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The History of No-Limit Texas Hold'em Poker Game

This is the story of how a small band of Texas gamblers unwittingly created the poker colossus that is currently enjoyed by more than fifty million professional and amateur players and is seen by millions of people worldwide on some of the most popular shows on television. Here is how it all started.

In the early 1960s, poker game was an illegal activity throughout the United States, with the exception of Nevada and California. But that didn't stop Texans from hosting high stakes games all over their state. Some game operators even disguised their organizations, hoping to prevent raids from the authorities. Sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't.

These men and more including the seven Texans who eventually brought no-limit Texas Hold'em to Nevada, travelled from town to town across Texas and the deep South playing poker. They became known as "outside" or "road" gamblers and they specialized in Kansas City lowball draw and Texas hold'em, then a new game that offered the best platform for developing multiple poker strategies and tactically implementing them.

Texas Holdem LegendsIn 1967, Nevada has only one legal poker room, which was located in the Golden Nugget and operated by a master of five-card stud player. Nevada and California players came there to play five-card stud, razz and California Lowball draw. This would change when a small group of Texans introduced high stakes no-limit Texas hold'em to Nevada. The game proved popular among the players, but for years there was no casino other than the Golden Nugget in which to spread the game.

As the game began to catch on in Las Vegas during the late sixties and early seventies, high stakes no-limit Texas hold'em games ranged from $10,000 to $100,000 change-in (that's about $90,000-$900,000 in terms of today's dollar). Later the excitement generated by new poker rooms on the Strip and the World Series of Poker fueled Texas hold'em's meteoric rise in nationwide popularity.

These prosperous days lasted until about the middle eighties. By that time, satellites had become so popular that they were running twenty-four hours a day and were occupying more and more of the limited floor space in the Horseshoe. Today the game of no-limit Texas hold'em has been transformed, thanks to its entertainment value, to television audiences. Ever increasing participation in major freeze-out tournaments have forced tournament hosts to impose rapidly increasing ante and blind structures in order to keep the tournament times manageable.

So now you know the history of no-limit Texas hold'em, the story of a small band of Texas gamblers who changed the game of poker forever.

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