Ike Haxton

Ike Haxton Rating: 8,6/10 699 votes

Isaac Haxton is calling for Las Vegas poker players to stop playing live games due to increased COVID-19 cases in Nevada. Nearly 1% of all Nevadans tested positive for the virus in the past week.

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  1. Guest: Isaac Haxton. Best of the Week – July 20, 2014 – Joe Rogan Experience. July 27, 2014 21,037 views. 163 likes 10 dislikes 16.30 ratio.
  2. Ike Haxton: PokerStars Rake Rollback “Great and Significant” In November, PokerStars shook a segment of the poker world by announcing rake increases at certain games and stakes. It was a decision met with disapproval from most in the mid- to high-stakes games but now, just two months later, PokerStars has decided to cancel the increases.
  3. 20 hours ago  It's the final table of a big time online tourney, and Ike Haxton is in the mix. Is his opponent making a mistake against the poker wizard? FLOP: 5c 6s Kd TURN: 8s RIVER: As Ike: 6d6h Ramage: Js10s For access to exclusive Poker Guys freerolls and other tournaments on.
  4. Haxton is considered one of the top online cash game specialists and plays under the aliases, Ike Haxton, luvtheWNBA, and philivey2694 where he has earned over $2,000,000. Although successful in tournament play, he prefers online cash games and considers them to be his specialty.

Isaac Haxton

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Maria Konnikova set out a personal challenge. Having never played a hand of poker in her life, she would master the game in a year and enter the poker world’s most prestigious event, The World Series of Poker. In her memoir The Biggest Bluff, she explains her mission was not merely to excel at poker, but to study the relationship between luck and skill, the two central factors in the game — and critically in life as well. As she writes, “I hoped to learn how to make the best decisions I possibly could, not just at the card table but in the world. Through poker, I wanted to tame luck — to learn to make a difference even when the deck seemed stacked against me.” Under the tutelage of some of the world’s best professional poker players, Konnikova had some extraordinary successes, but along the way, she made an interesting discovery — those who had mastered the science of the game, winning tens of millions of dollars, were, almost unanimously, deeply superstitious.

I actually cultivate some superstitions just on purpose,” says poker pro Ike Haxton, who looks exactly like Harry Potter, with a mess of dark hair swept to the side, dark-rimmed glasses, everything there but the scar.

His words catch me off guard. Ike Haxton? One of the most mathematical, logical minds I’d encountered in or out of the poker world, purposefully cultivating superstition? “You don’t actually believe in all that, do you?”

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“Well, I feel like the brain just doesn’t cope well with luck,” he explains. “And just really struggles to latch on to things to associate with good or bad luck. So I’m just taking the reins on that.”

It’s like the story that’s apocryphally attributed to Niels Bohr, the Nobel Prize–winning physicist. A friend of his was visiting his office and kept looking up at the horseshoe over the door. Finally, he could no longer contain his curiosity. Could it really be that a mind as remarkable as Bohr’s believed that horseshoes brought luck? Of course he didn’t believe it, Bohr replied. “But I understand it’s lucky whether I believe in it or not.”

“Life’s single lesson: that there is more accident to it than a man can ever admit to in a lifetime and stay sane.”

-Fausto Maijstral, in Thomas Pynchon’s V

So Ike is making the rational decision to be irrational, in an attempt to make that irrationality more … rational?

Something like that, he says. “It’s mainly lucky objects and articles of clothing. Like the shirt I was wearing when I won the Prague 25K one-day tournament [poker lingo for a tournament that costs $25,000 to enter and is completed in a single day] is now my designated 25K, one-day tournament shirt. I had a lucky quarter in my pocket for about a year and a half a while ago. I think I have a lucky dollar bill in my wallet right now.”

He furrows his eyebrows and reaches into his pocket for his wallet, to check whether the bill is in fact in place. It is.

