
My name is Chris Ferguson and I play online poker exclusively at
Full
Tilt Poker.
In 1999, Chris Ferguson had spent exactly half his life at UCLA.
After five years as an undergrad and another 13 as a graduate student,
UCLA awarded him a Ph.D. in Computer Science and told him it was
time to leave the nest of academia. He went reluctantly.
He didn't wander very far. A year later and only 300 miles away,
it was new school meets old school as Chris defeated TJ Cloutier
to win the main event in the 2000 World Series of Poker. It marked
the beginning of a professional career, with a record unmatched
by any player of the last decade.
Chris can't remember a time when he wasn't playing cards. A stinging
loss in the 4th grade (his trip queens lost to a heart flush, costing
him his last $.35) made Chris resolve never to go broke again. He
regularly beat his high school home game, and always returned from
weekend jaunts to Las Vegas with a tidy profit. In college, he discovered
the world of online poker.
Long before any of today's popular poker sites existed, Chris started
playing over the Internet on an IRC channel, and quickly became
its highest ranked tournament player. In 1994, recognizing that
his knowledge of game theory was a powerful weapon, he started playing
in the small tournaments in and around LA. A year later, Chris played
in his first World Series of Poker event. Despite playing relatively
few tournaments in those first five years, he made seven final tables
and had 12 money finishes, peaking at fourth place.
In the new millennia, he made his mark.
Chris won the Championship Event in 2000, now famously chronicled
in James McManus' Positively Fifth Street. It was his second bracelet
that year, following his win in the 7-Card Stud Event. A well-rounded
player, he won his next bracelet in the 2001 Omaha Hi/Lo Split event,
followed by two more wins in 2003.
Since he started playing the World Series, he has won more bracelets
(5), made more final tables (25), and had more money finishes (42)
than any other player. With his recent World Series of Poker Circuit
win and another final table finish, Chris has earned more than $4,000,000
playing poker in the WSOP and WSOP circuit alone. It's unlikely
that he'll be broke again any time soon.
Chris recently returned to the world of online poker, this time
applying his own ideas to improve Internet poker. He put together
a team of players and programmers to design the software for FullTiltPoker.com,
and now focuses on ensuring that Full Tilt Poker's customers have
the best software and the best games in the industry.
His talent with playing cards doesn't stop at the poker table.
He is well known for his ability to cut a carrot in half by throwing
a regular playing card from a distance of 10 feet. When he's not
slicing vegetables, you can probably find Chris dancing West Coast
Swing in a local club. Whether it's cutting up a fruit salad or
cutting a rug, he is constantly challenging himself to learn something
new. Because although UCLA may have told him it was time to go,
Chris has never really left school. |