Dewey Tomko

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Proprietor Dewey Tomko lounges in the expansive patio of Dewey’s Indoor Golf & Sports Grill.

Quite the same Wikipedia. To install click the Add extension button. The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked. Dewey Tomko is a true American success story. After earning a degree in physical education from Salem College in West Virginia he moved to Florida to teach preschoolers in Haines City in 1960 at the age of 24. Dewey Tomko Overview Dewey Tomko has been associated with one company, according to public records. The company was incorporated in Florida twenty-seven years ago and is no longer active. Dewey Tomko has won 3 bracelets and 1 rings for total earnings of $2,725,128. See all events where they placed in-the-money. Dewey Tomko has won 3 bracelets and 1 rings for total earnings of $2,725,128. See all events where they placed in-the-money.

Dewey Tomko- An Enigma

“Do you need a passport to go to Hawaii?”
“What language do they speak in London?”
“Is there something other than French Fries to eat in France?”

These are some of the questions Dewey Tomko asked me when I met him over 25 years ago. The questions were sincere but nonetheless they lulled me into dropping my guard against his true persona, that of a golf handicapper. Note that I didn’t call him a golf hustler because that type of person will lie about his true ability to give his opponent no chance of winning. With Dewey, you always had a chance albeit slim.

Around 1992, I was in Orlando for a Kubasaki High School Reunion. Although I had attended high school on Okinawa, our school had reunions in different parts of the U.S. After the Reunion, Dewey invited me down to Winter Haven for a little golf.

When I got down there, he told me that a frost had killed all the lemon trees in Florida and so he had decided to convert his orchard into a golf course. A good friend of his who was also the architect for Nick Faldo had agreed to design the course for only $120,000. That was quite a good deal when the going rate was $500,000 or more. It was about dusk, but Dewey wanted to show me and Hilbert Shirey the golf course. It seemed like we had driven to the middle of nowhere when we came upon a fenced area with construction equipment. I looked out at the barren tract of land and said, “Ok, it looks good, let’s go to dinner.”

I was not going to be so fortunate. “No, I’ll show you around, “said Dewey and he unlocked the chain-link gate and drove out in a 4 seater golf cart. We got in and he got out. “Where are you going?” I asked. “I’ve got to lock the gate,” he replied. “Dewey, we’re in the middle of nowhere and we’ll be (or so I thought) right back. You don’t have to lock it. There’s no one around.” Dewey briefly thought about what I had said and then resolutely said, “No I have to lock it.” Hilbert and I shrugged our shoulders and proceeded to wait. We were chatting but when that wait seemed to be way too long to just lock a gate, I turned to look. Dewey was in front of the gate and seemed to be struggling. I got out, walked over and asked what was wrong. “I just can’t get this to reach,” an exasperated Dewey exclaimed. I immediately saw the problem and chuckled. “Dewey, you have to close the gate all the way so the chain can reach”, I explained. He had not closed the gate completely flush so the ends of the chain couldn’t link with each other. After I showed him, he said, “I knew it would close because it was locked when I opened it.”

We started on our tour and after every few holes, I said that it looks pretty good and suggested we go to dinner but he proceeded to give me a tour of all 18 holes. Dewey was a scratch golfer and this was his baby so he could envision the layout of each hole but all I could see was dirt. This course is the Southern Dunes which is now in the Top 10 public courses in Florida and the architect, Steve Smyers is on the Executive Committee of the USGA. Yet all I could see that night was a dirt tract and all the “holes” looked the same.

Tomko

When we finally returned to the storage area, Dewey jumped out to open the gate and I drove the cart in and parked it exactly where Dewey directed me because that was the only spot the cart could be parked. As we walked out, we asked Dewey if he needed help locking the gate. “No, I got it,” he retorted. We had walked about 20 yards, when we heard, “Oh shit” and turned around. This time, he had successfully locked the gate but he was on the wrong side. We just started laughing. This is a true story.

