Updated on March 27, 2023
This year, the World Series of Poker (WSOP) will crown the 54th winner of the $10,000 Main Event. To date, there have been 47 different winners given that Johnny Moss and Stu Ungar both captured the title three times, while Doyle Brunson and Johnny Chan did it twice.
While some of the stories surrounding these champions are well known – such as Phil Hellmuth stopping Johnny Chan from winning three in a row, Jack Strauss coming back with a “chip and a chair”, and Chris Moneymaker forever changing the course of poker history – others you might not even be aware of.
We decided to take a look at eight fun stories and little-known facts concerning past WSOP Main Event winners.
Table Of Contents
- Sailor Roberts and Bob Hooks Chopped the 1975 WSOP
- Johnny Chan First Foreign-Born Player to Win
- No One Has Ever Won the “Big One” with Pocket Aces
- Tom McEvoy First Satellite Champion
- Robert Varkonyi Shaves Phil Hellmuth’s Head After Winning in 2002
- 16 Amateurs Have Won the WSOP Main Event
- 14 Players Have Made the Main Event Final Table 3+ Times
- Joe McKeehen First to Win Main Event Wearing 888poker Patch
Sailor Roberts and Bob Hooks Chopped the 1975 WSOP
The 1975 WSOP Main Event came down to roommates Bob Hooks and Brian “Sailor” Roberts, two Texas road gamblers. You might be surprised that neither wanted to win the winner-take-all poker tournament.
“You talk about tight; you can’t get any tighter than we were,” Hooks told PokerNews back in 2013 before his passing. “Didn’t either one of us want to win it. He had his reasons, and the IRS was after me all the time.”
Chops weren’t allowed, but that didn’t stop Hooks and Roberts from splitting the $210,000 under the table and playing it out for Benny Binion’s sake.
“We gave them a good show,” Hooks said. “The hand I got broke on, it was a legitimate hand. The hand he beat me on was all legit. It looked so good. It turned out you couldn’t have put a cold deck in any better.”
On the hand that put an end to the 1975 Main Event, Hooks shoved his remaining 59.500 on the flop 7♥6♣2♣. Roberts ended up calling and he had Hooks covered with his 150.500 chip stack. Roberts turned over pocket jacks and was ahead of Hooks' J♣9♣. Hooks ended up getting even more outs on the turn 9♠, but soon his tournament would be over after the 10♥ landed on the river.
Roberts took the gold WSOP bracelet home alongside the guaranteed $210.000 after the illegal deal made with his opponent.
Johnny Chan First Foreign-Born Player to Win
The WSOP Main Event has seen winners from all around the world. 2016 champ Qui Nguyen immigrated from Vietnam, as did 1998 winner Scotty Nguyen. Martin Jacobson, who is from Sweden, won it in 2014, and Germany’s Pius Heinz was victorious in 2011. Jonathan Duhamel (2010) was from Canada, and Peter Eastgate (2008) hailed from Denmark.
There was also Australian Joe Hachem (2005), Laotian Hmong Jerry Yang (2007), Spaniard Carlos Mortensen (2001), Irishman Noel Furlong (1999), Iranian American Hamid Dastmalchi (1992), Iranian-Brit Mansour Matloubi (1990), Argentinian Damian Salas (2020), German of Turkish descent Koray Aldemir (2021) and Norwegian Espen Jørstad (2022).
However, did you know the first foreign-born winner was actually Johnny Chan, who won it in 1987 and then again in 1988? In the process, he became the fourth player to win it back-to-back (Johnny Moss, Doyle Brunson, and Stu Ungar were the others).
No One Has Ever Won the “Big One” with Pocket Aces
In the 50-year history of the WSOP, no one has ever won the Main Event holding pocket aces. However, two players have cracked pocket aces to win it all. The first player to do it was Hal Fowler in 1979 when his 7♠6♦ overcame Bobby Hoff’s A♣A♥.
Then, in 2001, Carlos Mortensen’s K♣Q♣ got there against Dewey Tomko’s A♠A♥ to claim the title and $1.5 million first-place prize.
