Erick Lindgren

This article is about the professional poker player. For the composer and keyboards player, see Erik Lindgren.
Erick Lindgren

Lindgren at the WPT's Doyle Brunson Five Diamond World Poker Classic in 2007
Nickname(s) E-Dog
Residence Las Vegas, Nevada
Born (1976-08-11) August 11, 1976
World Series of Poker
Bracelet(s) 2
Money finish(es) 40
Highest ITM
Main Event finish
43rd, 2011
World Poker Tour
Title(s) 2
Final table(s) 5
Money finish(es) 16

Erick A. Lindgren[1] (born August 11, 1976 in Burney, California[2]) is an American professional poker player. He has won two World Poker Tour (WPT) titles, two World Series of Poker bracelets, and more than nine million dollars in tournament earnings during his poker career. As of August 2014 he is 28th in the All time money list of poker.[3]

Poker career

He won his first major tournament at the Bellagio in 2002 and followed that up with his first World Poker Tour (WPT) win ten months later. Six months later, he won the WPT PartyPoker Million III cruise, where he walked away with the million dollar top prize.

In January 2005, he finished 2nd in the World Series of Poker Circuit Event in Atlantic City. In February, he finished 5th in the WPT LA Poker Classic and just a week later, he won the second Professional Poker Tour tournament, also in LA.

In January 2006 he made another WPT final table, finishing 3rd at the 2006 Borgata Winter Poker Open.

In June 2006, Lindgren won the $600,000 first prize in the FullTiltPoker.net Poker Pro Showdown event, outlasting Mike Matusow, Clonie Gowen, Erik Seidel, John Juanda, Chris Ferguson and Phil Ivey. Lindgren's winning hand came in the first hand of heads-up play when his A K defeated Matusow's A J on a board of 6 6 9 A 3.

In January 2007, Lindgren won A$1 million after beating 17 other players in the $100,000 buy-in Hold'em event at the Aussie Millions.

Lindgren is the author of the book, "World Poker Tour: Making the Final Table", which covers strategy for poker tournaments.

Both the first name 'Erick' and the family name 'Lindgren' are Swedish names, representative of his Swedish ancestry.

He is a former member of "Team Full Tilt" at Full Tilt Poker. In February 2008, Lindgren hosted "FTOPS Event #9", part of Full Tilt's series of large buy-in tournaments. The tournament had over 5,600 entrants, and had a prize pool of over $1.65 million. Lindgren won the tournament becoming the first Full Tilt pro to win an FTOPS event that they hosted. He took home over $291,000. As of September 2012 according to Howard Lederer's interview Erick has a loan of $4 000 000 to FullTilt.

On June 27, 2007, Erick won a $350,000 prop bet with Gavin Smith, Phil Ivey and others. To win the bet, Erick had to play four consecutive rounds of golf at Las Vegas' "Bear's Best" golf course between sunrise and sunset. He had to carry his own bags and shoot under 100 in each of the four rounds. Temperatures reached 106 degrees and symptoms of heat exhaustion set in, but Erick won the bet. He said on a PokerListings interview that he lost 12 pounds during the bet.[4]

On June 5, 2008 Erick defeated Justin Bonomo during heads-up play for his first World Series of Poker bracelet in the 5,000 buy-in mixed no-limit/limit Hold'em event at the 2008 WSOP. In May 2013 Erick finished second in the WPT championship for $700,000

As of August 2014, his total live tournament winnings exceed $9,900,000.[5] His 40 cashes at the WSOP account for $3,120,803 of those winnings.[6]

World Series of Poker bracelets

Year Tournament Prize (US$)
2008 $5,000 Mixed Hold'em (Limit/No-Limit) $374,505
2013 $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em / Six Handed (No-Limit) $606,317

In 2008, he was named WSOP Player of the Year. With five total cashes, he earned $1,348,528 in prize money.[7]

Personal life

On May 29, 2011, Erick married fellow poker player Erica Schoenberg.[8] They have one child.[9] Lindgren and Schoenberg apparently divorced in March 2014.

Gambling debts and rehab

As a sponsored pro, Lindgren had been receiving a monthly paycheck from Full Tilt Poker, but he lost that income when Black Friday struck on April 15, 2011. An avid sports bettor, he found himself with sizable gambling debts he could not repay.[9] In late November 2012, Lindgren entered a rehab program for problem gambling.[9] According to an interview he gave with Bluff Magazine in January 2013, he had come to a payment schedule agreement with those to whom he owed money.[9]

Bibliography

Notes

External links

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