Jon Finkel (born May 18, 1978)Jon Finkel 2006 Pro Player card (from the Magic: The Gathering expansion) is an American and poker player. Finkel is one of the most decorated players in the history of professional play and is widely regarded as one of the greatest players of all-time. During his career he has won three events and made the Top 8 of a record 16 events, winning three. In the year 2000, he became the , as well as playing for the United States National Team, which won the team portion of the competition.
In 1996 the first was held in New York. Finkel competed in the Junior Division of the tournament, made it to the Top 8, and won a $1,000 scholarship. After reaching another Top 8 in the Junior Division of Pro Tour Columbus Finkel had his first appearance in the senior competition of the Pro Tour at the in Seattle. A ninth-place finish earned him $3,200.
Finkel had three Top 16 finishes in the , but never made it to the finals. His first Top 8 appearance was at . In the same season Finkel won his first Grand Prix title in Rio de Janeiro, his first Pro Tour title in New York; finished third at US and the World Championship, and eventually claimed the title.
The opened with Finkel winning another Grand Prix in Boston and making his third consecutive Top 8 appearance, a feat only once before achieved by Scott Johns. Finkel finished the season second to Kai Budde in the Pro Player of the Year race. At the first Team Pro Tour in Washington the following Finkel finished third with his friends and teammates Daniel and Steven O'Mahoney-Schwartz. After some mediocre finishes in the middle of the season Finkel won the as well as the team and the individual portion of the . Eventually Finkel finished third in the Pro Player of the Year race. Later in 2000 Finkel also won the Magic Invitational, giving him the chance to design his own Magic card. His creation, , debuted in the set and was later reprinted in and Modern Masters 2015 edition.
After two additional Top 8 appearances in the Finkel's performances dropped in the . Two Top 8s in were followed by another drop in and eventually by Finkel retiring from professional play. In 2005 he was inducted into the as the vote leader of the inaugural class. This allowed him to attend further Pro Tours without having to qualify. In 2008 Finkel thus attended and won , becoming the first player to win a Pro Tour after his induction into the Hall of Fame. Magic head designer Mark Rosewater commented on the occasion, "Finkel is the most naturally gifted player the game has ever seen. His accomplishments are rivaled by only one other man Budde".
In recent years, Finkel, like fellow Magic players David Williams and Noah Boeken, has been playing in high-level poker tournaments. He currently works as a managing partner at the hedge fund Landscape Capital Management.
As of 2021, Finkel was the Treasurer of the board of directors of Gamers Helping Gamers, a nonprofit organization that assists aspiring college students who play Magic: The Gathering by awarding them tuition .
In 2011, Alyssa Bereznak, an intern for tech website Gizmodo wrote an article about two dates she had with Finkel, which was picked up by Forbes, The Washington Post and CBS. The article was critical of Finkel for not revealing he played Magic on his OkCupid dating profile, eliciting negative comments against the writer from a number of people involved in tech and geek culture, notably actress Felicia Day and Playboy Playmate of the Year Sara Jean Underwood.
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