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Ted Forrest – King of the Props


Contributed by: Billy Monroe
Updated: Jun 20, 2008
Views: 670
Some poker players are strictly against all other forms of gambling. Ted Forrest is not one of thoseTed Forrest poker players. If you were to look in the dictionary next to the words “propositional bet,” there would be a picture of Forrest himself, and if there isn’t, it would be my guess that Forrest would bet Mr. Webster himself that it could be by the end of the year. Don’t get me wrong, Forrest doesn’t just bet on anything, he bets on anything he believes he is the odds on favorite to win. There is a difference, and Forrest has made millions exploiting these odds against willing competitors.

Ted Forrest was born in Syracuse, New York in 1964. While it’s true that the majority of poker players have a very early childhood memory of poker, Forrest didn’t become interested in the game until he was in his mid to late teens. That doesn’t mean his childhood wasn’t filled with some interesting stories involving gambling. One of the more exhilarating stories comes when Forrest was just about to turn 16, and with the blessing of his parents, was allowed to travel across country to the Grand Canyon, by bus, by himself. Forrest has said he enjoys spending time alone occasionally, and out there 2,500 miles away from his home, he was the epitome of alone. Because he was an unaccompanied minor, Forrest was forced to hide from park rangers at the Grand Canyon, so he often chose places to camp where others weren’t around so he wouldn’t be spotted. This also meant staying in dangerous areas where if something were to happen to him nobody would be able to get to him because they wouldn’t know where he was. It’s true that this part of the story seems like more than enough of an adventure to spend your 16th birthday, but the story was just starting.

After completing his time at the Grand Canyon, including hiking on a very difficult rated trail after being spotted by park rangers, he finally got to a bus station ready to head back home. On what should have been the easy part of his trip, he was asked by his parents to stop by and see his two aunts who lived in St. Louis. Surely Forrest could use some family love after his ordeal.

Forrest arrived in St. Louis and asked a nice enough looking man how to get to the address he had listed for his aunts. The man told Forrest to follow him and before Forrest knew it he was in a very bad neighborhood. The man asked Forrest to go into one of the houses, which ended up being a crackhouse. The man then held Forrest at knifepoint, robbing him of his one 20 dollar bill and 400 dollars worth of cashier checks that would be virtually impossible for the man to cash. Forrest then fled and ran back to the bus station.

Forrest was in great physical condition at the time, being a star in just about every sport his school had to offer. He figured that the man who robbed him would soon enough come back and then he would be able to rough him up a little bit. Luckily though, Forrest spotted a policeman and gave a description of the guy and the cop quickly told young Forrest that the man who robbed him had a laundry list of warrants, including one for murder.

Shortly after Forrest returned home was around the same time his passion for poker arrived. Forrest would spend his years waiting to be legally old enough to enter a casino by going to underground casinos and trying to work on his fake ID. He also spent countless hours with a deck of cards in his hands going over thousands of different situations. It’s been said that Forrest is a numbers guy, and nobody may know the numbers more than him.

In 1986 his relationship with the word “prop” began. However, this prop was as a prop player at a casino. A prop player is someone who is used by the poker room to either start a new game up, or keep a game going. They generally play with their own money, but are given some house perks such as free food and rooms. One night he sat down at a stud game with 100 dollars, and before long he was down to 33. Right then Forrest started to wonder if he had made the right career choice. He was then moved to a Hold’em game, and just like that he was up to over 160 dollars, and just as soon as he was about to quit, he decided he would stick with the game.

Forrest would also become a part-time dealer as well. Forrest made the most out of this time, often saying that in just a short time he was alarmed at the rate he would be able to predict the players hole cards. Forrest might have been making minimum wage as a card dealer, but the lessons he was learning in the box would be partly responsibly for the millions he has earned at the table since then.

Forrest would leave the casino for home for a brief period to go to college, but just a year before graduating his father passed away, and Forrest never returned to school, and for the better part of his life since then has made a poker table his classroom.

Forrest has been called one of the best stud players in the world, and that’s where he initially made his mark on the poker world. Before the internet poker boom and Moneymaker effect, stud was one of the premier games so it only made sense for Forrest to take a liking to the game where the most money at the time was to be won.

