POKER HALL OF FAME ANNOUNCES CLASS OF 2012

Poker Hall of Fame Announces Class of 2012

Eric Drache & Brian “Sailor” Roberts Join Poker’s Most Exclusive Club

Induction Ceremony to be held Tuesday, October 30 at 3:30 pm in Rio’s Penn & Teller Theater as part of World Series of Poker® Main Event Final Table Festivities

LAS VEGAS (October 18, 2012) – Eric Drache and Brian “Sailor” Roberts will become the 43rd and 44th individuals to be inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame.  The two were nominated by the public and voted in by a 36-person panel made up of existing Poker Hall of Famers and members of the media, it was announced today by the Poker Hall of Fame Governing Council.

Drache and Roberts will be inducted officially on Tuesday, October 30 at 3:30 pm at the Rio All-Suite® Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas prior to the finale of the 2012 World Series of Poker Main Event.

The special induction ceremony and celebration will take place in the lobby of the Penn & Teller Theatre in the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino.

Roberts, who passed away in 1995, was part of poker’s old guard of Texas Road Gamblers along with fellow Hall of Famers Doyle Brunson and Amarillo Slim.

Drache, has contributed in a variety of ways to the game of poker over the past thirty years – including originally coming up with the idea to create the Poker Hall of Fame.  But his legacy likely will be the creation of “satellite” events – a series of smaller buy-in events that instead of awarding money, award seats into larger buy-in events.  This Drache-creation greatly expanded the ability for players to enter events, thus increasing player pools and their bankrolls.

“I’m not only surprised and honored to have been selected, I’m also a bit embarrassed considering the other nominees,” said the humble Drache.  “When Jack Binion and myself worked on creating the Hall of Fame, I never considered myself a potential candidate.  I’m particularly happy for the family of Sailor Roberts.  Sailor by everyone’s account, including my own personal observations, was a great player and played many games very well.”

Current Hall of Famer Crandell Addington on behalf of Sailor Roberts: “In a time fifty years ago when poker players relied on luck, Sailor was developing sophisticated strategies that would enable him to make his own luck,” said Addington. “At a time in which professional poker players were viewed as outlaws and poker was illegal, he formed a partnership with Doyle and Slim and they traveled across the country from poker game to poker game. They deployed advanced strategies unknown at the time that featured playing their opponents hands on many occasions rather than their own hands. More often than not, they got the money.”

The Poker Hall of Fame Governing Council would sincerely like to congratulate the other 2012 finalists all whom remain eligible for future induction: Chris Bjorin, David Chiu, Thor Hansen, George Hardie, Jennifer Harman-Traniello, John Juanda, Tom McEvoy and Scotty Nguyen.

About this year’s inductees:

It is impossible to single out one facet of Eric Drache’s poker career that stands out above the rest, for he is a man who has worn many hats over the years.  An accomplished Seven Card Stud player, Drache made five WSOP final tables over the course of his career, finishing in the top three every time.  In addition to a poker playing career spanning more than three decades, Drache also left his mark on the WSOP by serving as the event’s tournament director from 1973-1988. During that time, Drache came up with the concept of satellite events, forever changing the tournament poker landscape.  In his role as the card room manager of casinos like Silverbird, Mirage, and the Golden Nugget, he also helped to build up the Las Vegas poker scene.  Most recently, Drache had a hand in the television poker boom, serving as a consultant on numerous poker productions.

To anyone who knew him, Brian “Sailor” Roberts was truly one of the ‘good guys’ of the game. Along with his poker skill, Roberts’ wit, charm and reputable integrity served him well in cementing his place as one of poker’s legends. A gambler at his very core, the 1975 WSOP Main Event champion grew up in the small town of San Angelo, TX where at age 12 he made his first winnings shooting dice while working as a caddie. After serving in the Navy during the Korean War, Roberts returned home to Texas, where he met Doyle Brunson and Amarillo Slim. The three travelled throughout the south and Midwest in search of poker games and became known as the famous “Texas Rounders,” whose exploits have been romanticized over the years in both film and literature. A pillar of poker’s old guard, Roberts was beloved by his fellow gamblers. The two-time WSOP champion also finished eighth in the 1982 WSOP Main Event won by fellow Hall of Famer Jack “Treetop” Strauss.  Roberts passed away in 1995.

The Poker Hall of Fame, established in 1979, was acquired by Harrah’s Entertainment (now Caesars) along with the World Series of Poker in 2004.  Though the Hall of Fame is virtual in nature, its membership includes poker's most influential players and other important contributors to the game.  There are now 19 living members.

The main criteria for the Poker Hall of Fame are as follows:

• A player must have played poker against acknowledged top competition
• Be a minimum of 40 years old at time of nomination
• Played for high stakes
• Played consistently well, gaining the respect of peers
• Stood the test of time
• Or, for non-players, contributed to the overall growth and success of the game of poker, with indelible positive and lasting results.

The entire list of 44 Poker Hall of Fame members includes (alphabetical with year of induction in parenthesis):

o Tom Abdo (1982)
o Crandell Addington (2005)
o Bobby Baldwin (2003)
o Billy Baxter (2006)
o Lyle Berman (2002)
o Joe Bernstein (1983)
o Benny Binion (1990)
o Jack Binion (2005)
o Bill Boyd (1981)
o Doyle Brunson (1988)
o Johnny Chan (2002)
o T.J. Cloutier (2006)
o Nick Dandolos  (1979)
o Eric Drache (2012)
o Barbara Enright (2007)
o Fred “Sarge” Ferris (1989)
o T “Blondie” Forbes (1980)
o Henry Green (1986)
o Barry Greenstein (2011)
o Dan Harrington (2010)
o Murph Harrold (1984)
o Phil Hellmuth (2007)
o James Butler “Wild Bill” Hickok (1979)
o Red Hodges (1985)
o Edmond Hoyle (1979)
o Linda Johnson (2011)
o Berry Johnston (2004)
o Jack Keller (1993)
o Felton McCorquodale (1979)
o Roger Moore (1997)
o Johnny Moss (1979)
o Henry Orenstein (2008)
o Walter Clyde “Puggy” Pearson (1987)
o Julius Oral Popwell (1996)
o Thomas Austin “Amarillo Slim” Preston (1992)
o David “Chip” Reese (1991)
o Brian “Sailor” Roberts (2012)
o Erik Seidel (2010)
o Mike Sexton (2009) 
o Jack “Treetop” Straus (1988)
o Duane “Dewey” Tomko (2008)
o Stu “The Kid” Ungar (2001)
o Red Winn (1979)
o Sid Wyman (1979)

For more information on the Poker Hall of Fame, visit www.WSOP.com/phof
ABOUT THE POKER HALL OF FAME
The Poker Hall of Fame, established in 1979, was acquired by Harrah’s Entertainment along with the World Series of Poker in 2004.  Though the Hall of Fame is virtual in nature, its membership includes poker's most influential players and other important contributors to the game. There are now 19 living members, and 44 members have been bestowed the honor of Poker Hall of Famer.  The Poker Hall of Fame traditionally elects one or two members annually.  The enshrinement ceremony is now held in concert with the final table of the Main Event of the WSOP, held each Fall in Las Vegas.