where did Jeff Madsen come from?

SixFive

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Looks to be some unknown guy that is just kicking ass at the WSOP this year. 4 final tables which includes 2 number 3s and 2 bracelets. Wonder what his story is?

JeffMadsen.jpg


JEFF MADSEN OF LOS ANGELES, CA, UNITED STATES
Lifetime Winnnings: $1,467,852 * (equal to the 4 tourneys at this years WSOP)

2006 POY Rank: 2

Most Recent Cash: $65,971 : Seven Card Stud

High-Low 8/OB TOURNAMENT/EVENT DATE PLACE WINNINGS
2006 37th Annual World Series of Poker
Seven Card Stud High-Low 8/OB 07/26/2006 3 $65,971.00

2006 37th Annual World Series of Poker
No-Limit Hold'em Short Handed 6/Table 07/22/2006 1 $643,381.00

2006 37th Annual World Series of Poker
No-Limit Hold'em 07/16/2006 1 $660,948.00

2006 37th Annual World Series of Poker
Omaha High-Low 8/OB 07/05/2006 3 $97,552.00
 

Terryray

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Nolan Dalla's writeup on Madsen

Nolan Dalla's writeup on Madsen

You?ve Got to be Kidding!

Jeff Madsen Wins Gold Bracelet Number Two!

21-year old college student sets World Series of Poker record unlikely to ever be broken

Las Vegas, NV ? The unthinkable happened on July 22, 2006 when 21-year-old Jeff Madsen won his second gold bracelet within a week. Even more remarkable is the fact that Madsen turned ?21? just six weeks ago. This was Madsen?s third final table at this year?s World Series of Poker, presented by Milwaukee?s Best Light. He is one of only two players to hold such a distinction. Madsen now has two firsts and one third-place finish on his WSOP resume.

No player has ever skyrocketed to the top of the poker world so quickly, or so effortlessly. Not Stu Ungar. Not Johnny Chan. Not Phil Hellmuth. At 21, Ungar was still hustling gin games in New York. Chan was washing dishes in his parent?s restaurant. Hellmuth was a University of Wisconsin student, playing in $20 buy-in hold?em games. Contrast those memoirs with Jeff Madsen, who already has two gold bracelets and $1,401,881 in WSOP winnings. And, here?s a notion that should make the poker world shake and shudder ? he?s not finished yet.

The $5,000 buy-in Short-Handed No-Limit Hold?em world championship attracted 507 entries. The tournament was played six players to a table. After 498 players had been eliminated over two long days, finalists took the final table on the Rio poker stage.

The six players comprised a tough lineup, most notably two former gold bracelet winners -- ?Captain Tom? Franklin and Jeff Madsen. Noted tournament professional Erick Lindgren was also competing for his first WSOP win. When play began, Jonathan Gaskell enjoyed a comfortable chip lead. Jeff Madsen was dead last in the chip count coming into the final table. That would certainly not be the case seven hours later, when the tournament ended and history was made.

Name Chip Count Seat
Tony Woods $354,000 1
Jonathan Gaskell $727,000 2
Captain Tom Franklin $365,000 3
Erick Lindgren $448,000 4
Paul Foltyn $438,000 5
Jeff Madsen $201,000 6

Paul Foltyn had a rough time at the final table. He was eliminated about two hours into play after taking a number of tough beats that left him severely short-stacked. Foltyn, a 22-year-old college student from England, was forced to play a weak hand and missed completely. He collected $83,402 for sixth place.

Proving that having chips at the start had no bearing on the outcome, the early big stack Jonathan Gaskell was the next player to go bust. Gaskell, another English player, experienced his Waterloo when his pocket kings were cracked by Erick Lindgren?s ace-king. Lindgren certainly didn?t like the view when the cards were tabled. But agony turned into ecstasy when an ace rained down on the river, giving Lindgren a monster-sized pot and the chip lead. Meanwhile, Gaskell was aghast and hit the rail in fifth place, good for a less-than-satisfying payout totaling $119,145.