Between 1991 and 1993 Forrest finished at the final table in15 mid-level tournament buy-ins, with a majority of them being in a variation of stud. Of the 15 final tables, three of them were first place victories ranging between $20,000-30,000. In what can only be attributed to his desire to learn, Forrest had made a name for himself as one of the better poker players in a very short period of time. Going from AAA to the major leagues, Forrest was ready to try his luck at the World Series of Poker.

Luck might not be the right word, as Forrest showed amazing skill at the 1993 WSOP. Forrest made 11 final tables in the 1993 WSOP, including three victories. His wins came in the $1,500 Seven-Card Razz, $1,500 Omaha 8 or Better, and the $5,000 Seven-Card Stud event. Combined, Forrest earned over $200,000 of prizes in just these three victories, and nearly half a million alone at the 1993 WSOP. Forrest’s success for a single year at the WSOP has never been matched, and some say it never will. Forrest more or less decided to concentrate on his cash game after this tournament success, not returning with any sense of regularity to the WSOP until the 2004 WSOP, where prizes were becoming inflated and very hard to ignore.

Ted Forrest is a staple at any large cash game around the world, including the “Big Game,” at Bobby’s room in the Bellagio, where games routinely go up to 4000/8000. Forrest also was a main character in the non-fiction book The Professor, the Banker, and the Suicide King by Michael Craig. The book revolves around Texas billionaire Andy Beal and his desire to play the best poker players in the world at the highest stakes in the world.

It was Beal’s attempt to see if there was a stake high enough to make even professional poker players get nervous about losing their money. The deal was Beal would play them heads up, and the limits could change at any time just as the opponents could change at any time. The blinds Beal decided on made the “Big Game” seem like small change.

The stakes started at 20K/40K and would routinely get as high as 100k/200k. To play one hand would end up costing Forrest as much money as he won for winning entire tournaments early in his career. After over a year of playing, the group would end up taking Beal for around 40 million, which was really not that much considering the stakes they were playing.

As mentioned earlier in this piece, Forrest has made a name for himself when it comes to some of the propositional bets he has made. The list of those could make a short novel, but some of his more notable ones are as followed:

He was once bet $7,000 dollars that he couldn’t run a marathon. He accepted the challenge, but unknowingly to him the challenge fell on the hottest day of the year in Vegas, approaching close to 115 degrees. Forrest would complete the challenge, but not until after having the soles of his feet stick to the shoes that were literally melting with each step he took. Forrest won the 7k, but ended up in the hospital for a day due to dehydration and medical attention on his feet.

Forrest was bet by fellow poker players that he couldn’t do a standing back flip. Forrest completed this task in the middle of the poker room, and collected $10,000. That sounds a whole lot easier than the marathon challenge.

Last year at the WSOP, Forrest bet Mike “The Mouth” Matusow that he couldn’t weigh less than 180 pounds for this year’s event. Matusow weighed in last week at 179 pounds, netting him a $100,000.

One of the more famous bets was that he couldn’t drink 10 beers in 30 minutes. He somehow downed the suds and took home $10,000.

Some other interesting gambling stories revolving Forrest is that he and Barry Greenstein once played a game of Chinese Poker lasting an entire month where Forrest would eventually relieve his adversary of 1.5 million dollars. While this appears a big score, it’s been said that Forrest has both lost and won a million dollars at a time playing craps, so it’s all just part of the variance with him.
It’s reported that Forrest has a bet with Howard Lederer that will give Forrest 30:1 on his money if he can cash nine times at the 2008 WSOP. When Lederer was asked what he thought the true odds of cashing nine times were, he responded they are about 300:1.

On a sad note, Forrest had his first three bracelets stolen from him, but has since picked up one that doesn’t belong to him. It’s reported that 1992 WSOP Main Event Winner Dastmalchi was complaining one night that the bracelet wasn’t worth $5,000 dollars like it was reported to be, and he guessed it was worth $1,500, tops. Almost before the sentence was out of Dastmalchi’s mouth, Forrest had thrown three $500 chips his direction, yelling “sold.”

