What made POKER take off?

stuckart said:
Well, I think we covered most of the answers to why Poker took off and none of them really will work with pool.

Not every fool sitting on there couch (right now) has any chance at winning a pool tournament. It just ain't gonna happen.

Any all those married dudes that jump online and play poker as soon as the wife's head hits the pillow isn't going to transfer to pool either.
previous reply response to this one...
 
Personally I think the hole cams made poker what it is today. Sure Moneymaker helped but poker was so boring to watch before you could see the cards.

Because of the amount of luck involved in poker you can have a lot of famous people get into tournaments and with a little coaching a few of them can get pretty deep into tournaments. This is a huge draw for the average player seeing people he recognizes making it far into tournamants. Most of them don't have a clue when it gets short handed so you hardly ever see any of them win a large tournament, but some make the final tables.

I like poker better, because I can beat up on the same guy week after week and he will keep playing. In pool if I beat up on someone over and over he is going to quit or ask for too much weight really quick.

There is a lot of luck in poker but the better player will almost always come out on top if you play enough.
 
A lot of you proved my point.

The fact that so many of you are under the mistaken impression that some lame ass hack can win the WSOP without any skill whatsoever or making a bunch of mistakes and just getting lucky is exactly why poker took off and pool hasn't.

Anyone who really knows how to play poker and has played in top events like the world series ( I have by the way and was enven mentioned in Card Player magazine in 2006) knows that you have to know the game and make the right decisions to win.

They have showcased the bad beats and the bluffs on TV and that has given many the false impression that they can win even though they have almost no chance whatsoever.

MY point is that in pool the opposite is the case. They showcase only the best play and edit out the errors and until that changes and the average joe can watch it and atleast try to convince himself that he has a chance if he practices hard, pool will stay in the funk that it is in.


Jaden.
 
It helps that poker does not spotlight all the bad that goes with poker. I mean think about it, there are probably thousands and thousands of people who have lost everything trying to win big and you never see it.
 
Seeing a blank like Chris Moneymaker winning millions.. :D


1997 WSOP had about 900 players and paid 1 million for first... Try fadin 5k players now.. Talk about how lucky you gotta be to win it with those numbers.

How amazing would it be if pool payed out what poker does? That would be a dream come true.
 
socks said:
poker also doesnt restrict the common joe. or rather all the stupid wardrobe restrictions placed on pool. it is a dark game, embrace it. the common public sees the pros on tv having to wear a suit or tux or something and they disassociate, where with poker on the other hand, they see the guys wearing shorts and sweatshirts, a raggedy t-shirt with some sarcastic slogan and the common person can associate to that. hint hint to all the tournement and tour directors, this is not golf people, this game does not cater to the rich upper class. embrace the seady side of pocket billiards. theres no reason to require slacks and collared shirts and all that sillyness, this is a blue collar game, treat it as such and the masses will come.



Negative... Pool is blah for money because it lacks the rich upper class.. Pool, The hustlers game.. Yeah, Let's have them all dress like bums.. Give them the look that most who look down upon the game vision when they think of pool players anyway.. We are sure to attract big money then. :rolleyes: :rolleyes:

Just my opinion..
 
derekdisco said:
Put me in jay, I play for 40%, and when im catching cards im tough to beat!


Aren't we all. :)
But can you win money when you're not catching cards? That is the mark of a really good player.
 
Jaden said:
The question therefore is, why hasn't that happened with pool. Anyone who was into pool in the mid eighties might have thought that it was going to go that way for pool after the color of money came out and was so successful and it might have.
I like all the answers, so I'll add to the discussion. It wasn't just one thing or even two things. For someone like me, I've waited to watch whatever poker was could be televised since the first time I realized they had televised poker. That would be the 80's. They showed the final table of WSOP for several years as well as a handful of other events.

People talk about the hole cam, but in those early years, the commentators knew what the cards were, but not all the time. I think they had the hole cams, but they were either not as sophisticated, or they didn't have them at each station. Sometimes, they'd get one card, and have a question mark on the second card, so I don't think it was a post production thing.

Anyway, I think that the commentary improvements is one of the things that make viewere come back. Previously, the commentary was lack luster with little explanation. But nutbags like me would still keep coming back to watch. We had Dick Van Patten (father of Vince) and Gabe Kaplan as the celebrity commentators on different years. But neither add the depth that Mike Sexton does nor the color that Norm Chad does.

And though people keep bringing up Chris Moneymaker, I think from a production standpoint, it was Robert Varkonyi's year that made more viewer's take notice. That was really the first year that a left-field amateur "lucked" his way into winning the entire event with some very odd plays.

