Quote:
Originally Posted by stinkypete
by definition, if you were any good, you were positioned to play in high stakes games and or high buy-in tournaments during the boom
I don't think that's true at all. Unless you're on the older side and you were already doing well for yourself financially or you came from money, you didn't just show up in the poker boom with a bankroll sufficient to play in big games. And unless you come from immense privilege, you couldn't exactly afford to just take a shot. The opportunity was definitely there to grind out a bankroll, but that takes a lot of hours that not everybody had to dedicate to poker.
I agree that the opportunity was there for anybody that was reasonably good, if they were willing and able to play poker full time, to make a lot of money during the boom. But for various reasons a lot of people who would have had a big edge over the field were not putting in the hours.
There's a reason why most of the people who made a killing during the boom are young white men from relatively privileged backgrounds, and it's not because young white men from privileged backgrounds are inherently better at poker.