Phillip D. "Phil" Ivey (born February 1, 1976) is an
American professional
poker player who has won eight
World Series of Poker bracelets and one
World Poker Tour title and appeared at nine World Poker Tour final tables. Ivey is regarded by numerous poker observers and contemporaries as the best all-around player in the world today.
Personal life
Ivey was born in
Riverside, California and moved to
Roselle, New Jersey when he was three-months old.
Ivey resides in Las Vegas. In December 2009 Ivey and his wife, Luciaetta, filed a joint petition for divorce after seven years of marriage; which was granted on Dec 29, 2009.
Ivey is a Los Angeles Lakers, Houston Rockets, and a Buffalo Bills fan and can often be seen wearing basketball jerseys. Ivey's hobbies include video games, prop betting and golf. He participated in the inaugural World Series of Golf, where he finished in third place.
Philanthropy
Ivey has given money to a number of charitable causes. In March of 2008 Ivey donated $50,000 to Empowered 2 Excel, a Las Vegas charity for underprivileged children, and later that week created the Budding Ivey Foundation, a non-profit organization to continue the work of his grandfather, Leonard "Bud" Simmons. The foundation raised $260,000 (mostly for Empowered 2 Excel) at a July 3, 2008 charity poker tournament,and is also involved in children's literacy projects and programs to feed the homeless.
Poker
Ivey first began to develop his poker skills by playing against co-workers at a
New Brunswick, New Jersey telemarketing firm in the late 1990s. One of his nicknames, "No Home Jerome", stems from the ID card he secured to practice in
Atlantic City in his teenage years. His other nickname is 'the Tiger Woods of Poker'.
Live poker
Tournaments
As of 2010, his total live tournament winnings exceed $13,800,000. $5,213,809 of his total winnings have come from cashes at the WSOP.
World Series of Poker
Ivey's tournament accomplishments include winning three
bracelets at the
2002 World Series of Poker, tying
Phil Hellmuth Jr,
Ted Forrest, and
Puggy Pearson for most tournament wins in a single year (
Jeff Lisandro has also since tied the record). Ivey also has bracelets in
Pot Limit Omaha from
2000 and
2005. In 2000, he was the first person to defeat
Amarillo Slim heads-up at a WSOP final table. In addition to his eight World Series bracelets, Ivey has had great success in the WSOP Main Event. He placed in the top 25 four times between the
2002 and the
2009. Ivey finished 23rd in 2002, 10th in
2003, 20th in 2005 and 7th in 2009.
In 2009, Ivey won his 6th bracelet in the $2,500 No-Limit 2-7 Draw Lowball Event of the 2009 WSOP. He defeated a field of 147 players to catch his bracelet. He won a very long heads-up battle against John Monette. He then proceeded to win another bracelet in the $2,500 1/2 Seven Card Stud Hi/Lo 1/2 Omaha Hi/Lo event besting a field of 376 people. He defeated Ming Lee heads-up. While winning the $2,500 1/2 Seven Card Stud Hi/Lo - 1/2 Omaha Hi/Lo event he also managed to place 22nd in the $5000 Pot-Limit Omaha Eight-or-better despite only playing during the breaks in the Stud/Omaha event.
In the 2010 World Series of Poker, Ivey received the most votes for the Tournament of Champions.
At the 2010 WSOP Ivey won his eighth bracelet in the $3,000 H.O.R.S.E. in a final table made up of other notable players, which included Bill Chen (2nd), John Juanda (3rd), Jeff Lisandro (5th) and Chad Brown (8th).
Between 2002 and 2009, Ivey finished among the top 25 players in the Main Event four times, in fields ranging in size from 600 entrants to just under 7000. Ivey finished 10th in the 2003 WSOP Main Event (one place short of the final table), and 7th in 2009. In 2009 his lost to Darvin Moon's when a queen paired Moon on the flop; he ended with winnings of $1,404,002.
With eight World Series of Poker bracelets, Ivey is currently tied with Erik Seidel for the fifth most of all-time. Also, at age 33, he is the youngest player to ever win eight (Phil Hellmuth was 39). In addition, no other player has accumulated eight bracelets more quickly; it took Ivey only ten years from the time of his first bracelet to his eighth (Johnny Moss took 11 years). He is also the all-time record holder for most bracelets won in non-Holdem events, with all 8 of his victories coming in non-Holdem events.
