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The Professonal Poker Team of Full Tilt Poker

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Lesson: 19
So You Wanna Go Pro
Rafe Furst
July 25, 2005
At the final table of this year's World Series of Poker, the media
consensus was that there was only one pro at the table: Mike Matusow.
We've since learned that this year's champ, Joseph Hachem, gave
up a 13-year chiropractic career three years ago to play poker for
a living. The other seven players at the final table won over a
million dollars each. It's a safe bet that a few of them now consider
themselves poker professionals. What does that mean?
Three Myths About Playing Poker Professionally
Myth #1: Either I'm a Pro or I'm Not
Consider the following players. Which ones are pros and which are
amateurs?
Adam
Adam plays the tournament trail full-time. He's up thousands one
month, and broke the next. He's always borrowing money from fellow
poker players. He has no life outside the poker world and constantly
thinks, "I wish I had some skills and experience that would
allow me to get a normal job."
Betty
By day, Betty's an accountant making $50K a year. She plays poker
in her spare time. Some years she earns $20K playing poker, other
years she earns $100K. She rarely has a losing year.
Charlie
Charlie picked up the game a year ago, entered his first tournament
- the prestigious "WPT London" - and won it with flair
and showmanship. He netted $500K and got a ton of TV coverage. He
blew through $350K in the next 11 months playing every big event
with no cash finishes. He's still got a bankroll, thanks to some
juicy endorsement contracts from an online site and a beer company
that guarantee him $1 Million a year for the next three years. All
he has to do is continue to play in every major tournament and endorse
their products.
Debbie
Debbie has a bankroll of $500K, She makes (or loses) anywhere from
-$50K to +$200K per year playing a very erratic schedule. That schedule
is structured around the good games, whether they're offline, online
or on the tourney trail. She travels to far-off lands whenever she
feels like it, and has plans to settle down and start a family.
Someday. But not now.
Eddie
Eddie only plays online, He clocks in, plays exactly eight hours
a day, five days a week, at four simultaneous tables no higher than
$5-$10 limit hold 'em. He earns a surprisingly consistent $100/hr,
takes the family on vacation twice a year, plays tennis, and attends
opera on the weekends.
Myth #2: I Would be so Much Happier if I Could Just Play Poker
Full Time
TRUE: It's fun playing an hour or two each day.
BUT: It might not be so fun playing all the time to the exclusion
of other interests, family and friends.
TRUE: It's low-stress and entertaining, playing as a hobby.
BUT: It might be very stressful if you have to grind it out to
pay the bills every month.
TRUE: Those big tourney winners on TV live like rock stars.
BUT: What about the other 99% of the players you don't see, all
of whom are competing for your dream.
Myth #3: I Don't Need a Big Bankroll to be a Pro
Check the long list of Former World Champions who have gone a full
year without making the final table of a major event. As of this
writing, it takes roughly $500K to enter all the major tournaments
in a year.
Ask your favorite pro how many times he or she has gone bust in
their career, or how many times they have been hit up for a sizable
cash loan from one of their good friends.
Poker is a great game; it's tons of fun, and it has never been
as potentially profitable as it is today. But try to keep it in
perspective.
Poker doesn't have to consume your life. You can make a good chunk
of change playing poker, and you can do it without giving up all
the good things you have going in your life.
Financially, mentally and socially, you are better off making poker
fit into your life rather than the other way around.
Getting back to the players in the introduction, it's clear that
Eddie is a pro. And it's equally clear (to me anyway) that Adam
is definitely not, even though he thinks he is, and so does the
general public. Adam is a dime a dozen in the poker world. You've
even seen him and his ilk on TV a number of times. As for the other
three, I don't know whether I'd call them pros or not, but I sure
wouldn't mind being in their shoes.
"Professional" is just a word. Being a professional poker
player is not the same thing as being a successful poker player.
Bottom line: You don't need to be a professional to be a poker
champion.
Rafe Furst

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