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Poker Hall of Fame |
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The Poker Hall of Fame
adds another player's
name to its list of
poker legends every
year. |
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Since its inception in
1979, the Hall of Fame
has honored thirty-three
gamblers, one for each
year, with the exception
of 1993 and the year
2002, 2005 & 2006. All
but two, Hoyle and
Hickok, were
twentieth-century card
players, and many of
them road gamblers who
followed the game
wherever it would take
them. |
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Hall of Fame Standards |
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Selection Criteria for
the Hall of Fame is
straightforward and the
standards are high: |
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* A gambler must have
played poker against
acknowledged top
competition,
* Played for high
stakes,
* Played consistently
well, gained the respect
of peers,
* And stood the test of
time. |
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WSOP Information |
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Felton "Corky"
McCorquodale, 1979
A noted no-limit
gambler, Corky
introduced Texas hold 'em
to Las Vegas in 1963. He
was enshrined in 1979 as
a charter member.
Deceased. |
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Johnny Moss , 1979
Ageless patriarch of the
game, Johnny Moss was a
three-time world
no-limit Texas hold 'em
champion (1970, 1971,
and 1974). He lived in
Las Vegas until his
death in 1997. In 1979
he was enshrined as a
charter member. |
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Red Winn, 1979
Known as a
quintessential
all-around player, Red
Winn was enshrined in
1979 as a charter
member. Deceased. |
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Sid Wyman, 1979
From the early 1950's to
the late 1970s, Sid was
co-owner of several
gaming properties,
including the Sands,
Riviera, and the old
Dunes. The Missouri-born
Wyman was a noted
high-stakes gambler who
excelled at poker. He
died in June 1978.
Casino play was halted
for two minutes at the
Dunes at the hour of his
funeral. He was
enshrined in 1979 as a
charter member. |
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"Nick the Greek"
Dandolos, 1979
Known for making
astronomical wagers in
Las Vegas casinos, Nick
became a household name.
Late in his career,
Dandolos was near broke
and playing low-limit
poker in Southern
California. Asked how he
could bet millions of
dollars once and now
play for $5 chips,
Dandolos was purported
to have said "Hey, it's
action." He was
enshrined in 1979 as a
charter member.
Deceased. |
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Edmond Hoyle, 1979
For more than two
centuries, card players
have played "according
to Hoyle", which has
become synonymous with
conformity to rules.
Born circa 1672 in
England, Hoyle wrote his
first book, A Short
Treatise on the Game of
Whist in 1742. The book,
a classic, was used to
settle differences
during games played by
London society. Hoyle
died August 30, 1769, at
age ninety-seven. The
eighteenth-century
author was enshrined in
1979 as a charter
member. |
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"Wild Bill" Hickok,
1979
James Butler "Wild Bill"
Hickok, a
nineteenth-century
gambler and lawman, was
killed while playing
poker. He held aces and
eights, which became
known as "The Dead Man's
Hand." Hickok is perhaps
the most recognizable
name in the shrine at
least to those outside
of poker circles. He was
a scout in the Civil
War, a marshal in
Kansas, and later toured
with Buffalo Bill's Wild
West show as a
sharpshooter. His
shoot-out with the
McCanles gang -- he
killed three of them --
made Hickok a legend in
his own time. While
playing in a poker game
in a saloon at Deadwood
in the Dakota Territory
(now South Dakota), he
was shot in the back by
"Crooked Nose" McCall
and died on August 2,
1876, at age
thirty-nine. He was
enshrined in 1979 as a
charter member. |
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T. "Blondie" Forbes,
1980
A master road gambler,
Blondie was enshrined in
1980. Deceased. |
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Bill Boyd, 1981
Regarded as one of the
best five-card stud
players of all time,
Bill was several times
champion of the event at
the World Series of
Poker. He was
ceremonially dealt the
first poker hands at
both the Golden Nugget
and Mirage cardrooms.
Retired from
professional poker, Boyd
was selected to be a
Hall-of-Famer in 1981,
and lived in Las Vegas
until his death on Nov.
21, 1997. |
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Tom Abdo, 1982
After suffering a heart
attack at the poker
table, Tom turned to
another player and asked
him to count his chips
down and save his seat.
He died that night,
intending to return to
the game. He was
enshrined in 1982. |
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Joe Bernstein, 1983
A sharp road gambler;
Joe was known as a
dapper dresser at the
poker table. He was
enshrined in 1983.
Deceased. |
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Murph Harrold, 1984
Regarded as one of the
best deuce-to-seven draw
(Kansas City lowball)
players of all time,
Murph was enshrined in
1984. Deceased. |
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Red Hodges, 1985
Considered one of the
best seven-card stud
players of all time, Red
was selected for the
Hall of Fame in 1985.
