For other persons of the same name, see John Moss. Johnny Moss (May 14, 1907 – December 16, 1995)[1] was a long-time professional poker player. John Moss is the name of: Johnny Moss (1907â1995), Professional poker player John E. Moss (1915â1997), U.S. Representative from California John Moss (cricket), English cricket umpire John Moss (musician) John Moss (Philadelphia) (c. ...
Download high resolution version (800x621, 118 KB)This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons, a repository of free content hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation. ...
The 1974 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binions Horseshoe. ...
Nickname: Location within the state of Texas Country State County Ector Government - Mayor Larry Melton Area - City 36. ...
The WSOP logo The World Series of Poker is the most prestigious set of poker tournaments in the world. ...
Non-Main Event gold bracelets given to the event winners during the 2005 WSOP The World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet is the biggest non-monetary prize a poker player can win. ...
For a list of words Poker, see the Poker category of words in Wiktionary, the free dictionary The following is a glossary of poker terms used in Wikipedia poker articles. ...
Summary 1970 was the first year that the World Series of Poker was held. ...
The 1971 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binions Horseshoe. ...
The 1974 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binions Horseshoe. ...
May 14 is the 134th day of the year (135th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1907 (MCMVII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar (or a common year starting on Monday of the 13-day-slower Julian calendar). ...
is the 350th day of the year (351st in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
Year 1995 (MCMXCV) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display full 1995 Gregorian calendar). ...
For the domestic fireplace tool, see fireplace poker. ...
Learning the game Moss was born in Marshall, Texas in 1907 and grew up in Dallas, Texas where he learned how to gamble as a young boy. A group of cheaters taught him how to cheat in games, but Moss put this knowledge to good use. As a teenager he was hired by a local saloon to watch over games and make sure they were played fairly. While he was keeping games safe from cheaters, he was also learning the strategy behind playing poker. Two years later he became a rounder, a player who travels the country looking for gambling action. Marshall is a major city of the northeastern region of the U.S. state of Texas. ...
âDallasâ redirects here. ...
Official language(s) No official language See languages of Texas Capital Austin Largest city Houston Largest metro area DallasâFort WorthâArlington Area Ranked 2nd - Total 261,797 sq mi (678,051 km²) - Width 773 miles (1,244 km) - Length 790 miles (1,270 km) - % water 2. ...
Gambling (or betting) is any behavior involving the risk of money or valuables on the outcome of a game, contest, or other event in which the outcome of that activity is partially or totally dependent upon chance. ...
âYoung Menâ redirects here. ...
This article or section does not cite any references or sources. ...
The term rounder can mean several things. ...
The World Series of Poker In 1949 Moss played with the much older Nick the Greek in a five month long poker marathon set up by Benny Binion, winning anywhere from $2 million to $4 million. At the end of the marathon, down millions of dollars, Nick the Greek uttered what has become one of the most famous poker quotes ever: "Mr. Moss, I have to let you go." Year 1949 (MCMXLIX) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Nicholas Andreas Nick the Greek Dandolos (born in Rethymnon, Crete 1883-December 25, 1966) was a professional gambler and high roller. ...
Benny Binion at the 1979 World Series of Poker Lester Ben Benny Binion (November 20, 1904 - December 25, 1989) was a well known American casino owner and poker enthusiast. ...
Because of people like Nick the Greek, Binion and Moss, poker became popular and eventually a World Series of Poker was organized. Moss won the 1970, 1971, and 1974 World Series of Poker main events. For the 1970 WSOP, Moss was actually elected the champion by his peers and only received a silver cup as his prize. A (possibly apocryphal) story about that election that has appeared in print several times has every one of the eight players voting for himself as the best player, and that it was only when the players were asked to vote for the second best player that Moss emerged. He played at every WSOP from 1970 to the 1995 World Series and during his career he won 9 WSOP bracelets, placing him fourth overall behind Johnny Chan, Doyle Brunson (10 each) and Phil Hellmuth(11). During his career he won over $680,000 in tournament play. The WSOP logo The World Series of Poker is the most prestigious set of poker tournaments in the world. ...
Summary 1970 was the first year that the World Series of Poker was held. ...
The 1971 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binions Horseshoe. ...
The 1974 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binions Horseshoe. ...
The WSOP logo The World Series of Poker is the most prestigious set of poker tournaments in the world. ...
The 1995 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binions Horseshoe. ...
For the actor, see Johnny Chan (actor). ...
