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2014 Poker Hall of Fame: And The Nominees Are...

Tags: 2014 poker hall of fame, Chris Bjorin, daniel negreanu, Humberto Brenes, Mike Matusow, pokerstars, Ted Forrest.
Posted on 10 September 2014 by "T".

The 10 nominees (selected by the public for the sixth year in a row) for the 2014 Poker Hall of Fame were announced by World Series of Poker on Tuesday. The list of nominees include 5 returning candidates (highlighted in blue) and five new players, including Daniel Negreanu who turned 40 this year and now meet the criteria* to be inducted.

The living 21 Hall of Fame members and a 20-member media panel will now decide before October 10th who (up to two players) will join Doyle Brunson, Chip Reese, Stu Ungar and other legends in the Poker Hall of Fame!

The induction ceremony will be held during the WSOP Main Event final table at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas on Sunday, November 9.

* ▪ Be a minimum of 40 years old at time of nomination

▪ A player must have played poker against acknowledged top competition
▪ Played for high stakes

▪ Played consistently well, gaining the respect of peers
▪ Stood the test of time

▪ Or, for non-players, contributed to the overall growth and success of the game of poker, with indelible positive and lasting results.

2014 Nomineee (info from WSOP's website)

CHRIS BJORIN
Bjorin, a 66-year-old Swedish-born poker player who now resides in London, England, has earned more than $5.5 million playing poker in his distinguished career. The two-time WSOP gold bracelet winner sits sixth on the all-time WSOP cash list with 68 and ranks fifth all-time in WSOP Main Event cashes with seven. A model of consistency, Bjorin has cashed for six-figures in 19 different calendar years, including 13 consecutively. He hold's Sweden's all-time money and cash records and is WSOP Europe's all-time cash leader as well.

HUMBERTO BRENES
The man known as "The Shark" may be best known for his gregarious and outgoing personality, but Humberto Brenes has a lot of poker bite to back up all his barking. Now third on the all-time WSOP cashes list with 82 in-the-money finishes after cashing ten times at the 2014 WSOP, Brenes has been one of the most consistent WSOP performers for the better part of 25 years. What stands out among those cashes is his track record in the WSOP Main Event, a tournament he has made the money in on nine separate occasions, including a fourth place showing in 1988. That puts him second on the list of most Main Event cashes behind only Berry Johnston. In addition to his $6 million in tournament earnings, the winningest Costa Rican player in poker history has also played a crucial role in helping to develop the poker scene in Latin America.

BRUNO FITOUSSI
Perhaps no one is more influential in French poker circles than Fitoussi, 55, who turned his passion for poker into a successful playing career and several other poker-related business interests. He introduced Texas Hold'em into France in 1995 at the Aviation Club de France, Paris' most famous gaming club. He has more than $2.7 million in career poker winnings, ranking 8th all-time on France's list. "The King" won the inaugural World Heads Up Poker Championship in 2001, defeating Amarillo Slim. His first recorded cash was in 1991. He was the runner-up in the WSOP $50,000 Poker Players Championship in 2007, securing his largest cash, for $1,278,720 and showing he was capable of playing all poker's major variants well. But Fitoussi's mark on the game in large part comes from getting poker on television in France and his participation and commentary in several poker shows over the years. France truly became a poker market in part due to Fitoussi's activities to develop the game in his home country.

TED FORREST
A six-time WSOP gold bracelet winner, Forrest captured his latest bracelet by slaying Phil Hellmuth heads up to win the Seven Card Razz event at the 2014 WSOP. The 49-year-old New York native has won more than $6 million during his career spanning three decades. Forrest's first cash at the WSOP was a victory at the 1993 WSOP when he won Event #11, the $5,000 buy-in Limit Seven Card Stud event. But if that wasn't a coming out party, it only took two days longer to cement his name in poker circles. He went on to win Events 12 and 13 too - incredibly winning three WSOP gold bracelets in three consecutive events in three variants of poker - the first and only time that has occurred in WSOP history. Forrest's resume is littered with success in every major variant of poker, and he's captured a WPT and National Heads Up title. He's also a noted cash game player, even taking part in the famed high stakes heads up cash games with Andy Beal.

JEN HARMAN
Jen Harman has a long list of tournament accomplishments, including more than $2.7 million in earnings, two WPT final tables, 12 WSOP final tables, and the honor of being the first woman to win multiple WSOP bracelets in open events. However, what might be even more impressive than her tournament results is her skills in the cash games. The Reno, Nevada native has been a staple in the biggest cash games in Vegas for more than a decade and is one of the only women to play cash at such high stakes. The 49-year-old mother of two also dedicates much of her time to using poker to raise money for charitable causes, including the National Kidney Foundation and the Nevada Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

BOB HOOKS
The oldest member on this year's nomination list, 85-year-old Bob Hooks was one of the original Texas Rounders travelling the Texas and Arkansas circuit with the likes of Johnny Moss, Doyle Brunson, Amarillo Slim and Sailor Roberts. From Dallas, Hooks picked up the game while playing football in college at SMU in the 1950's and went on to finish runner-up in the 1975 WSOP Main Event to his friend and roommate at the time Brian "Sailor" Roberts. Hooks was hired on by Benny Binion in 1970 to be the first card room manager of the Horseshoe in Las Vegas - the same year the World Series of Poker was started there. Steve Wynn eventually hired Hooks away to work at the Golden Nugget, before Bob returned to his Dallas roots in the late 1970's, where he played often at the famed AmVets Club. Hooks' poker career spanned six decades, and he played nearly daily until he retired from the game in early 2013.

