the whole Poker craze hype
the game has been around for years, but if you haven't already noticed, there's been a surge of popularity from television, internet, pubs, to your friend's local basement on weekends.
played out yet ?
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World-class poker faces belong to Canadians
Mar. 18, 2006. 01:00 AM
SAN GREWAL
LIFE WRITER
Forget hockey players and comedians. Canada's coolest cultural exports right now are a bet-it-all billionaire playboy, a sexy card shark and the world's best Texas Hold'em player.
Gamblers Calvin Ayre, Evelyn Ng and Daniel Negreanu are part of a wave of Canadians taking over the hottest industry in the world.
"It's the weather," says Ayre, explaining the popularity of gambling in Canada. The small-town kid from Saskatchewan recently made the cover of Forbes magazine, which announced his entry into the billionaires' club.
He's the self-described party animal and "heavily single" founder and CEO of Bodog.com, an online sports betting, poker and gaming site based in Costa Rica and valued at more than $1 billion (U.S.).
Ayre says he's not joking about his theory. "You can see the difference between the seasons. We even see spikes during large winter snowstorms. People are forced indoors. In terms of why so many Canadians gamble or play online I don't think there are any other cultural explanations than that."
Negreanu, who cut his teeth playing poker at charity casinos around Toronto as a 19 year-old, before being named the World Poker Tour's player of the year in 2005 and making millions on the professional poker circuit, says the city produces some of the best players in the world.
"There was more poker going on in Toronto (during the '90s) than most places in the world, other than California. There were 20 to 30 charity casinos to play poker at any time."
He offers the same explanation for the game's popularity here as Ayre: "A lot of places in Canada are pretty cold."
When escaping the cold, many Canadians chase their favourite pastime down to the gambling mecca of the world, Negreanu says. "Ever since I've been going to Vegas (where he's now based) I've always found a high percentage of the poker players were Canadians."
Other than the weather, Negreanu says the popularity of gambling in Canada is linked to the government's involvement in running casinos, lotteries and video gaming terminals.
"Canadians don't really have a taboo about gambling," he says. "I mean, the government's part of the culture too."
Ng, a Toronto native also based in Las Vegas, is the undisputed femme fatale of professional poker. She's one of the top three female players in the world, a cold-blooded poker assassin who's notched many top-10 finishes around the globe.
At 5-foot-11 and with smouldering looks, Ng intimidates many of the men she comes up against, standing out in a world where many players aren't exactly easy on the eyes.
Ng has won many large pots. One of her biggest was $65,000 in the 2005 World Poker Tour Borgata Poker Open.
It's not just high rollers who make the connection between Canadians and gambling.
"We're certainly up there among the esteemed group of countries that gamble a lot," says Nigel Turner, a gambling researcher at Toronto's Centre for Addiction and Mental Health.
A 2001 survey of Ontarians showed that 84 per cent of adults had gambled within the previous year, he says.
But what's surprised him most recently are data suggesting Ontarians gamble online at a much higher rate than most other people in the developed world.
"Five per cent of adults in Ontario report gambling online," Turner says, compared to a rate, for example, of one to two per cent in England.
Don't blame the weather for this, he says.
"A British counterpart of mine has put it down to the idea that Canadians are more comfortable with technology and have more access to it."
Whether it's the climate or our technological advantage, online card sites such as PokerRoom.com confirm the large numbers of Canadians seeking out the adrenaline speedball rush of a huge poker rake.
Canada has more players on PokerRoom.com per capita than any country other than the U.S. But with the popularity of charismatic personalities such as Ayre and Negreanu, who has helped Citytv's World Poker Tour show become one of the top five rated programs in its time slot, the gap between the two countries is closing.
And the trend in Canada is spreading from the flashy high-stakes world of televised professional poker and online gambling to live games.
The Red Hot Poker Tour was started by Toronto's Dean MacNeil to promote live tournament-style poker, the way it's played on television, in bars across Ontario. Amateurs can play for non-money prizes almost any night of the week.
Another Torontonian, Joel Krass, hopes to follow Ayre's lead as a superstar of the online gaming world.
Krass is co-owner of HomePoker.com which allows beginners to sharpen their skills and organize private online games.
He says in the 15 years he's been playing poker he's never seen the kind of numbers recorded at Ontario casinos.
"At (Casino) Rama, at (the charity casino in) Brantford you can't even get a seat at the tables. I don't know if it's the weather that started the craze, but now it's bigger than anything else that people want to do."
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source:
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/Co...72154&t=TS_Home
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Palm Trees > Pine Trees , Sand > Snow
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