Tony Woods went out next. The 41-year-old poker pro from California lost with ace-king to Erick Lindgren?s pocket jacks. Woods failed to hit his pair, which meant a fourth-place finish and $150,123 in prize money.

This was ?Captain? Tom Franklin?s second final table appearance this year. Franklin, a Vietnam veteran turned poker pro from Gulfport, Mississippi, went card dead at the worst possible time of the tournament. His two opponents -- Madsen and Lindgren -- applied relentless pressure, forcing Franklin into repeated folds when he could not call a large bet or a raise after missing the flop. Franklin?s final hand came when he hit top pair, but was out kicked by Jeff Madsen. Franklin?s queen-ten lost to Madsen?s king ten, after a ten flopped. The Captain was saluted for his third-place finish, which paid $214,461.

Normally, a player in Madsen?s unique position would be a huge crowd favorite, when heads-up play commenced. But this was not the case. Erick Lindgren, described by many of his peers as ?the best poker player not to have won a WSOP gold bracelet,? attracted a rowdy cheering section. For a time, it looked like Lindgren would not disappoint his legion of fans. The Vegas poker pro enjoyed the chip lead during most of the duel, but then suffered a horrendous turn of events that left everyone in a stunned state of disbelief.

After taking a few beats and losing coin flip situations (Lindgren?s pocket eights losing to Madsen?s ace-king when an ace flopped completely changed the momentum of the contest), Lindgren lost his final hand of the night holding ace-jack suited versus Madsen?s queen-nine. The final board showed K-Q-2-5-3 ? good for a pair of queens for Madsen.

Erick Lindgren could not have been more disappointed with a $357,435 payoff. No amount of consolation could ease the painful sting of defeat. However, like Gentleman John Gale the previous year ? who lost a WSOP tournament in the most dramatic way possible, only to come back and win an event this year ? Erick Lindgren?s day shall come.

The question everyone is now asking is ? what will Jeff Madsen do next? He will be competing for what could be a record-third gold bracelet over the next week. Madsen will also play in the main event, which begins on July 28th. But beyond that, what does a 21-year-old college student do with $1.4 million and two WSOP titles?

Demonstrating maturity and composure far beyond his years, Madsen said he expects to return to college in the fall for his senior year. The Cal State-Santa Barbara film student still wants to pursue a career in movies. Perhaps Jeff Madsen?s first film should be a remake of ?Kid Millions.?

by Nolan Dalla
 

Terryray

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Nolan Dalla's writeup on Madsen's first win

Nolan Dalla's writeup on Madsen's first win

A Summer Job that Pays $20,000 an Hour

Jeff Madsen Becomes the Youngest Winner in WSOP History

21-year-old UC-Santa Barbara college student wins $660,948


Las Vegas, NV ? For the third consecutive year, the record for youngest World Series of Poker winner has been broken. Back in 2004, Gavin Griffin became the youngest player in history to win a gold bracelet. Even then, with so many young people turned on to poker, it seemed just a matter of time before a younger star would emerge and eclipse the record. Next came 2005, when Eric Froehlich won the $1,500 buy in Limit Hold'em championship. At 21 years, three months, and three days of age, Froehlich established a new benchmark for the youngest poker champion. Now in 2006, the record has been shattered again.

Jeff Madsen, age 21 years, one month, and nine days, has likely set a record that will not be broken for quite some time. Madsen defeated a whopping 1,578 players, who each put up $2,000 to enter Event #22 on this year?s World Series of Poker schedule. First place paid $660,948. Not bad for a young college student preparing to return to school next month for his senior year.

It took two long days to eliminate most of the huge field. On Day Three, the nine finalists took the stage at the Rio Las Vegas to play for the championship. The final table included several well-established tournament veterans. However, this was the first open event in 2006 not to include at least one former gold bracelet winner.

