like to Thank PokerStars and Oracle Red Bull Racing for giving me this experience of a lifetime.â
And the cows? Theyâll be well looked after.


The cows are going to be fine.
âWe have asked two very experienced retired farmers to look after the farm when we’re in Vegas so have no worries at all about that.â
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