Poker As A CareerBy John Reger With the popularity of poker as high as it is right now, the game is seeing more and more people who have crossed over from other careers to make playing poker their full-time occupation. Poker players have always had other occupations while they played the sport, but it was more of odd jobs to keep their stakes up so they could play cards. Work wasn't really a polite word used in poker circles. Are you ready to play online poker? Sign-up at Poker Host and receive a 100% Sign-up Bonus! Besides excepting U.S. poker players, huge bonuses, 24/7 customer service and fast, easy and secure deposit methods, they still boast the LOOSEST TABLES filled with fish making their players WIN & LOYAL! With over $5 million in guaranteed poker tournaments, earn FPP Points for free-roll rournaments and play some cards with poker pro "Cowboy" Kenna James right now at PokerHost.com!It is a trend that will continue, I believe. There are more and more hobbyists turning professional, and as purses increase it will make it more financially viable for business professionals to enter the game. It didn't used to be that way. Most of the older, more established players were poker players from a young age or worked in a profession associated with the game. "I saw the same people winning all the time," Ng said of her days as a dealer. "I knew it was a game of skill that I could really put my mind to and I would probably do well in, and I think it was a good guess." A lot of the older players, like Doyle Brunson, Amarillo Slim and Johnny Moss, played home games in Texas and made a dangerous living trying to avoid getting robbed while building their bankrolls. Barry Greenstein was a software engineer in Silicon Valley. Mark 'The Shark' Seif was an attorney who worked in the District Attorney's office in Los Angeles. Humberto Brenes is a successful businessman who owns a television station. The recent winners of the World Series of Poker's main events were business professionals first, card players second, but that quickly changed after capturing poker's spotlight tournament. Greg Raymer was an accountant, Joseph Hachem a chiropractor and this year's winner, Jamie Gold, was a Hollywood agent. Even the smaller events are seeing players who are more hobbyists than professionals. McCorkle won the $1,000 no-limit game at Caesar's Indiana, winning $56,254 for his first big victory. As more and more people start entering the game, expect to see more success stories like McCorkle's. People are figuring out that they don't need to keep their day job to make a living playing professional poker. --- by WagerWeb at Poker Room on November 02, 2006
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