Name Chip Count Seat #
Troy Parkins $451,000 1
Bob Bright $365,000 2
Billy Duarte $102,000 3
Jeff Madson $413,000 4
Julian Gardner $628,000 5
Michael Chow $125,000 6
Robert Dylon Cohen $419,000 7
John Shipley $166,000 8
Paul Sheng $569,000 9

John Shipley was the first player out. The British pro was low on chips and was forced to play a sub-par hand in the end, resulting in elimination. Shipley, who won the European Poker Tour championship in London two years ago and also made the final table of the WSOP main event in 2002 (one of two players at this table to do so), received $60,349 for ninth place.

Billy Duarte, who has been playing poker for 60 years and made several final tables at major tournaments in recent years, was the next player to exit. Duarte arrived as the low stack and went out on the 10th hand of play holding ace-eight suited. His opponent had king-jack suited and flopped a jack. Duarte locked up eighth place, which paid $71,845.

Michael Chow followed next with pocket nines, which lost to pocket jacks.
Chow, 230th in the main event last year (out of 5,619 entries), took seventh place. The Hawaiian said ?aloha? and pocketed $83,340.

Robert Bright went out in sixth place with pocket fours, which were steamrolled by a straight. Bright, the CEO of a stock trading firm, cashed out for $94,835 in prize money.

Robert Dylan Cohen was the next player to exit. The New York actor and comedian turned poker player was low on chips and lost his final hand with jack-ten versus pocket queens. Cohen had to settle for fifth place, which paid $112,077.

A few hands later, Troy Parkins made a very bold move with an all-in bet on a straight draw. Jeff Madsen made a tough call holding top pair. When Parkins missed his draw, it meant a fourth-place finish. Parkins, an information technology specialist from Leesburg, Virginia collected $132,194.

Julian Gardner hoped to become the third main event runner-up to win a gold bracelet this year. So far, Sammy Farha (2003) and David Williams (2004) have won events. Gardner finished second in 2002 to world champion Robert Varkonyi (earning $1.1 million). This time he could do no better than third place. On his final hand, Gardner had top pair but lost to Jeff Madsen?s spade flush. Gardner, one of England?s top poker players, received $172,427 in prize money.

When heads-up play began, Jeff Madsen enjoyed a slightly better than 2 to 1 chip lead versus Paul Sheng. It didn?t take long for the final hand of the tournament to come. Madsen had jack-seven versus Sheng?s ace-seven. Madsen?s hand was completely dominated, normally a bad situation. But all the chips went into the pot on the turn when the board showed 10-9-8-6. Both players had a seven, good for a straight. However, Madsen also had a jack, which meant a higher straight. It was a brutal way for Sheng to lose, but there was not much defense against a higher straight.

As the runner up, Paul Sheng received $330,485. The Taiwanese-born software executive, who now lives in San Francisco, had his best showing ever at the WSOP. This is Sheng?s third year to play on poker?s biggest stage and certainly won?t be his last.

Following his win, Jeff Madsen demonstrated why he has been so successful in poker at such a young age. Madsen displayed none of the bravado that one might expect from someone who had just won $660,948 at the World Series. Remarkably, this was Madsen?s second big cash at this year?s WSOP. He also finished third in the Omaha High-Low championship held two weeks ago ? good for $97,552.

Madsen is currently a film student at UC-Santa Barbara. He says he hopes to eventually get into film and perhaps try his hand at directing. ?I will definitely finish college,? Madsen said afterward. ?College is very important, so it will be part of my life. But the reality is -- I?m still young, so I have some time to figure things out.?

Despite his youth, Madsen has played live casino poker for nearly three years. He played regularly at various California Indian casinos near his home, where the legal gambling age is 18. Due to Nevada state law, this is the first year he was eligible to play at the WSOP.

Madsen expects that his record might stand for quite some time. ?It?s going to be tough (to break),? Madsen said. ?I?m just lucky that my birthday was so close. It?s going to be hard, since I?m 21 and one month. It will sure be tough to break that record.?


by Nolan Dalla

Note: All content in this report may be re-printed by media.
 