Beyond that, in Moneymaker's and maybe in Raimer's year, there were a lot of women champions in open events during the WSOP. Annie Duke by herself brought in so many women into the game by her great showing in those years, as did her contemporaries like Kathy Lieberman (who won a million dollar first place riverboat event years earlier) and Jennifer Harmon (probably the greatest female player ever).

So, Varkonyi followed by Moneymaker, internet play, hole cam, amateur luck, great commentary, female champions in a typically men's game, and overall better production.

Fred
 
stuckart said:
Well, I think we covered most of the answers to why Poker took off and none of them really will work with pool.

Not every fool sitting on there couch (right now) has any chance at winning a pool tournament. It just ain't gonna happen.

Any all those married dudes that jump online and play poker as soon as the wife's head hits the pillow isn't going to transfer to pool either.

LOL LOL LOL That was a good one.....................
 
The difference between poker and pool is that even a novice poker player can look like he knows what's going on after reading a book and watching espn or the other 12 networks that broadcast card games.

In pool, people look like goobers for a very long time, and most people hate that. Too much dedication to get better in pool. Card playing is 95% mental, and 5% wearing shades and a hat, pool is very mental but also takes a lot of physical work to improve.

They also have that card cam thing and people get all exited knowing what cards people have. Why poker got huge all of a sudden and pool didn't, no clue. Both are "gambler" games, both have so-so histories and reputations. Maybe they can put together a hall of fame shootout where a HOF pool player and a HOF card palyer square off in both pool and cards. I'm willing to bet the pool player wins. Cards involve luck too much, where there is no way a lower player can beat a pro in pool unless they play only a couple of games.
 
Hole Card Cam

I think all those that have mentioned the hole card cam are right on. When you see an old poker tournament on TV (before the advent of the hole card cam) you still watch it but it is boring compared to watching a tournament now and knowing what the players are holding.

Now, if pool can just figure out a way to let the viewer know who has the advantage half way through the game (and put a percentage on it) and a way for the other player to bluff him out of the game!
 
jay helfert said:
I'm headed for the WSOP in eight days to play some of the preliminary events. There are something like 50 tournaments scheduled this year. Even the "small" tournaments generate prize pools in the millions. Wish me luck! :)

Jay,

Good luck at the series. How about you doing an update thread once you get there?

I am trying to get into the main event through the steps on Poker Stars, made step 5 twice. Who knows, maybe I will see you there as I still have time :)
 
Someone said something earlier about everyone paying $10K or higher to enter a major poker tournament... is that true?

If so, I think that's a huge key. Anyone willing to pay that much to enter a pool tournament?
 
lodini said:
Someone said something earlier about everyone paying $10K or higher to enter a major poker tournament... is that true?

If so, I think that's a huge key. Anyone willing to pay that much to enter a pool tournament?

This is partly ture. Most Pro players consider a tourney with a 10K buy in to be a major tourney and it is usually a main event at a series of tourneys. Many Top Pros will not play events with a buy-in under $10K

However, I believe that in most 10K buy-in events, more than 50% of the entrants do not pay $10K but they get a 10K seat by playing in smaller buy-in tourneys that award a seat.

In contrast, the US Open 9 Ball is a $500 Buy In. The question is, if the US Open was a 10K buy in, how many players would pay 10K and how many would play smaller buy in qualifiers to get a seat in the 10K pool tournament?

If my bankroll supported it, I would buy in directly into a 10K entry poker tournament but I would not buy into a 10K entry pool tournament. The reason is I feel that I have a better shot of making money in a 10K entry poker tournament then in a 10K entry pool tournament.
 
stuckart said:
Well, I think we covered most of the answers to why Poker took off and none of them really will work with pool.

I made these suggestions for attracting a new "interactive" generation to pool awhile back and didnt really get much comment...

DAWG said:
Poker never became popular until they invented the hole card cams where you could see what a player was holding and then watch the way they played a hand therefore it not only had it's entertainment value but also provided a level of education... which obviously empowered people to want to try it and therefore "fall in love" with the game... resulting in unparrelled success for the game...

That got me to thinking.

Now as I said I don't watch a ton of pool on TV so some degree of this might be used. I have obviously seen the pocket cam (useless) and during some broadcasts the commentators would give you the basic strategy of what a player was thinking they wanted to do and what basic english that player was going to be using.