The Southern Dunes Golf & Country Club is located south of Orlando in Haines City. It is one of Florida’s top public golf courses. Sporting 5 sets of tees, each one offers its challenges. This is the par 4 17th, 421 yards from the back tees.

The Professional Golf Invitational (PGI)

When Jack Binion owned the Horseshoe in downtown Las Vegas, in addition to the World Series of Poker, he also hosted the PGI for poker players and other professional gamblers. For this annual event, phrases like “Enter at your own risk” and “Let the buyer beware” come to mind.

Dewey had a theory that handicaps could be equalized by distance. He resurrected the PGI at the Southern Dunes putting players on its different tees to compensate for their skill level.

“I Don’t Know Nothing”

Some people get mired in the details and lose sight of the whole picture. Another mistake I’ve seen people make is that they believe they have to develop their personal skills in their business or project to placate their ego when they are on the wrong side of the learning curve. Dewey has no such ego. He is the owner of one of the most successful upscale restaurants in a competitive market and he will tell you, “I don’t know nothing.” Next door is Ruth’s Chris Steakhouse but the activity is predominantly in front of the Vines Grille & Wine Bar. The creative and managerial success is due to Dimitrios Karatiniis who had a small restaurant in the same location and used to play golf at the Southern Dunes. In 2004 he parlayed his talent as a restaurateur into the popular and vibrant new Vines.

I was once in the same situation as Dewey. I didn’t know anything about the restaurant business and had been warned against investing in one but I had an experienced partner that had owned a successful one in the past. He was also a chef and had the creativity of an interior designer. Unfortunately he was not a restaurateur and violated its top 3 rules: Location, Location, Location! Voila had great food and reasonable prices but customers would look at our menu and walk next door to the Olive Garden.

The Vines is located in the center of Orlando’s Restaurant Row and close to the Convention Center and other major hotels.

A fixture in the golfing scene in the Orlando area, Dewey attracts celebrities such as Michael Jordan & Arnold Palmer. The latter’s signature logo in stained glass can be seen in the upper right of the Arnold Palmer Room photo above.

Necessity is the Mother of All Invention

In the evenings, Dewey would want to go hit golf balls but the driving ranges weren’t open at night in Orlando. Simulators had advanced considerably in sophistication. They can analyze each shot and compare their differences with every other shot. Plus you could play any course in the world in a couple of hours while drinking beer with your buddies all in air-conditioned comfort. When you watch a game, don’t you prefer a giant screen? How about the largest screen short of a sports arena? The problem with a screen of that size is that it takes up a lot of space in height and width and the viewers can’t be too close. Of course, golf requires a putting green so why not put one between the giant screen and the sports bar? Voila, you have Dewey’s Indoor Golf & Sports Bar, 15,000 square feet of it.

He has also considered other revenue streams. A distributor for the golf simulators, he also intends to market to golf companies during conventions. What a comfortable set-up for clients to test golf clubs?

David, Dewey, Diego, Marianella, & Derek Tomko sitting below the giant television screen. Another son, Drew was out of the country.

Cleveland Golf sponsored my golf bag that is part of the décor on the walls of Dewey’s Indoor Golf & Sports Grill. The logo for RealHangoverRelief.com is not very readable but with Dewey’s as its foundation, it will grow throughout the state and beyond. Always an innovator, Dewey’s is also home to The Gamblers Golf Hall of Fame that includes Titanic Thompson, Doyle Brunson, Puggy Pearson, Bobby Baldwin, Jack Binion, & Dewey himself. Dewey finished 2nd twice in the World Series of Poker’s.