Doyle Brunson, also known as Texas Dolly, (born August 10, 1933 in Longworth, Fisher County, Texas) is an American poker player who has played professionally for over 50 years. ...
Phillip J. Hellmuth, Jr. ...
World Series of Poker bracelets | Year | Tournament | Prize (US$) | | 1970 | World Series of Poker Championship* | n/a | | 1971 | $5,000 No Limit Hold'em World Championship | $30,000 | | 1971 | Limit Ace to 5 Draw | $10,000 | | 1974 | $10,000 No Limit Hold'em World Championship | $160,000 | | 1975 | $1,000 Seven Card Stud | $44,000 | | 1976 | $500 Seven Card Stud | $13,000 | | 1979 | $5,000 Seven Card Stud | $48,000 | | 1981 | $1,000 Seven Card Stud Hi-Lo | $33,500 | | 1988 | $1,500 Ace to Five Draw | $116,400 | *In 1970, Moss was voted champion by his peers. The 1975 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binions Horseshoe. ...
The 1976 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binions Horseshoe. ...
The 1979 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binions Horseshoe. ...
The 1981 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binions Horseshoe. ...
The 1988 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binions Horseshoe. ...
Legacy Moss was sometimes called the "Grand Old Man" because of his longevity and superior play. He was one of the charter inductees to the Poker Hall of Fame in 1979. The Poker Hall of Fame is a group of poker players who have played poker well against top competition for high stakes over a long period of time. ...
Also: 1979 by Smashing Pumpkins. ...
The Texas Hold'em starting hand Ace-Ten is named the Johnny Moss in his honor. Texas hold em (or simply hold em or holdem) is the most popular of the community card poker games. ...
External links - PokerPlayer Magazine article
- Hendon Mob tournament results
| World Series of Poker Main Event Winners | Moss • Moss (2) • Slim • Pearson • Moss (3) • Roberts • Brunson • Brunson (2) • Baldwin • Fowler • Ungar • Ungar (2) • Straus • McEvoy • Keller • Smith • Johnston • Chan • Chan (2) • Hellmuth • Matloubi • Daugherty • Dastmalchi • Bechtel • Hamilton • Harrington • Seed • Ungar (3) • Nguyen • Furlong • Ferguson • Mortensen • Varkonyi • Moneymaker • Raymer • Hachem • Gold • Yang The WSOP logo The World Series of Poker is the most prestigious set of poker tournaments in the world. ...
Thomas Austin Preston, Jr. ...
Walter Clyde Puggy Pearson (January 29, 1929 in Tennessee â April 12, 2006) was an American professional poker player. ...
Sailor Roberts at the 1979 World Series of Poker Brian Sailor Roberts was a professional poker player. ...
Doyle Brunson, also known as Texas Dolly, (born August 10, 1933 in Longworth, Fisher County, Texas) is an American poker player who has played professionally for over 50 years. ...
Doyle Brunson, also known as Texas Dolly, (born August 10, 1933 in Longworth, Fisher County, Texas) is an American poker player who has played professionally for over 50 years. ...
Bobby The Owl Baldwin is a professional poker player and casino executive. ...
Categories: People stubs | Poker players ...
Stuart Errol Ungar (September 8, 1953 â November 22, 1998) was a professional poker and gin rummy player, considered to be the best in history at both games. ...
Stuart Errol Ungar (September 8, 1953 â November 22, 1998) was a professional poker and gin rummy player, considered to be the best in history at both games. ...
Jack Treetop Straus (1930 - August 1988) was a professional poker player. ...
Tom McEvoy (born November 14, 1944 in Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA) is a professional poker player and author. ...
Gentleman Jack Keller (?-December 2003) was a professional poker player. ...
Bill Smith was a renowned professional poker player. ...
Berry Johnston is a professional poker player. ...
For the actor, see Johnny Chan (actor). ...
For the actor, see Johnny Chan (actor). ...
Phillip J. Hellmuth, Jr. ...
Mansour Matloubi is a professional poker player. ...
Brad Daugherty (born July 5, 1951 in Mountain Grove, Missouri) is a professional poker player. ...
Hamid Dastmalchi is a professional poker player. ...
Jim Bechtel is a professional poker player. ...
Ever since he was five years old, Russ Hamilton has been following the gambling money. ...
Action Dan Harrington (born December 6, 1945 in Cambridge, Massachusetts) is a professional poker player. ...
Huckleberry (Huck) Seed (born 1969?) is an American professional poker player. ...
