Stu Ungar's World Series of Poker Results?

Stu Ungar's World Series of Poker Results?

I only got into poker three years ago and I consider him a legend. I wish I had been able to see him play when he was alive, but I was very young when he died and hated watching the WSOP on ESPN until a few years ago because I didn't know how to play and thought it was a stupid card game. Ungar is the GOAT in my opinion and Tom Dwan is just a wannabe copycat who will lose it all if he keeps playing recklessly in those high stakes cash games.

What were Stuey's results in the World Series of Poker (Main Event obviously)? It seems like the internet gives a very fragmented history of his Main Event results, and it leads a lot of people to think he only played in it 4 or 5 times and won it 3 times, but I highly doubt that, and I would guess he played in it virtually every year from 1980 to 1997, and just didn't do well in it for 13 or 14 years. Does anyone know his results? I'm also interested in knowing every reputable pro's results in the WSOP over their entire careers. You might think it's useless, but I think there are interesting patterns that you can draw out with this data in front of you.

18 April 2015 at 06:40 AM
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73 Replies

5
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Earlier posts are available on our legacy forum HERE

by shamus k

This NYT article from a decade ago includes One of a Kind co-author Nolan Dalla referring to Ungar winning “10 out of the 30 major events he entered,” a probably unconfirmable stat that has been repeated a lot by others over the years.

Skimming back through, One of a Kind describes him playing in the WSOP every year from 1980-1984, then again in 1990 (the year he played the first two days of the ME then spent the rest in a hospital while his stack finished 9th), then again in 1996 and 1997. Has

The only years Ungar didn't enter the ME were 1992 & 1993 (plus 1998 shortly before he passed away).

Stu Ungar's Complete WSOP Main Event History:

1980: 1st
1981: 1st
1982: no cash (Day 2 [3:30pm])
1983: no cash (57th Day 2)
1984: no cash (109th Day 1)
1985: no cash (Day 2)
1986: no cash (early Day 1)
1987: no cash (Day 1)
1988: no cash
1989: no cash (176th Day 1 [just 15 minutes in!]; maybe 175th)
1990: 9th
1991: no cash (76th Day 1)
1992: N/A
1993: N/A
1994: no cash (Day 1)
1995: no cash (131st Day 1 [late; maybe early Day 2])
1996: no cash (Day 1)
1997: 1st

I didn't set out specifically to collect the above information but picked it up along the way while researching the WSOP for the last decade+ (pretty sure I can claim the title of World's Greatest Unknown WSOP Historian).


For all the hate for Ungar in this thread, he's ironically the best proof that if you dropped a current player into those old days, they would have dominated through pure aggression.


by rjen47 k

The only years Ungar didn't enter the ME were 1992 & 1993 (plus 1998 shortly before he passed away).

Stu Ungar's Complete WSOP Main Event History:

1980: 1st
1981: 1st
1982: no cash (Day 2 [3:30pm])
1983: no cash (57th Day 2)
1984: no cash (109th Day 1)
1985: no cash (Day 2)
1986: no cash (early Day 1)
1987: no cash (Day 1)
1988: no cash
1989: no cash (176th Day 1 [just 15 minutes in!]; maybe 175th)
1990: 9th
1991: no cash (76th Day 1)
1992: N/A
1993: N/A
1994: no cash (Day 1)
1995: no cash (131st Day 1 [late; m

Wow, nice find. So Ungar's legend was partly built around him lucking out in the right spots. First directly back to back, then degen, then coming back for that last, record breaking.


by barretta k

http://www.majorwager.com/forums/mess-ha...

This is an old school US gambling forum which is pretty much dead now. Great insight in to Ungar and the fact he possibly cheated. Supposedly he wasn't alone - he owed so many people money and his drugs were out of control. He was a liability to everyone. Fixing the WSOP gave him a way out of his debts and a chance to sort his life out.... Shame it never worked out that way.

the link just takes me to the front page of the forum. how do i find the thread?


by plaaynde k

Wow, nice find. So Ungar's legend was partly built around him lucking out in the right spots. First directly back to back, then degen, then coming back for that last, record breaking.

There's obviously some luck involved but unlike basically everyone else back then he understood that being hyper aggressive against people who were scared to play back at him would either let him build a huge chip stack or bust pretty early which even today is a good tournament strategy. Now take into account how much more top heavy payouts we're back then and it's even more correct.

1980 main event

4th- 73k
3rd- 110k
2nd-146k
1st- 365k

1981 main event-
6th-30k
4th/5th-35k
3rd- 75k
2nd-150k
1st- 375k

The year he got 9th in the main:

3rd- 167k
2nd-334k
1st- 835 k

The years they had a million dollar first prize the payouts got really wonky with a massive jump from 2nd to 1st.

For all of his demons he was obviously was ahead of his time as far as tournaments go.


by Punker k

For all the hate for Ungar in this thread, he's ironically the best proof that if you dropped a current player into those old days, they would have dominated through pure aggression.