Deceased. |
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Henry Green, 1986
A road gambler from
Alabama, Henry Green was
an even tempered player
who was skilled at all
forms of poker. He was
selected for the Hall of
Fame in 1986. Deceased. |
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Puggy Pearson, 1987
A husky, cigar-chomping
Tennessee born gambler,
Walter Clyde "Puggy"
Pearson won the world
title in 1973.
Considered a great
seven-card stud player,
he is noted for his
aggressive style, an
erratic temper, and
homespun philosophy. He
was made a Hall-of-Famer
in 1987 at age 58. A
professional gambler,
that lived in Las Vegas.
Deceased on April 12,
2006 at the age of 77.
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Doyle Brunson, 1988
A hulking-Texas-born
gambler who won the 1976
and 1977 world titles,
Doyle was the first
player to win $1 million
in tournament play. His
book Super/System is an
acclaimed study of his
high stakes poker.
Brunson got his nickname
"Texas Dolly" when Jimmy
"The Greek" Snyder
misread "Doyle" as
"Dolly." Enshrined in
1988 at age fifty-four,
he's an active
professional gambler who
lives in Las Vegas. |
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Jack Straus, 1988
An aggressive gambler
noted for imaginative
play, Jack won the 1982
world title. The
salt-and-pepper-bearded,
Texas-born gambler was
noted for spinning poker
yarns. Nicknamed
"Treetop," Straus stood
six-foot-six. He died in
August 1988 at age 58
after suffering a heart
attack during a
high-stakes poker game
at the Bicycle Club in
Bell Gardens,
California. He was
enshrined at the first
Hall of Fame Classic
that year. |
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Fred "Sarge" Ferris,
1989
A New England-born son
of Lebanese immigrants,
Sarge became a
professional gambler to
escape the poverty of
his youth. He won the
1980 deuce-to-seven draw
world title. He gained
notoriety when, on April
22, 1983, the Internal
Revenue Service seized
$46,000 worth of chips
from him during a
high-stakes game at the
Horseshoe. He died of a
heart attack in March
1989, the year he was
enshrined. |
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Benny Binion, 1990
A colorful cowboy and
gambler. Benny Binion
founded the Horseshoe
casino in downtown Las
Vegas. In 1970, he
inaugurated the World
Series of Poker as a
gambler's convention at
the resort. He died on
Christmas Day 1989, at
age 85. He was enshrined
in 1990. A tempered
player who was skilled
at all forms of poker,
he was selected for the
Hall of Fame in 1986.
Deceased. |
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David "Chip" Reese,
1991
David Edward "Chip"
Reese came to Las Vegas
in 1974 with $400 in his
pocket and started at
the $10 limit tables. He
quickly rose to become
one of the game's best
all-around high-stakes
players. The Ohio-born
gambler who began
playing poker for
baseball cards at age
six, is a Dartmouth
graduate. He was
enshrined in 1991 at age
40, the youngest
Hall-of-Famer ever. A
professional gambler who
lived in Las Vegas.
Deceased on December 04,
2007 at the age of 56. |
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"Amarillo Slim"
Preston, 1992
A fast-talking,
flamboyant Texas gambler
and poker tournament
promoter, Thomas Austin
"Amarillo Slim" Preston
won the world title in
1972. Unlike many
gamblers of his era, he
sought out publicity by
going on national talk
shows after winning the
World Series. He was
enshrined in 1992 at age
62. Preston has not
competed in major Las
Vegas tournaments in
recent years. He resides
in Texas. |
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Jack Keller, 1993
"Gentleman Jack" has
been one of the most
consistent players since
arriving in Las Vegas
from Philadelphia in the
early 1980s and is the
1984 World Champion.
Enshrined in 1994 at age
51, he is an active
professional gambler who
lives in Mississippi. |
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Julius Oral "Little
Man" Popwell, 1996
Popwell was a gambler of
near-mythical stature.
He was posthumously
inducted into the Poker
Hall of Fame in 1996.
His road games were
five-card stud. He
played against Johnny
Moss, Henry Green and
others in the '40s and
'50s. Deceased. |
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Roger Moore, 1997
In 1974 Moore entered
his first World Series
of Poker and hasn't
missed one since. Born
into adversity as the
son of a sharecropper,
Moore has earned the
reputation as one of
pokers most determined
and formidable
practitioners. He has
preformed admirably
against most of the
giants of the game,
including fellow Hall of
Famers Johnny Moss,
Doyle Brunson, Chip
Reese, Amarillo Slim,
Jack Straus, Puggy
Pearson and Jack Keller.
Moore is the 1994 World
Series of Poker $5000
Seven Card Stud World
Champion and has placed
in the money 15 times.