Stuart Errol Ungar (September 8, 1953 â November 22, 1998) was a professional poker and gin rummy player, considered to be the best in history at both games. ...
Thuan Scotty Nguyen (born October 28, 1962 in Nha Trang, Vietnam) [1] is a Vietnamese American professional poker player. ...
Noel Furlong (born in Dublin, Ireland) is a professional poker player. ...
Chris Jesus Ferguson (born April 11, 1963, in Los Angeles, CA) is a professional poker player. ...
Juan Carlos Mortensen (born April 13, 1972 in Ambato, Ecuador) is a professional poker player, known for his loose play, bluffing tactics, and interesting chip-stacking style. ...
Robert Varkonyi (born October 7, 1961) is a professional poker player. ...
Christopher Bryan Moneymaker (born November 21, 1975 in Atlanta, Georgia) is an American poker player who won the main event at the 2003 World Series of Poker (WSOP). ...
Gregory Raymer (born on June 25, 1964) [1] is a professional poker player. ...
Joseph (Joe) Hachem (pronounced Ha-shem) (Arabic: Ø¬ÙØ²Ù ÙØ§Ø´Ù
) (born 3 November 1966 in Lebanon) is a Lebanese-Australian poker player. ...
Jamie M. Gold (born August 25, 1969)[1] is an American television producer, an experienced talent agent, and poker tournament player, based in Malibu, California. ...
This article is about the poker player. ...
| Remembering Johnny Moss by Johnny Hughes, author of the novel, Texas Poker Wisdom The first time I met Johnny Moss was in Longview, Texas in 1959. On the five hundred mile drive from Lubbock, Curly Green taught me about gambling with his stories about Johnny Moss and Pat Renfro, who had been partners when they were only twenty-one years old, back in 1928. In his Cadillac, Curly had a high-powered rifle, a sawed-off shotgun, a .22 caliber semi-automatic pistol, and the .38 caliber revolver that he always carried inside gambling joints. Johnny Moss and Curly had known each other many years in Dallas. Both men wore the baggy, pleated, dark colored slacks that would help disguise the barking iron they always carried. Being robbed or arrested was common place. Pat, Curly, and Johnny had just been robbed in a large poker game in Corpus Christi, Texas. The robbers were real pros out of Kansas City. They had machine guns and tear gas. Curly ran into the bathroom and hid most of his bankroll and his doorknob-size diamond ring. The robbers told him to come out or they would shoot through the door. As soon as Curly came out, the main masked bandit asked him, "Curly, where's that ring?" The robbers made everyone line up and searched them. Then they announced that they were going to search again and if anyone was holding out they would be pistol whipped. Pat said, "Hey, you missed a little dab." pointing to four hundred-dollar bills in his shirt pocket. The robbers took Curly's Cadillac but they told him they would leave it a couple of miles down the road. Hijackers were a lot better class of people back in those days than they are now. When Curly went to his car, he was counting the Mexican money in boxes in the trunk. He had been fading dice in Mexico and had stacks of the much cheaper currency. The laws saw him and it was in the newspapers that the robbers had missed thousands of dollars which was not true. We were often arrested at poker and dice games. Once when Johnny Moss was flying home from Alabama, he was having a pleasant conversation with a nice man. The gentleman asked, "Have we flown across the state line?" When Johnny said he thought they had, the FBI man arrested him for interstate gambling. Curly told me that the poker game in Longview would be huge. He expected to play and to buy part of the action of Pat and Johnny. Johnny Moss had won millions of dollars at poker, golf, and bowling. He lost millions shooting dice and betting sports and the horses. The big game was at the Elks Club in Longview. It was gambling night. There were five open dice tables down stairs. You could shoot or fade, throwing wads of cash on the table. Curly staked several faders. Upstairs there were two poker games. One was a five dollar limit seven stud game. I jumped in there with three hundred dollars. Curly watched as a very old man in bib overalls cheated me, using an overhand stack. Curly said he didn't pull me up because this was just part of my education. Johnny Moss was the dominant force in the big poker game. He talked the most, verbally challenging people, "Come on. We drove a long way to gamble." He seemed to have the largest stack of currency. I climbed up in a shoe-shine chair in the corner of the room to watch. Back then we gambled with paper money. We didn't use chips because of the frequent raids by the law. People usually kept twenties on the bottom, hundreds and larger in the middle, and fives on top. You couldn't look across the green felt and count a man