Most current player,s if "dropped into those old days" would have lacked the intuitive skill needed to excel at a game without any material to help them improve and would have sucked at poker.


by Kebabkungen k

Most current player,s if "dropped into those old days" would have lacked the intuitive skill needed to excel at a game without any material to help them improve and would have sucked at poker.

The common argument for many years has been those old school legends were too passive, folded too much, cared too much about their tournament lives, and just didn't put the kind of pressure on that you face nowadays. Ungar certainly was the antithesis of that and gave at least some evidence that the theory is correct.


by Punker k

The common argument for many years has been those old school legends were too passive, folded too much, cared too much about their tournament lives, and just didn't put the kind of pressure on that you face nowadays. Ungar certainly was the antithesis of that and gave at least some evidence that the theory is correct.

Of course its correct that they played too passively compared to today's standards of play. Doesnt mean the likes of Dan Smith and Sean Winter etc would have been able to understand that and exploit it if they played 50 years ago. In fact everything about how those people approach poker makes it likely that they would just copycat what everyone else was doing at the time and get destroyed by the likes of Ungar.


by Kebabkungen k

Of course its correct that they played too passively compared to today's standards of play. Doesnt mean the likes of Dan Smith and Sean Winter etc would have been able to understand that and exploit it if they played 50 years ago. In fact everything about how those people approach poker makes it likely that they would just copycat what everyone else was doing at the time and get destroyed by the likes of Ungar.

Exactly. The guys who put in a ton of work and study with solvers etc wouldn't have these tools back then and would do a lot worse than people who are good at figuring things out for themselves .Someone like Shaun Deeb would do way better 40 years ago than some solver nerd.


by Kebabkungen k

Of course its correct that they played too passively compared to today's standards of play. Doesnt mean the likes of Dan Smith and Sean Winter etc would have been able to understand that and exploit it if they played 50 years ago. In fact everything about how those people approach poker makes it likely that they would just copycat what everyone else was doing at the time and get destroyed by the likes of Ungar.

by borg23 k

Exactly. The guys who put in a ton of work and study with solvers etc wouldn't have these tools back then and would do a lot worse than people who are good at figuring things out for themselves .Someone like Shaun Deeb would do way better 40 years ago than some solver nerd.

Yes today's players are able to improve much faster thanks to the tools and resources available to them.

When someone says a great player from today would crush back then, they're obviously saying as a hypothetical if they went back with all of the knowledge that they have today.

On the flip side you can't say a great player from the 70s (with their knowledge from their era) could come in to today's game and crush.


by Punker k

The common argument for many years has been those old school legends were too passive, folded too much, cared too much about their tournament lives, and just didn't put the kind of pressure on that you face nowadays. Ungar certainly was the antithesis of that and gave at least some evidence that the theory is correct.

I think in one of Doyle's or Mike Sexton's books, they mentioned that Stu Ungar was the the best player in a shorthanded high ante game. By contrast, when they had a 9 player game, he was the worst player.


by newguyhere k

Yes today's players are able to improve much faster thanks to the tools and resources available to them.

When someone says a great player from today would crush back then, they're obviously saying as a hypothetical if they went back with all of the knowledge that they have today.

On the flip side you can't say a great player from the 70s (with their knowledge from their era) could come in to today's game and crush.

Why do people make these arguments though? It is an incredibly dumb thing to say


by newguyhere k

Yes today's players are able to improve much faster thanks to the tools and resources available to them.

When someone says a great player from today would crush back then, they're obviously saying as a hypothetical if they went back with all of the knowledge that they have today.

On the flip side you can't say a great player from the 70s (with their knowledge from their era) could come in to today's game and crush.

I agree with you mostly. But regarding your second point, a lot of (dumb) people actually, unironically, seem to think that if some random MTT grinder was put into the games 50 years ago, without carrying over their current knowledge, they would still crush the games somehow.

The same people who say stuff like "Pele wasnt that good, he wouldnt even get into a Premier League first 11 these days" with a straight face and dont understand how moronic the statement is even though its technically true if you moved 1960s Pele magically to 2024 - Im sure you Americans see similar arguments for NBA or NFL or whatever.

by mdroz247 k

Why do people make these arguments though? It is an incredibly dumb thing to say

Its either a completely redundant thing to say, or its a dumb thing to say. If you understand that its redundant, why even say it? Most people making those kind of statements actually somehow believe that players from today would crush the games 50 years ago even without transferring their knowledge.


by mdroz247 k

Why do people make these arguments though? It is an incredibly dumb thing to say

Same reason some old school players pronounce that "kids today never would have made it in the old days because they didn't know how to look a man in the eye and tell he was bluffing".


by mdroz247 k

Why do people make these arguments though? It is an incredibly dumb thing to say

Recency bias is a killer drug.


by JackRandall k

He was chip leader going into the FT one year, "over indulged" the night before, and his stack blinded into about 6th. Much to the dismay of Billy Baxter, who'd put him in the tourney.

