With
poker's popularity growing because of televised
tournaments, retailers are betting that playing cards
and chips will be among the must-have items during the
holiday shopping season.
Stores are
showcasing displays of casino-quality chips and gaming
tables with holders for drinks and betting chips.
"I'm
not a big poker player, but I know a lot about it
because it's such a hot item" Kmart spokeswoman Caryn
Klebba said. "It seems like the teenagers are in love
with it."
Walmart spokeswoman Karen Burk said the renewed interest
in poker may make a deck of cards the top stocking
stuffer of the holidays this year.
Poker, which was introduced to much of the country by
riverboats on the Mississippi and Ohio rivers in the
1800s, is now seeing another surge thanks to cable
networks televising tournaments at all hours are fueling
the
Texas
HoldEm
poker
craze.
"The
World Series of Poker" on ESPN along with Bravo's
"Celebrity Poker Showdown" and the "World Poker Tour" on
the Travel Channel are among the biggest hits.
Few
networks were interested in poker until the World Poker
Tour turned into an overnight success a year ago.
PokerStars.com, a popular poker Web site that offers
games online, estimates based on anecdotal research that
from 50 million to 60 million people play poker at least
once a month.
Games range from high school students gathering in
basements on weekend nights to organized tournaments.
Noah
Campbell, 25, started a weekend
Texas
HoldEm
tournament
in Toledo this year that draws a combined 80 players on
Friday and Saturday nights, with the money going to
charities.
He
spent at least $2,000 buying tables, cards and chips.
Campbell said many of his friends are buying their own
supplies too - including high-end chips and cards.
"They want emulate what they see on TV," he said.
Sears, Roebuck and Co. sells a $99 gaming set that comes
in a portable velvet-lined case with a chrome handle and
300 chips and two decks of cards.
Georganne Greece, a buyer for the company's game room
group, said expectations are that poker supplies will
see a huge surge in sales in the coming months.
"It's somewhat in its infancy," she said. "But early
indications are that we're going to sell through most of
this product - even the high-end items."
Most
items began arriving at Sears stores in the middle of
August. "We saw it fly away," she said.
Books written by some of the game's best-known players,
such as Phil Hellmuth and Doyle Brunson, have been top
sellers at Borders bookstores, said Beth Bingham, a
spokeswoman for Borders Group Inc.
Hellmuth has a second book "Bad Beats and Lucky Draws"
coming out in November. He's also working on a couple
more for next year.
In
the last year, Borders has added 20 percent more
poker-related books. "It's not just the book titles,"
Bingham said. "There's a lot more products - we're
carrying poker games, a Texas HoldEm game."
Restoration Hardware, the furniture and home decor
retailer, sells playing cards and all the extras -
mechanical card shufflers, playing card coasters and
shot glasses.
The
retailer, just like any good poker player, had a little
luck on its side, too. It began stocking gaming items a
few years before the poker boom.
Dave
Glassman, a spokesman for the Corte Madera, Calif.-based
company said at first the items "didn't get much visual
importance in the store," but the company was
well-positioned to capitalize when poker shows on
television began drawing fans.
Now
the items are front and center inside its stores and
catalogues.
Crate & Barrel spokeswoman Bette Kahn said poker's
elevation is a testament to the power of television.
It's
hard to say whether
Texas
HoldEm
card
playing will stick around, she said. "It may not be a
fad. They've played poker for years and years," Kahn
added.