Rembering Chip Reese..........

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"When it comes to respect, Chip was number one" - Barry Greenstein


Tuesday, the poker world awoke to the shocking news of David “Chip” Reese’s death with sorrow and tears, and once the emotional tide caused by his sudden passing recedes, there’s no doubt that more and more people will come forward and share their memories of one of the greatest poker players who ever lived.

Reese, a comparatively low-key figure compared to many of his colleagues, was called “The True King of Poker” by Daniel Negreanu after Reese won his final World Series of Poker bracelet in 2006. Reese captured the inaugural $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. title during a match wherein he faced Andy Bloch for more than six hours heads up.

Obituaries ran in newspapers across the country, most with a smiling picture of Reese, who did a lot of that while playing poker. And why shouldn’t he have? Chip lived a legendary life that is the stuff of movies and will be remembered for as long as cards are dealt.

And it started off with what Reese described as a vacation: "I came to Vegas in 1974, and I really just came for a weekend."

Reese was on his way to graduate business school at Stanford when his life changed forever. As Reese described it, he took the $400 he had in his pocket and within a month turned it into $50,000. He believed he couldn’t afford not to stay in Las Vegas. Click here to read more about his time there.

Reese was hardly an amateur when he rolled into Vegas. He had played so many hours of poker during college that when he left, his fraternity named the game room the “David E. Reese Memorial Card Room.” Even before getting to college, Reese had a lot of practice. He started playing poker for baseball cards when he was a boy in Dayton, Ohio. He learned how to play cards from his mother while he spent a year at home suffering from rheumatic fever.

When Reese hit Las Vegas, he could not believe how fundamentally flawed some of the greatest and wealthiest players in the world were playing stud, a game in which Reese was considered by many to be a grand master. During the mid-1970s, Reese would win more than $2 million playing cash poker.

He was so good at stud that Doyle Brunson had Reese write the chapter on that game for his masterpiece “Super System.”

While in Vegas, Reese didn’t just play poker. He was the poker manager at the Dunes, and for a few years in the 1980s, he was a central player with the Computer Group, which was a conglomerate of sports bettors who applied computers and mathematics to sports betting. The operation generated millions of dollars for those involved.

In 1991, at the age of 40, Reese became the youngest member to be inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame.

Reese took a nearly 10-year break playing major poker tournaments in the mid-1990s, but started entering them again around 2002. He already had two WSOP bracelets at that point (he won a $5,000 limit stud event and a $1,000 stud split event in 1982 and 1978, respectively), but his greatest WSOP moment came when he won the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. event in grinding fashion. It was the first time the event was held.

Reese was close to many of the players and was known for his civility and intelligence both at and away from the tables. Many players are in shock at the suddenness of Reese’s passing, and many were too choked up to even speak about him. He was a friendly man with many friends and his death was shocking to all that knew him.

“Chip was not only the greatest living all-around poker player on Earth, he was also a friend,” Antonio Esfaniari said. “Even before things started going well for me in poker, Chip was always so nice to me. It’s a major hit to our industry to lose such a great representative of the game. May he rest in peace.”

Reese died in his sleep at his home sometime in the morning on Dec. 4. Although Reese was suffering from a mild case of pneumonia, the exact cause of death is not yet known. Services are planned for Friday, but the details have not yet been released to the public.

The Reese family has requested that, in lieu of flowers or other gifts of condolences, money be donated to the Alzheimer's Association in Chip's name.

People from across the poker world have extended their memorial wishes to the Reese family, and the following are just a few. Please feel free to leave memorial comments about Chip below the article:

Barry Greenstein
, close friend of Reese: “Chip was a much deeper person than what the poker world realizes. He was a real deep thinker. He was a family man like no one else in poker. No matter what the situation was, if his kids had something going on, he would quit and go to it.

“I think if you polled his peers, he became the greatest player in poker. I think that’s where they’d put him. It’s obviously between him and Doyle … but when it comes to cash games, Chip was the top dog for over 30 years. When it comes to respect, Chip was number one.”

Gus Hansen: “With the utmost sadness and shock, I learned this morning that my buddy Chip Reese is no longer among us. The world just gotten poorer today with the loss of Chip Reese.

“Although it is almost impossible for me to understand, Chip died last night after a sudden case of pneumonia. What makes it even harder to sink in is the fact that I just talked to him last night around 7 p.m.

“Chip was not only a world-class poker player but also a world-class individual, and I am proud to call him my friend. Chip was the kind of gambler we should all strive to be.

“Chip’s experience, good spirit, and integrity made him the best ambassador for the game, and I am certain that the whole poker community will miss him greatly. I, for one, will miss the fierce competition, our friendship, and his guidance off and on the poker table.