Along with his three
runner-up finishes, he
has been in the money in
the championship event
three times. WSOP
lifetime money earnings:
$400,378. |
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Stu Ungar, 2001
When anyone talks about
the greatest poker
players of all time, Stu
Ungar's name will
surface immediately. He
is considered by many to
have been the greatest
No Limit Hold'em player
of all time. Ungar was a
three-time World
Champion (with five WSOP
bracelets). He won ten
major No Limit Hold'em
championship events (in
which the buy-ins were
$5,000 or higher).
Amazingly, Ungar only
played in about 30 of
these championship
events in his lifetime. |
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Lyle Berman, 2002
Berman prefers
high-stakes cash games
to tournaments, although
he has played in a few.
He is a three-time
winner at the World
Series of Poker: Limit
Omaha in '89, no-limit
hold’em in '92, and
deuce-to-seven draw in
'94). He finished second
at the WSOP four times.
In 1991, he won the
$5,000 buy-in no-limit
hold'em championship at
the Hall of Fame Poker
Classic. Berman doesn't
play many tournaments
and yet considering the
number of events he has
played, his record is
worthy of the Hall of
Fame. |
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Johnny Chan, 2002
Johnny Chan is used to
being first. The winner
of back-to-back World
Championships in 1987
and 1988, Johnny was
also first in money won
all-time at the World
Series of Poker in 2002.
He's also the first
poker-playing movie
star. It was Chan, shown
trapping Erik Seidel,
that Matt Damon idolized
in the movie, Rounders.
It may come as a
surprise to some that
Johnny Chan wasn't in
the Poker Hall of Fame
sooner. It's not an
oversight. It's because
Johnny is still so
young. Not yet 50 years
old, Chan had unusual
success very early.
Always known as one of
the finest No-Limit
Hold'em players who ever
lived, Johnny Chan
qualified for the Hall
of Fame because he is
willing to take on all
comers. Chan has played
in the biggest games
going for the last
quarter century.
Nicknamed by the pundits
as "The Great Wall of
China" and "The Orient
Express" Johnny Chan is
also one of the most
approachable and
well-liked of former
World Champions.
Lyle Berman, fellow Hall
of Fame 2002 Inductee,
introduced Johnny before
the start of the
Championship Event. He
reminded the audience
that Chan started
playing poker at the
$2/$4 level. He
cautioned all players
that if they couldn't
beat that game, they
wouldn't be able to beat
$10/$20 and above. So
don’t ask him for a
stake.
Johnny thanked Lyle for
the introduction and the
Hall of Fame for the
"honor." Then he told
the dealers, "Shuffle up
and deal." |
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Bobby Baldwin, 2003
Recognized as the man
who helped bring class
to poker, Bobby Baldwin
is one of Vegas's top
Chief Executive Officers
and poker's biggest
friend. The 1978 WSOP of
Poker Champion, Bobby is
also honored for is his
world class playing
skills, willingness to
take enormous risks, and
his ability to come out
on top time after time. |
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Berry Johnston, 2004
The 1986 World Series of
Poker Champion, Berry
Johnston is also
recognized for being the
man with the most all
time cashes in 2004.
He's made at least one
cash every year since
1982. |
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Jack Binion, 2005
For over 50 years, the
innovations and style of
Jack Binion has led to
unparalled success in
the casino industry.
Inherting the Horseshoe
legacy from his father,
Benny Binion, Jack
developed the downtown
Horseshoe Casino into a
Las Vegas icon renowned
for its high limits and
generous odds - and
hosted the first World
Series of Poker in 1970. |
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Crandell Addington,
2005
World-Famous poker
ambassador and
consistant high stakes
winner. Crandell
Addington enjoyed an
extremely successful
poker career from 1963
until he retired in the
Mid 80's after playing
against the games's
biggest names. Described
by Doyle Brunson as a
"No Limit Hold'em
Legend" and "one of the
most colorful and
greatest players of
poker history." |
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T.J. Cloutier, 2006
Cloutier specializes in
playing tournament
poker, especially No
Limit and Pot Limit
Hold'em. He is the only
person in the history of
the World Series of
Poker (WSOP) to have won
events in all three
types of Omaha played at
the World Series - (Pot
Limit High, Limit High,
and Limit 8-or-Better
High-low split). Despite
winning dozens of
tournaments, he has
never won the main event
of the World Series of
Poker, although he has
placed four times in the
top 5, including two 2nd
place finishes in 1985
and 2000. |
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Billy Baxter, 2006
Though his most well
known contribution to
poker is that he staked
Stu Ungar from 1990 on,
Baxter has won 7 of his
own World Series of
Poker bracelets. As of
2006, he ranks just
behind Johnny Moss (8),
Phil Hellmuth, Johnny
Chan and Doyle Brunson
(10 each). All of
Baxter's bracelets are
in lowball games |
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