(This is from memory, some of the details might be wrong)

"In 1990, Ungar was found on the third day of the tournament unconscious on the floor of his hotel room from a drug overdose. However, he had such a chip lead that even when the dealers kept taking his blinds out every orbit, Ungar still made the final table and finished ninth without playing another hand, pocketing $25,050."

Billy Baxter was staking him and was begging and pleading the with TDs to let him play Stuey's stack. He refused to back him again until 1997 which he won.


by vrael111 k

what are u talking about? U know math-based optimal game is unexploitable and cannot be beaten by whatever "style" you choose to play vs it. Not saying current top players are playing completely optimal but they are getting closer. Saying current "style" might not be effective in 70's games is stupid

Actually, if most of the table is a bunch of donks playing extremely suboptimal, GTO poker will win you far less than if you played an extremely exploitative style.


by Carnivore k

Actually, if most of the table is a bunch of donks playing extremely suboptimal, GTO poker will win you far less than if you played an extremely exploitative style.

I miss the good ole days of this forum... you know, before every conversation devolved into the GTO vs. Exploitative play debate.

If Stu Ungar existed in 2024 poker, we would be naming and shaming him for spitting on dealers, throwing objects at dealers and making female dealers cry.

Source:


Imagine if we had video of Doug Polk or Tom Dwan spitting on a dealer?

It wouldn't matter how much Stu won or how good he was or what kind of tips he gave to cocktail when he was in a good mood.

I personally measure people by how you treat people who can do nothing for you. Spitting on another human being is scum-tier.


by easyfnmoney k

Imagine if we had video of Doug Polk or Tom Dwan spitting on a dealer?

.

Tom Dwan is on the way to become a Stu from the 21st century.

Actually Tom is the perfect exemple of how Stu would be doing nowadays if he was alive.
Owing money to drug dealers and poker players.

Just living the best of the degen life while high on meth.


by 420legalize420 k

Tom Dwan is on the way to become a Stu from the 21st century.

Actually Tom is the perfect exemple of how Stu would be doing nowadays if he was alive.
Owing money to drug dealers and poker players.

Just living the best of the degen life while high on meth.

It's very possible that if Ungar existed in 2024, he would have likely been lifetime banned from all CET properties and would have been named/shamed if he tried to enter any other poker venue.

He probably should have been lifetime banned in 1981 after the spitting incident alone.


by easyfnmoney k

I miss the good ole days of this forum... you know, before every conversation devolved into the GTO vs. Exploitative play debate.

If Stu Ungar existed in 2024 poker, we would be naming and shaming him for spitting on dealers, throwing objects at dealers and making female dealers cry.

Source:

Imagine if we had video of Doug Polk or Tom Dwan spitting on a dealer?

It wouldn't matter how much Stu won or how good he was or what kind of tips he gave to cocktail when he was in a good mood.

I personally

Nobody is in here saying he was a good person. He was a deadbeat dad degenerate gambler druggy. He was also way ahead of his time in tournaments.


by borg23 k

Nobody is in here saying he was a good person. He was a deadbeat dad degenerate gambler druggy. He was also way ahead of his time in tournaments.

Stu Ungar wouldn't have been allowed to exist in the live poker world in 2024.

Is there anyone in the poker world today who has emulated his abusive antics that isn't permanently 86'd from CET/MGM/Sands et all?

OP referred to Tom Dwan as a crybaby copycat or something, and we have 5 pages of posts talking about how Ungar would have faired in modern poker.

I'll go back to my first sentence, we likely wouldn't know who Stu Ungar is if he were born 20-30 years later.

Stu Ungar on PokerStars/Full Tilt between 2004 and 2011 would have been an interesting conversation.

He could do all sorts of abusive antics in the privacy of his own home and no one would know and I have no-doubt he'd be recognized as one of the best.

We'd just know him as StueyNYC123 or something.

He probably should have been banned from poker rooms and the WSOP in the early 80s, if any of stories are indeed true.


by easyfnmoney k

Stu Ungar wouldn't have been allowed to exist in the live poker world in 2024.

Is there anyone in the poker world today who has emulated his abusive antics that isn't permanently 86'd from CET/MGM/Sands et all?

OP referred to Tom Dwan as a crybaby copycat or something, and we have 5 pages of posts talking about how Ungar would have faired in modern poker.

I'll go back to my first sentence, we likely wouldn't know who Stu Ungar is if he were born 20-30 years later.

Stu Ungar on PokerStars/Full Tilt

Who knows. Maybe with an actual threat of a ban he'd conduct himself better. Treating dealers like absolute garbage back then was tolerated so scumbags did it way more.


I have never understood the Stu Unger love or anyone idolizing him. He was hyper-aggressive in a time when almost no one else was and as a result, he won some tournaments and went on a few heaters. Other than that, he was a degenerate gambler who was an awful person, dead-beat father, drug addict, and a cheater. He behaved poorly, berated dealers and floormen, and treated most others like complete crap. Why his name still comes up all the time is beyond me. Who GAF.

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