Speaking of Dastmalchi, it is reported that the Guinness Book of World Records has the longest poker game lasting 75 hours by the Scottish Bridge Club. Forrest has played a session with Dastmalchi lasting over 100 hours straight, and has said he knows he’s played at least a handful of times over 75 hours. In fact, the 75 hour claim being the longest is frowned on by most poker players, as many of the pros can remember times sitting at a table non-stop for over three days. Maybe the Guinness Book of World Records should take a trip to Las Vegas sometime.

Forrest returned to the tournament circuit with a bang in 2004, winning two events at that years WSOP, the $1,500 Seven Card Stud event for $111,400, and the $1,500 No Limit Hold’em event for over $300,000. In March 2006 he won the National Heads-Up Championship for $500,000 and he has also final tabled five World Poker Tour events, including winning the Bay 101 Shooting Stars Tournament. In that match he played a marathon head-up session with J.J. Liu that lasted two and a half hours, the longest in WPT history. The wait was worth it, as Forrest took home 1.2 million dollars, his biggest poker win to date.


Major Tournament Results

08-Jun-08 $ 2,000 Omaha Hi/Lo
39th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 2008, Las Vegas 2nd $ 143,420
04-Apr-08 $ 9,700 No Limit Hold'em - WPT Event
Foxwoods Poker Classic 2008, Mashantucket 6th $ 103,360
10-Mar-08 $ 9,600 No Limit Hold'em - Championship Event
Bay 101 Shooting Stars, San Jose 25th $ 16,000
08-Sep-07 £ 5,000 Pot Limit Omaha
World Series Of Poker - Europe, London 17th £ 8,580 $ 17,278
11-Jun-07 $ 2,000 Seven Card Stud Hi/Lo 8 or Better
38th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 2007, Las Vegas 10th $ 9,591
08-Jun-07 $ 1,500 Seven Card Stud
38th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 2007, Las Vegas 14th $ 6,201
12-Mar-07 $ 9,600 WPT Championship Event - No Limit Hold'em
Bay 101 Shooting Stars, San Jose 1st $ 1,100,000
02-Mar-07 $ 25,000 No Limit Hold'em
2007 NBC National Heads-Up Championship, Las Vegas 9th $ 25,000
19-Feb-07 $ 20,000 Week 7
Poker After Dark, Las Vegas 5th
09-Feb-07 $ 10,000 No Limit Hold'em - Heads Up Championships
2007 1st Annual Heads-Up Championships, Compton 9th $ 10,250
28-Jul-06 $ 10,000 No Limit Texas Hold'em - World Championship Event
37th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 2006, Las Vegas 408th $ 30,512
10-Jul-06 $ 1,000 No Limit Hold'em
37th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 2006, Las Vegas 228th $ 1,578
09-Jul-06 Heat 18
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 3, Las Vegas 5th
18-Jun-06 Heat 15
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 3, Las Vegas 6th
14-May-06 Heat 10
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 3, Las Vegas 6th
23-Apr-06 Heat 7
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 3, Las Vegas 6th
02-Apr-06 Heat 4
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 3, Las Vegas 4th
03-Mar-06 Heads Up No Limit Hold'em
2006 National Heads-Up Poker Championship, Las Vegas 1st $ 500,000
05-Feb-06 Quarter Finalists Invitational Freeroll
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 2, Cabazon 2nd
08-Dec-05 $ 5,000 No Limit Hold'em
Fourth Annual Five Diamond World Poker Classic, Las Vegas 17th $ 9,610
