• Register

Who is nicknamed the “Paul Bunyon of Poker,”?

1 like 0 dislike
339 views

Who is nicknamed the “Paul Bunyon of Poker,”?

asked Oct 8, 2015 in Trivia by kamraladympr ( 31,912 points)

2 Answers

1 like 0 dislike
 
Best answer
T.J. Cloutier
answered Oct 12, 2015 by vega77 ( 4,951 points)
selected Feb 14, 2016 by kamraladympr
1 like 0 dislike

TJ Cloutier

Thomas James Cloutier, better known as T.J. Cloutier and nicknamed the “Paul Bunyon of Poker,” is considered by many to be among the most talented poker players in the world. Born on Friday the 13th, 1939 in Albany, California, but later moved to Texas. Cloutier was a naturally born athlete who attended U.C. Berkeley on an athletic scholarship and even played in the 1959 Rose Bowl, but later dropped out because of financial hardship. Soon after, Cloutier was drafted into the United States Army. After serving in the army, Cloutier went on to play in the Canadian Football League as a tight end for the Montreal Allouettes until a knee injury forced him to retire.

While working as a caddy at a golf course, Cloutier was introduced to poker and often played in between rounds of golf. After a failed food company business venture, Cloutier moved back to Texas and began work on an oil rig, where he played poker on his days off. Cloutier soon realized he was making more money playing poker than he was working, which inspired him to make the transition to playing poker full-time.

Cloutier was met with immediate success, which never seemed to stop. He has won over 50 major tournaments worldwide, but has never won the World Series of Poker Main Event (though he has come close finishing second in both 1985 and 2000). Despite not winning the Main Event, Cloutier has been successful in the W.S.O.P. winning six bracelets (1987- limit Omaha, 1994- Omaha eight-or-better, 1994- pot-limit hold’em, 1998- pot-limit Omaha, 2004- seven-card razz, and 2005- no-limit hold’em), being among the top players for number of “cashes”, and being the only person in history to have won events in all three types of Omaha (Pot Limit High, Limit High, and Limit 8-or-Better High-low split).

 

answered Oct 29, 2015 by pippy ( 5,380 points)