|
May 5, 2008 Daniel Cox Editor, Gaming Review Online
San Jose, Costa Rica - Gaming Review Online: Are you recognized as much in Costa Rica as in America?” Humberto Brenes: “In Costa Rica I am not known as much
as a poker player, but as a businessman. I have owned several hotels, the
television station, and many other businesses. In Costa
Rica, I am known as ‘Papeto’ and they know me as ’The
Shark’ in America.”
GRO: How do you feel as the most famous
poker player in Costa Rica?
HB: “I prefer to be known first as
‘Papi,” as a family man, then as a poker player and businessman. My family is
what is most important to me. They know how to help me set my priorities. When
I was in Monte Carlo,
I asked my teenage daughter Jessica to carry my sharks into a player’s
reception. She didn’t want to. I explained to her that I am famous for the
sharks. She said, ‘You aren’t a star, you‘re my Papi.’ When I came back from
the $25,000 World Poker Tour Championship Event last week, I played in a $50
tournament here in Costa
Rica with my sons. I had more fun playing
with them in that tournament than I did at the Bellagio”
GRO: You have two World Series of Poker
bracelets. Your brothers each have World Poker Tour Titles. Who is the better
player, you, Alex or Eric? (NOTE: A week after this interview, Alex placed 4th
in the inaugural Latin American Poker Tour event in Rio de Janeiro.) HB: “As with any player, it depends on
the day. Which of us has slept best, or is free from stress or is capable of
making the best decisions? Poker is about making decisions, so whoever is
making the best decisions on a given day is the best player.”
GRO: Besides the Brenes family, who are
the other Costa Rican players to watch out for? HB: “Jose Rosenkrantz is a very good
player, having won on the World Poker Tour. Max and Mary Stern are also good
players. They are the only husband and wife to have both won World Series of
Poker bracelets.”
GRO: Why are there so few Costa Rican
players on the international poker circuit? HB: “Until recently, like in most of
the world, poker was not a sport that had much respect. There are many Costa
Rican players when you compare them to other Latin American countries. The new
Latin American Poker Tour (LAPT) that PokerStars.NET is sponsoring is going to
grow more players. Also, many players play in Latin American tournaments, as
well as in Europe, because they do not like
that American Casinos must withhold taxes of 30% on money earned in
tournaments.
GRO: Do you see poker growing in Costa Rica? HB: Years ago, poker was underground in
Costa Rica, like it was in America and many other countries. Now, many of the college students are playing poker
and it is becoming very popular.
GRO: How do you feel when some people
say you go over the top, at times, with your Shark card covers and your
flamboyant actions at the table? HB: “Some people that say I go over the
top with the sharks are jealous of my play and others feel it is a waste of
time. Usually the players that complain are the ones I have just beaten. The
people who criticize me must understand that I do these actions because I feel
it is good for televised poker. As Cassius Clay (Muhammad Ali) was a good boxer
and a good person, his flamboyant actions were good for the sport of boxing at
the time. I feel my actions are good for televised poker. The people that watch
poker, for the most part, enjoy watching me and they enjoy how I play with the
sharks.”
GRO: Unlike many people, I enjoy a good
bad beat story. What is your worst ‘Bad Beat’ story? HB: “My worst bad beat was the hand
that ended my 2003 World Series of Poker against Chris Moneymaker.
By knocking me out, he took the lead in the World Series and
never looked back. It is more painful because it was on television so often; it
is even on You Tube. I have lost more money on other bad beats, but that was
the one that hurt the most.”
GRO: Is there a question interviewers
have not asked in the past, but that you wish someone would ask? HB: “The question I would most like to
have asked is, ‘What is the biggest happiness that poker has given you?’” His
answer was typical of the Humberto I had grown to know, “It isn’t the money.
Poker has given me a chance to be the best at something. It has given me the
satisfaction of winning.”
GRO: Is there anything you would like to
add? HB: “The attention I get with the
sharks also lets me bring attention to anti-shark fin projects, a cause I feel
very deeply about. I have a chance to help promote actions to stop the
slaughter of sharks solely for their fins. It is a chance to protect the sharks
from the cruelty of removing the fins and dumping the live sharks back in the
water where they die. Costa
Rica has more hammerhead sharks per cubic
meter of territorial water than any other country in the world. Though the
Costa Rican government has passed laws protecting the sharks from fining, they
do not have the money to enforce the laws. For more information on the problem
and ways to help, visit http://www.sharkscostarica.org/.
I am also involved in causes that protect nature. I am
supporting one of the first ‘wind farms’ in one of my farms located in Santa Anna Mountains to produce clean electricity.
The most important thing for everyone to do is get involved in protecting
nature. If it helps to get people involved in protecting nature by using my
name, I am willing to support these causes.”
Poker is the international sport of the 21st
century. More and more people are playing poker seriously and for much longer.
Michael Jordan was a great basketball player, but he had to quit playing at a
young age. In poker you can play for many years more. Look at Doyle Brunson; he
is still playing at 74 years old. Poker is good for exercising the mind, which
aids against Alzheimer’s. It is also a sport that brings the family together.
All of the members of the family can have fun playing. Poker is also a sport
that does not set generations apart, it unifies them People of all ages can
play together. Hopefully, with time, those people [anti-gaming politicians and
others who treat poker as a game of luck, not one of skill] that do not
understand the unifying power of poker can change their minds.”
|