A Book of Five Rings Club

Japan’s greatest samurai, Musashi Miyamoto’s classic book is “A Book of Five Rings”. Battle in the 1600’s consisted of individual sword fights. Musashi had analyzed the sword strokes and grouped them into 5 concentric circles that were applicable for both offense and defense. By mastering these 5 “Rings”, the samurai would be formidable in any battle. Studied by Japanese businessmen, the book is complex and philosophical but the core concept is that strategy must be encompassing. All aspects of a project must be considered, planned, and executed for its successful conclusion. Dewey makes it evident that one does not have to be worldly or mechanically inclined to be a successful entrepreneur. He has focus on his goal and implements all the elements of “A Book of Five Rings” even if he probably has never heard of it.

Dewey Tomko starts with his vision. How do you know where you’re going if you don’t conceptualize your goal? He then considers all the aspects of reaching that goal. He knows he doesn’t have the skill set himself but he finds the ones that do. Not a greedy person, he gives his partners and associates ample incentives to do a stellar job.

Dewey is a member of the “A Book of Five Rings Club” because he is a visionary that exercises its concepts and makes thing happen. The other requirement is financial success.

Ideas are important but execution is priceless…Stephen Wolff.

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Dewey Tomko

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Dewey Tomko

Dewey Tomko at the 2006 World Poker Tour Bellagio Five Star Tournament
Nickname(s)Dewey
ResidenceWinter Haven, Florida
Born December 31, 1946 (age 65)
World Series of Poker
Bracelet(s)3
Money finish(es)43
Highest ITM
Main Event finish
2nd
World Poker Tour
Title(s)None
Final table(s)2
Money finish(es)5
Information accurate as of 12 September 2010.

Duane 'Dewey' Tomko (born December 31, 1946 in Glassport, Pennsylvania)[1] is an American former kindergartenteacher turned professional poker player, based in Winter Haven, Florida.

Tomko is chiefly noted as the runner-up in the World Series of Poker (WSOP) $10,000 no limitTexas hold'em main event in both 1982 (to Jack Straus) and 2001 (to Carlos Mortensen.) Besides his success in the main event, Tomko has won three WSOP bracelets, all in different variations of poker, in addition to various other tournament wins throughout his career.

  • 2Poker Career

Early Life

Tomko was born and raised in Glassport, PA., a suburb of Pittsburgh. He began playing poker profitably as a 16-year-old in Pittsburgh pool halls which allowed him to finance his education.

He worked as a kindergarten teacher for several years, but often played poker through the night. After Tomko realised that poker was more profitable than his job, he invested a sum of his winnings into businesses while choosing to play poker full-time and leaving his full time job.

Poker Career

Tomko won his first WSOP bracelet in 1979 in the $1,000 No Limit Hold'em event. He defeated Duanne Hammrich heads-up to win the title and $48,000 cash prize.

At the 1984 WSOP, Dewey won two bracelets. First he won the $10,000 Deuce to Seven Draw event. The next day he went back-to-back, winning the $5,000 Pot Limit Omaha with re-buys event.

In addition to his WSOP success, Tomko has made two World Poker Tour (WPT) final tables. He finished runner-up in the 2003 Five Diamond World Poker Classic ($552,853) and in fourth place in the Costa Rica Classic ($14,650.)

Dewey Tomko Net Worth

Tomko has played every WSOP Main Event since 1974 which is currently the longest active streak.

Tomko took third place in the 2005 WSOPDeuce-to-seven lowball event worth $138,160. He also made the final table of the first WSOP $50,000 buy-in H.O.R.S.E. tournament in 2006 which featured some of the best tournament and cash game poker players in the world. He finished in 7th place earning a $343,200 payday.

As of 2010, his total live tournament winnings exceed $4,960,000.[2] Just over half of his tournament winnings, $2,641,573, have come at the WSOP.[3] He is a 2008 inductee into the Poker Hall of Fame.[4]


World Series of Poker Bracelets

Dewey Tomko Hendon

YearTournamentPrize (US$)
1979$1,000 No Limit Hold'em$48,000
1984$10,000 Deuce to Seven Draw$105,000
1984$5,000 Pot Limit Omaha$135,000

Family

Tomko is married with three children. His son Derek encouraged him to return to playing poker tournaments. (Tomko claims his son is a better player than he was at his age.)