down. You could not ask how much money an opponent had until it was all bet. The game was razz, seven stud, low ball to the wheel. The short stacks had a few thousand in front of them. When there were two or three cards showing, anyone with an advantage moved all in and the pot usually ended there. If Johnny Moss had an even gamble, he would move in on the short stacks. Moss would announce that he could cover them so no one knew how much money was in his five-inch high stack of bills. At the time, five hundred dollar bills and thousand dollar bills were in circulation. Curly taught me how to move money in and out of the game secretly. He had a pocket full of coarse notes, as the bigger bills were called. You could get in a pot with someone you thought was a short stack only to find they were on heavy money. If Johnny Moss doubled up a short stack, it was only then that there was a count. If he won, you couldn't even tell how big the pot was since he just swooped up the money. When a pot was being played, people who were not in the pot kept quite. Moss ribbed and scolded and dared his opponents, making talk his weapon to tilt people. When a pot finished, there were zero celebration or gloating. When a man suffered a big loss or got knocked out, he showed no emotion. It was quite at the end of a pot because you did not rib a loser. I was aware that many of the men in the room, including Curly and Johnny, had guns. At first, Curly, Pat Renfro, and Johnny Moss all played in the game. Pat played extremely tight as he did in all games all his life, regardless of what was going on around him. When a short stack got broke, there was always someone waiting to sit in. Late in the night it was apparent that Johnny Moss was losing and moaning about his luck. Curly quit the game about even. He gave more money to Johnny and Pat since the game was getting bigger as the night wore on. Finally, Johnny Moss went on a rush about daylight, breaking several players. A few months later, Johnny Moss spent an afternoon sweating my partner and I in a bridge tournament in Oklahoma City. As always, I was mostly taken by his eyes and his poker face. His eyes were piercing, all-knowing, fearless, scary, bemused, cold, predatory, and conceited. It appeared as if he could see right through you and the backs of your cards. His eyes seemed to be permanently half opened. He scanned the room studying every detail. Johnny Moss moved to Odessa, Texas in the mid-fifties to be near the oil boom, gambling, and the big-time gamblers including Paul Harvey and Tom "Pinkie" Roden. They had one of the biggest poker games in Texas for many years. Paul Harvey, a big-time bookmaker and gambler, catered to the oil-rich Texans in Midland and Odessa. One time, Paul and Johnny played heads-up poker for five days and nights. They took a two day break and played another five days and nights. Needless to say, Johnny won. Pinkie had been Texas' biggest bootlegger before he established the state's largest chain of retail liquor stores. Pinkie owned a small hotel in Odessa called the Inn of the Golden West. The poker games were in a private club in the hotel called the Golden Rooster. This was the home game of Johnny Moss and many of the future winners of the early World Series including Moss, Amarillo Slim, Doyle Brunson, Brian "Sailor" Roberts, Bill Smith, and Jack "Treetop" Straus. All of the famous road gamblers of the fifties and sixties went to Odessa to try Johnny Moss including Pat Renfro, Doc Ramsey, James "Longgoodie" Roy, Joe Floyd, and Charlie Hendrix. My partner, Jerry Blair, and I rode down to Odessa to try the big game in 1961, when we were twenty-one. We rode down from Lubbock with our dear friend Bill Smith, who won the main World Series event in 1985. We knew our bankrolls of around five hundred each were laughable. We thought we could beat anyone at Texas Hold 'em. The very first pot Jerry played in the seven-five lowball game, he caught a pat ten and raised it on up. Paul Harvey drew two cards and moved Jerry all in. Jerry folded and Paul showed he had caught two face cards. Poker is hard on the low rollers. Johnny Moss remembered me from the bridge tournament and from Longview. He told me to come early the next day and he would stake me in a bridge game.. None of the gamblers were very good at bridge except Sailor Roberts. A couple of months earlier, Bill Smith and I had played bridge all night long against Pat Renfro and Longgoodie and trounced them easily despite giving them a spot. Later, Jerry got in a marathon gin rummy match. We went home with Tuffy Hufstedler and they played gin nearly all night. Jerry made enough money for us to try the big Hold 'em game the next day. The next afternoon, Johnny Moss and I played partners in three rubbers of auction bridge for a dollar a point. He also