The summer’s biggest cultural stories are not just about winning. They are about pressure, passion, and the strange magic that happens when underground energy meets the main stage.
Some summers arrive with a clean storyline. Others show up holding a stack of chips, a half-burned matchbook, and a striker built like a cheat code.
This is one of the weird ones. Erling Haaland has Norway crashing deeper into the 2026 FIFA World Cup than history expected. Alex Foxen, an ACR Poker Pro, added a fourth World Series of Poker bracelet to a résumé that already reads like a warning label, while reclaiming the lead in the Global Poker Index (GPI) Player of the Year race. High Times, after years of turbulence, is back in the mix as one of the few counterculture brands old enough to remember when rebellion did not come with a media kit.
On paper, a World Cup pitch, a Las Vegas poker table, and a cannabis magazine do not have much in common. Look closer and the overlap is obvious: risk, spectacle, devotion, myth, and the kind of audience that does not casually watch. They sweat it.
The Summer of High Stakes Culture
The mainstream has always had a funny relationship with subculture. First it ignores it. Then it borrows the language. Then it builds an industry around it.
Poker knows that cycle. Cannabis knows it too. Soccer, for all its global power, still runs on tribal feeling that looks a lot closer to street culture than polished entertainment. Every chant, every scarf, every bad beat, every strain name with a local legend behind it carries the same charge: this matters because people decided it matters.
That is why this summer feels bigger than a sports calendar. The 2026 World Cup has turned North America into a temporary football planet. The WSOP is once again turning Las Vegas into the center of the poker universe. High Times is reemerging at a moment when cannabis culture is legal in some places, criminalized in others, and still fighting over who gets to profit from a movement built by outlaws, growers, patients, artists, and people who took real risks before the suits showed up.
The connection is not that these worlds are the same. They are not. It is that all three understand the value of stakes. Not branding stakes. Real stakes. The kind where one touch, one card, one raid, or one ruling can change the whole story.
Haaland Breaks the Bracket
Norway’s 2-1 win over Brazil in the Round of 16 was the sort of result that makes a tournament feel alive. Brazil entered carrying the weight of football history. Norway came in with Haaland, belief, and the dangerous freedom of a team that had already surpassed expectations.
Haaland scored both goals, sending Norway into the World Cup quarterfinals for the first time, and was named Player of the Match (MVP). That is not just a stat. That is a national memory being made in real time. For fans, it is the exact reason these tournaments still hit so hard. The global machine can be massive, commercial, and overproduced, but the game still leaves room for the irrational.
That is where the cultural power lives. Not in the sponsorship boards or the broadcast packages, but in the moment a favorite looks vulnerable, and an underdog realizes the door is open.
Poker players know that feeling. So does anyone who has ever watched a culture move from the margins into the light.

ACR Poker Pro Alex Foxen and the Bracelet Summer
While Haaland was putting Norway on his back, Alex Foxen was building another chapter of his own in Las Vegas.
Foxen captured his fourth career WSOP gold bracelet this summer, adding another major marker to one of poker’s most consistent modern résumés. In a game where variance can humble anybody, staying dangerous year after year is the real flex. Poker has never only rewarded nerve. It rewards memory, discipline, patience, selective aggression, and the ability to look calm while the floor drops out from under you.
That is why the WSOP still matters. First held in 1970 at Binion’s Horseshoe, the World Series of Poker has become the game’s mythology factory. The bracelet is not just jewelry. It is proof that a player survived a specific kind of pressure in a room full of people who all believe they are the one meant to win.
The modern poker dream still owes a lot to Chris Moneymaker, who famously turned an $86 online satellite into a 2003 WSOP Main Event title and $2.5 million. That story did not just make one player famous. The Moneymaker Effect cracked open poker’s imagination. Suddenly, the distance between the poker weekend warrior and the biggest stage in the game felt shorter.

That same underdog current runs through ACR Poker’s summer programming. The Run Up Series features more than $10 million GTD, the biggest Venoms ever guarantee a combined $15 million across two Mystery Bounty events, and the schedule also includes a $66 buy-in, $1 million guaranteed Mystery Bounty event. It is a very modern version of an old poker promise: the next story can come from almost anyone, anywhere.
That does not mean poker is easy money. It is a game of variance and skill, and players should understand the risks and play responsibly. The appeal is not hard to understand. Poker turns pressure into theater. Every decision is public. Every mistake has a receipt. Every win feels like a confession that the player saw something the rest of the table missed.
Why High Times Belongs in the Conversation
High Times has always lived around that same edge. Founded in 1974 by Tom Forçade, the magazine emerged from a counterculture world where cannabis was not a lifestyle vertical. It was illegal, political, funny, dangerous, communal, and deeply tied to music, art, protest, and underground economies. High Times treated weed like culture long before much of the mainstream could say the word without smirking.
That history matters because cannabis is now surrounded by the same tension poker knows well. What happens when a scene built in back rooms becomes an industry? What gets preserved? What gets sold? Who gets welcomed in after the heat dies down, and who paid the price when the heat was still real?
The brand has not had a clean, frictionless path. It has been through financial trouble, ownership changes, and print pauses. In 2025, Josh Kesselman acquired the High Times brand and assets in a $3.5 million deal, setting up a new chapter for one of cannabis culture’s most recognizable names.
The Point Is Not the Odds
There is a reason poker, football, and cannabis culture keep producing legends. They all understand suspense.
A football match can turn on one touch. A tournament can turn on one river card. A cannabis movement can turn on one election, one court case, one grower willing to risk freedom, or one publication willing to say the quiet part out loud before the rest of the media catches up.
That is the thread running through this summer. Haaland and Norway are giving the World Cup a fresh underdog charge. Foxen is adding another bracelet to a career built on precision and nerve. ACR Poker is leaning into the summer tournament grind, where amateurs and killers sit inside the same digital ecosystem chasing their own version of the big score. High Times is stepping back into a landscape it helped shape, older, stranger, and still carrying the fingerprints of the underground.
Strip away the broadcast gloss and the same truth shows up in all three: they reward passion over predictability. Whether you are betting your stack on the river, launching a cross-field volley in front of millions, or treating a plant like culture in the face of federal bans, the moment belongs to whoever is willing to risk the most and flinch the least.
The clean corporate version of culture wants everything to be smooth and safe. But the stories people actually remember come from somewhere messier. A bad beat. A miracle goal. A magazine that should not have survived. A player nobody wants to face when the blinds get ugly.
That is the summer of high-stakes culture. Not a slogan. Just three worlds reminding everyone that the edge is still where the story lives, and it still belongs to the bold.

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All photos courtesy of ACR Poker
Sponsored Content Disclaimer: This article was published as part of a paid commercial arrangement with ACR Poker. It is not independent editorial content. References to the company, its services, events, offerings, or business claims reflect the sponsor’s perspective unless otherwise noted and have not been independently verified by High Times.
<p>The post Poker, Soccer, and High Times Go All In first appeared on High Times.</p>