SpursDynasty

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he was actually a real bad cash game player, I played with him quite a bit at the indian casino here last winter break, but I guess as a tourney player he turned it around.

quite amazing.
 

SixFive

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SpursDynasty said:
he was actually a real bad cash game player, I played with him quite a bit at the indian casino here last winter break, but I guess as a tourney player he turned it around.

quite amazing.

sounds like you needed to be in Vegas playing the WSOP!! Should give you confidence should you ever decide to go.
 

saint

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Article from SI:

The Prince of Poker
21-year-old Jeff Madsen is the surprise star of the WSOP


By Ramona Shelburne

At some point, Jeff Madsen will get used to this whole youngest-player-ever-to-win-a-World-Series-of-Poker-bracelet thing. But for at least the next week or so, he'll still be getting the hang of it. You see, people who win multiple bracelets and $1.4 million aren't supposed to worry about getting a room at the Rio Hotel in Las Vegas, which hosts the WSOP main event.

Jeff Madsen puts on his best poker face during a recent World Series of Poker event.
Jeff Madsen puts on his best poker face during a recent World Series of Poker event.
AP

It's only been a few days since Madsen, a 21-year, 1-month, 19-day-old film student from UC Santa Barbara won the second of his two WSOP gold bracelets. He's still carrying a rather endearing innocence about going from college student to poker god in less than a week.

"I got a room at the Rio for the next three days, but after that, I'll have to move somewhere else since they're all booked,'' he said. "I thought about dropping the fact that I won two bracelets, but I don't know if the people at Suite Reservations really care."

Umm. Here's guessing that poker's resident brat, Phil Hellmuth, wouldn't be having this kind of problem.

Maybe it's better, though, if Madsen doesn't stay at the luxury all-suite hotel. After all, he came to Vegas two weeks ago with a college buddy and just enough money to pay for his buy-ins at the WSOP. They booked the cheapest room they could find -- $80 a night at the Hooters Casino -- and played in small-time cash games up and down the Strip to help pay for it and their board.

"He'd never been to Vegas before, so I didn't want him to get lost,'' said Matt Poldberg, 23, Madsen's buddy from UC-Santa Barbara who makes enough money from playing poker online and in Los Angeles-area casinos to live a comfortable life in Isla Vista, the college town next to their school.

`"I wasn't going to go until the Omaha event, but he actually asked me to come with him and show him around," Poldberg said. "I've been to Vegas five or six times, so I went about a week-and-a-half earlier than I'd planned. What was I going to do, let him go to the biggest tournament in the world and sit in a hotel room by himself in a city he's never been in before?''

Here's the thing, though: This was no Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure. Madsen planned on winning this thing. It's how he sold his parents on letting him take $6,000 from his college fund and a $3,500 loan (he insisted on repaying it) from his parents to pay for his buy-ins to six WSOP events.

"`We actually talked about (lending) him the money two or three months before,'' said his mother, Harriet. ``But he convinced us because he said he could do well. I've always taught my children to believe in themselves, so why should I stop now? I have no worries about my son being a gambler. He's in it because he's a competitor and he loves the strategy. Anything he does, he does it very, very deeply. So he's pretty deeply into being a student of poker.''

Still, it's not like Madsen had a long resume to base his confidence on. His biggest wins before his $1.4-million score at the WSOP were a couple of $2,000 checks from Sunday tournaments at the Chumash Indian Casino (which allows 18-year-olds to gamble) in Santa Ynez, Calif. Somehow, though, he knew he was ready for the big time. He'd read just about every book ever written on the game, studied every pro on TV and played enough hours at Chumash to feel like he could read other players' hands better than they could read their own.

Madsen admitted to a few butterflies when he saw poker legend Doyle Brunson strut across the room on the first day. But pretty soon, he was getting chummy with one of the game's best.

"Chris Ferguson sat next to me at the first tournament,'' Madsen said. "I wasn't intimidated or anything because I've watched him on TV a lot, so I know how he plays and he doesn't know how I play.''

