7/30/2022
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Chip Reese was a legendary cash game player Reese used to play in some of the largest cash games in the world with the likes of Doyle Brunson, Bobby Baldwin, and Barry Greenstein. While it is difficult to measure exact winnings over time in these games, many speculate that Chip Reese has actually won more money playing poker than anyone. Chip would always try to entice any potential players into playing in the game. He was the king of the hill. He used to say to me in his somewhat patronizing way that we now teasingly call Chip-talk, “Buddy, we’ve got the perfect game for you.

Before his untimely death, Chip Reese was one of the most feared players on the felt. For over thirty years Reese was the epitome of the “old school” poker player, always in control of his emotions whatever the game and stakes in play. These talents at the tables have led many to call Reese one of the greatest players that the game has ever seen.

Reese’s lineage in the game started even before he began to terrorize the felt around the world. Born in Dayton, OH, David Reese (his given name) took to playing poker against childhood buddies at the age of six for baseball cards. As he got older, his acumen at the game caught the attention of other Dayton players, most notably Mike Sexton, and he continued to play on through his college years. After his graduation in 1974 from Dartmouth with a degree in economics, Reese was set on law school and headed west to Stanford.

Chip Reese Wiki

16 records for Chip Reese. Find Chip Reese's phone number, address, and email on Spokeo, the leading online directory for contact information. Chip Reese Associate Vice President for Student Affairs, Columbus State University Columbus, Georgia Area 500+ connections.

On the way to a life as a barrister, however, Reese found what was to be his true calling. A pre-Stanford stop in Las Vegas (a location which Chip had visited on several occasions) and a victory in a Seven Card Stud tournament in 1974 netted him a nice starting bankroll of $60,000 which, as it would turn out, converted Reese into a professional poker player. What was the legal professions loss (and potentially a significant one) turned out to be the basis for a man who became a legend of the game.

For the next three decades, Reese toiled in his new hometown of Las Vegas and wherever else the best game was in what may be the true meaning of a professional: the cash game world. Chip played in ring games against some of the toughest players in the world, including Doyle Brunson and Lyle Berman, and would travel anywhere to play for the highest stakes. Brunson thought enough of Reese’s skills that he tapped him to write the Seven Card Stud section for his seminal poker book Super/System.

It is unknown how much Chip may have won during that time but estimates would have it easily in the millions. He also found the time along the way to take down two World Series of Poker bracelets in 1978 and 1982 (both Seven Card tournaments) and become the youngest member ever inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame in 1991.

While he was able to make a healthy living from only cash games, the birth of the World Poker Tour and his children gradually pushed him back into the tournament world. Arguing that they had never seen him play poker on television, Reese started playing WPT events, earning a fourth place finish at the Jack Binion World Poker Open in 2004 and picking up four more cash finishes in the next three years. This perhaps prepared him for what was to be the greatest tournament championship of his career.

2006 saw the creation of the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. tournament at the World Series and Chip found his way to what was potentially the toughest final table in history. Alongside such poker notables as Brunson, Phil Ivey and T. J. Cloutier and playing what was arguably not his best game in No Limit Hold ‘Em (the first WSOP H.O.R.S.E. final table was a NL affair for television reasons,) Reese was able to get to heads up action against Andy Bloch. After an epic eight hour battle in which the two gladiators swapped the chip lead, Chip Reese was able to capture the first $50K H.O.R.S.E. event at the World Series and his third bracelet. The $1.7+ million that he won became a significant portion of his lifetime tournament earnings of around $2.8 million.

December 4th, 2007 will be remembered as a dark day in the annals of poker history. The poker world awoke to the news that Reese had passed away in his sleep the night before (some say the effects of pneumonia, others believe a heart attack) and the poker world mourned the loss of a great champion. Tournaments around the world paused for a moment of silence to reflect on such a devastating loss and, most notably, the World Series decided to rename the trophy given to the $50K H.O.R.S.E. champion the “Chip Reese Memorial Trophy”. While the accolade was a fitting one, the poker world will have a difficult time replacing one of the greatest players ever in Chip Reese.

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Wurtzyboy
13 years ago

Chip Reese Cause Of Death

Chip Reese

Chip Reese

Being what I would consider a more than avid poker fan, and a lover of every and all facets of the game, I ritualistically pull up CardPlayer.com on my computer every morning when I wake up. And yesterday morning, on December 4th, when I did, I couldn't help but be in complete shock. The first thing that caught my eye was the picture of Chip Reese and the dates, '1951-2007'. It was all too painfully obvious what had happened, and in an instant, I couldn't help but let out my emotions like I tend to do sometimes. By no means did I know Chip personally. But then again, in terms of poker and Chip in his personal life, few did except for his fellow poker players, personal friends, and those who had the pleasure of meeting the legend that was Chip Reese. I, like many, only knew Chip through what I saw of him through televised poker, interviews, or other forms of media in which he appeared. Even so, that doesn't really matter in the end. The feelings which I felt when I learned the news of Chip's passing only proves that he touched the lives of innumerable other, including people he didn't even know, including myself. This just proves what kind of person Chip was, and how he emitted the vibe of an all-around stand-up person in everything he did. Even though I didn't know Chip, I as if I did, from the many times I saw him on T.V. playing the game he loved so much, and clearly excelled to no end, and through interviews, The Circuit in particular, that really gave an insight to what type of person he really was. Not just a poker player, though first and foremost that is how he will probably be remembered, but also a family man, and a man who truly cared about the lives of others. Just tonight, I listened to Barry Greenstein's audio blog, and while throughout the blog, I felt a great deal of sadness, I couldn't help but feel an enourmous amount of respect for Chip as a person as Barry related numerous stories about Chip and how he was always there to help others in any way he could, often times financially, even when he knew he would most likely never be reimbursed! Barry's blog just gave me more insight to Chip's life which on the whole, made me miss him that much more. I had wanted to someday play with Chip, no matter what it was is (obviously not the big game, but most likely a tournament he was playing in). Being a little younger than 21, I'm still not legal to play with the top dogs as of yet. But now, it looks as if that dream of mine will never become a reality, and that saddens me greatly. Not enough positive things can be said about Chip, as he was clearly a person who was larger than life in more ways than one, and in no ways except good ones. Chip Reese will be remembered forever among those who knew him, those whos lives he touched, and even those who didn't know him, such as myself. The poker world, and the world in general lost a great person yesterday, and few people, if any, will leave a legacy that even slightly compares to the one Chip Reese has left. The poker player, the family man, the friend, the legend. Chip Reese, you will be missed.

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