Justin Bonomo Poker
Justin the Player and Person
Justin Bonomo; Justin Bonomo. Justin Bonomo, also known as ‘ZeeJustin’, is a professional poker player. He is one of the most famous and most successful professionals to ever play the game and has a reputation for taking part in the High Roller circuit. Bonomo was born in Virginia in 1985 and showed an interest in card games during his.
Justin won hundreds of thousands of dollars before the age of 21. All the wins are well documented as well. While he may not be the best online poker player he is famous in the online community. Unfortunately Justin is famous for things other than his great poker play. There are some events people wish they could take back and Justin has a few he isn’t proud of.
- Justin Bonomo unwittingly started his path towards poker greatness already at the age of 9 Displaying his inkling for card games and strategy-oriented thinking, Justin Bonomo unwittingly started his path towards poker.
- As a result of the USA Online Poker Ban, Bonomo moved to Malta In September 2011 along with fellow professional Isaac Haxton. Born in 1985, Justin is a member of the online poker generation.
Justin has since gone down the right path and even recently joined Team Bodog. (he quit the team in the beginning of 2010)
Just Who is Justin Bonomo?
Justin Bonomo started in the card games scenario by playing a game called Magic where he traveled around the world playing against players much older than him. Justin was born in 1985 and began playing poker when he was 16. He mostly played .5/1 games and dared to go bigger but usually lost. At the age of 18 he began to take the game much more seriously by reading books and visiting poker strategy forums.
He began his online poker quest at Party Poker where he quickly built a bankroll of $10,000 from about $200. He then built his bankroll even more by playing multiple tables at Party Poker’s $200 Sit n Go’s. By the age of 21 Justin was the youngest player to ever make it to a final table on the World Poker Tour which just so happened to be aired on Television. Besides poker Justins passions in life are music. He frequents alternative rock concerts and has been to over 100 of them.
BetOnline.com is still accepting real money USA players.
How He Makes Money
Justin is known for his canning ability to dominate Sit N Go poker at Party Poker where he used to have an account. We’ll get into the “used to” part in a minute. He is known at many forums as the 12 tabler. His normal game is playing eight $200+15 Sit n Go tables at a time. During his peak he visits the $1,000 Sit n Go’s and plays 8 at a time. He regularly tracks his stats and averages $40 profit per table he plays when at the $200 tables. He’s stated that he can make about $400 an hour playing these smaller tournaments.
The Cheating Scandal
It is best to explain the scenario in full to get a complete understanding of what happened to Justin before drawing any conclusions. Justin plays a lot of multitable tournaments at Party Poker and Poker Stars. During this period of time a guy named Josh Field aka JJProdigy and ABlackcar was caught for multi-table cheating at Party Poker. He was doing so by exploiting a bug in Party Poker’s software. By clicking the Party Poker icon rapidly it allowed players to open multiple accounts at once.
This brought to light a bunch of other cheaters and Justin Bonomo was one of them. It turns out Justin had multiple accounts and was entering multi-table tournaments at both Party Poker and Poker Stars. During this raid by Party Poker they proved that Justin was a cheater and confiscated $100,000 from his account. The amount was just about all the money he had won from the Big Sunday $600+40 Party Poker tournament the week before. Poker Stars investigated his account as well but found his winnings were legit in the Big Sunday tournament where he won $137,000.
The Apology
Justin has publicly apologized for what he did. He has stated on his website how wrong it was but he still does feel Party Poker over reacted to the whole situation. Many of his followers believe the entire situation was blown out of proportion while some are outraged about what he did.
Event Placings
Tournament Event | Date | Winnings |
World Poker Tour | 9/20/11 | $8,501 |
Epic Poker League | 8/9/11 | $43,190 |
World Series of Poker | 6/28/11 | $117,305 |
World Series of Poker | 6/25/11 | $4,242 |
World Series of Poker | 6/14/11 | $13,368 |
World Series of Poker | 6/11/11 | $4,743 |
World Poker Classic | 5/18/11 | $224,160 |
World Series of Poker | 6/30/10 | $58,699 |
World Series of Poker | 6/11/10 | $5,202 |
Wynn Classic | 3/15/10 | $11,737 |
North American Poker Tour | 1/5/10 | $28,000 |
World Series of Poker | 7/3/09 | $25,027 |
World Series of Poker | 6/30/09 | $11,296 |
World Series of Poker | 6/28/09 | $2,690 |
World Series of Poker | 6/20/09 | $2,890 |
World Series of Poker | 6/12/09 | $4,871 |
World Series of Poker | 5/28/09 | $413,165 |
World Series of Poker Circuit | 4/27/09 | $227,692 |
World Poker Classic | 4/14/09 | $53,970 |
Poker Stars Caribbean Adventure | 1/8/09 | $31,600 |
Dream Team Championship | 11/8/08 | $18,000 |
World Poker Tour | 10/20/08 | $42,630 |
World Poker Tour | 7/11/08 | $19,390 |
World Series of Poker | 6/13/08 | $14,438 |
World Series of Poker | 6/2/08 | $230,159 |
World Series of Poker Circuit | 4/29/08 | $96,594 |
Foxwoods Poker Classic | 4/2/08 | $13,595 |
World Poker Tour | 1/27/08 | $135,243 |
Caesars Palace Classic | 10/22/07 | $163,693 |
World Series of Poker | 7/2/07 | $8,067 |
World Series of Poker | 6/28/07 | $8,212 |
World Series of Poker | 6/6/07 | $156,040 |
Sunday Poker Stars Tournament | 12/11/05 | $137,000 |
World Series of Poker | 4/28/07 | $40,973 |
World Poker Tour | 4/21/07 | $77,350 |
L.A. Poker Classic | 2/12/07 | $11,400 |
World Poker Tour | 1/6/07 | $77,702 |
World Poker Tour | 12/14/06 | $152,230 |
World Poker Classic | 12/5/06 | $16,465 |
Sunday Poker Stars Tournament | 12/11/05 | $137,000 |
Sunday Party Poker Event $600+40 -Confiscated | 10/22/05 | $110,000 |
Poker Stars Multitable | 8/29/05 | $19,000 |
EuroPoker Tour | 2/15/05 | $40,815 |
World Poker Tour | 1/05/05 | $15,600 |
Last Updated: January 24, 2012
If any information in this biography is incorrect please email us at info@compatiblepoker.com and we will correct it immediately. Information is collected through web research and sometimes interviews. We try to keep the info as accurate as possible but sometimes rumors take the place of facts by accident.
