It was the discuss of the summer time of 2022. The man who gained the $1,500 restrict maintain’em occasion together with a cool $145,000 had by no means performed restrict maintain’em earlier than. He then took that money and purchased himself into the $100,000 occasion, regardless of by no means having performed a excessive curler earlier than, and completed fifth for $420,000.
Who was this unknown, a participant who glided by ‘Texas’ Mike?
“I’m a parlay guy, so I figured I’d go for it, go big.”
A becoming rationalization for a person with “all gas, no brakes” quoted on his Twitter profile.
In the three years since his debut to the high-stakes world, Mike Moncek has turned heads along with his fearless method and racked up a formidable assortment of bracelets, rings, and trophies, in addition to greater than $5.2 million in cashes, and a rising spotlight reel of viral livestreamed poker arms.
But recognize Moncek when you can, as a result of it seems the poker world is simply borrowing him for a short while.
Poker Success Follows Tragedy And Heartache
Despite the ‘Texas’ nickname, which comes from his time on the University of Texas, Moncek was truly born and raised in Chicago, which is the place he additionally earned his MBA from Loyola University. You can at all times spot him on the desk sporting a burnt orange UT hat to rep his alma mater, nonetheless, as evidenced by all of his images on this article.
At simply 32 years previous, Moncek wasn’t even a teen when the poker increase hit, but it surely nonetheless had a significant influence on him.
“Poker started with Moneymaker, just like everybody else,” Moncek recalled. “I was 11, and I would watch with my dad. That’s one of the things we bonded over, watching poker on ESPN. He wasn’t really a poker player before that, but the next year he went and played in the main event. He ended up losing with kings to Daniel Alaei’s aces, and I don’t think he ever played it again.”
While Mike Sr. won’t have loved his unceremonious $10,000 donation to the sharks in Vegas, the youthful Mike couldn’t wait to get within the recreation. He was in graduate college when he obtained his probability, taking part in playing cards on the weekends in rooms within the better Chicago space.
There have been back-to-back closing tables on the Chicago Poker Classic, after which in February of 2019 he took down the $400 no-limit occasion on the WSOP Circuit cease in Milwaukee, incomes the primary of his 4 rings.
Then, Moncek’s world was utterly turned the wrong way up, and never due to a worldwide pandemic.
“My dad was pretty excited about my success,” he stated. “I was playing an event at the Horseshoe (in Hammond, near Chicago) and he asked me for an update. I was actually chip leader on day 1, so I told him, and he sent back a thumbs up.”
“On dinner break, I got a call and learned that he had a heart attack while driving and crashed. I left immediately, just leaving the chips behind, but my dad was gone before I got to the hospital. He was only 53.”
“My mom was in the car as well. We almost lost her, but we got very lucky. His foot was pressed against the gas pedal and he was unconscious at the wheel. The car was still accelerating but stopped after hitting a construction trailer on the side of the road at around 40 miles per hour. She barely survived and was in the hospital for a few weeks. We had to keep pushing the funeral service back.”
Moncek and his father have been very shut, with he and his brother being groomed to take over the household enterprise, a profitable wholesaler for packaging merchandise. With his passing, nonetheless, the corporate was put up on the market.
“It was really tough,” Moncek admitted. “I didn’t want to sell it, but it was his wish that the family, my mother and siblings, be set and taken care of if something happened to him. I was excited about the company and learning more so my brother and I could take it over, but we didn’t have that option. Of course, you couldn’t really sell a company during COVID, so we did keep it going for a few years.”
“I want to get back into that business, but we had to sign a five-year non-compete. So, during the non-compete, and on days when I feel okay, I’ve just been playing poker. The last message I got from my dad was a thumbs up about a tournament update, which I kind of took as a sign. It was telling me to keep pursuing poker.”
One In The Chamber
When you watch him play, you may say Moncek is “all heart,” by no means afraid to make the gutsy play. It’s an apt description, given his cardiomyopathy prognosis.
“My heart is four times too big,” he defined. “In the last two years, I found out that I have heart failure. I have a blood clot in my heart, which is why I’m now on blood thinners. This summer they said the bottom of my heart is dead because I have a trapped artery.”
“There’s one surgery, a full on, open-heart surgery, that they said had a 10% chance of making me feel better. The other option is a heart transplant, which I’m eligible for now, but the surgeon said he would rather do the 10% surgery than a transplant. That shows you just how much they don’t like to do transplants. Kind of, ‘Get what you can out of this heart, first.’”