Instead of talking poker, Madsen asked Ferguson -- better known as "Jesus'' in the poker world (for his looks and style of play) -- about high school. "I knew he was from Pacific Palisades (Calif.) so I asked him if he went to Palisades High, like me, and he did,'' Madsen said.

At one point, another player at the table told Madsen that he'd better watch out for Ferguson -- as if the kid didn't know who he was. Ferguson laughed and told the guy that he'd better watch out for the kid, who was rapidly amassing a huge chip stack. "That was cool of him,'' Madsen said. ``It showed he respected me as a player.''

By the end of his second tournament victory on Saturday, Madsen was coolly facing one of poker's stare-down kings, Erick Lindgren, in the $5,000 short-handed no-limit Hold'em event final. After his first bracelet win -- in the $2,000 No-Limit Hold'em Event on July 17 -- there was plenty of room for the skeptics out there to call Madsen a fluke. Poker involves a fair amount of luck. The WSOP is a different beast. An amateur can get on a rush and make a final table once. It's been happening with greater frequency in recent years as the sport grew in popularity. But with a field as big as the WSOP, and a talent pool as deep, it's fair to say that two victories in less than a week is more than a rush.

Madsen insists it won't change him ... much. Unlike many of the young guns who've scored big at the WSOP, Madsen plans on returning to UCSB in the fall to complete his degree in film studies. He's planning on being the same old Jeff, too. Nice guy, a film major with a lot of night classes, who likes to go out in downtown Santa Barbara with his buddies on a Friday night.

``I know he went out and bought some Lacoste shirts after he won. But he's still wearing skater shoes,'' Poldberg said. ``Next year, he might wear some nicer clothes more often, but as far as his priorities, I don't think he'll change much.''

Nicer clothes aside, the biggest difference to Madsen's daily life will probably come on weekends. Instead of driving a half-hour to Chumash, he might jet to Aruba for a World Poker Tour event.

`"One-point-four million: It's so ridiculous I don't know what to say," he said. "It's like, `I guess I have a lot of money now and I can buy stuff.' ... But I'm just trying to focus on winning bracelets and playing good poker.''

One thing he's got to work on, though, is putting those gold bracelets to work.

After winning his second bracelet on Saturday, Madsen was invited to party at the hot nightclub Pure. He was still wearing the same outfit from earlier in the day, and the bouncer wasn't going to let him in with skater shoes.

"He wasn't like, `Dude, do you know who I am?' '' Poldberg said. "He was like, 'Whatever, let's go someplace we can all hang out.' That's just the kind of guy Jeff is."
 

SpursDynasty

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hand highlights from the heads up match between him and Erik Lindgren.

111. On a flop of J66, Jeff Madsen bets $20,000 and Lindgren makes the call. The turn is the J and Madsen bets $25,000. Lindgren mucks his hand.

112. Madsen limps from the small blind and Lindgren checks. The flop comes Q63 and Lindgren checks. Madsen bets $20,000 and Lindgren calls. The turn is the K and Lindgren checks. Madsen fires $40,000 and Lindgren calls. The river is the 9 and Lindgren checks again. Madsen bets $75,000 and Lindgren folds.

113. Lindgren raises to $50,000 from the button and Madsen folds.

114. On a flop of 1062, Lindgren bets $20,000 and Madsen calls. The turn is the 8 and Lindgren checks. Madsen bets $35,000 and Lindgren calls. The river is the 5 and Lindgren checks again. Madsen fires $65,000 and Lindgren makes the call. Madsen turns over Q8 for a pair of eights. Lindgren mucks and Madsen wins the pot.

115. Lindgren raises to $40,000 from the button and Madsen calls. The flop comes 976 and Madsen checks. Lindgren bets $40,000 and Madsen calls. The turn is the J and Madsen checks. Lindgren bets $80,000 and Madsen folds.