made some side bets. I never once had enough face cards to make a bid. We lost all three rubbers and the Hold 'em game started. Jerry was smart enough to get the seat right behind Johnny Moss but we were both clearly out bankrolled. This was the most talented gathering of poker players imaginable at the time. No wonder we got broke The big producers in those days were the bookmakers, bootleggers, and the oil men. Famous gamblers from all over came to Pinkie's joint. They strutted up licking their chops and limped away licking their wounds. Mickey Cohen, the biggest mob boss on the west coast, came to Odessa to gamble with Paul Harvey and his oil men. He was portrayed by Harvey Keitel in the movie Bugsy. He was Bennie Seigel's right-hand man. The Texas Rangers heard Cohen had arrived and demanded he leave the state. When the Rangers telephoned Paul Harvey, he asked, "Well, what is he, an outlaw?" Paul Harvey provided Cohen a limo to Wichita Falls but the Rangers arrested him and drove him to Dallas where he flew back to Los Angeles. Johnny Moss maintained his residence in Odessa and Las Vegas for the rest of his life. During the eighties and nineties, I would always say hello to Johnny Moss at the World Series of Poker at Binion's Horseshoe in Las Vegas. He was very recognizable with his golf cap, cardigan sweater, and Buddy Holly glasses. He was extremely courteous to me but he had a reputation of being rather hard on the dealers. Moss won a total of eight bracelets at the World Series of Poker over the years. He won his last bracelet when he was 81 in l988. Moss continued to play poker right up to his death at age 89 in 1997. I was at the World Series almost every year after 1980. When he was pushing ninety, Johnny rode all around the Horseshoe in this electric cart. It had this little rubber horn you would squeeze like the one Harpo Marx always carried. He took great delight in honking the horn. He played twenty dollar limit and usually napped at the table. These naps might last a round. The dealers knew not to bother him. Around Binion's, Johnny Moss was treated like a King. He lived there free courtesy of Jack Binion. Johnny Moss rolled up beside me the last time I saw him and we played in the ten and twenty dollar limit Hold 'em game. The other players all knew who he was. He got out a small piece of paper from his wallet and said, "Johnny, read that. That's what I got." It said "gout". They called him the Grand Old Man of Poker and he really was a grand old man. The End. Johnny Hughes is the author of a novel entitled Texas Poker Wisdom that will be published in late 2007. Sources: Jenkins, Don. Johnny Moss: Champion of Champions. Copyright: Johnny Moss. Nugent, John. Mickey Cohen: In My Own Words. Prentice-Hall. Stowers, Carlton. The Unsinkable Titanic Thompson. Eakin Press. Johnny Moss Timeline (sidebar) 1907 - Born in Marshall, Texas. 1908 - Moved to Dallas. 1919 - Started playing poker. 1923 - Started working at a poker room watching for cheaters. 1927 - Married Virgie. They stayed together his whole life. 1926 - Daughter Eleoweese born. 1928 - Moved to Olney, Texas for the oil boom. First partnered with Pat Renfro. 1930 - They moved to Graham, Texas for the oil boom. 1938 - Moved to Lubbock, Texas and was promptly hijacked. 1938 - Celebrated golf match in Lubbock with Titanic Thompson. Ti bet Johnny he couldn't shoot a 46 on nine holes with a four iron. Johnny had his four iron welded into a two iron. Ti sent a man around to raise the cups on all the holes. Johnny caught on and sent his caddy around to put the cups back as they were. Johnny won the bet. Titanic was the model for the character Sky Masterson in the play and movie Guys and Dolls. Marlon Brando played Sky in the movie. 1939 - Moved back to Dallas and won $250,000 in one poker game. Lost it all on the horses. 1942 - Moved to Lake Charles, Louisiana. 1943 - Drafted into the Navy as a Seebee. 1945 - Honorable Discharge 1949 - Famous five month heads-up match at Binion's Horseshoe in Las Vegas with Nick "the Greek" Dandalos. Moss and Benny Binion won nearly three million dollars from the Greek. 1950 - Met Amarillo Slim. 1953 - Met Doyle Brunson. Doyle has said that Johnny Moss was the best no-limit Hold 'em player in the world in his day. 1970 - Selected first World Series Champion by a vote of his peers. 1971 - Won the first World Series Championship 1974 - Won the World Series Championship. 1979 - The only living inductee into the Poker Hall of Fame. 1997 - Johnny Moss died at age 89. He won eight World Series bracelets and numerous other tournaments in his lifetime. This story originally appeared in Bluff Magazine. April. 2007. Johnny Hughes is the author of the novel, Texas Poker Wisdom, to be available on Amazon.com, BarnesNoble.com, and at booksellers by order in late December. |