Annie
Duke
A
strong
competitor
when it
comes to
tournament
poker.
Nobody likes to
differentiate
between
whether
a player
is male
or
female.
A player
is good
or bad
regardless
of their
gender,
but I
like the
fact
Annie is
a female
poker
player.
She
regularly
proves
that
women
can hold
their
own in a
game
that is
supposedly
"male-oriented".
Phil Hellmuth
once
stated
that
Annie is
the best
all-around
woman
poker
player
in the
world
today
and many
would
agree.
Annie
was born
in
Concord,
New
Hampshire.
She
attended
school
at St.
Paul and
went on
to
Columbia
where
she
double-majored
in
psychology
and
English.
She then
attended
the
University
of
Pennsylvania
where
she was
in
pursuit
of a
doctoral
degree
in
psycholinguistics.
She left
the
program
to begin
to play
poker.
Her
brother
Howard
Lederer
taught
her how
to play
and she
hasn't
looked
back
since.
Although
she
attends
the
higher-limit
tournament
poker
events,
you
would be
more
likely
to see
her
playing
ring
games at
the
Bellagio
in Las
Vegas.
Annie is
a mother
to four
children
and that
sets her
apart
from
almost
anybody
in the
poker
world. If
it was a
choice
between
a
tournament
or one
of her
children's
plays,
the play
was
always
going to
win out.
It shows
that a
person
can have
the best
of two
worlds.
She
wants to
beat the
best at
the game
whether
they are
male of
female.
Annie's
sister,
Katy Lederer,
recently
wrote a
memoir
titled
Pokerface.
The book
has
great
insights
into
both
Annie
and
Howard's
competitive
nature.
Annie
works
with the
UltimateBet
online
cardroom,
where
you can
find her
articles
on Omaha
and
other
topics.
Annie
has
taken
over
from
Amir
Vahedi
poker
tutoring
actor
Ben
Affleck.
In June
2004,
Affleck
won the
$10,000
California
State
Poker
Championship
No Limit
Hold'em
tournament
at the
Commerce
Casino,
along
with its
$356,000
first
prize.
Annie
Duke is
the
leading
money
winner
among
women in
World
Series
of Poker
history
including
tenth
place in
the
$10,000
main
event
when she
was
eight
months
pregnant
with her
third
child.
She won
her
first
World
Series
of Poker
bracelet
in the
2004
$2000
Omaha
High-Low
event.
Some of
her
other
accomplishments
include
winning
the
September
2004
ESPN
World
Series
of Poker
Tournament
of
Champions
where a
first
prize of
two
million
dollars
was at
stake.
She also
earned
second
in Limit
Hold'em
in 1999
and 2003
at the
World
Series
of
Poker,
second
in the
Omaha
High Low
at the
Bellagio
Five-Star
World
Poker
Classic
and
sixth in
the
Omaha
High Low
at the
2003
World
Series
of
Poker.