David Williams Poker Twitter
- Nickname: D-Dub
- Facebook: dwpoker
- Twitter: @dwpoker
- Website: www.davidwilliamspoker.com
- Birthdate: 9th June 1980
- Birthplace: Arlington, Texas
- Residence: Las Vegas, Nevada
- WSOP Bracelets: 1
- Biggest Win: $3,500,000
- Total Winnings: $8,388,658
- Sponsored by: PokerStars
- Sponsor Site Username: dwilliams
David Williams looked the epitome of cool at the final of the WSOP 2004 with a smart black shirt, stubble and designer shades but, he is the first to admit that though he has always tried to disguise the fact, he is a ‘geek.’ From 2004 to early 2010 David was a Bodog Poker pro, since June 2010 he has been a member of the elite Team PokerStars.
Do you know David Williams’s Twitter account, Instagram profile, Youtube channel or Facebook page? Let’s check out: Professional poker player who became a celebrity in the gambling world for becoming the runner-up in the 2004 World Series of Poker. David Williams was a contestant on Season 7 of MasterChef. He was the co-runner-up of that season. 1 Personality 2 Season 7 2.1 Episode 1 2.2 Episode 2 2.3 Episode 3 2.4 Episode 4 2.5 Episode 5 2.6 Episode 6 2.7 Episode 7 2.8 Episode 8 2.9 Episode 9 2.10 Episode 10 2.11 Episode 11 2.12 Episode 12 2.13 Episode 13 2.14 Episode 14 2.15 Episode 15 2.16 Episode 16 2.17 Episode 17 2.18 Episode 18/19. Page 1 of Tweets by poker pro David Williams with up to date Twitter posts. Sign In / Register. Since 1988, CardPlayer has provided poker players with poker strategy, poker news. David and Bodog Poker made a fantastic team for a long time and they could not be parting at a better time. David has been one of the world’s best poker players for many years, and his success in the WPT was the cherry on top- Bodog Poker wishes him well! DanM says: May 5th, 2010 at 8:42am.
He was born in 1980 in Texas and raised by his mother, Shirley, having never known his Iranian father. It was just the two of them, playing scrabble and video games together, until his sister, Tina, came along when David was eight. When his mother was on the other side of the world, through her work as an air hostess, the pair were shipped off to their grandparents though David was often bored there and by the age of twelve had started to stay home alone.
Williams began to play the fantasy card game ‘Magic: the Gathering’ and found he was remarkably good at it. At the same time his mother discovered he was far brighter than his peers at school and enrolled him in a school for gifted children. He says that ‘he hung with the cool kids’ but would return home to watch the Science Channel, finish his homework and play his beloved ‘Magic.’ Soon he was starting to enter tournaments in the game around the world.
The ‘Magic’ circuit does tend to attract a more obsessive type of character to it and though overall he won over $40,000 at the game, he was banned for a year for using a pack that was slightly bent which cut to the same card each time the judges tried. Williams refutes the claim that he was trying to cheat, pointing out that the bent card was actually one of the weaker ones but the ban stood.
The lack of tournament play in ‘Magic: the Gathering’ meant that Williams focused his time on his studies and online Texas hold’em poker instead.
David Williams MasterChef Wiki Fandom
He got accepted into the highly rated Princetown University but found it cold on the East coast and feeling homesick, he returned to Dallas to continue his Economics degree at Southern Methodist University. He started entering small live poker tournaments in 2000, continued playing online, built up his bankroll and in 2004 won a seat in the WSOP through Bodog.com.
Though achieving a second place finish in 2004 in what was, at the time, the largest World Series Of Poker (WSOP) main event field should be considered an amazing achievement, Williams suffered a crisis of confidence. Luckily, it didn’t last too long and four months later he won a Limit Hold’em Borgata Open World Poker Tour (WPT) tournament and over $550K. Two years later in 2006 he managed his first WSOP bracelet at 7 card stud winning $163K. In 2009 playing under the name RugDoctor he won $107K in the World Championship of Online Poker (WCOOP). In 2010 he won the World Poker Tour Championship taking home over 1.5 million dollars. Occasionally, he still enters ‘Magic: the Gathering’ tournaments but nowadays he says it is just for fun.
David continues to play poker online and this earns him a healthy income. However, he misses reading the body language of his opponents so this self-confessed nerd plays in local underground games, live tournaments and continues to make an impact finishing regularly in the money. David keeps his winnings in the family having provided a bankroll for his mother, Shirley Williams, to start playing the game too. She even outlasted him in the WSOP main event in 2006.
Williams has been described as part of the new breed of poker player who are young, intelligent (he has a SAT score of 1550) and who learnt the game playing on the internet. All this is true but he has still transferred his ability into the live arena, something a little bit of ‘Magic’ helped him to do.
WSOP 2004
David Williams had been short-stacked and looking favourite to be the last man eliminated before the final table seats were decided in the 2004 WSOP Texas Hold’em main event. It was his first time in the tournament and he was desperate to be amongst the select nine. He had been playing somewhat cagily but eventually doubled up after hitting an ace on the turn for a pair against a pair of pocket tens.
Later on the following day, it was just him and Greg Raymer left and Williams was no longer content with the final table finish. He wanted to win. He had been playing faster and looser than the previous day and this tactic had got him to this position. He was holding A♥ 4♠ and caught a middle pair when the flop came out 4♦ 2♦ 5♠. Raymer called and so Williams placed a $500,000 bet and was promptly re-raised. The turn was a 2♥ and William’s hand just kept on improving. Raymer announced a $2.5million bet and before he had even moved his chips in, Williams was stacking an equivalent amount for the pot. The river card was a 2♣ giving Williams a full house and causing the crowd to gasp.
Raymer turned to the dealer and said ‘All in.’ Williams, his hand covering his mouth, studied the board for some moments and called with the rest of his chips. He flipped his cards over, shrugged his shoulders and turned his palms to the sky in an expression of disappointment as he saw Raymer’s cards, 8♠ 8♦. Later he would say that he had felt Raymer had made his moves quicker than usual so he hadn’t expected him to be holding a middle pair and, despite being $3.5million dollars richer, he looked a dejected figure as he watched Raymer celebrate.
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Last updated May 2013