“Chip was extremely gifted and very well respected in the poker world as well as in the business world. His list of achievements is endless, with his 2006 WSOP H.O.R.S.E. win as the latest proof of his excellent poker skills.

“My thoughts and deepest condolences go out to Chip’s family to whom he was always devoted as a father and a father-figure. Although it is little consolation, it is my hope that they know of the great legacy that Chip is leaving behind.”

Mike Sexton: “David ‘Chip’ Reese was extremely smart (a Dartmouth graduate), probably the most successful poker player of all time, and the youngest player ever inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame. If there’s one thing you should know about Chip Reese, however, know that he understood the ‘object of the game.’

“Years ago, I was talking to Chip about another Hall of Fame poker player that we lost too early, Stu Ungar. I asked Chip if he thought Stuey was the most talented player he’d ever seen. Chip said, ‘Natural ability-wise, yes. Certainly, he was the quickest-minded guy I’ve ever known. Stuey’s problem, however, is that he doesn’t understand the ‘object of the game.’ The object of the game is to accumulate wealth, improve your lifestyle, and provide for your family, and Stuey will never get it.’

“Chip did. Poker players have always admired Chip for his success, his demeanor at the table, his lack of ego, and that he never ‘steamed’ or went on tilt. I’d suggest we remember him as a player who truly understood the ‘object of the game.’

“Rest in peace, Chip.”

Phil Laak and Jennifer Tilly: “It’s such a blow to anyone who knew Chip. Others knew him better than us, but we were always warmed in his presence. He had a great disposition and always left you with the feeling of, ‘Wow, what a stellar guy.’ The poker world will never be the same with out him. He was an icon as well as being a phenom of the game. Our heart-felt condolences for his family.”

Johnny Chan: "As many have said and will continue to say, Chip Reese was always a gentlemen. He was easily the best cash game and overall poker player around. He has always been one of my favorite players and it is sad that we just lost one of the Poker Greats. He's in God's hands now and I know he'll be winning the Big Game in the Sky!"

WSOP Commissioner Jeffery Pollack: “Many consider Chip the greatest cash-game player who ever lived, but he was also a World Series of Poker legend. His victory in the inaugural $50,000 buy-in H.O.R.S.E. championship in 2006 won him his third WSOP bracelet and made him a part of WSOP lore forever. On behalf of the WSOP and Harrah’s Entertainment, I want to extend to his family our deepest sympathies.”
 

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had the pleasure of meeting him years ago at a dinner the most knowledgeable and humble of all the players
 

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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=5 align=right border=0><TBODY><TR><TD> </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>"Well, I came to Vegas in 1974, and I really just came for a weekend."

It might not have been David "Chip" Reese's plan to spend more than 30 years in Las Vegas and to become one of the most respected poker players in history, but that's what happened.

Reese grew up in Centerville, Ohio, and poker was a part of his life from a young age. At Dartmouth College (he turned down admission to Harvard University), Reese was so dominant in cards that after leaving, his fraternity named a room in its house the "David E. Reese Memorial Card Room."

Once in Las Vegas, Reese stayed. He won more than $50,000 in his first month, and soon started playing in the original "Big Game" with Johnny Moss and Doyle Brunson. In his first session, Reese played for four days straight. He walked away a $300,000 winner, and a legend was born.

"That moved me to the next level," Reese said in a recent interview.

The legacy of the "best all-around gambler" continued to grow. After contributing a chapter to Brunson's seminal poker book Super/System, Reese won bracelets at the 1978 and 1982 World Series of Poker in seven-card stud eight-or-better and seven-card stud, respectively. In 1991, at the age of 45, he became the youngest living player inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame.

Despite his fame and notoriety at the poker tables, Reese worked hard over the years to maintain a certain level of anonymity. A combination of privacy issues, starting a family, and the draw of cash games such as the Big Game, limited Reese's participation in major tournaments. In 2004, he broke a nine-year hiatus from the WSOP when he played in the $2,000 no-limit hold'em event.

At the urging of his children, Reese made a more permanent return to the tournament circuit, but his main focus remained on the cash games. That was, of course, until word of the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. event hit the Big Game. While Reese may not have been the fans' pick to win it all, other mixed-game specialists and Big Game regulars pegged Reese as a favorite to reach the final table.

Reese's victory at the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. event, in conjunction with his dominant performance on day two and epic heads-up battle with Andy Bloch, sealed his status as one of the best poker players in the world, and engrained his name into the public consciousness of a whole new generation of poker fans.