He explains that he got it from another professional player, Nick Petrangelo, when they were both playing in a tournament in Florida in which they’d agreed to share five percent of any winnings. Nick left for dinner break one hand early. “I’m extremely anal about not missing hands,” Ike recalls. “That’s really unacceptable.” So, while Nick was off having his dinner, Ike ran some quick calculations. How much expected value had Nick cost him by his decision to leave early? It turned out to be a dollar, give or take. Ike told Nick as much, and after dinner break, Nick ceremonially offered him a single dollar bill. On the next hand, Ike stacked an opponent — that is, he took all of his chips.

Ike HaxtonIke Haxton

“It was the most ridiculous pot I’d played in quite a while,” he remembers. And he went on to run deep in the tournament, and the dollar was deemed extra lucky. “It’s been in my wallet since.” So what would have happened, I ask, if he’d checked his wallet just now only to find the dollar missing? Or if his lucky shirt got ripped in the wash?

“The dollar, I think I would be mildly distressed for a few minutes and then get over it. The shirt, I might just wear it anyway.”

I object that he’s purposefully avoiding the point of my question. Isn’t attaching himself and any part of his mental well-being to random objects just adding one more factor that you might not ultimately be able to control?

In one study conducted in Italy, for instance, 700 students were randomly assigned to seat numbers during a written exam. Some of the numbers were tagged as culturally lucky — that is, according to Italian cultural reference, they brought good fortune — and others unlucky. It turns out that students who were in the “lucky” seats were consistently overconfident in how they would do — and those in “unlucky” seats were actually expecting lower grades. Confidence is an important factor in how you play. Wouldn’t you want to minimize the potential confounding variables?

Belief is a powerful thing. Our mental state is crucial to our performance. And ultimately, while some superstitions may give you a veneer of false confidence, they also have the power to destroy your mental equilibrium. I like to think of this as the black cat effect. You see one cross the parking lot as you walk to a poker tournament. You brood about the bad luck. Your game is thrown off. You blame the cat. You bust. You feel validated. Superstitions are false attributions, so they give you a false sense of your own abilities and, in the end, impede learning. What do you do if your lucky charm falls down the drain or the cleaners lose the shirt that led you to victory?

You may think you’d deal with it with grace, buying a new shirt or donning a new lucky charm, but the research disagrees. In that moment where the lucky object is lost, a degree of mental equilibrium often goes with it, consciously or not. You may feel off your game. You may push your edge a little less as you recover. In a sense, you lose your control, because something outside your control has disrupted an object you’d imbued with power — even if only jokingly. In my mind, this isn’t a harmless enough pastime. It’s something with implications that are potentially troubling for optimal performance in the long run.

Ike doesn’t quite agree. “The point of the practice as I see it is to acknowledge and accept that my mind is going to make these associations no matter what, and try to take ownership of that process,” he tells me. “And also, to be honest, I think it’s funny to talk about it because people find it very strange. Like, I don’t really believe it, but I do put a medium amount of effort into keeping track of my lucky objects and making sure I have them.”

Jane Risen, a psychologist at the University of Chicago, calls this kind of thinking from people like Ike — “smart, educated, emotionally stable adults” — a form of acquiescence. We can recognize that something is wrong and irrational but then consciously and purposefully choose to let the false belief stand rather than correct it. “People can recognize that one course of action is rationally ­superior yet choose to follow a different one,” Risen writes. You know the sports team you support won’t lose if you don’t wear your lucky jersey — but you put it on anyway. You may not actually believe in astrology, but can it really hurt to read your monthly horoscope?