A household tragedy, critical well being considerations, and a whole upheaval of his skilled life have given Moncek a Carpe Diem outlook on life.
“When your dad dies at 53 and you have your own health problems, there’s definitely a bit of a YOLO (you only live once) mentality.”
It’s that method that obtained Moncek observed within the first place, placing up virtually all of his bracelet-earning winnings on the WSOP to enter a $100,000 buy-in excessive curler.
“I was going to leave town after a few days, but then I won the first tournament I played. It felt like a freeroll. I’m a parlay guy, so I figured I’d go for it, go big. Plus, it was a small field, so a good shot at another bracelet. I wanted to win Player of the Year, and that’s now my goal every summer.”
He closed out 2022 with a fourth WSOP Circuit ring, after which the subsequent summer time he returned to Las Vegas and took down the $5,000 no-limit maintain’em/pot-limit Omaha occasion for his second bracelet and $535,000. Moncek additionally completed third within the $10,000 razz occasion and in 2023 took third within the $25,000 H.O.R.S.E. occasion.
After two runner-up showings on the Poker Masters, Moncek picked up his greatest rating with a min-cash within the $500,000 Triton Million Invitational within the Bahamas for $1,200,000.
In February, Moncek put collectively a run of first, second, and third within the PokerGO Cup, narrowly lacking out on participant of the sequence honors to a historic run by Joey Weissman. Then a month later, he was a couple of unlucky runouts away from taking down the inaugural Super High Roller Bowl Mixed Games occasion, settling for a runner-up end and $725,000.
But regardless of his very fast rise within the excessive curler world, Moncek stays very humble about his accomplishments.
“Sometimes with success, I feel like I’m just getting lucky because I know all these guys are better than me, especially in the high roller scene and at the PokerGO studio,” he admitted. “These guys are all pros, I’m just a recreational player trying to compete. They’re studied and know what to do in almost every situation, but I’m problem solving the entire time on the spot. I know how much I’m guessing, and I know they’re not.”
“But that’s also the fun of it, and why it appeals to me. I could go study solvers, but that wouldn’t be fun. I like problem solving, and being a little unorthodox is kind of exciting and can throw everything else off at the table. Luckily there is a lot of luck and variance in poker, so I’ve been able to win sometimes, but I know how much better all these guys are.”
While he might not be operating solvers and consulting charts in his day off, Moncek is clearly a fast research and is usually capable of finding the suitable play utilizing his instincts and well-timed aggression.
“I’ve gotten better by just learning from what other people are doing around me. That’s why PokerGO is so great, because you can just see what all the best players are doing. And if you make a mistake you can watch it and avoid it in the future. You can even ask friends, ‘Hey, what did I do wrong in this hand?’”
“That being said, if you keep playing high rollers, maybe it’s a little irresponsible to not figure out how to play poker at some point.”
Going Viral
Moncek isn’t afraid to place up huge cash outdoors of tournaments, both, bringing seven figures to the Hustler Casino Live Million Dollar Cash Game. It was there that he made headlines for an enormous bluff, in some way pushing Chalie Hook off of 8 7
on a board studying A
5
4
6
A
holding nothing however 10
2
.
“Once I saw I had ‘the Doyle,’ I wasn’t going to dog it. I thought, ‘This is going to look so stupid if it doesn’t work. But if it does work, then there’s nothing cooler.’ I get a rush out of it.”
The week wouldn’t finish properly, with Moncek dropping a $2.2 million coinflip with pocket tens towards A Q
to fellow high-stakes sicko Alan Keating.
“I was already down a lot for the day, playing two horrible hands against Brandon Steven. Then I had a hand against Keating with a straight against his flush. I wasn’t happy with how I was playing, and I wasn’t feeling well. And then we got to that hand, which ended up being a flip because he is sick enough to call it off with A-Q suited. His call is sicker than my jam. I’m not supposed to jam, but his call is even crazier,” he defined. “I appreciated the ace on the flop rather than the river.”
How did he shrug off dropping one of many greatest pots in poker historical past? By flying to Vegas and leaping right into a event the subsequent day.
“To be flipping was fair. If I get it in good and happen to lose, oh well, good game. But if I messed something up or could have done something differently, that’s what bothers me.”
When the cameras are on, Moncek feels an obligation to be entertaining to these watching at residence, usually taking part in the overwhelming majority of the arms he’s dealt. At one session on the Lodge in Texas, he had a VPIP (voluntarily put cash into pot) of practically 90%.
