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The
Ultimate Card Playing Legend
by
Doug French
by Doug French
DIGG THIS
The dealing
has started at this year’s World Series of Poker (WSOP) in Las Vegas.
It seems America has gone poker crazy. The game is now televised
and shown at all hours of the day and night, watched by millions
all over the world who no doubt fanaticize about playing at the
final table of the WSOP and winning it all. And, why shouldn't they?
Amateurs have dominated the tournament the past few years, making
instant stars and changing the lives of guys who entered the tournament
as patent attorneys or accountants, and leaving with millions of
dollars and new careers. The 2007 WSOP attracted 6,358 entrants
to its final event: The No Limit Texas Hold 'em World Championship
that paid a first prize of $8.5 million to winner Jerry Yang, a
psychologist from the heart of California suburbia, Temecula.
But these amateur
winners are likely flashes in the pan; they caught lightning in
a bottle for a few days but will never be heard from again. Yang
is a good example, his best finish in a tournament since last year’s
WSOP is only 14th place.
People, who
play poker day in and day out, grinding out a living in Las Vegas
poker rooms, are a rare and curious breed. The number of real poker
superstars can find seats at a single Texas Hold 'em table. One
of a Kind: The Rise and Fall of Stuey "The Kid" Ungar, The World's
Greatest Poker Player chronicles the compelling story of
the man who won the WSOP three times.
Authors Nolan
Dalla and Peter Alson's well-written book is hard to put down. Stuey
Ungar was a superstar poker player like no other, who burned brightly
and then flamed out, dying in the seedy, downtown Oasis Motel. His
death, according to the coroner, "was brought on by his lifestyle."
Ungar's
photographic memory and innate ability to read opponents made him
a great poker player, but he was probably the greatest gin rummy
player of all time. He was virtually impossible to beat at the game
one-on-one. Within two discards he would know what his opponent
was holding. He destroyed the best gin players in the world and
eventually no one would play him.
In the late
1970s, Ungar entered five gin tournaments and won three. He placed
in the top four in one of the tournaments that he didn't win, and
in the other he didn't show up on the tournament's second day. In
1979, tournament officials at the Riviera wouldn't let him play,
because other players wouldn't enter knowing they didn't have a
chance to win against him.
Ungar grew
up in New York, the son of a Lower East Side bookie. Hanging around
his father's bar that fronted the bookmaking operation, Ungar developed
an addiction for betting on horses and sporting events that he would
never conquer. Despite winning millions at card tables, he was constantly
broke, wagering away any winnings he had on the next day's slate
of ball games or at the track. He was the ultimate high time-preference
individual.
After his father
died in the arms of a paramour, Stuey quit high school and spent
his days and nights in the Big Apple's underground card rooms. He
had learned to play cards watching his mother play in the Catskills
during family vacations. His mother was a terrible player, but Ungar
learned the basics of poker and gin and learned how to determine
what cards his opponents held. The Kid was so good that members
of the Genovese crime family bankrolled him as he demolished the
top gin players on the east coast.
But as good
as he was at cards, the rest of his life was a disaster. Stuey demanded
instant gratification at all times. He often gambled every dollar
he had and would be constantly borrowing money from others. He didn't
own a watch and didn't have a bank account. The Kid was in his 40s
before anyone taught him table manners or other common courtesies.
In contrast, 2007 winner Yang recently told the Las Vegas Review
Journal, "I’m not a big player. I’m still learning the
game. There’s as old Chinese saying: money is good in the pocket,
so why risk it?"
Ungar came
out of nowhere to win the 1980 WSOP, playing in only his second
poker tournament ever. After winning, the 26-year-old Stuey had
to be chauffeured to the Federal Building to be issued a Social
Security number in order to collect the first prize. He defended
his title the next year, but soon drugs took over Ungar's life.
Stuey
made the unlikeliest of comebacks to win the 1997 WSOP, but only
18 months later was laid to rest. At the service, poker player and
casino owner Bob Stupak took up a collection to pay for the funeral.
The Kid had won approximately $30 million in his lifetime, but died
with only $800 in his pocket and the clothes on his back.
Mr. Yang reportedly
has saved much of the $8.5 million he won last year and has made
sure his kids’ college education is paid for. He is a prudent guy
who got lucky. Stuey Ungar was the ultimate card-playing legend.
June
2, 2008
Doug
French [send him mail]
is associate editor for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
Copyright
© 2008 Doug French
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French Archives
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