20-Nov-05 $ 25,000 No Limit Hold'em
2005 Monte Carlo Millions, Monte Carlo 101st
18-Nov-05 Grand Final - No Limit Hold'em
Poker Royale: The James Woods Gang vs The Unabombers, Temecula 6th
11-Nov-05 Preliminary Match 6 - No Limit Hold'em
Poker Royale: The James Woods Gang vs The Unabombers, Temecula 6th
23-Oct-05 Quarter Final 1
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 2, Cabazon 3rd $ 15,000
21-Oct-05 Preliminary Match 3 - No Limit Hold'em
Poker Royale: The James Woods Gang vs The Unabombers, Temecula 1st $ 5,000
07-Oct-05 Preliminary Match 1 - No Limit Hold'em
Poker Royale: The James Woods Gang vs The Unabombers, Temecula 5th
02-Oct-05 Final 16 - Group C - Match 2
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 2, Cabazon 2nd
25-Sep-05 Final 16 - Group C - Match 1
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 2, Cabazon 1st $ 15,000
22-Sep-05 $ 300 7 Card Stud Hi/Lo
2005 United States Poker Championship, Atlantic City 2nd $ 12,768
31-Jul-05 Heat 21
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 2, Cabazon 1st $ 10,000
25-Jul-05 $ 10,000 Main Event - No Limit Hold'em
Ultimate Poker Challenge, Las Vegas 7th $ 21,500
17-Jul-05 Heat 19
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 2, Cabazon 1st $ 10,000
13-Jul-05 $ 20,000 No Limit Hold'em
FullTiltPoker.Net Championship, Las Vegas 2nd $ 132,000
26-Jun-05 Heat 16
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 2, Cabazon 2nd
27-May-05 PPT No Limit Hold'em Final
2005 Mirage Poker Showdown, Las Vegas 1st $ 225,000
23-May-05 $ 10,000 WPT No Limit Hold'em Championship
2005 Mirage Poker Showdown, Las Vegas 2nd $ 579,386
08-May-05 Heat 9
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 2, Cabazon 6th
01-May-05 Heat 8
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 2, Cabazon 4th
03-Apr-05 Heat 4
Poker Superstars Invitational Tournament Season 2, Cabazon 1st $ 10,000
05-Mar-05 Heads-Up No Limit Hold'em
2005 National Heads-Up Poker Championship, Las Vegas 9th $ 25,000
18-Feb-05 $ 9,603 Main Event - No Limit Hold'em Championship
2005 L.A. Poker Classic, Los Angeles 4th $ 263,487
09-Feb-05 $ 970 Seven Card Stud
2005 L.A. Poker Classic, Los Angeles 3rd $ 10,767
14-Jan-05 $ 2,000 Limit Hold'em
2005 WSOP Circuit Tournaments - Atlantic City, Atlantic City 6th $ 6,120
14-Dec-04 $ 15,000 World Poker Tour Championship - No Limit Hold'em
Five-Diamond World Poker Classic, Las Vegas 13th $ 54,453
19-Oct-04 $ 10,000 The Doyle Brunson North American No Limit Hold'em Poker Championship
2004 Festa al Lago III Poker Tournament, Las Vegas 19th $ 24,000
03-Jul-04 $ 10,000 No Limit Hold'em Championship Final Day
Festa al Lago II, Las Vegas 13th $ 17,302
15-Jun-04 $ 2,500 No Limit Hold'em
California State Poker Championship 2004, Los Angeles 8th $ 6,565
09-Jun-04 $ 1,000 Seven Card Stud Final Day
California State Poker Championship 2004, Los Angeles 8th $ 1,590
08-Jun-04 $ 1,000 No Limit Hold'em
California State Poker Championship 2004, Los Angeles 24th $ 1,510
04-Jun-04 $ 10,000 No Limit Hold'em
Championship Poker at the Plaza, Las Vegas 3rd $ 80,000
12-May-04 $ 1,500 No-Limit Hold'em
35th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 2004, Las Vegas 1st $ 300,300
24-Apr-04 $ 1,500 Seven Card Stud
