RIP Paul Magriel - Best Backgammon Player of his time (maybe ever) and Poker Pro

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[h=1]Remembering Paul Magriel[/h]
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Paul Magriel died yesterday.
Most poker players likely remember Paul from his disheveled appearance and quirky behavior. At times, it seemed like he was from a different planet. His nickname was “X-22.” He often quacked like a duck at the poker table, usually after winning a pot. When you heard “quack quack,” you knew Paul was in the room. Fittingly, his favorite Hold’em hand was pocket dueces, otherwise known as a pair of ducks.
What most people probably don’t know is the fascinating story of Paul’s life decades before he became a regular poker player.
From early childhood, Paul was a prodigal gamesman. He started out playing backgammon and chess. He won the New York State Junior Chess Championship just a few years after another prodigal talent, Bobby Fischer burst onto the scene. By the late 1960s, New York’s Greenwich Village became his personal playground. He frequented the Olive Tree Cafe on MacDougal Street, known to be the hangout of hustlers. Later, he spent most of his free time at Singapore Sam’s, and after that, the far more fashionable uptown Mayfair Club.
Within a decade, Paul was widely acknowledged as one of the greatest backgammon players in the world. He often played games for $1,000 a point — astronomical stakes at the time. He won the 1978 World Championship of Backgammon held in Nassau, The Bahamas. Months earlier, Paul was victorious in one of the greatest backgammon matches in history, a grueling 17-hour marathon in Athens, Greece against then European champion, Joe Dwek. Paul was so proficient at the game that he became known as the “Human Computer.” In 1977, he wrote a book simply titled Backgammon, which became the game’s bible. It sold 10,000 copies in the first two months of release. Later, Paul wrote the weekly backgammon column for The New York Times.
But that was just part of who Paul was, who most did not know.

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This photograph (above) shows Paul playing backgammon against Kiumars Motakhasses at the Mount Parnis Casino in Athens.
*****

Paul was more than a master of games. He attended the prep school at Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire. He earned a B.A. in mathematics from New York University, graduating at age 20. Next, he did his graduate studies at Princeton.
He was a math wizard, who loved numbers and relished the opportunity to solve complex puzzles. At night, he played games. During the day, he was a math instructor at the New Jersey Institute of Technology, where he worked for seven years before deciding to finally put away the chalk and take up backgammon (and later poker playing) for a living, because the money was just too good a thing to pass up and there were plenty of suckers who wanted a game.
Back then, backgammon was a high-stakes web of rich people and cultural elites who gathered nightly at posh social clubs. Paul’s immersion onto that privileged scene, first in New York City then later around the world at the most exclusive resorts, was every bit as momentous as the indelible impact on games and gambling left by Ken Uston and Stu Ungar, every bit his contemporaries.
Paul’s exemplary talent was perhaps best displayed by playing backgammon while blindfolded. He couldn’t see the board. However, Paul could remember the placement of every piece and memorized the new layout after every dice roll. He barked out his moves with the authority of a military general. Paul regularly beat opponents who glared studiously at the board, ultimately forced to reach into their pocket at game’s end to settle a lost wager.
Quoted in a 1978 magazine feature, Paul explained his fascination with games as follows (see footnote below):
I think I’m addicted to backgammon. I’m addicted to games in general. Games are controlled violence. You can take out your frustrations and hostilities over a backgammon set, where the rules are clearly defined — in contrast to life, where the rules are not so well defined. In games, you know what’s right and wrong, legal versus illegal; whereas in life, you don’t.
Psychologically, backgammon is very different from chess. It’s an exercise in frustration — you can make the right moves and lose, or you can make the wrong moves and win. And chess didn’t have the gambling that I like.”