Reese didn't plan on being a celebrity again, but he should know as well as anybody - plans were meant to be broken.
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There have been some posters who have tried to make fun of or belittled his death as someone who was just a degenerate gambler. It seems as if those who truly knew him tell a different story. He sounded like a truly good friend, someone who was honest with people and cared for his family. RIP Chip.
 

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Chip was part of the infamous "computor group" that rocked the Vegas sportsbetting world in the 80's...........
 
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Had the pleasure of meeting him in Las Vegas during the 80's....Great Read and Post Fishead....
 
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From Daniel Negreanu's Blog:

Chip Reese

09 Dec 2007


I attended the funeral the other day and the place was overflowing with people which is a testament to how many friends he had. I showed up early and yet still there was no sitting room and people were standing anywhere they could.

Chip’s son spoke and it was incredible. Simply based on his maturity and poise you could see that Chip had taught him well, a chip off the old block, if you will.

Frankly, I was happy to see that the funeral, while attended by a large group of poker players, wasn’t really about Chip the poker player at all. Despite the fact that Chip was without a doubt the greatest poker player that ever lived, from seeing the pictures and listening to his family you also got the impression that he may have been an even better father than a poker player.

I don’t know that there is such a thing as a “good funeral,” but if there is, then this was definitely one that would qualify. Again, little about Chip the poker player made the cut, instead it was about Chip the family man as well as a man of faith. I never really talked to Chip much about God and his beliefs and he was never one to jam things down your throat.

Based on his behavior at the table and away, though, I always got the sense that he was a man of faith. He never, ever, ever, had a bad word to say about anybody, even if that person was someone you could easily find fault in. I genuinely believe that he tried to focus on the good in people rather than any mistakes they may have made. Maybe the most non-judgmental person I’ve ever met.

Since Chip was a Christian there was obviously a preacher reading scripture and talking about Heaven, etc. It was a unique environment in some ways, as not al those in attendance were believers, but I don’t think it came off as “preachy” at all. A funeral isn’t really about those attending and their personal beliefs, it’s a reflection of the man and his family.

Several of Chip’s closest friends also got up to speak, closing with Doyle Brunson, who understandably started by saying he’d always imagined Chip doing this for him. Everyone who spoke, including Bobby Baldwin and David Chesnoff combined memorable stories about Chip, mixing in humor and emotion in such a way that left much of the room teary eyed.

At the end of the ceremony the family put together some pictures on video along with some music. Some great pictures of him and his family. You could sense just from the pictures that he was most happy when with his family. Some real funny pictures in there too with Chip having his face painted in some, and wearing just an awful wig in others!

After the ceremony was finished most of the people there headed to TPC Summerlin for food and cocktails. That, and of course more stories of Chip’s amazing life. By the end of the night golf matches were being discussed, other goofy bets were made, and I couldn’t help but think that’s the way Chip would have wanted it. He just didn’t seem like the type of guy that would want us to mourn for him. He didn’t crave attention or glory while he was here so I felt like he’d want us to carry on.

The poker world will carry on but it will never be the same. Chip was one of a kind at the poker table. He was probably the most socially intelligent person I’ve ever met. Fully understanding what it meant to be a professional and fully understanding his role as not only a player in the game, but as a “host.”

As for what made him so good? I loved what one of the speakers had to say. In fact, it was Chip himself who said it to him when asked why he plays with the best in the world. Chip said, “When they are on there A game they are all fantastic players, some probably better than my A game. The thing is, my D game isn’t much different than my A game.” Think about that for a moment. There is a lot important information in those words. You are only as good of a player as you are on your worst days and no one understood that and was able to execute that better than Chip.

When I played poker with Chip the word “graceful” would be a word I’d use to describe it. It was effortless. He was never really up and down like a yo-yo, you rarely ever saw him get all of his money in bad and in need of the deck saving him. Every play he made just seemed to “make sense.” It wasn’t crazy wild or erratic which you’d think would make him predictable. Not the case though, as I mentioned earlier he was a social genius which translates into not only understanding people, but also knowing what they think of you as well. I’m sure he’s bluffed me a million times and I had no idea.

We actually had this bizarre theme going on when we played poker- I never called him on the river and he never called me. It was so odd. Then one hand in 2-7 single draw with a $100,000 cap I raised with 2-3-4-5-8 which on all accounts is an absolute monster hand. He capped it and I finally called him. He showed 2-3-4-5-7 and said, “No wonder we never call each other.”

I always liked Chip and learned a lot from him. Playing with him was a privilege and I feel lucky for having had the chance.


I have other things to share blogwise but nothing as important as this so it can wait.
 

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