{| class="wikitable" border="1"
|-
|+ World Series of Poker bracelets
|-
!Year
!Tournament
!Prize (US$)
|-
|2000
|$2,500 Pot Limit Omaha
|$195,000
|-
|2002
|$2,500 7 Card Stud Hi/Lo
|$118,440
|-
|2002
|$2,000 S.H.O.E.
|$107,540
|-
|2002
|$1,500 7 Card Stud
|$132,000
|-
|2005
|$5,000 Pot Limit Omaha
|$635,603
|-
|2009
|$2,500 No-Limit 2-7 Draw Lowball
|$96,367
|-
|2009
|$2,500 Omaha Hi/Lo / 7 Card Stud Hi/Lo
|$220,538
|-
|2010
|$3,000 H.O.R.S.E.
|$329,840
|}
World Poker Tour
Ivey has also reached nine final tables on the
World Poker Tour. He has lost several of these WPT events by being eliminated while holding the same starting hand each time, an ace and a queen. Nine out of the eleven times Phil Ivey has cashed in a WPT event, he has also made the television final table. During the
sixth season of the WPT in February 2008, Ivey made the final table at the LA Poker Classic at
Commerce Casino that included
Phil Hellmuth and
Nam Le, eventually capturing the $1,596,100 first prize and putting an end to his streak of seven WPT final tables without a victory. Ivey has earned close to three million dollars in WPT cashes. Ivey made his debut on the
European Poker Tour in
Barcelona, September 2006. He came to the final table of nine as the chipleader, but he eventually came in second to Bjørn-Erik Glenne from
Norway.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|+ World Poker Tour Titles
|-
!Year
!Tournament
!Prize (US$)
|-
|2008
|$10,000 L.A. Poker Classic
|$1,596,100
|}
Other notable tournaments
In 2006, Ivey was enticed to
London to participate in The London All Star Challenge of the inaugural
European Poker Masters. Not only
Europe's first-ever independent poker tour, the EPM boasted the best lineup of players ever seen in Europe. As one of the favorites, Ivey made it to the final table to finish seventh, and collected £6,700 ($12,534). In November 2005, Ivey won the $1,000,000 first prize at the
Monte Carlo Millions tournament. Just one day after, Ivey took home another $600,000 for finishing first at "The FullTiltPoker.Net Invitational Live from
Monte Carlo". His six opponents were (in reverse finishing order)
Mike Matusow,
Phil Hellmuth,
Gus Hansen,
Chris Ferguson,
Dave Ulliott, and
John Juanda.
On the January 22, 2007 airing of NBC's Poker After Dark, Ivey won the $120,000 winner-take-all "Earphones Please" tournament by eliminating Mike Matusow, Tony G, Andy Bloch, Phil Hellmuth and Sam Farha. On the April 15, 2007 airing of NBC's "National Heads-Up Poker Championship", Ivey was defeated by actor Don Cheadle. The loss marked the third consecutive year Ivey had been eliminated in the first round from this tournament. His streak ended in 2008, when he advanced to the semifinals, losing to eventual champion Chris Ferguson. Phil Ivey took part in seasons three and six of GSN's High Stakes Poker.
Cash games
Ivey is a regular participant in the $4,000-$8,000 mixed cash game at the
Bellagio hotel in
Las Vegas (often referred to as
the Big Game). In February 2006, he played heads-up
Limit Texas Hold'em versus
Texas billionaire Andy Beal. With stakes at $25,000/$50,000, Ivey won over $16,000,000 over the course of three days. Ivey was playing for "The Corporation", a group of poker professionals who pooled their money and took turns playing against Beal. Earlier in the month, Beal had beaten the Corporation out of $10,000,000.
Online poker
Ivey is part of the design team for
Full Tilt Poker. He can often be found playing online at Full Tilt Poker, playing high-stakes cash games up to $500-$1000 no-limit and $2000-$4000 limit and $500-$1000 PLO under the tag Phil Ivey. According to HighStakesDB.com, Phil Ivey earned $1.99 million on FullTilt in 2007, $7.34 million in 2008, $6.33 million in 2009 and $3 million in 2010.
Notes
External links
Official site
Full Tilt Poker profile
Category:1976 births
Category:African-American sportspeople
Category:American poker players
Category:Living people
Category:People from Atlantic County, New Jersey
Category:People from Riverside, California
Category:People from Union County, New Jersey
Category:World Poker Tour winners
Category:World Series of Poker bracelet winners