What makes folks chase the ace? The big draw may not be the big draw - Action News
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What makes folks chase the ace? The big draw may not be the big draw

A MUN psychologist is looking at what makes people chase the ace, and he's finding it's not always about the money.

People see Chase the Ace as social opportunities, but it's still gambling, says MUN psychologist

A crowd of ace chasers sit on the lawn outside St. Kevin's Parish in the Goulds neighbourhood of St. John's in 2017. (Zach Goudie/CBC)

If you were one of the tens of thousands of people who flocked to the Gouldsneighbourhood of St. John's each Thursday in the summer of 2017 to play Chase the Ace, a Memorial University psychologist wants to know what drove you there.

(Not literally, of course though many people did drive in from all over the province and play from their decked-out RVs.)

"I think it's really interesting and it's kind of come out of nowhere, particularin Atlantic Canada," Nick Harris, a MUN psychologist who specializes in behavioural addictions, told CBC's On The Go.

Nick Harris says he has attended a Chase the Ace event, but has never played. (Submitted by Nick Harris)

He and his team just finished collectingdata for a new study looking at the game and its players, in an effort to figure out what made all those people make like Lemmy and chase the ace of spades.

They put out a survey aimed at Chase the Ace players and got about 275 responses from people with varying dedication to the game. Judging from the responses, there were three main reasons people threw their money down for a chance to pick a card and flip over the dark, solitary ace.

Turns out, the main draw wasn't necessarily the draw itself.

1. It's a chance to party

Chase the Ace was a deadly party for most of the people who played the Goulds game.

People living in the houses near St. Kevin's Parish threw parties word on the street was that 81-year-old Peg Frizzell held legendary potlucks each week and people in the crowds outside the hall dressed up in costumes, danced and whooped as they waited to hear if they were holding the ticket to future fortune.

Party at Peg's! Peg Frizzell, 81, right, held a huge potluck and party for all of her nearby friends and family. Anyone else who cared to join was welcome, too. (Vanessa Rose)

That kind of fun, saidHarris, was a big reason many of the respondentsplayed the game.

2. It's a chance to be rich

Heck yeah there was money lots of it.Marge and Don Gormantook home $2.6 million from the Gouldsbonanza, Donelda MacAskill took home $1.7 million in Inverness, N.S., and Mary Milleytook home $175,000 this summer in Mount Pearl.

People were playing to win, Harris said. And though the odds of winning were still intergalacticly huge, they were better than the odds of winning thelottery.

Lottery hopefuls line up for tickets for the final Chase the Ace draw by St. Kevin's Parish in Goulds. (Mark Cumby/CBC)

3. It's a chance to bond

People said it brought them together, Harris said. Ticket and car pooling, buying tickets for friends andhaving friends buy tickets for themit all gave people a reason to bond with their family andtheir colleagues.

Mostly, anyway. There was that case inMargareeForks, N.S., where an aunt took her nephew to court over a $1.2 million win.

But is it a chance for problemgambling?

"Compared to other types of gambling, people perceive this very differently. They didn't necessarily see it as a gambling activity, they saw it as a social activity," he said. They also saw it as a way to raise money for a charity or organization, he said.

But, of course, it is gambling, no matter how many millions were raised for a local church. There are a lot of similarities to traditional gambling games,like the built-in reward system, the anticipation, the excitement andthe fun.

And sure enough,it did wind up causing some problems: eight per cent of the survey respondents saidthey'd spent more than they'd intended, or more than they could afford, he said.

Harris said he and his team will be analyzing the data more over the coming months and hope to present at a few conferences after the spring and eventually publish a paper.

He also said that though he has never played Chase the Ace and was therefore disqualified from taking his own survey, he has attended a couple draws in New Brunswick and he attended for reason the third reason: bonding with his brother-in-law.

Read more articles from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador