ORLANDO, Fla.
- You could say that more teenage boys have
started staying home and working on math skills:
calculating percentages, identifying patterns, adding
and subtracting.
But, to
use a bad pun, let's call a spade a spade.
They're playing poker - Texas Holdem to be exact.
"Oh,
God, it's unbelievable," said Pat Fowler, director of
the Florida Council on Compulsive Gambling. "It's
probably the hottest craze with teenage and young males
going on at this time. There's probably not another
activity that they're interested in that's going on
right now more than poker-tournament playing."
Since televised Texas Holdem tournaments have become the
darling of ESPN, the Travel Channel and Bravo, the
free-for-all brand of poker has spread like text
messages through a high school.
"You
see a lot more people playing it now," said Boone High
School sophomore Russell LeBlanc, 16, who plays the card
game mostly on Saturdays with friends and family. "Since
it's been on ESPN, it's really picked up."
The
newfound popularity of poker among teens worries some
adults.
Orange County, Fla., has become the first school
district in that state to include anti-gambling lessons
in its curriculum. The Florida Council on Compulsive
Gambling thinks all school systems in the state should
warn students of the perils of wagering.
"Instead of doing drugs or alcohol or other destructive
behavior, they're now gambling for the excitement, for
something to do," said Margie LaBarge, who admits to
liking slot machines. She directs the district's Safe
and Drug-Free Schools program.
Near
Boone High's campus in downtown Orlando, LeBlanc said he
has been playing cards for money since he was 11. He
said it's obvious that some novices have a gambling
problem because he has seen them lose $1,000 at a
sitting.
LeBlanc said he has lost as much as $150, but he has
also won $500.
"I
know when to quit," he said.
Of
course, knowing when to fold isn't everyone's strong
suit. At the gambling council, Fowler said she has seen
card playing eclipse slot machines and the lottery to
become the top reason people call the council's
1-888-ADMIT-IT hotline.
"It's a great concern to us," Fowler said. "In the
process there will be many kids who get involved in
gambling with this Texas Holdem craze, and some of them
are going to end up becoming addicted to compulsive
gambling."
University of Florida sophomore Ricardo Elias, 19,
started playing poker with friends immediately after
graduating from Orlando's Edgewater High School. He
plays four or five times a week but said he's not that
interested in the money and doesn't let it interfere
with school.
"It's something you can do on a Friday or Saturday
night," he said. "I don't let it get in the way of
academics, but I could see how it would for other
people."
Texas Holdem has become so mainstream with college
students that Florida State University has sanctioned a
campus tournament in October as part of the school's
recreational offerings.
"We're the last ones doing this," said FSU's recreation
director, Alicia Crew. "They have offered everywhere.
We're not doing anything that anyone else isn't doing."
The
prize is an intramural T-shirt.
While some worry about the dangers of kids hunting royal
flushes, others say odds are slim that the young players
will become addicted.
At
USA Darts and Cigars in Orlando, which sells clay-chip
poker sets, owner Rich Celenza Sr. said he hasn't seen
many card-crazed teens come to his shop. While gambling
can be addictive, Celenza said today's youths are not at
a great risk.
"How
much money can a kid have?" he said. "They don't have
any money. They're going to lose what they have in their
pockets and go home."
Even
the cases of chips seldom sell. People call regularly
about prices but then buy them online, said his son,
Rich Celenza Jr.
"These are a bunch of kids who can't even afford chips,
if you know what I mean," he said.