Ike is far from alone. Johnny Chan, a World Series of Poker (WSOP) winner, is known to play with an orange — the fruit — at his side. Sammy Farha has an unlit cigarette. Doyle Brunson has a Ghostbusters card protector — and apparently even rents it out to those in need of a lucky boost ($200 if you want it for a half hour). More recently, Frank Stepuchin, who won the World Poker Tour Gardens Main Event in 2019, has taken to bringing a chicken wing to the table, for the lucky wings that propelled him to his Gardens win. At the WSOP, I played with one man who lugged a stuffed penguin to every tournament. You’d be right to question my choice of lugged, but let me assure you, lugged is indeed the word. The penguin was large enough that the man was threatened with disqualification from one event if he didn’t remove it from the table area. As far as I could tell, he never made it very far in any event, but the penguin remained faithfully by his side throughout. (I later learned that the player in question was a successful one from Hong Kong, Sparrow Cheung.)

Then there’s the player who won the European Poker Tour Monte Carlo Main Event back in 2014, Antonio Buonanno. In an interview during his incredible run, the interviewer asked him if he was superstitious. Not at all, came the reply. You see, he went on to say, he had tried all the superstitions he could over the years and nothing seemed to work, so he gave it up. Of course, it goes without saying that he was wearing the same shirt he’d worn the day prior because it had brought him this far in the event and he was scared to try his luck with any other outfit. And he had his lucky glasses. Naturally. But no, no, not at all superstitious.

It goes beyond objects, to a sort of magical thinking that you wouldn’t expect in a high-level player. Phil Hellmuth often talks about his “white magic” — an ability to see into his opponents’ souls and hole cards to make huge plays. Daniel Negreanu has often claimed to be able to know what card is coming next — something he has said repeatedly on many a poker stream. Even Jason Koon has admitted to having a “lucky feeling” that he was going to win an all-in during a major event, even though he was far behind. He just knew the card was coming.

When you see unsuccessful players embrace the mythical, it raises an eyebrow but not much else. After all, about a quarter of the American population actually admits to being either somewhat or very superstitious. In a 2019 poll, 27 percent reported that a four-leaf clover is lucky, 23 percent thought breaking a mirror was unlucky, 22 percent will knock on wood, 21 percent won’t walk under a ladder (actually, that one seems eminently reasonable; show me someone who regularly walks under active ladders and I’ll show you an idiot without basic safety training), and so on. Even the rabbit’s foot is a lucky object for 14 percent — and a black cat will ruin the day for about 11 percent. That’s not even getting into the significance of numbers. The number 13, especially if paired with Friday: unlucky for some cultures, lucky for others. Hotels and airplanes often go to great lengths to avoid floors and rows and rooms of any offending number. Same with sports jerseys: some numbers can never be used; others are held in certain veneration by virtue of their history. The ultimate compliment: a retired number.

But at the higher levels, even with all the rationality in the world behind a practice, the mind craves control. We are on an endless quest to put our stamp on the things that couldn’t care less about our existence. Even if it’s not altogether rational, just let me be.

Superstitions … give you a false sense of your own abilities and, in the end, impede learning.

Acquiescence is not harmless. Because the moment you acquiesce, you give up a bit of control, however tiny, to the process of superstition. And if you actually believe in it, you become a gambler in the real sense of the word, ready to gamble with fate in a way that is the very antithesis of everything poker has taught me about approaching life. But I am coming to appreciate the power of belief in a broader sense. As it happens, there may indeed be something to the hot hand: Thinking you’re on a streak may not be a fallacy after all, at least not always. Here’s what more recent analyses have shown. Yes, a basketball player who seems to be on a winning streak may not always be making more baskets — but sometimes she is. Her confidence translates to her execution, especially in the immediate term.

A human being is not a robot. How you feel affects how you act. And while a hot streak of cards or dice is actually not possible — the gambler’s fallacy remains eternally fallacious — streaks that require actual human performance may indeed exist. The more the realm is subject to individual action, such as creative careers where mindset is one of the central elements, the more this is the case. A 2018 study in Nature found clear evidence of hot streaks in artistic and film careers, as well as in scientific trajectories. The streak “emerges randomly” and inevitably comes to an end, but while it lasts, it has a self-reinforcing effect.

