This Player Defeated a Field of 1 to Win a WSOP Bracelet

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Managing Editor
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Binion's WSOP

There are many legendary four-time WSOP bracelet winners. They include Main Event winners like Amarillo Slim, Bobby Baldwin, Huck Seed and Joe Cada and poker legends such as Eli Elezra, Max Pescatori and Brian Rast.

However, many players will not have even heard of Poker Hall of Famer Bill Boyd, who was so good at Five Card Stud, the event stopped being included in the World Series of Poker.

Biography

Boyd was born in McNeil, Arkansas on January 27, 1906. As a teenager, he began travelling across America by train. During his trip, he once walked into a Montana saloon with just $13. Hours later, he walked out with $1,300.

Following a stint in the National Guard, Boyd began running cardrooms in San Francisco and by 1946, Boyd became manager of the Golden Nugget cardroom.


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Boyd at the WSOP

The World Series of Poker began in 1970, with Johnny Moss being voted best all-around player. But there were several other categories including Best All-Around Hold'em Player and Deuce-to-Seven Lowball Champion.

Boyd was voted "most respected poker player" by his peers, and returned to the WSOP the following year, by which point the event now consisted of four preliminary events along with the Main Event.

One of these events was $1,000 No-Limit Five Card Stud, won by Boyd for $10,000 after defeating a field of 10 players. He backed this up the following year by defeating an unknown player heads-up for $20,000.

In 1973, the $10,000 buy-in No-Limit Five Card Stud event garnered one entry - Bill Boyd. He "won" the event for $10,000 and a third WSOP bracelet, potentially the only one-player WSOP bracelet event in history.

Bill Boyd 1973 WSOP Main Event Champion

In 1974, the buy-in for the Five Card Stud event was reduced to $5,000 and attracted eight entries. Boyd won that event for $40,000, the largest cash of his career.

Five Card Stud never appeared on the WSOP schedule again, allegedly because Boyd couldn't be beaten. Poker legend Amarillo Slim once said, "I'd rather catch frost on my winter peaches than play stud with Bill Boyd."

YearEventEntriesWinnerPayout
1971$1,000 No-Limit Five Card Stud10Bill Boyd$10,000
1972$10,000 No-Limit Five Card Stud2Bill Boyd$20,000
1973$10,000 No-Limit Five Card Stud1Bill Boyd$10,000
1974$5,000 No-Limit Five Card Stud8Bill Boyd$80,000

From the Poker Vaults: Bill Boyd


His Place in History

"I'd rather have a gambler's word than a preacher's note." —Bill Boyd

Boyd is one of only four players to have won bracelets in four consecutive years (Doyle Brunson 1976-79 and Loren Klein 2016-19).

Away from the tables, he managed the Golden Nugget cardroom from the day it opened in 1946 until its closing in 1988. He was dealt the ceremonial first hand at both the Golden Nugget in 1946 and the Mirage in 1989.

He was elected to the Poker Hall of Fame in 1981 and retired from poker in 1982

Boyd died in Las Vegas on November 21, 1997 at the age of 91 after complications from a stroke.

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Managing Editor

Based in the United Kingdom, Will started working for PokerNews as a freelance live reporter in 2015 and joined the full-time staff in 2019. He now works as Managing Editor. He graduated from the University of Kent in 2017 with a B.A. in German. He also holds an NCTJ Diploma in Sports Journalism.

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