35th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 2004, Las Vegas 1st $ 111,440
19-Apr-04 $ 25,000 WPT No Limit Hold'em Championship Final Day
2004 Bellagio Five-Star World Poker Classic/WPT Championship, Las Vegas 22nd $ 49,899
08-Apr-04 $ 2,500 Seven Card Stud Hi/Lo
2004 Bellagio Five-Star World Poker Classic/WPT Championship, Las Vegas 1st $ 73,720
11-May-03 $ 5,000 Razz
34th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 2003, Las Vegas 3rd $ 18,000
14-Apr-03 $ 25,000 WPT Championship - No Limit Hold'em
2003 Bellagio Five-Star World Poker Classic WPT Championship, Las Vegas 5th $ 119,990
17-Jun-02 $ 500 No Limit Hold'em
California State Poker Championship 2002, Los Angeles 4th $ 5,550
14-Jun-02 $ 500 Limit Hold'em
California State Poker Championship 2002, Los Angeles 4th $ 8,400
10-Jun-02 $ 300 No Limit Hold'em
California State Poker Championship 2002, Los Angeles 17th $ 689
05-Jun-01 ATS 34,400 World Heads Up Poker Championships Finals
Austrian Masters 2001, Vienna 17th ATS 14,820 $ 926
04-Jun-01 ATS 20,000 No Limit Holdem
Austrian Masters 2001, Vienna 7th ATS 61,590 $ 3,847
02-Jun-01 $ 2,175 No Limit Hold'em
2001 World Heads Up Poker Championship, Vienna 16th $ 940
23-Apr-01 $ 1,500 Seven Card Stud
32nd World Series of Poker (WSOP) 2001, Las Vegas 23rd $ 2,375
10-Dec-00 $ 4,000 Seven Card Stud
2000 United States Poker Championship, Atlantic City 3rd $ 42,720
05-Oct-99 Seven Card Stud Championship
Poker EM 1999, Baden 4th ATS 480,600 $ 40,050
08-May-99 $ 5,000 Limit Hold'em
30th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1999, Las Vegas 10th $ 6,600
04-May-99 $ 2,500 Omaha 8 or Better
30th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1999, Las Vegas 9th $ 7,440
02-May-99 $ 2,500 No Limit Hold'em
30th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1999, Las Vegas 2nd $ 145,825
09-Dec-98 $ 1,000 Omaha Hi/Lo Split
1998 United States Poker Championship, Atlantic City 1st $ 20,400
23-Apr-98 $ 1,500 Omaha Limit
29th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1998, Las Vegas 10th $ 3,294
01-Apr-98 $ 5,000 No Limit Hold'em - Championship Event
1998 Four Queens Poker Classic, Las Vegas 3rd $ 19,500
31-Mar-98 $ 500 Limit Hold'em
1998 Four Queens Poker Classic, Las Vegas 3rd $ 3,900
14-Jan-98 $ 1,000 Seven Card Stud
Carnivale of Poker, Las Vegas 4th $ 7,540
12-Dec-97 $ 3,000 7 Card Stud
1997 World Poker Finals, Mashantucket 8th $ 4,770
10-Dec-97 $ 500 No Limit Hold'em
1997 World Poker Finals, Mashantucket 7th $ 2,643
29-Apr-97 $ 2,000 Omaha 8 or Better
28th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1997, Las Vegas 3rd $ 40,850
25-Apr-97 $ 1,500 Seven-Card Stud
28th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1997, Las Vegas 9th $ 5,783
23-Jan-97 $ 5,000 No Limit Hold'em
1997 Four Queens Poker Classic, Las Vegas 7th $ 17,500
20-Jan-97 $ 1,000 Razz
1997 Four Queens Poker Classic, Las Vegas 1st $ 17,100
Dec-96 $ 1,500 Limit Hold'em
1996 World Poker Finals, Mashantucket 9th $ 1,860
Dec-96 $ 500 Pot Limit Omaha
1996 World Poker Finals, Mashantucket 1st $ 10,350
20-Nov-96 $ 7,500 No Limit Hold'em Championship Event
1996 United States Poker Championship, Atlantic City 15th $ 5,950
12-Nov-96 $ 1,500 Limit Hold'em
1996 United States Poker Championship, Atlantic City 2nd $ 35,190
11-Nov-96 $ 1,500 Limit Seven Card Stud
