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Tom McEvoy

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Residence
  
Las Vegas, Nevada

Title(s)
  
None

Role
  
Author

Money finish(es)
  
44

Name
  
Tom McEvoy

Bracelet(s)
  
4

Final table(s)
  
None


Tom McEvoy Tom McEvoy Poker Player

Born
  
Thomas McEvoy November 14, 1944 (age 79) Grand Rapids, Michigan (
1944-11-14
)

Movies and TV shows
  
National Heads-Up poker Championship

Books
  
Championship Omaha, Championship Tournament Poker, Championship No Limit & Pot Limit, Beat Texas hold'em, How to Win No‑Limit Hold'em

Education
  
Ferris State University

Highest ITMMain Event finish
  
Winner, 1983


Similar
  
Crandell Addington, Roger Moore (poker player), Mickey Appleman

Tom Mcevoy v Amed Medina Eng v USA in Blackpool 13.01.2018


Thomas K. McEvoy (born November 14, 1944 in Grand Rapids, Michigan, U.S.) is a professional poker player, author and member of the Poker Hall of Fame. He is best known for his win in the 1983 World Series of Poker main event.

Contents

Tom McEvoy wwwpokerlistingscomassetsphotostommcevoy158

Merril inn 343 main picton ward on k0k 2t0 tom mcevoy


Early life

Tom McEvoy Scotty Nguyen and Tom McEvoy Inducted into Poker Hall of

McEvoy was born and raised in Michigan. He was an accountant, but after he was laid off from his job, he took up poker full-time in 1978. He first learned to play poker when he was five years old and would regularly get in trouble for playing it in grade school.

Poker career

Tom McEvoy Tom McEvoy Poker Player PokerListingscom

McEvoy first cashed in the WSOP in 1982, finishing in 6th place in the $1,000 Razz event. The following year, he won his first World Series of Poker bracelet in the $1,000 Limit Hold'em event, defeating Irish professional poker player Donnacha O'Dea heads-up to win the tournament.

Tom McEvoy Tom McEvoy Blog What is it like being a poker pro

McEvoy won the 1983 World Series of Poker Main Event. He was the first winner to earn his buy-in through a satellite tournament. His heads-up matchup with Rod Peate was the longest heads-up battle in WSOP history before being surpassed during the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E event in 2006 by Chip Reese and Andy Bloch.

Tom McEvoy Tom McEvoy

Since his two bracelet wins in 1983, McEvoy has gone on to win two more WSOP Bracelet(s). He won the Razz tournament in 1986, defeating Alma McClelland, and a Limit Omaha tournament in 1992, defeating 1986 world champion Berry Johnston. But his luck in the WSOP Main Event since his championship win has not been so good. McEvoy's only other main event cash since 1983 was in the 2006 WSOP, when he finished in 371st place, earning $34,636.

In March 2006, Tom McEvoy won the third ever Professional Poker Tour event beating a field of pros-only at the Bay 101 casino. He defeated a final table that included fellow WSOP bracelet winners, Toto Leonidas and Hoyt Corkins.

McEvoy is staunchly opposed to smoking. In 1998, he helped organize the first tournament where smoking was not allowed. There was much reluctance, but the tournament still attracted a large number of players, and therefore confirmed the viability of having non-smoking tournaments. Also, in 1998, McEvoy won the annual Ventura County poker championship, with fellow accountant, Phil Palmquist, finishing in third place. Palmquist began this Omaha tournament with a Royal Flush, which brought him to the final table as Chip Leader, only to be "worn down" by McEvoy. In 2002, McEvoy convinced Becky Binion Behnen to make the WSOP a non-smoking tournament by agreeing to give Behnen poker lessons.

McEvoy has authored or coauthored over a dozen books on poker with other players such as T. J. Cloutier, Brad Daugherty, Don Vines, Dag Palovic and Max Stern. He is a columnist for CardPlayer Magazine and a representative of PokerStars.com, where he can be seen playing under his own name.

On Sunday May 31, 2009, Tom McEvoy became the winner of the WSOP's first Champions Invitational, outlasting 19 other former Main Event champions. He defeated 2002 world champion, Robert Varkonyi in the heads-up play to win the tournament. The first prize was a Classic 1970 Corvette and the inaugural Binion Cup, presented by Jack Binion, in honour of his father, Benny Binion, the founder of the WSOP and Binion's Horseshoe, the original home of the World Series.

As of 2010, his total live tournament winnings exceed $2,900,000. His 38 cashes at the WSOP account for $1,297,410 of those winnings.

McEvoy resides in Las Vegas and has three children.

References

Tom McEvoy Wikipedia