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Experts: TV and tournaments are raising ante
When Oscar Santana gets
home from school everyday, the Brooklyn teenager dutifully does his
homework, then boots up his computer for an evening of Texas Holdem.
For Oscar, and a
growing number of students, playing the popular poker game online is
swiftly becoming a new American pastime - with potentially dangerous
consequences.
"I could spend a
good two hours playing poker on the computer," said Santana, an
11th-grader who lives with his parents and two siblings in
Bedford-Stuyvesant.
But the soft-spoken
member of Edward R. Murrow High School's national championship chess
team insists he's got his game-playing under control.
"I can tell myself
when to stop," he said. "Since I have been playing, I haven't lost. I
really don't worry about getting addicted. I just love playing."
Santana, 17, says he
never watches TV, preferring to spend his free time honing his poker
skills on PacificPoker.com.
Even though all
online poker sites are located offshore (the U.S. Department of Justice
says online gambling, a $9 billion a year business, is illegal), players
must be at least 18.
To get around the
rule, one of Santana's college buddies lets him play for real money on
his PartyPoker.com account once a week. "I'm up $15,000 in play money,
and $400 in real money."
His parents, Rosa
and Oscar, know he plays poker. Rosa Santana said she does not like her
son playing for money, but doesn't mind if he plays for fun, as long as
it doesn't get out of hand.
"I tell him I'm
watching him," she said. "Because like with anything, it starts off
slowly, like fun, but it can creep up on you and you can get hooked."
Several experts
interviewed by the Daily News said the problem, fueled in part by the
popularity of professional and celebrity poker tournaments on TV, is
growing despite restrictions to limit underage gambling with real money.
"This is a new
phenomenon. There is no research out there yet on youth and online poker
addiction," said Rina Gupta, co-director of a youth gambling research
center at McGill University in Montreal. "But what we do know is that
poker, including online poker, has caught on like wildfire."
"It's definitely a
potential for concern and problems down the line," said Gupta. "We are
getting a tremendous amount of requests from the states for prevention
information. They call and say, 'I am a counselor in a school, there are
a lot of kids playing poker. Help!' "
The News found kids
as young as 11 playing poker online for play money.
Students at a
private school in Riverdale said they play Texas Holdem online on
nongambling sites to hone their skills for when they play for money with
their friends. "It's easy to do when you have a free period at school,"
said one student.
Researchers and
therapists have found an increased probability that youngsters who
engage in poker on play-money sites will eventually play for cash.
Worse, they say, success on the practice sites can mislead kids into
believing they'll win money if they play for real.
Therapist Heiko
Ganzer, who specializes in gambling addiction, said when he was summoned
to a Long Island school by a worried staffer last month, he asked 150
boys how many had ever gambled. To the surprise of the teachers - but
not Ganzer - 90% of them raised their hands.
Still, Ganzer, a
member of the New York Council on Problem Gambling, was taken aback when
he wandered into the auditorium and noticed four kids playing online
poker on their laptops in the middle of the school day.
"This generation is
in love with poker and computers," he said. "And parents and teachers
generally don't have a clue what's going on."
A recent study by
the International Center for Youth Gambling at McGill of 1,100 children
ages 12 to 17 showed that 42% play gambling games online, but not for
money, while nearly 6% play for real dough. The remaining children said
they do not gamble online.
And a national study
published last month by the Annenberg Center at the University of
Pennsylvania found an 84% increase in weekly card playing by young males
ages 14 to 22 from 2003 to 2004.
The study also found
that young weekly card players were also more likely to gamble
frequently on the Internet, even it they are under 18.
"The rise in weekly
card playing among young persons is worrisome," said Dan Romer, director
of the Adolescent Risk Communication Institute. "These latest results
suggest that the fad among teens is real and raise concerns that more
young people will experience gambling problems as they age."
Alan Goodleaf,
chairman of the Kahnawake Gaming Commission near Montreal, which
licenses many online gaming sites, said most underage gamblers are
"sanctioned by their parents. . . . We do whatever we can to stop it,
but parents still rule their children - supposedly."
Alex, a 17-year-old
Stuyvesant High School student who declined to give his last name, said
his parents established his online account.
"I used to play
Texas Holdem everyday in multiple tournaments," he said. "I pay my
parents from my money and they opened the account for me. I'm down a few
hundred dollars."
Many online sites
aggressively try to limit underage gaming, but critics say it's not
enough.
PokerRoom.com offers
a link to CyberPatrol, which blocks children from accessing specified
Web sites.
Gibraltar-based
PartyPoker.com, the most-used online poker site, posts a lengthy
disclaimer with specific tips for parents on how to prevent minors from
logging on and gambling.
But, experts agree,
the responsibility ultimately rests with parents.
"The truth is when
my son is on the computer, I can think he is doing his longterm essay on
Hemingway," said Pamela Hogan, an upper West Side mom of a 10th-grader.
"But maybe he is really playing poker. I trust him, but I guess we've
all got to pay more attention." |