MIKE MATUSOW
Mike "The Mouth" Matusow has plenty to talk about when it comes to his poker accomplishments. The 46-year-old is a four-time bracelet winner with $9 million in career tournament earnings. A poker dealer turned poker pro, Matusow has final tabled the WSOP Main Event twice in 2001 and 2005, made 11 other WSOP final tables, and appeared at five WPT final tables. Never one to bite his tongue, Matusow developed a reputation of being a tough player and a tough talker, as he frequently speaks freely at the tables. The Mouth is a four-time WSOP gold bracelet winner and last year won the NBC Heads Up Championship.

JACK McCLELLAND
Jack McClelland, 62, has seen poker from all sides and from its highest high to its lowest low. A one-time semi-professional bowler who moved out to Las Vegas to help his ailing mother, McClelland ended up with one of the most storied poker operations careers spanning five decades. McClelland has worked with three existing Poker Hall of Famers, Eric Drache, Jack Binion and Bobby Baldwin and was involved at the Bellagio when Mike Sexton and the WPT brought their first tournament there. From tournament directing the WSOP in the 80's to running the Bellagio poker room from 2002 to 2013, McClelland has been part of a lot of poker history, and has done so from the operator side, starting as an $18 a day dealer and working his way up to running the biggest events and biggest rooms in Las Vegas. McClelland also played a little poker, but only for a brief stint full time. He has worked poker events in Aruba, Cyprus, London, Vienna and Russia. McClelland retired at the end of last year.

DANIEL NEGREANU
This Canadian-born superstar of European decent moved to Las Vegas when he was 22 and has accomplished more than anyone in the game the past 18 years. Now 40 and first-time eligible for the Poker Hall of Fame, Daniel Negreanu is poker's all-time winningest player, with nearly $30 million in lifetime earnings. "Kid Poker" has captured six WSOP gold bracelets - and is the only two-time WSOP Player of the Year - winning it most recently in 2013 and initially in 2004. He also has two WPT titles, is second on the all-time WPT money list, third on the WSOP all-time money list and has made his living playing poker, travelling the world and serving as one of the game's greatest ambassadors since the late 90's. He is the face of the Poker Stars online poker site and Negreanu has appeared countless times on televised poker shows around the globe and has carried the mantle for the game. Negreanu is charitable both with his time and his resources to help the game and other causes he believes in and is as fan friendly a poker pro as you will find. Never shy to share an opinion, Negreanu has influenced tournament structures, betting styles, table image and strategy and weighs in on topics on and off the felt without fear.

HUCKLEBERRY SEED
It isn't just Huckleberry Seed's tall frame that helps him stand out among his competition at the table. The California native and Caltech alum is a four-time bracelet winner with $7.6 million in career tournament earnings. There is truly nothing Seed can't play at the tables, as his varied list of results include bracelets in Razz and PLO, a victory in the NBC Heads-Up Championship, two final table appearances in the $50K Poker Players Championship, a win in the WSOP Tournament of Champions in 2010, and, of course, winning the WSOP Main Event in 1996. Since Seed first started playing tournament poker back in 1990, he has posted six-figures worth of results all but five years he has played.


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5 comments on "2014 Poker Hall of Fame: And The Nominees Are..."


 Theapple10/09/2014 08:16:59 GMT
nothing for me here this year either... maybe next year ...

Tongue
 doubletop77710/09/2014 08:50:31 GMT
A great list again of nominees and i am very surprised that Mike Matusow is not already in the Hall Of Fame. He must be inducted this year, along with Daniel Negreanu
 Heskor10/09/2014 17:25:48 GMT
Yeah great list and i had fun to read all the things they have done and good God they did some amazing things and they have such a nice skills,and all of them deserve to win and be in the Hall of fame, but i hope my favorite player Daniel goes to win, he is one of the best and have such a good baggage to be the next one to enter the hall of fame and further more he is still playing nowadays and winning this show how good and consistent he has been. Good luck to him and have a nice day guys!
 Robbo199011/09/2014 08:35:29 GMT
Despite having 3 top pro's who currently still play, Huck, Dan, and Mike. They have many more years ahead in which they can claim there spot in the Hall of Fame. I like the idea of people being inducted on what they have acheived with playing poker, but also what they have done to help create the massive game that we know today. I think it should be BRUNO FITOUSSI and JACK McCLELLAND or Bob Hooks
 JorAxe11/09/2014 12:44:26 GMT
Pues suerte a todos y pues seria bueno ver a Daniel Negreanu o a Humberto Brenes.

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Well good luck to all and therefore would be good to see Daniel Negreanu or Humberto Brenes.

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