CasinoCityTimes.com

Home
Gaming Strategy
Featured Stories
News
Newsletter
Legal News Financial News Casino Opening and Remodeling News Gaming Industry Executives Author Home Author Archives Search Articles Subscribe
Newsletter Signup
Stay informed with the
NEW Casino City Times newsletter!
Vin Narayanan Archives
More Strategy Experts

Vin Narayanan Gaming Guru

author's picture
 

2015 WSOP Main Event November Nine Profile: Pierre Neuville

5 November 2015

By Vin Narayanan and Gary Trask

The Pierre Neuville File

The Pierre Neuville File


Age: 72

Hometown: Knokke-Heist, Belgium

Position: 4th

Chip Count: 21,075,000

Career WSOP Cashes: 19

Pierre Neuville was lying on his back on an operating table back in 2007, contemplating mortality, when he made a promise to himself. If he survived, he would pursue his lifelong dream of playing poker for a living.

It was a curious aspiration for the then-64-year-old Belgium native, who had suffered a life-threatening accident, since he hadn't actually played the game regularly for decades. In fact, his wife of 20 years, Claudine, thought he was hallucinating.

"She told the doctors to stop with the drugs because for some reason I thought I was a poker player," Neuville remembers with a laugh.

What Claudine didn't know was that her husband had been a closet poker fanatic for more than 40 years, even playing to help finance himself through Université libre de Bruxelles in the late 1960s. But when his prosperous business career took off shortly after he graduated, Neuville's days at the poker table were forced to take a back seat.

In 1969 he created a board game and started a successful toy company, which thrived to the point that it was bought by Hasbro in 1982. Neuville stayed on as a vice president for the company, which had a strict policy that its employees could not gamble or visit casinos.

Fast-forward to 2007, when Neuville was near death and about to undergo a sixth operation to save his life.

"I told myself, I have worked long enough — if I survive, the job is finished and I will play poker," he said.

Two months later, with his recovery going better than expected, Neuville made good on his promise to himself. He told his wife to pack their bags for the holidays and that they were going to the Bahamas for three weeks. The destination was chosen because the 2008 EPT PokerStars Caribbean Adventure was taking place at Paradise Island, just after the New Year.

Upon arrival, Claudine quickly realized the tournament her husband was about to enter was the real deal, with the likes of Greg Raymer, Daniel Negreanu and eventual winner Bertrand Grospellier in the field.

"She said to me, 'You can't play here. This is for real players,'" Neuville said. "On Day 1 she thought I would play for a few hours and meet her at the pool."

But Day 1 turned into surviving and playing Day 2. Three days later, Neuville was still alive and ended up finishing 18th, cashing for $48,000.

"That was my professional poker bankroll and it has never crashed," he said proudly. "It changed my life and it changed my wife's life, too."

Since that trip to the Bahamas, Neuville, who has also flourished as a personal life consultant to well-known clients such as golf legend Gary Player and actor Kevin Costner, has cashed in 39 EPT events and 19 WSOP events and has earned more than $3 million. Earlier this year he received a Lifetime Achievement Award at the European Poker Awards.

But the biggest moment of his poker career continues next week, when plays the final table of the World Series of Poker Main Event at the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino.

Neuville has the fourth-largest stack with 21,075,000 chips, and at the age of 72, he'll be trying to become the oldest Main Event winner in history — surpassing the late Johnny Moss, who won it in 1974 at 67 years old.

Casino City sat down with Neuville back in July, the day after he became the oldest player to reach the final table in the November Nine Era, and discussed his business background, how it has helped him at the poker table and why he thinks he has as good a chance as anybody to prevail.

How did your career as a businessman help you in the Main Event and make it to the final table?
When I first decided to stop my business career after 40 years and play poker, I had success very fast. I mixed my poker skill with all my business experience. I think everything I have done with my life has helped me at the poker table. Poker is such a rich game, those things can really help.
I look around (at the other members of the November Nine) and there are some young geniuses. Their minds work two or three times quicker than mine. But I can compensate with life experience and self-control.

Poker has helped me feel younger physically and mentally every year. I expect to do this for another 30 years (laughs).

Did poker come naturally to you, or did you really have to work at it to become so good?
When it comes to anything in life, you must be born for it. We don't know why, but Tiger Woods was born for golf. You could practice, practice and practice at something, but never become the best at it, because you weren't born for it.

When I started playing poker at the age of 14, I was very good, I must say. When I was playing at university, I was winning every day. I have been passionate about it ever since that time, even when I was not playing.

At what point of the Main Event did you think you had a chance to make the final table?
On the first day, during the first hour at the first table. When I enter a tournament, the first thing I do is focus on the whole tournament. I am a perfectionist. I know when the first bubble will be and I focus on it.

Visualization is so important. It's amazing to me that so many people sit down at the start of the tournament and have no idea when the first bubble will be. I always focus on making the bubble and then once I make it, I focus on making the final table.

Are you happy that there is a long break in the action before the final table will be played?
Yes. Because for the first time in five years, (the day after the final table was decided) I didn't have any desire to play poker. It's been very tough for me the last eight days, putting in 13-hour days. I am trying to beat the years. (On Day 7,) I was at my limit of resistance. Now the accomplishment is done and I can enjoy time off.