1996 United States Poker Championship, Atlantic City 2nd $ 32,430
08-Nov-96 $ 1,000 Omaha Hi/Lo Split
1996 United States Poker Championship, Atlantic City 2nd $ 20,240
06-May-96 $ 2,500 Seven-Card Stud
27th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1996, Las Vegas 6th $ 14,400
02-May-96 $ 2,500 Seven-Card Stud Split
27th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1996, Las Vegas 2nd $ 54,050
03-Dec-95 $ 1,050 Seven Card Stud
1995 World Poker Finals, Mashantucket 7th $ 3,680
Sep-95 $ 1,000 Razz
1995 Four Queens Poker Classic, Las Vegas 6th $ 2,900
22-Aug-95 $ 1,000 Omaha Hi/Lo
1995 Legends of Poker, Los Angeles 7th $ 2,730
15-May-95 $ 10,000 No Limit Hold'em World Championship
26th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1995, Las Vegas 270th
14-Jan-95 $ 1,000 Limit Hold'em
Queens Poker Classic V, Las Vegas 4th $ 10,465
Dec-94 $ 1,500 Seven Card Stud
Hall of Fame Poker Classic 1994, Las Vegas 3rd $ 18,000
19-Aug-94 All around points championship
10th Annual Diamond Jim Brady, Oceanside 7th $ 300
10-Aug-94 $ 300 7 Card Stud
10th Annual Diamond Jim Brady, Oceanside 6th $ 2,600
04-Aug-94 $ 300 Omaha Hi/Lo
10th Annual Diamond Jim Brady, Oceanside 1st $ 26,680
20-Apr-94 $ 1,500 Seven-Card Stud
25th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1994, Las Vegas 16th $ 3,390
Dec-93 $ 100 7 Card Stud
1993 World Poker Finals, Mashantucket 5th $ 406
Dec-93 $ 300 Omaha Hi/Lo
1993 World Poker Finals, Mashantucket 5th $ 1,050
Dec-93 $ 1,000 Razz
1993 World Poker Finals, Mashantucket 1st $ 12,800
Dec-93 $ 300 7 Card Stud
1993 World Poker Finals, Mashantucket 2nd $ 8,184
Aug-93 $ 300 Omaha Hi/Lo
Jim Brady Tournament, Los Angeles 6th $ 3,640
06-May-93 $ 5,000 Seven-Card Stud
24th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1993, Las Vegas 1st $ 114,000
25-Apr-93 $ 1,500 Omaha 8 or Better
24th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1993, Las Vegas 1st $ 120,000
24-Apr-93 $ 1,500 Seven-Card Razz
24th World Series of Poker (WSOP) 1993, Las Vegas 1st $ 77,400
25-Mar-93 $ 100 Omaha Hi/Lo
Masters Of Poker Championship II, Gardena 9th $ 400
Dec-92 $ 500 Limit Seven Card Stud
1992 World Poker Finals, Mashantucket 3rd $ 2,160
Dec-92 $ 2,000 Limit Seven Card Stud
1992 World Poker Finals, Mashantucket 1st $ 29,000
25-Jun-92 $ 1,500 Seven Card Stud
LA Poker Classic, Los Angeles 5th $ 2,175
20-Jun-92 $ 1,000 Omaha Hi/Lo Split
LA Poker Classic, Los Angeles 4th $ 4,550
18-Jun-92 $ 1,000 Asian Limit Five Card Stud
LA Poker Classic, Los Angeles 2nd $ 7,920
16-Jun-92 $ 1,000 1/2 Hold'em 1/2 Stud
LA Poker Classic, Los Angeles 1st $ 20,800
14-Jun-92 $ 1,000 1/2 Hold'em 1/2 Lowball
LA Poker Classic, Los Angeles 1st $ 27,200
13-Jun-92 $ 1,000 Lowball
LA Poker Classic, Los Angeles 8th $ 2,640
09-Jun-92 $ 500 Asian Limit Five Card Stud
LA Poker Classic, Los Angeles 6th $ 1,025
06-Jun-92 $ 500 Seven Card Stud
LA Poker Classic, Los Angeles 3rd $ 6,850
02-Jun-92 $ 300 Omaha Hi/Lo Split
LA Poker Classic, Los Angeles 2nd $ 11,400
31-May-92 $ 300 Seven Card Stud
LA Poker Classic, Los Angeles 2nd $ 13,940
08-Dec-91 $ 300 1/2 7 Card Stud, 1/2 Hold'em
National Finals, Las Vegas 2nd
07-Aug-91 $ 500 7 Card Stud Hi/Lo
7th Annual Diamond Jim Brady, Los Angeles 3rd $ 9,035

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