116. Lindgren gets a walk on his big blind.

117. Erick Lindgren bets $40,000 from the button and Jeff Madsen calls. The flop comes 963 and Madsen checks. Lindgren bets $45,000 and Madsen calls. The turn is the A, Madsen checks and Lindgren bets $90,000. Madsen calls and the river the 10. Madsen bets $150,000 and Lindgren folds. Madsen shows the 2 as he rakes the pot.

118. Madsen limps and Lindgren checks. The flop comes Q82 and both players check. The turn is the 4 and Lindgren bets $20,000. Madsen folds and Lindgren wins the pot.

119. Lindgren raises to $40,000 and Madsen calls. The flop comes KJ3, Madsen bets $35,000 and Lindgren folds.


159. Lindgren raises to $50,000 and Madsen reraises to $170,000. Lindgren moves all in immediately and Madsen calls all in for $814,000, showing 88. Lindgren turns over A K . The board comes A 9 8 2 4 and Jeff Madsen has doubled up.

Lindgren raises to $50,000 and Madsen calls. The flop comes J102 and Madsen bets $60,000. Lindgren makes the call and the turn is the 4. Madsen fires $100,000 and Lindgren calls. The river is the J and Madsen bets $200,000. Lindgren thinks for a long time before folding. Madsen shows 65 for six high and rakes the pot
 

Terryray

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his Card Player interview

his Card Player interview

he sez he's gonna "try to finish" his last year at school. Reminds me of David Williams saying he was going back to SMU to study economics after he won that $3.5 million second place. He ended up moving to Las Vegas---and that IV/UCSB party scene is way more distracting than anything at SMU!

............................



published on: Saturday Jul 29, 2006

Going 12 Rounds with Jeff Madsen

Two Bracelets for WSOP Young Gun

Like his favorite character from the movie Fight Club, Jeff Madsen has rebelled against popular thought by taking matters into his own hands. Taking after the crazy alter ego of the movie?s main character, Tyler Durden, Madsen recently unleashed a campaign of utter mayhem upon the World Series of Poker, leaving a wake of players wondering exactly what hit them.

In Fight Club, Durden says that real life isn?t supposed to be so good. ?We?ve all been raised on television to believe that one day we?d be millionaires, and movie gods, and rock stars. But we won?t. And we?re slowly learning that fact. And we?re very pissed off,? Durden said in the movie. With his recent wins, however, Madsen has shown the exact opposite to be true.

Although this famous movie line may apply to most people who play poker, for film student Madsen the film?s gritty reality is not the world he lives in. At 21 and seven weeks, he became the youngest player to defy big odds and won a World Series of Poker bracelet in the $2,000 no-limit hold?em event. Madsen didn?t just stop there. Four days after winning his first title, he won another bracelet in the $5,000 short-handed no-limit tournament.

With two bracelets and three final table appearances at this year?s WSOP, Madsen has exploded onto the poker scene. Leaving no trace of his competitors, Madsen has railed pros and amateurs alike, showing no mercy on his way to earning over $1.4 million at this year?s Series.

Card Player caught up with Madsen after his second bracelet victory and sat down with the young champ to find out what makes him tick.

Michael Friedman: Where were you born?
Jeff Madsen: Santa Monica, California.

MF: When?
JM: June, 7, 1985. I?m 21 years and 7 weeks old.

MF: Where do you live now?
JM: I live in Los Angeles, but I go to college in Santa Barbra. I was raised in Los Angeles, spending my whole life in the same house until I went to college.

MF: How long have you been playing poker?
JM: About four years. I really started playing when I first got to college.

MF: What first got you involved with the game?
JM: My friends really got me into it. It was more casual at first, but once I got to college, I found a nearby Indian casino that would let me play. I started going there a lot and it took off from there.

MF: Was there a defining moment when you realized that poker was going to be your game?
JM: They had a weekly tournament at the casino that I won the first time I played it. It is their biggest event and that made me feel really comfortable. I knew I had a chance to make money and play poker for a living.