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This photograph (above) shows Paul Magriel playing “blindfolded” against the legendary writer and adventurer George Plimpton at New York’s famous “21” Club.
*****

It’s been said that backgammon offers the ultimate challenge of creating order out of chaos.
Making the leap from the king of backgammon during the 1970s to one of the many millions who became caught up in the poker craze three decades later posed a new challenge and even offered the rare chance of reinvention. Paul found a new game filled with chaos, but like even the game’s greatest players wasn’t able to create any sense of order.
You wouldn’t have known about Paul’s mastery of other games by looking at him in his later years, which were mostly spent grinding low-stakes poker games in Las Vegas, with the occasional tournament cash here and there. He rarely talked about his life before poker. The last time I saw Paul was a month ago. He was playing in a $70 buy-in nightly tournament at the Orleans.
Cynics might have gazed upon Paul, seen his wrinkled pants barely hanging around his waist, observed his distracting facial tics, and be very hard-pressed to imagine this same man was once a gaming giant who regularly dressed in tuxedos, dined at the world’s finest restaurants, and always flew first-class.
Indeed, Paul seemed to become what many old poker players become in the late autumn of their years, broken down men who long ago forfeited their riches and glory to old age and the creeping hands of all human clocks, their lost triumphs now long past in the rearview mirror of life, invisible to the casual eye.
But we shall remember Paul because it is the right thing to do.
To remember him. To honor him. To celebrate his life.
To have known Paul Magriel and remember who he was is to gain a better appreciation for those greats who proceeded us all and blazed their own path, often alone, and left their own mark.
Paul certainly blazed a path. And he certainly left a mark.
Quack. Quack.

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Photo Credit: The three photographs posted in this article were taken from an August 1978 feature story in Gambling Times magazine.
Some of the biographical content is also taken from the narrative, written by Susan M. Silver.
Here’s a link to another article, published in The New Yorker in 1977. “PLAYING x-22
Correction: A previous version of this article identified Phillips Exeter Academy as being located in NewYork. It’s actually in New Hampshire






http://www.nolandalla.com/remembering-paul-magriel/
 
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<header class="styles-headerBasic--3czk2 css-e9d4j7 e111kb3g0" style="margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; text-size-adjust: 100%; font-variant-numeric: inherit; font-variant-east-asian: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-size: 18px; line-height: inherit; font-family: "Times New Roman"; vertical-align: baseline; color: rgb(51, 51, 51);">Paul Magriel, Who Was Called the Best in Backgammon, Dies at 71

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<figcaption class="ResponsiveMedia-caption--1dUVu Media-caption--wlc0l ResponsiveMedia-toneNews--pMwMi" itemprop="caption description" style="margin: auto 0px 15px 15px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; text-size-adjust: 100%; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-size: inherit; line-height: inherit; font-family: nyt-imperial, georgia, "times new roman", times, serif; vertical-align: baseline; display: flex; color: rgb(102, 102, 102); -webkit-box-orient: vertical; -webkit-box-direction: normal; flex-direction: column; width: 330px;">Paul Magriel playing in a backgammon tournament in Boston in 1981.CreditBlake Fleetwood</figcaption></figure>By Sam Roberts


<time class="Timestamp-timestamp--3FJff elementStyles-timestamp--26VGL styles-timestamp--KJFCK" datetime="2018-03-08" itemprop="datePublished" content="2018 - 03 - 08" style="margin: 0px auto; padding: 0px 1em 0px 0px; border: 0px; text-size-adjust: 100%; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-size: 0.86rem; line-height: 1.1625rem; font-family: nyt-franklin, helvetica, arial, sans-serif; vertical-align: baseline; width: auto; max-width: 580px; display: inline-block;">March 8, 2018</time>

</header>Paul Magriel, a former youth chess champion who traded game boards to become known as the world’s best backgammon player, then turned to poker as his passion for gambling grew, died on Monday at his home in Las Vegas. He was 71.
His death was confirmed by a former wife, Martine Oules. No cause was specified.
After winning the New York State Junior Chess Championship at 19, Mr. Magriel (pronounced ma-GRILL) became fixated by backgammon, the 5,000-year-old dice-and-disk board game that combines luck, skill and speed.
Before the 1970s ended, Mr. Magriel had won the world backgammon championship and published what was acclaimed as the bible of backgammon. He was also writing a weekly column about the game for The New York Times.
In 1977, The Boston Globe described Mr. Magriel, who by then had given up teaching math at a New Jersey college to play professionally, as “probably the best backgammon player in the world.”
His quirkiness and cunning gave backgammon currency.
“He was a big part of the reason for the backgammon boom that happened in the late ′70s and ′80s,” Erik Seidel, a stock trader who became a professional backgammon and poker player, said in an email.
Mr. Magriel could be philosophical on the subject of games. “Games are controlled violence,” he told Gambling Times magazine in 1978. “You can take out your frustrations and hostilities over a backgammon set, where the rules are clearly defined — in contrast to life, where the rules are not so well defined. In games, you know what’s right and wrong, legal versus illegal; whereas in life, you don’t.”