That self-reinforcement can lead to a performance boost in most any field — and poker seems to be particularly well suited as a demonstration. Because at the poker table, perceived confidence often translates to incorrect assumptions on the part of your opponent: If you look self-assured and act with conviction, your actions will garner more respect. People may fold to you more often — and you will win more often. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy of sorts.

Maria Konnikova, who graduated from Harvard University and received her Ph.D. in psychology from Columbia University, is the author of Mastermind and The Confidence Game. A contributing writer for The New Yorker, she has written articles for The Atlantic, Scientific American,and Wired, among many other publications.

This article is featured in the January/February 2021 issue of The Saturday Evening Post. Subscribe to the magazine for more art, inspiring stories, fiction, humor, and features from our archives.

Featured image: Asia Evtyshok / Shutterstock

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Ike Haxton comes into the $25,000 Pot Limit Omaha final table with a chance to earn a rare title. (Photo: Poker Central)

Isaac Haxton is at his second final table of Poker Masters today in the $25,000 Pot Limit Omaha event. Haxton placed sixth in the $10,000 No Limit Hold’em Event 1 and is in a position to gain on current leader points leader Brandon Adams pending a strong finish.

The casual hoodie and t-shirt worn by Haxton can be replaced by a Purple Jacket if the details of variance break his way this week. Thing is, the variance has not been on Haxton’s side for the better part of the last few years. Some would suggest Haxton is one of the most unlucky players in recent history.

Eh, I’ve been on a flukey run of bubbles and mincashes and not many big scores the last few years but I’m not at all in the running for number one unluckiest.

— Isaac Haxton (@ikepoker) August 30, 2018

Haxton politely disagrees with this sentiment but holds the capitalist sensibility to be remiss over the lost money that comes with not finishing first a few times.

“I’ve never been big on title-chasing but then again, that’s easy to say as somebody who has done pretty poorly from a title-chasing perspective over my career,” Haxton said with a half-smile. “It would be fun to win the Purple Jacket, sure.”

Ike Haxton

The contemporaries of Haxton’s generation hold titles that lap his $19 million resume that currently ranks 19th on the all-time money list.

Justin Bonomo is the king of 2018. Jason Koon owns a PCA $100,000 Super High Roller win and SHRPO Championship. Bryn Kenney’s bracelet win in 2014 is one more than what is in Haxton’s collection.

By sheer fortune, Haxton owns only four direct wins with one of them coming in a PCA event where he was one of four entrants.

Haxton focuses on making money but missed chances to strike have cost him since he became one of the first regulars in the High Roller circuit.

“Well, obviously it’s nice to cash a few tournaments. I actually cashed a bunch of tournaments this year but no huge scores. I think I’ve got eight, 12 or 14 final tables with an average finish of about fifth. So, I’ve been getting close a lot and it’d be fun to win one or two.”

Haxton took ninth in Super High Roller Bowl China and then fourth a few months later in the $50,000 High Roller event at the WSOP. Mixed in were three final table results in the U.S. Poker Open.

Today is a primary chance to take down a major title and help Haxton’s Poker Masters odds. Haxton is the consummate professional and plans to remain balanced emotionally and with short-term expectations as the chase for the Purple Jacket turns toward next week.

Lose six-figures or win seven, Haxton is always going to be in the registration line for the next event. Haxton is one of only seven players to never cash Super High Roller Bowl across all four editions. He is also 0-2 in appearances in the Big One for One Drop.

Ike Haxton Net Worth

The tough toll in high buy-in events is balanced by Haxton’s career as one of the most prolific online cash game players of all-time.

“I’m just planning on showing up and playing each tournament regardless. I’m not going to start gambling early to run up a stack or treat rebuys because they’re free because I’m threatening to win the most points. I’m still playing the tournaments for dollar EV even if I’m in the running for the title.”

Ike Haxton Twitter

When summing up the irony of winning Poker Masters without potentially earning a title during the series, Haxton laughed at the thought.

Ike Haxton Hendon

That would kind of fit, wouldn’t it?”