MF: What is your major at college and what is it like for you?
JM: I am majoring in film studies. It?s a very social life and the weather is nice. It?s a small little college community and I enjoy being there.

MF: What?s the poker scene like on campus?
JM: It?s good. They have occasional poker tournaments on campus and plenty of home games around. With the casino close by, there are a lot of good players around.

MF: What have you taken from your studies to the felt?
JM: I guess it would just be studying itself. I?ve read a lot of poker books and treated it like a class at first. I really learned to be patient and stay focused.

MF: Were you playing a lot of online poker at the time?
JM: I?ve never really played a lot online. I?ve gone through phases when I?ve played for a little bit, but I?m much more of a live player.

MF: What were you playing live?
JM: I played mostly small limits and built my bankroll. I was playing mostly $2-$5 no limit with a $200 buy-in. Before the World Series, however, I really didn?t have a large bankroll. I really didn?t have much of a chance to play a lot last year, so I wasn?t working with much. I had to borrow money to play in the Series. My parents actually lent me money so I could play.

MF: So you parents supported your play?
JM: My parents have always known I played poker and I convinced them that I was a good player. I explained that I could make money at the World Series and they helped me out. I also borrowed money from my college fund that my grandfather had put away for me. I got just enough money to play in six tournaments and make a run for the final event.

MF: How do they feel about your play now that you?ve won two bracelets and $1.4 million?
JM: They?re really proud of me and excited. Before, like every parent, I think they were skeptical of me playing poker and gambling. When I started winning tournaments they came to see that I could really play.


MF: What is your favorite aspect of the game?
JM: I just love the sheer competition of it. The one-on-one play and the ?you versus him? aspect. I love the psychological portion of the game. I love trying to read my opponents and put them on a hand. It?s always fun to try and figure out other players? patterns and get inside their heads.

MF: How important is the math versus reading a player?
JM: I think the math used to be important to me. Now math really isn?t anything any more; it?s automatic. Today I focus more on reading players and seeing their tendencies. Math only comes in when you have to call for pot odds. I use math maybe 10 percent of the time.

MF: Who was your toughest read on the way to your first bracelet?
JM: There were a lot of players who acted the same and have the same patterns. This event had a lot of good pros playing. Probably the most difficult was John Juanda, but I picked up a lot of information on most of the players. I just used what I learned and played my hand accordingly. I really didn?t have that much trouble because I think I have a talent for understanding the psychological aspects of the game.

MF: Define your playing style.
JM: I play hyper-aggressive. I?m a ?feel? player. I tend to move away from the mathematics and focus on what players are doing at the tables. Every situation is different. It depends on the player, your position at the time, as well as other things.

MF: How do you feel about luck?
JM: On any given day, luck can be a huge factor. It can be 100 percent, but in the long run, no one can continually win based on just being lucky. In the long run, the game is 99 percent skill. For me to have four cashes in four different events shows that it was more than just luck for me. Everybody has to get good cards to win, but that doesn?t mean they can outplay everyone else.

MF: Do you feel you have made a reputation for yourself with the four cashes in four different events?
JM: Hopefully the pros will give me some respect. Sometimes it works out better that they don?t.

MF: Are you more of a tournament or a cash game player?
JM: I?ve always been a tournament player. I play cash games, but more for practice than anything else. I?m pretty much a tournament specialist.

MF: What books did you read on poker to help your game?
JM: Super/System and Harrington?s books. I read some of T.J. Cloutier?s stuff as well. My first book was Phil Hellmuth?s Play Poker with the Pros, so I remember that one the most. It was a good one for beginners.

MF: Who has influenced your game?
JM: People keep asking me that and I say Phil Ivey. He?s really focused and calm all the time. His style is fearless and he is also a ?feel? player. I spent a lot of time watching his play over the last four years.

MF: What happens when you go one-on-one against Phil Ivey?
JM: I?m just thinking about what he?s thinking. I?m going to try and get in his head and figure out what he?s doing. I?ve watched him on television and pretty much understand the way he plays. I think we would be a great heads-up match. I play a lot like him. It would be interesting to see if I would be able to get a read on him.

