Hello. My name is Matt Mangham, and I'm a juggling poker player. Well, not really a juggling-poker-player, because I don't actually juggle while I play poker. Wait a minute. Sometimes I do juggle while I'm playing on-line. So, my original title is correct. I am a juggling poker player. Where was I going with this?
Many of you may know me better as "Mangatang" (my screen name for poker forums, juggling forums, and on-line poker rooms). It's a nickname I received back in college, spawning from an alcohol-induced, monkey-like dance I used to do. Don't ask to see the dance, for it's been in retirement for many years now.
In the real world, I work as a process control engineer at an oil refinery in New Orleans, LA. I went to school at Louisiana Tech University where I graduated with a degree in chemical engineering. I'm happily married with two kids.
I can't remember ever not playing poker of some sort. As a kid, I used to play nickel/dime poker with friends (5 card draw was the only game we knew). In college, there was always a dealer's choice game going on (Mexican sweat, follow-the-bitch, 5-card-no-peek, etc.) But it wasn't until 1994 when my dad told me about a poker game he saw played in the casino called, Texas Hold'em, that I became serious about learning poker.
Although I made many trips to play poker in several of the Louisiana riverboat casinos over the years, I didn't become a winning player until I started playing on-line. