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#1
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Professional Poker
I know this question may sound stupid, but how would someone be considered a professional poker player? I was just curious if there were any certain requirements or certain earnings that you had to have before you could be considered a pro.
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#2
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Re: Professional Poker
I would say a player is professional when poker becomes his main source of income.
Let me give you an example away from the world of poker. If I was an accountant and was also a keen photographer who sold photos to magazines and made more money from the freelance photography work ... yes, then that guy could call himself a professional photographer. |
#3
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Re: Professional Poker
[ QUOTE ]
I would say a player is professional when poker becomes his main source of income. Let me give you an example away from the world of poker. If I was an accountant and was also a keen photographer who sold photos to magazines and made more money from the freelance photography work ... yes, then that guy could call himself a professional photographer. [/ QUOTE ] What if the accountant/photographer made just a little less at the photography, would that make him "unprofessional"? |
#4
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Re: Professional Poker
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] I would say a player is professional when poker becomes his main source of income. Let me give you an example away from the world of poker. If I was an accountant and was also a keen photographer who sold photos to magazines and made more money from the freelance photography work ... yes, then that guy could call himself a professional photographer. [/ QUOTE ] What if the accountant/photographer made just a little less at the photography, would that make him "unprofessional"? [/ QUOTE ] There are a number of well know professional players you see on tv who reportedly now make more money away from the tables--endorsments, books, appearances etc, than they do at the tables... Are thes guys not professional anymore if they have these outside sources of income? There are a lot of definitions of pro I'd find perfectly acceptable, but a real good one, or at least a good starting point, would be if you filed your taxes as a professional gambler. Note you can make more money in other endeavors than from your poker and still file as a professional gambler. --Zetack |
#5
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Re: Professional Poker
Another problem with the 'primary source of income' definition is students situation. [censored], poker is my only source of income, but i'm not a professional poker player. I'm a student.
I'm with the 'it doesn't matter' crowd. |
#6
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Re: Professional Poker
[ QUOTE ]
I would say a player is professional when poker becomes his main source of income. Let me give you an example away from the world of poker. If I was an accountant and was also a keen photographer who sold photos to magazines and made more money from the freelance photography work ... yes, then that guy could call himself a professional photographer. [/ QUOTE ] I think that is semi proffessional. for a proffessional, that is his sole source of income. I think... |
#7
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Re: Professional Poker
There is a written and verbal test you have to pass. You also have to accumilate at least 23 minutes of total airtime on TV, or have at least 3 aired rants about how the "amateurs" don't know how to play.
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#8
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Re: Professional Poker
I giggled.
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#9
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Re: Professional Poker
Why is money the determining factor? Is Greenstien only professional when he is playing cash games? Seeing he donates his tourney winnings? But, I would think if one is gainfully 'self-employed' as a gambler/poker player whether it is his/her main source would then...
Is Moneymaker yet amateur because he has not (at last report) quit his day job? What? $2.5 mill is not enough? [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] |
#10
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Re: Professional Poker
[ QUOTE ]
Why is money the determining factor? Is Greenstien only professional when he is playing cash games? Seeing he donates his tourney winnings? But, I would think if one is gainfully 'self-employed' as a gambler/poker player whether it is his/her main source would then... Is Moneymaker yet amateur because he has not (at last report) quit his day job? What? $2.5 mill is not enough? [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img] [/ QUOTE ] I think the real answer is who cares? Why do people spend so much time obsessing over the idea of whether or not a player is professional? If you're ever a professional player, you'll know you are. Does it really matter otherwise? |
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