What has your wife thought of this whole process?
My wife is so happy. When I left my business and started to play poker for a living, she also stopped working. She was a high-level manager with a marketing firm, but she stopped working to help me. She pushes me. She's helping me all of the time. We really are a team.


This article is part of Casino City's series of WSOP November Nine profiles. Other articles include:

  • Neil Blumenfield: Find out why the 61-year-old from San Francisco almost didn't play in the Main Event after a personal setback.
  • Federico Butteroni: Thanks to a 12-month hiatus in Australia where he worked as a dishwasher and on a watermelon farm, the Italian poker pro is rejuvenated and primed to make a deep run at the WSOP Main Event final table.
  • Max Steinberg: After spending most of his time over the last 18 months focusing on daily fantasy sports, Steinberg finds himself among the final nine players at the World Series of Poker's Main Event.
  • Tom Cannuli: This 23-year-old wants to do "something huge" in poker. Winning the Main Event would certainly qualify.
  • Ofer Zvi Stern: With $3,500 in WSOP tournament lammers that would become worthless once Main Event registration closed, this Israeli businessman booked a flight to Las Vegas.
     

    Top 10 things to keep an eye on at the WSOP Main Event final table

    20 July 2015
    LAS VEGAS -- When Daniel Negreanu busted out of the World Series of Poker Main Event in 11th place, it felt like the air had been sucked out of the room. The fans in attendance had poured all their energy into supporting and rooting for the popular pro. And when he was eliminated, the fans were spent -- and trying to figure out who to root for next. ... (read more)
     

    Negreanu falls short of WSOP Main Event final table

    15 July 2015
    LAS VEGAS -- The World Series of Poker Main Event final table is set, and Joe McKeehen is your chip leader with 63.1 million in chips. Joining the McKeehen at the final table is Zvi Stern (29.8 million), Neil Blumenfield (22 million), Pierre Neuville (21.075 million), Max Steinberg (20.2 million), Thomas ... (read more)
     

    Day 6 of the WSOP Main Event shows a shift in the meaning of 'social'

    14 July 2015
    LAS VEGAS -- Poker is always called a "social game." In home games, where most poker (in the U.S.) is played, that statement is true. But once you leave the friendly confines of the home game, it rings hollow. In competitive poker -- and especially in tournament poker -- the poker player is truly alone. ... (read more)

    Next 10 Articles >

    • Featured Articles

    Prize money doesn't dull the pain at the WSOP Main Event

    LAS VEGAS -- There's no good way to bust out of the World Series of Poker Main Event. But some ways are a lot worse than others -- a lesson Heinz Kamutzki learned the hard way on Day 5 of the World Series of Poker Main Event.Kamutzki's day started innocently enough. He arrived at the Amazon Room, skateboard ... (read more)
     

    You get 1 million chips, you get 1 million chips, everyone gets 1 million chips

    LAS VEGAS -- Attention shifted from the small stacks to the monster stacks on Day 4 of World Series of Poker Main Event.When play began Saturday afternoon, only 661 players from the original field of 6,420 players remained -- and only three players had more than 1 million in chips. By the time play ended ... (read more)
     

    Money bubble gets a Hollywood ending at the WSOP Main Event

    LAS VEGAS -- The money bubble arrived a day early at the World Series of Poker Main Event. Normally a Day 4 staple, the bubble burst just after the dinner break on Day 3 because of change in the Main Event payout structure. Traditionally, the Main Event paid prize to money to 10 percent of the field. ... (read more)
     

    Top-10 Biff bets

    I finally got around to watching the season finale of The Flash this weekend and I was surprised by how badly the show handled the time travel plot. These characters live in a world that's already seen Back to the Future, The Terminator and Star Trek (in all of its incarnations). These characters should know the Prime Directive and how dangerous it is to mess with the space-time continuum. ... (read more)
     

    Proponents of online gambling ban serve "demon rum" at House hearing

    WASHINGTON, D.C. -- "Demon Rum."Two simple words uttered by Rep. Ted Poe (R-Tex.) perfectly summed up the farcical testimony offered by proponents of federal legislation to ban online gaming in front the House Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, Homeland Security, and Investigations on Wednesday."I don't think ... (read more)
    Vin Narayanan
    Vin Narayanan is the former managing editor at Casino City and has been involved in the gaming industry for over a decade Vin is currently based in Hong Kong, where he runs his own consultant group and works as head of gaming and public relations for Mega Digital
    Entertainment Group.

    Before joining Casino City, Vin covered (not all at the same time) sports, politics and elections, wars, technology, celebrities and the Census for USATODAY.com, USA WEEKEND and CNN.

  • Vin Narayanan
    Vin Narayanan is the former managing editor at Casino City and has been involved in the gaming industry for over a decade Vin is currently based in Hong Kong, where he runs his own consultant group and works as head of gaming and public relations for Mega Digital
    Entertainment Group.

    Before joining Casino City, Vin covered (not all at the same time) sports, politics and elections, wars, technology, celebrities and the Census for USATODAY.com, USA WEEKEND and CNN.