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Online Poker News - By Jim of RakeDrop.com 4/16/2006 Poker Legend Puggy
Pearson passes away at age 77 - Credit LA times.
The news sprung up today on dozens of website that Poker Legend 'Puggy Pearson' passed away April 12, 2006 at age 77.
Our condolences go out to his family and friends. Rest in peace
Puggy and thanks for the large part you've done over so many years
in paving the way for poker to eventually come to what it is today.
Below is the news of the story released by the LA Times.
Courtesy LA Times:
By Dennis McLellan
His name was Walter Clyde Pearson, but everyone in the world of
poker knew him as "Puggy."
A cigar-chewing, legendary poker player, Puggy Pearson owned a
$200,000, 38-foot diesel Imperial Holiday Rambler motor home
dubbed the "Rovin' Gambler," painted with the challenge: "I'll
play any man from any land any game that he can name for any
amount that I can count."
Then came the kicker, in smaller letters: "providing I like it."
It was a fitting motto for the 1973 World Series of Poker champion
and member of the Poker Hall of Fame, a fifth-grade dropout from
Tennessee who played in the highest-stakes poker games in Las
Vegas for more than 25 years.
Pearson, one of the game's most colorful ambassadors, died
Wednesday in Las Vegas. He was 77. The results of an autopsy are
pending, but Pearson's family told the Las Vegas Sun that he had
oral surgery Tuesday and apparently hit his head Wednesday,
possibly after suffering a heart attack.
Puggy Pearson is credited with introducing Las Vegas to the "freeze-out"
style of playing tournament poker, in which everyone starts with
the same amount of chips and, as players are eliminated, the
winner winds up with them all. The format has been incorporated
into the World Series of Poker and all other major poker
tournaments.
In 1973, Pearson took home $130,000 from a field of 13 players in
the $10,000 buy-in, No-Limit Texas Hold 'Em World Championship —
the first time the event was recorded for television.
Last year, there were more than 5,600 entries, and the winner,
Joseph Hachem, walked away with $7.5 million.
Pearson was one of the more colorful characters in a world that
has spawned its share of colorful characters.
Mike Sexton, a columnist for Card Player magazine, wrote that
Pearson was "one of the few players in history who said, 'Deal me
in' (for the highest game in the room) as soon as he walked into a
poker room — and this was without knowing what the game was or who
was playing."
Pearson also was known to show up at major poker tournaments in
the 1970s and '80s in full Viking regalia, or costumed as a cowboy
or an American Indian, complete with headdress and war paint.
"Puggy Pearson was a charming, talented rogue," Howard Schwartz, owner of the
Gambler's Book Shop in Las Vegas, told The Times on Friday.
"I think he was influential in making poker a respectful form of
gambling for at least two generations of players," Schwartz said.
"He was not a guy who was a handsome, slick, boring individual; he
was colorful. He chomped on his cigar, he'd make proposition bets
— 'I'll bet you this, I'll bet you that.'
"He knew the old generation, and he helped pave the way for the
game to be popular, exciting, a contrarian lifestyle for a newer
generation."
Pearson is prominently featured in many books, including "Fast
Company: How Six Master Gamblers Defy the Odds and Always Win" by
Jon Bradshaw; and "Aces and Kings" by Michael Kaplan and Brad
Reagan.
"Puggy Pearson was very much an influence in the poker world for many
years," Lyle Berman, one of the founders of the World Poker Tour,
told The Times on Friday. "He was just everything that poker was
back then; he was a character up until he died."
In his later years, Berman said, "Puggy was not able to take
advantage of the big surge in poker. Puggy Pearson was a little past his
prime, but he lived to see what poker was to become, and I think
he glorified in that a great deal."
One of nine children, Pearson was born Jan. 29, 1929, in
Adairville, Ky., and grew up in the hills of Tennessee.
His illiterate parents were so poor, he once said, "that we had to
move every time the rent came due. I didn't know what shoes were
until I left home."
Pearson, who quit school at the age of 11 to go to work and help
his family, earned his nickname when he was 12.
To impress a girl, he was walking on his hands over 2-by-4s at a
church construction site when he missed one of the boards and
fell, landing on his nose. Around the pool halls where he hustled
money, the players took one look at his flattened nose and started
calling him "Pug."
Puggy
Pearson joined the Navy at 17 and trained to be a frogman. He also
learned to play poker, refining his skills in poker and pool
during his 10 years in the Navy.
Discharged from the Navy in the mid-1950s, he made his living
playing cards and developed a reputation as an aggressive player.
In addition to winning the World Series of Poker's main event in
1973, Pearson took the 1971 limit seven-card stud world title, the
1973 $1,000 buy-in, no-limit hold 'em championship and the 1973
$4,000 buy-in limit seven-card stud title.
The high-stakes gambler once estimated that he won and lost
millions of dollars playing poker and pool over the years.
"At the time Puggy Pearson was at his peak of powers, he was as good as
anybody," Larry Grossman, a Las Vegas gaming analyst and poker
historian, said Friday. "He came on with his Tennessee drawl a
little bit, but he was shrewd and he was smart. He was incredible
in a number of different gambling-type games, be it poker,
backgammon, pool or golf — and he was very successful in hustling
all of them.
"As long as he liked the game, usually it was to his favor."
Puggy
Pearson is survived by his longtime companion Simin Habibian; son
Stephen Mark Pearson; daughter Andrea Elaine Phelan; brother J.C.
Pearson; sisters Bobbie Jean Bailey and Gladys Gracie Pearson; and
a grandson.
R.I.P. Puggy
Pearson.
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