“People are taking time out of their busy lives to watch other people play poker. I think we should try and make it fun,” he stated. “That’s what I try to do on streams. I don’t want to be a nit. I mean, I’m not a nit when the cameras are off, either, but if people are literally watching others play poker, it should be exciting. You have to make moves.”
“Granted, it can get very expensive if you’re making moves in a million-dollar game.”
Moncek most not too long ago went viral for a 2-7 single draw lowball hand he performed on the closing desk of the Super High Roller Bowl, selecting off a bluff from Yuri Dzivielevski with a pair of fours. Dzivielevski had been making a giant snow play with two pair, and Moncek’s unlikely name earned him quite a lot of respect from the poker neighborhood.
“I know Yuri is a good player capable of snowing with the right hands, and that he wasn’t afraid to go for it. I was hoping he had a snow and not a seven or eight right off the bat. Once he jammed river it just felt very polarized and it seemed like as good of an opportunity to knock out a far superior opponent as I was going to get.”
But would he have made the decision if the cameras weren’t rolling?
“Playing on the live stream didn’t change my play at the final table, but for that particular hand the hero call aspect of it definitely appealed to me. I was risking looking like an idiot, but if I called correctly it could be a legendary call. Definitely high risk-high reward, but luckily it worked out.”
The Beat Goes On
Did Moncek get his fearlessness from his prognosis, or was it at all times there?
“I think it was always there. My family was always very competitive, even with board games. A game of Monopoly or Risk at our house could get more intense than some of these $100,000 high rollers.”
Still, simply being on the desk does pose some real-life danger for Moncek, given the heart-pounding pleasure that comes with big bluffs and seven-figure flips.
“Sometimes I start to feel bad, but I have a big stack. So, what do I do? I can’t exactly leave. So, tournaments can be a little risky. My blood flow will slow down and my hands will get cold. I get chest pains. I’m worried about having a heart attack at the table, especially when I’m playing on a stream. It’s not fun feeling sick in public, let alone on camera.”
“But while stress probably doesn’t help, when I’m playing and feeling okay, I’m not thinking about my heart. It’s nice to be able to take my mind off it for a while.”
The WSOP has 100 bracelet occasions scheduled for the summer time, and Moncek estimates he’ll play in about 85 of them as he chases the POY award.
“That could be a little low,” he added. “In the small ones I’ll be trying to build a stack really quick, sometimes even going all in blind towards the end of re-entry. I’m playing every event, low to high, no-limit to mixed, just trying to maximize my chances at a bracelet.”
There are about two years left on Moncek’s non-compete clause, and relying on his well being and different enterprise alternatives, he plans on benefiting from his time within the poker world.
“I’m trying to get as much fulfillment out of poker as I can. That’s why I’m playing everything, whether it’s the high rollers or $1-$3. I don’t care what the stakes are, as long as it’s something competitive and the people are fun.” ♠
Top Tournament Scores
Date | Buy-In | Event | Finish | Payout |
Dec. 2024 | $500,000 | WSOP Paradise Triton Million Invitational | ninth | $1,200,000 |
March 2025 | $100,000 | Super High Roller Bowl Mixed Games | 2nd | $725,000 |
June 2023 | $5,000 | WSOP No-Limit Hold’em/Pot-Limit Omaha | 1st | $534,499 |
June 2022 | $100,000 | WSOP No-Limit Hold’em High Roller | fifth | $420,944 |
July 2024 | $25,000 | WSOP H.O.R.S.E. High Roller | third | $336,442 |
Sept. 2024 | $15,000 | Poker Masters No-Limit Hold’em | 2nd | $216,600 |
Feb. 2025 | $5,000 | PokerGO Cup No-Limit Hold’em | 1st | $185,850 |
Feb. 2025 | $10,000 | PokerGO Cup No-Limit Hold’em | 2nd | $182,900 |
Dec. 2023 | $25,000 | WSOP Paradise Pot-Limit Omaha High Roller | sixth | $172,300 |
Sept. 2024 | $10,000 | Poker Masters No-Limit Hold’em | 2nd | $165,000 |
June 2022 | $1,500 | WSOP Limit Hold’em | 1st | $145,856 |
June 2023 | $10,000 | WSOP Razz | third | $133,177 |
Feb. 2025 | $10,000 | PokerGO Cup No-Limit Hold’em | third | $115,000 |
*Photos by PokerGO