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- »The Five Biggest MTT Cashes of Justin Bonomo
Justin Bonomo is one of the best poker tournament players of all time. There are very few achievements left for Bonomo to check off. He’s won three WSOP bracelets and more than $49.1 million from live MTTs. Bonomo is one of the greatest poker players ever.
Bonomo was born in Fairfax, Virginia but now resides in Las Vegas, Nevada. He also grinds online poker tournaments from a residence in Vancouver, Canada.
He cut his teeth online, but he has a chequered past. PokerStars and partypoker banned Bonomo after he was found to be playing on multiple accounts, often at the same time and in the same tournaments. That was back in 2006 and he’s since cleaned up his act significantly.
The man known as “ZeeJustin” helped himself to a $1,775,000 prize on June 2. He came out on top of a 50-strong field in the $102,000 Super High Roller Bowl at partypoker. The event was packed with the world’s elite grinders, but Bonomo’s class shone through.
Bonomo scooped $1,775,000 for this latest impressive victory, but it doesn’t even rank in his top five prizes won! That is how amazing this man is at poker. His top five scores weigh in at an almost unbelievable $25,237,002! Here are those top five scores.
Bonomo Won $10 Million in July 2018
$10 million is the biggest prize won by Bonomo during his career so far. Imagine winning an eight-figure prize from a poker tournament. This gigantic prize came his way when he won the Big One For One Drop at the 2018 WSOP. Twenty-seven players paid $1 million in this event and Bonomo outlasted them all. He defeated German legend Fedor Holz heads-up; Holz banked $6 million for second-place.
The Big One For One Drop title awarded this poker hero his third WSOP bracelet. There are many more bracelets coming his way, surely.
Justin Bonomo Cheating
Bonomo Wins 2018 Super High Roller Bowl For $5 Million
May 2018 saw Bonomo win the Super High Roller Bowl in Las Vegas. He was among 48-entrants who forked out $300,000 and created a $14,400,000 prize pool. The likes of Christoph Vogelsang, and Jason Koon reached the final table. Daniel Negreanu was the only player standing between Bonomo and a $5 million score. He didn’t stand in his way for long.
Incredibly, this $5 million prize came less than two months after he won another SHRB vent! Which brings us to…..
Bonomo Takes Down Super High Roller Bowl China For $4.8 Million
The American superstar won the Super High Roller Bowl China for the equivalent of $4,823,077 in March 2018. He triumphed in the Las Vegas edition two months later for an additional $5 million!
This event was again so stacked with elite pros that it was, as the kids say, sick. Bonomo eventually found himself heads-up against Patrik Antonius. Bonomo fears nobody and he sent the Finn to the showers in second place. This victory, the first in China, won Bonomo HK$37,830,000 ($4,823,077). It was, at the time, his largest live tournament prize of his career.
$3,248,728 Score In London
It was only 10 months ago that Bonomo bagged a top prize of $3,248,728 in London. Some 108 entries of £100,000 each were processed in the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series London Short Deck event. This led to a £10,370,000 prize pool ($12,617,721) that the top 15 finishers shared.
He was once again the last man standing after defeating Wai Yong heads-up. His £2,670,000 prize ($3,248,728), although massive, ranks only fourth in his largest MTT scores! Ridiculous!
Justin Bonomo Poker Player
His First Seven-Figure Haul
Bonomo has secured seven prizes weighing in at seven-figures or more. The first came back in April 2012 in Monte Carlo. He entered the €100,000 buy-in EPT Grand Final Super High Roller. Buy-in of this size were almost unheard of back then yet 45 players bought in.
Justin Bonomo Poker Strategy
Negreanu and Antonius cashed. As did Bertrand “ElkY” Grospellier. Bonomo sent Tobias Reinkemeier home in second place to net €1,640,000 ($2,165,217).