Golf

Tomko is an excellent golfer, spending much of his time on the golf course when he is not playing poker. He has played with many of his fellow high stakes poker players like Doyle Brunson, Phil Ivey, and many others. One of his most frequent golf partners is poker player Hilbert Shirey who also lives in Tomko's hometown of Winter Haven, Florida.

Rick Reilly chronicles a day with Dewey on a golf course in his book Who's Your Caddy. In it, he contends that Tomko is not interested in competition if there is not a wager riding on it. Dewey is just as good a gambler on the golf course as he is sitting at a poker table. He notes that many PGA professionals will refuse to play him for money.

On NBC's Poker After Dark, Greg Raymer noted that pro golfer Rocco Mediate has said that if he had one person to putt for his life, it would be Tomko.

Dewey Tomko Restaurant

Notes

  1. ^Tourney.com profile
  2. ^Hendon Mob tournament results
  3. ^World Series of Poker Earnings, www.worldseriesofpoker.com
  4. ^Pokernews.com: Poker Hall of Fame 2008 Inductees Announced
1970
1971
  • Johnny Moss (2)
1972
1973
  • Aubrey Day
  • Puggy Pearson (3)
1974
  • Jimmy Casella (2)
1975
1976
  • Howard Andrew (2)
  • Doyle Brunson (2)
  • Doc Green
  • Walter Smiley
1977
  • Billy Allen
  • Bobby Baldwin (2)
  • Doyle Brunson (2)
  • George Huber
  • Louis Hunsucker
  • Fats Morgan
  • Jeff Sandow
  • Richard Schwartz
1978
  • Gary Berland (2)
  • Aubrey Day
  • Henry Young
1979
  • Gary Berland (2)
  • Lakewood Louie (2)
  • Dewey Tomko
note
number in brackets represents the number of bracelets earned in that year
1980
  • Robert Bone
  • Pat Callihan
  • Pete Christ
  • Jim Fugatti
  • Lynn Harvey
  • A.J. Myers
  • Bobby Schwing
1981
  • Ed Barmach
  • Frank Cardone
  • Fred David
  • Sid Gamerman
  • Bruce Hershenson
  • Juanda Matthews
  • A.J. Myers
  • Mickey Perry
  • Glen Rodgers
  • Stu Ungar (2)
1982
  • Billy Baxter (2)
  • Tom Cress
  • Nick Helm
  • Dani Kelly
  • Ralph Morton
  • John Paquette
  • Vera Richmond
  • David Sklansky (2)
1983
  • David Angel
  • Donna Doman
  • Buster Jackson
  • Tom McEvoy (2)
  • David Sklansky (2)
  • Don Todd
1984
  • Dick Albano
  • Todd Baur
  • William Bennett
  • Norman Berliner
  • Paul Fontaine
  • Jack Keller (2)
  • Sandy Stupak
  • Bob Martinez
  • Mike Schneiberg
  • Dewey Tomko (2)
1985
  • Dick Carson
  • Tommy Fischer
  • Rick Hamil
  • Mark Mitchell
  • Zorn Smiljanic
  • Tony Thang
  • Harry Thomas
  • Edwin Wyde
1986
  • Jim Allen
  • Mike Cox
  • Tommy Fischer
  • Ron Graham
  • J.B. Randall
1987
  • Bob Addison
  • Jim Craig
  • Ralph Merton
  • Joe Petro
  • Carl Rouss
1988
  • Val Carpenter
  • Russ Gibe
  • Gilbert Gross
  • David Helms
  • Lance Hilt
  • Merrill Hunt
  • Seymour Leibowitz
1989
  • Barry Blackburn
  • Norman Keyser
  • John Laudon
  • Harry Madoff
  • George Allen Shaw
note
number in brackets represents the number of bracelets earned in that year

Dewey Tomko Birthplace

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