I think that it would be very cool and would probably lend itself to an increased popularity in the sport or at worst and increase in the urge to participate in the sport if they had a few things... some of these things could be added post production if it wouldn't be viable to do it realtime...

1. wouldn't it be cool if when a player took a shot if there was a small cue ball image on the screen showing you exactly what english they were about to apply to a shot? and a small "power meter" which maybe had some red bars maybe going up a cue stick image that showed how much power they applied to a certain shot?

2. "player eye" cams. not sure how this could be accomplished could be as simple as a ear piece (similiar to perhaps a hands free (blue tooth) headset earpiece like for cell phones), or two ear pieces with cameras triangulated to show you what a player was looking at like the exact view that you would see if you were the one looking down the cue preparing for a shot. coupled of course with the above mentioned "english indicator" and "stroke meter"

I think that would not only be very interesting and educational, I think it could certainly ad an additional "interactive" aspect to the game and would almost unquestionably increase the interest in playing the game. People would think "I know how he did that, I gotta try that. I think I can do that".

Thoughts?

~D4\/\/G~

Original thread here
 
shanesinnott said:
Jay,

Good luck at the series. How about you doing an update thread once you get there?

I am trying to get into the main event through the steps on Poker Stars, made step 5 twice. Who knows, maybe I will see you there as I still have time :)

I'm not sure that belongs on here or NPR. What do u think?
 
M HOUSE said:
I think all those that have mentioned the hole card cam are right on. When you see an old poker tournament on TV (before the advent of the hole card cam) you still watch it but it is boring compared to watching a tournament now and knowing what the players are holding.

Now, if pool can just figure out a way to let the viewer know who has the advantage half way through the game (and put a percentage on it) and a way for the other player to bluff him out of the game!
I haven't read through the whole thread... not enough time at the moment - will do so later.

But I agree, the hole cam is a major factor, along with the way they able to jump around to various tables, as to why poker has become more popular to watch on TV. The hole cam makes the bluffs and the strong hands more interesting to watch. It even makes the timely fold quite a bit more interesting, often times leaving you with the "how'd he know" or "wow! that was a brave bet!". Without the hole cam, those interactions look very boring.

Poker's edge over most every other game/sport is that most any novice has at least a remote chance. So it's able to get a larger appeal.

Pool requires a level of skill. The likelihood of a novice beating top pool players is significantly remote to where it's basically a guaranteed bet. Luck can factor into pool, but only if the two players are at least relatively close in skill.

Now, other games/sports also require skill - beit golf, tennis, or even Nascar. And they are able to attract a fan base.

I think if pool were presented the right way, it could at least increase it's fan base. But like the hole cam, it's gonna take at least a bit of work. I have some ideas on how that can be done (as I'm sure others do as well), but the process of converting legitimate ideas to reality is not always easy to do.

Just my $.02 worth...
 
They found people interested in developing the product and were focused on quality rather than profit.
 
Russ Chewning said:
Oh come on now! You're comparing apples to orangutangs..

The main event is NOT comparable to the finals of the U.S. Open. It is simply comparable to the ENTIRE U.S. Open... Both are OPEN events, where ANYBODY can plunk down their money and enter.

You wanna compare apples to apples? Fine. An amateur getting to the final table of the WSOP is comparable to a run-of-the-mill A player getting to the U.S. Open finals. It just ain't gonna happen.

A decent amateur can win a $20 weekend bar 8 ball tournament, just like a decent amateur poker player might win a 100 person multitable tournament. Neither one usually has much of a chance at higher levels.

If pool had a qualifier system where 10 players put up $50 apiece to get into the U.S. Open, then THAT would be comparable to the supersatellite system qualifiers into the WSOP main event, but it doesn't. Why? Because pool is not popular enough, that's why.

Don't hate poker just because it is more popular to the masses. Your statement that some hack poker player can get through thousands of good players at the WSOP and win, is just WRONG. Statisically, if they are making bad decisions, them bucking the odds compounds with every hand they play, and by the end of the tournament, they have played thousands of hands, making it statiscally almost impossible to win.

Russ

U can take offense to that statement if u like russ, but i stand by it. Thats the way the "average joe" me included, sees the WSOP and thats why its still so popular. Everyone thinks they have a chance. Whereas in pool it only take 5 minutes of watching a pro tourney for most people to realize their out of their depth.


And for the record, I dont hate poker. it does nothing for me either way
 
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jay helfert said:
I'm not sure that belongs on here or NPR. What do u think?

Pretty sure a Poker thread would be NPR :) and I am guessing there are many people on this board that would enjoy the updates (in NPR)
 
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