Friday, October 5, 2007

Poker Is A Fun Game

     

I think that all of you in this whole world like to play poker game. Some of you love to play this game in the free time or as one of your hobby. But some you has adopted this game as your business to earn money. This is a  favourite game of many of the people who really like to have fun in life. This game has become a money making machine for many of the people in the world. This game of jeux poker is really a fun with money.   

You see now that you may be playing with a fool, but if he has ten or twenty times as much money as you, his being a fool may not help you at table stakes. You get him in a $2-limit, dealer’s-choice game and you11 shred him like cabbage. A few personal comments. I started the poker bit almost thirty years ago at my mother’s elbow, whenever I was permitted to watch. From her I first learned the mysteries and fascinations of online poker and the dignity of people and card games requiring skill and imagination. Later as a teen-ager I played wherever I could-in cellar clubs, in hallways, the sand pile at Lawson Playground, Chicago . In the Army days, I played for high stakes. An Australian pound was $3.20 in U. S. money, but we treated it like a dollar. Japanese yen had the stature of paper. In November 1945 we were quartered in a huge ware¬house called the Silk Mill. A five-card-stud, pot-limit poker game was in progress. As the going price for a carton of cigarettes in Tokyo and Yokohama was 200 yen, everyone in the game was loaded. The first bet was normally 50 yen. The final bet in the average pot was usually between 500 and 1,000 yen. The funny little papers were changing hands rapidly. The rate of exchange was 15 yen to $1 U. S. The opening bet was almost $3 and the final bet was usually in the $40-to-$70 range. Most of the guys in the outfit had been overseas for two years. We had been relieved of duty and were leaving for the States in a few days. The men in the outfit were called to exchange our Japanese money for U. S. currency in preparation for our departure. The game was interrupted for maybe an hour. We reassembled and the cards were dealt. A young fellow from Springfield, Massachusetts , was high. He reached into his pocket: “Bet a half dollar.” A little while ago he had been betting wildly45, $10, $5O-but in yen. Now it was the real green stuff and he and all the rest of us settled down to conservative betting. played a little tournament bridge from 1946 to 1949. I couldn’t find a poker game. Since 1949 I have played poker regularly. I never played high-low games until that year, but I immediately enjoyed them better than the standard brands of poker. I realized that the high-low games required more skill

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So remember, poker is a great game. It is even greater when you win. It become more enjoyble when you earn money out of funtime. So this game is called having fun and earn money when you win. 

Posted by Rohn at 07:08:16
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