Chau Giang

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chau Giang

Chau Giang in Poker Superstars II
Nickname(s) None
Hometown Las Vegas, Nevada
World Series of Poker
Bracelet(s) 3
Money finishes 34
Highest ITM main
event finish
13th, 1996
World Poker Tour
Titles None
Final tables 3
Money Finishes 8

Chau Giang (born 1955? in Vietnam) is an American professional poker player of Chinese descent.

Giang fled Vietnam in a small boat in the late 1970s and arrived in Florida, working minimum wage jobs. He moved to Colorado soon after, taking a job as a chef at $160 per week. It was then that he began to learn poker. His success in poker led him to move to Las Vegas, where he made more than $100,000 in his first year as a professional player.

He first had success at the World Series of Poker (WSOP) in 1993, where he finished 2nd in the $1,500 Pot Limit Hold'em event to John Bonetti, and winning his first bracelet in the $1,500 Ace to Five Draw event the same year.

He first cashed in the WSOP Main Event in 1996, finishing in 13th place. He won a second bracelet in the $2,000 Omaha 8 or Better event in 1998, and a third bracelet in the $2,000 Pot Limit Omaha event in 2004, finishing ahead of Robert Williamson III, Dave Colclough and Chris Ferguson.

Giang avoided playing tournaments other than the WSOP for many years, as he preferred to concentrate on his cash game play, where he plays $4,000/$8,000 limit regularly. Giang is a regular in "The Big Game" in Las Vegas, alongside his next-door neighbour Doyle Brunson. He returned to tournaments when his children asked him why he was not on the television. His first World Poker Tour (WPT) cash was 9th place in the first WPT Championship. He would also cash in the second WPT Championship. However, his largest tournament prize to date was 2nd place in the 2005 $10,000 World Poker Open, which earned him $773,448.

Giang has regularly stated that poker is not a game of chance, and is remembered for telling Dana Smith in a 1994 interview, "At the table I hear people say, ‘Poker is luck.’ That is 100 percent wrong. If they are losing, it is because they're doing something wrong. Poker is skill, it isn't luck. In the long run, day after day after day, you cannot get lucky all the time."

Giang is married and has three children.

As of 2006 his total live tournament winnings exceed $2,400,000.

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