Paul David Magriel Jr. was born on July 1, 1946, in Manhattan. His father, an immigrant from Latvia, was librarian at the American School of Ballet and curator of dance archives at the Museum of Modern Art. His mother, the former Christine Fairchild, was an architect.
As a child, Paul was remembered as a savant who rarely answered questions and spoke only when he had something to say. After graduating from Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire and getting a perfect score on his college boards, he earned a bachelor’s degree in math from New York University. At. N.Y.U., he was a fellow of the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences.
He was later a National Science Foundation fellow at Princeton University, where he specialized in probability. He taught at the Newark College of Engineering (now part of the Newark Institute of Technology) from 1969 to 1973

Mr. Magriel was married several times and divorced. His survivors include a son, Louis, with Ms. Oules, a French-born poker player, and a brother, Dr. Nicolas Magriel, a musician and teacher.
Mr. Magriel made his transition from chess to backgammon in Greenwich Village, at hangouts like the Olive Tree Cafe, while he was a doctoral student at Princeton and on track to become a math professor there.
“Psychologically, backgammon is very different from chess,” Mr. Magriel said. “It’s an exercise in frustration — you can make the right moves and lose, or you can make the wrong moves and win. And chess didn’t have the gambling that I like.”
Mr. Magriel grew increasingly gifted at backgammon, and consumed by it, cataloging, in the era before computers, thousands of potential playing strategies on index cards. And he ascended to more upscale venues, like the Mayfair Club on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, where wagers might be made for $1,000 a point.
Gambling, too, became an obsession. Coupled with that were on-again-off-again brushes with substance abuse and a preoccupation with his own celebrity in the rarefield world of backgammon, his first wife, Renee Roberts, said.
“He had an incredible ability to concentrate his intellect on the things he wanted to know,” she said in a telephone interview. “He had so much promise, but the gambling took him to a place where everyone was relating to him because of his fame.”
With Ms. Roberts, he wrote the seminal “Backgammon” (1976) and “Introduction to Backgammon: A Step-By-Step Guide” (1978). His Times column appeared from 1977 to 1980.

Mr. Magriel made a small fortune from backgammon and later low-stakes poker. Playing poker, sometimes huddled disheveled over a table, he was known for uttering a signature “Quack, quack” when betting (usually a bet beginning with 22, the pair of numbers known in backgammon as double ducks and in poker as ducks).
His more enduring legacy to the card game was his formulation of the M-ratio — a measure, named for him, of how many chips a player needs to sit passively and make only compulsory bets.
For all his expertise in any game that required mental acuity, Mr. Magriel found backgammon to be “the most frustrating, the cruelest.”
“The fascinating thing about backgammon is that it represents an interesting paradox,” he told The Boston Globe in 1977, adding: “People who want a sure thing don’t make it in backgammon. There are risks, yes, but on the other hand there is an enormous amount of control needed, something most gamblers lack.”
In 1977, he played a promotional match at the 21 Club in Manhattan against George Plimpton, the adventurous journalist and author who liked to slip into other careers and write about his experiences. (Mr. Magriel’s original backgammon tutor, years earlier, had been Mr. Plimpton’s wife, Freddy Espy, a decorator and artist.)
In this match Mr. Magriel had a serious handicap: He was playing Mr. Plimpton while blindfolded.
“I have nothing at stake except the honor of my psyche,” Mr. Plimpton told The New Yorker. “My tactics are going to be to talk as much as possible, ply him with drinks, and do everything else I can to befuddle him. If he loses track of a single piece on the board, I win.”
Mr. Plimpton lost.
 
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Is that supposed to be impressive that he won a coin flip?

Poker is funny

No. Didn't post it to show anything impressive. It's quite funny/sad to see Hellmouth's reaction, calling him a maniac when
Magriel got his chips in with the (slightly) better hand.
 
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Thank you Zit....nice post and very informative for those who did not know Magriel....
 

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Is he the guy that had the jacked up nose, nostrils?
 
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Seems like a growth that happened in his latter years, as pictures of him as a younger man don't show it.

images
 

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