While pocket rockets have never won it, thirteen players won their Main Event titles holding pocket pairs. They were:
1974 – Johnny Moss (3♥3♠)
1975 – Brian “Sailor” Roberts (J♠J♥)
1978 – Bobby Baldwin (Q♦Q♣)
1983 – Tom McEvoy (Q♦Q♠)
1984 – Jack Keller (10♥10♠)
1985 – Bill Smith (3♠3♥)
1989 – Phil Hellmuth (9♣9♠)
1990 – Mansour Matloubi (6♠6♥)
1999 – Noel Furlong (5♦5♣)
2004 – Greg Raymer (8♠8♦)
2007 – Jerry Yang (8♦8♣)
2009 – Joe Cada (9♣9♦)
2014 – Martin Jacobson (10♦10♥)
Tom McEvoy First Satellite Champion
Poker Hall of Famer Eric Drache, the long-time tournament director of the WSOP, is credited with the creation of satellites. In 1983, he introduced the concept for the WSOP Main Event, and one player that won his way in was Tom McEvoy, who had been playing in Las Vegas for four years.
McEvoy, who actually shipped a WSOP bracelet in a Limit Hold’em tournament prior to the Main, talked about the satellites as highlighted in this PokerNews article. In the Main Event, which drew 108 runners, it came down to McEvoy, Rod Peate and Doyle Brunson. “Texas Dolly” wound up exiting in third place and the other two engaged in the longest heads-up match in WSOP Main Event history until the record fell in 2018. McEvoy wound up taking the victory for $540,000,
With that, McEvoy became the first player in history to qualify via a satellite and go on to win the WSOP Main Event.
Robert Varkonyi Shaves Phil Hellmuth’s Head After Winning in 2002
At the final table of the 2002 WSOP Main Event, Phil Hellmuth was in the booth, on duty as a poker commentator, alongside Gabe Kaplan when he put his foot in his mouth.
“If Robert Varkonyi wins the World Series of Poker, I’ll shave my head”, he said after Varkonyi lost a big hand in the first hand. Well, Varkonyi came back to win the title and the $1 million prize, and Hellmuth was put on the spot.
“Of course, Becky Behnen made sure that someone had some barber’s equipment on hand, and I am a man of my word”, Hellmuth later wrote. “I would have loved to have avoided the head shave, but I certainly deserved what I had coming, and I knew it!”
Varkonyi, Behnen, and the late Andy Glazer and David “Devilfish” Ulliott all took turns shaving the “Poker Brat’s” head, a moment that was captured on ESPN.
16 Amateurs Have Won the WSOP Main Event
Poker pros tend to do well in the WSOP Main Event – they’ve won 33 of them (67%) – but on 16 occasions an amateur has come out on top. While many of those amateurs went on to become poker pros, they weren’t at the time of their victory.
Year Players Occupation at Time of Win
1979 Hal Fowler Advertising Executive
1983 Tom McEvoy Accountant
1989 Phil Hellmuth Student
1990 Mansour Matloubi Hotel Investor/Manager
1992 Hamid Dastmalchi Real Estate Investor
1993 Jim Bechtel Farmer
1995 Dan Harrington Attorney
1999 Noel Furlong Carpet Company Owner
2002 Robert Varkonyi Investor
2003 Chris Moneymaker Accountant
2004 Greg Raymer Corporate Attorney
2005 Joe Hachem Chiropractor
2006 Jamie Gold Talent Agent
2007 Jerry Yang Psychologist/Social Worker
2008 Peter Eastgate Student
2016 Qui Nguyen Entrepreneur
14 Players Have Made the Main Event Final Table 3+ Times
Both Jesse Alto and Doyle Brunson have final tabled the WSOP Main Event on five different occasions, while half a dozen others have done it four times. Here’s a look at the 14 players who’ve made the WSOP Main Event final table three or more times.
Players Final Tables
Doyle Brunson 5
Jesse Alto 5
Johnny Chan 4
T.J. Cloutier 4
Dan Harrington 4
Berry Johnston 4
Johnny Moss 4
Stu Ungar 4
John Bonetti 3
Hamid Dastmalchi 3
Jack Keller 3
Al Krux 3
Steve Lott 3
Bill Smith 3
Joe McKeehen First to Win Main Event Wearing 888poker Patch
While 888poker has patched up many pros over the years, it wasn’t until the 2015 WSOP Main Event that a player sporting the patch won the tournament. That is when Joe McKeehen topped a field of 6,420 players to capture a $7,683,346 first-place prize.
Other players 888poker has patched up at the WSOP Main Event final table were John Hesp, Tony Miles, Griffin Benger, and Fernando Pons.
Scott Blumstein, John Cynn and Koray Aldemir would also take down the Main Event donning 888poker patches in 2017, 2018 and 2021 respectively.
Originally Published on June 27, 2019