Blackjack Hall of Fame: Ken Uston
The Best Blackjack Player Ever
The Making of a Professional Blackjack Gambler
Uston quit his job, joined a card-counting team and set out on the life of a professional blackjack gambler. His blackjack card-counting career was based mostly in Atlantic City after gambling was legalized in that city. At one point, he was barred from casinos there and he sued the casinos in turn. He won his lawsuit and as a result the Atlantic City casinos are not allowed to ban card counters, although they did change the rules of their blackjack games to make card counting more difficult.
The Blackjack Book that Created the Teams
The result of Uston's book was twofold: on one hand the casinos were on the lookout from then on in for blackjack card-counting teams; but on the other hand many of the great teams honed their skills through techniques they learned in Uston's books and went on to greatness after its publication. The MIT Blackjack Team, for instance, was formed after the publication of Uston's ground-breaking work.
Uston's career as an author didn't stop with "The Big Player." In the 1980s he wrote several best-selling books on blackjack and subsequently became something of an expert on home video games. But blackjack was his first and true love and, as a member of several card-counting teams, Uston won millions of dollars at the blackjack tables. For almost 20 years he played in disguise to evade the Griffin Investigations Agency and the blackjack casino owners who wanted him out. Ken Uston died at the age of 52 in 1987 and was inducted posthumously into the Blackjack Hall of Fame. It wasn't too late to recognize the legend even if it was after his time.











