8 responses

  1. Mike Alexakis
    September 28, 2020

    At the time when I watched that I was puzzled by some of the plays he made, it did seem like he was not focused on winning the title, it bothered me a little bit as an avid player to see a regular Joe on the cusp of the most coveted title in the game throw it away… Thank you for posting this tribute, it helped me understand the good man’s actions, and it brought me back to the top of the poker revolution, I do miss the time when poker was enjoying its heyday…

    Reply

  2. Goose
    September 28, 2020

    A friend of mine was involved in the tv production that year and I remember him telling me darvin really didn’t want to win. He had no interest in the fame or media attention. That year things ended exactly how he wanted

    Reply

  3. Kevin Lewis
    September 28, 2020

    Hasn’t that always been the appeal of the WSOP? It’s so much more luck- than skill-dependent that any random yahoo can ride the Train of Fortune to a big payday. It’s like a very slow lottery.

    Tellingly, neither Moneymaker nor Gold nor Yang ever won a significant poker event again. Moon apparently didn’t try, which makes you wonder what got into his head to enter in 2009. After all, Vegas doesn’t have any trees! (Except whatever is planted in the Bellagio conservatory.)

    Reply

    • jimmy jazz
      September 29, 2020

      Kevin,

      He won a small buy in satellite tourney. If you win that, you are going to go play in the biggest poker tournament in the world.

      I think if he could have separated winning from the all the attention, it would have made a difference. I’m sure him and his wife had a blast for the week they were in Las Vegas but probably never returned again. It’s great to see someone who wasn’t blinded by the money and fame. Rest in Peace, Mr. Moon. We can always use more gentlemen at the poker tables.

      Reply

  4. Mark
    September 29, 2020

    Seriously Kevin,

    Who are you to judge Darvin or anyone else’s motivation to play in the WSOP? He made the big show, made a plan (not to win) and executed it to perfection. Good on you Darvin!

    By the way some of us yahoo’s have the common decency not to bad mouth the dead. As the poster Jimmy Jazz says RIP Darvin. We need more like you!

    Reply

  5. Kevin Lewis
    September 29, 2020

    I didn’t “judge” Moon at all. I seriously wondered, given the information provided about his life and the things he liked to do, what made him up and go to Vegas for the first time in his life. It seems like he would have been a fish completely out of water.

    I’m sure that on his way to second place, he won a LOT (as in, dozens) of hands he “shouldn’t” have and knocked out a whole bunch of players who no doubt had things to say about him that were far more uncomplimentary than whatever you imagine I said.

    Reply

    • Blitzkrieg
      October 28, 2020

      Kevin, what made him up and go to Vegas for the first time in his life was that he won the satellite tourney to get him to Vegas. Had he not done that he wouldn’t have flown or drove to Vegas to enter the Main Event of the poker world, guaranteed. Moon was obviously a poker player back in his home state. NLHE is the same game in his home state as it is in Vegas or anywhere else for that matter be it a brick and mortar casino or a private home game. The rules and the game didn’t change to the point to where he didn’t know what he was doing, just the venue.

      Reply

  6. Blitzkrieg
    October 28, 2020

    Blair, on another note it would be nice if you could write an article about any underground poker games going on in Vegas in this current environment. Are people having more home poker games in Vegas in order to circumvent the draconian measures put in place by Vegas casinos in the Covid-19 era? Do many poker players in Vegas that you talk to believe that Covid-19 is as dangerous as the mainstream media makes it out to be? What is the consensus with poker players in Vegas who can sense if someone is bluffing or not?

    Reply

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