MF: While you?re watching another player?s tells, are you focusing on your own?
JM: I try to be conscious of how I act. Seeing how people read you is another big aspect of the game. It?s a challenge to sometimes give off tells to get people to do what you want them to do.

MF: How tough is the playing at the WSOP?
JM: It?s tough being here and playing in so many events. Sometimes they just take so long. It can be grueling but it?s fun because it is on the biggest stage in the world. Just knowing that makes it worth it.

MF: What does it take to win in a large field?
JM: Besides getting good cards, you just have to play your game and stay focused. It?s all about being aggressive and taking it to other players. If you sit back and get blinded down, you?re never going to win a tournament.

MF: Which is more important, the bracelets or the money?
JM: At this point, definitely the bracelets. The money was good at first, because I didn?t have any money. I had to win if I wanted to play more poker. At this point though, the titles are what counts.

MF: Take readers through your first final table appearance.
JM: I was the chip leader in the Omaha event and just played well the whole way. I was happy to make it, but I wanted to win. I thought I was going to be nervous, but I really wasn?t. I just played my game and finished third and made $100,000. It was just so much money for me, so I was happy. It was really cool to play against Negreanu as well.

MF: What was it like winning the first bracelet?
JM: It was kind of surreal. I came in at fourth or fifth in chips. There really weren?t any big pros at my table. I just thought I could do well. I had been playing with these guys for a couple of days now and had a pretty good feel for what I was doing. I knew if I played well I could take it down. I have to admit, I got lucky in a few situations like when my queens ran into aces, four-handed. I spiked a queen on the flop and got lucky. That hand made me the chip leader. Heads-up also only lasted one hand. It just happened so fast. It might have been a bit better if it had been a longer more drawn-out table.

MF: And the second bracelet?
JM: Winning four days later in the $5,000 short-handed event was just as good. I liked this tournament better because there were more pros playing. With a lot less people and more pros, the level of overall play was better. When it got down to the final table, I was short-stacked, but I really wasn?t worried. I basically sat back and let Erick Lindgren do all the work for me. He took out a few players and then I took out the last player. Then it was me and him battling heads-up.

He?s a pro, so I kind of know how he plays from watching him on television. I won a big race against him with ace-king and just tried to chip away at his 2-to-1 chip lead. Because I play a lot like him, I felt pretty comfortable being in his head and trying to figure out his motives during the heads-up play. When I won, it was a weird feeling. Two bracelets in one year doesn?t seem possible, but it happened.

MF: How hard will it be to sit in a classroom knowing you took down Erick Lindgren?
JM: It will be fun. In the middle of a boring lecture, I?ll be able to think about taking him down. I?m sure I?ll spend a lot of time looking forward to the next tournament I?m going to play.

MF: Your grandmother passed away during the tournament. How difficult was it to stay in the game?
JM: She had been sick and had cancer for a couple of years. She was doing fine, but a couple of weeks after I left for Vegas she got worse. It was tough. She was in the hospital and in serious condition. I tried to stay focused and play my game. My parents told me that things would be okay and that I shouldn?t let it affect me. I don?t really think I did. I guess I won it for her.

MF: On a lighter note, $1.4 million at 21, what?s the plan?
JM: It?s kind of ridiculous considering I?ve never seen more than $8,000 at once in my life. The $1.4 million is a number I can?t really grasp. I don?t know what I?m going to do with it yet. I haven?t even left Vegas so I?m not exactly sure. I definitely need a new car. I?m not going to gamble it away or be stupid about it. Obviously, I?m going to also play more poker with it.

MF: Are you going to finish school?
JM: I am going to try. I?m going back for my last year. It might be tough with all the stuff going on right now, but I?m going to try.

MF: What did you do to celebrate your victories?
JM: I haven?t really done much yet, no real crazy partying. For the second bracelet, I had a bunch of friends come up and we went out. I?ll party soon enough!
 
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