The main reason for why Stu switched from gin to poker was that he was a little too good at it. So good in fact, that no one possibly could equal him. Even the commonly called experts who were meant to be the most favorable at gin rummy were blow away when they played against Stu. One of these gin rummy masters was Harry Stein, nicknamed, "Yonkie". Harry Stein was handed such a humiliating defeat at the hands of mr. ungar that he evidently quit competing in it professionally and never resurfaced at a gin rummy tournament.
Accordingly, with a honor like that it wasn’t too long before gamblers became shy of wagering against Stu Ungar. He could not find any games and in his agony he began doing something no one had done before. Stu began offering beginning handicaps to potential opponents in the wish that they may play with him if they believed they had an edge. He at will started from a bad arrangement and one tale has it that stu even competed with a regular bad egg. Amid the contest, he received warnings that the absconder was at it once again but mr. ungar stated that he was aware of the chicanery and he would still come away with a win, which of course, he did.
The same problem followed Stu Ungar to vegas. He won so frequently that the casinos started requesting that he not to wager on their rooms anymore. The reason was that other poker room players refused to be seated at the poker table if Stu was playing.
Stu Ungar is recollected more for his abilities in holdem poker but he always maintained that he was a whole lot more skilled at gin rummy.
He defeated Doyle Brunson in the WSOP in 1980 and became the youngest world champion. Due to his features that made him seem far younger than he actually was, he was nicknamed, "The Kid".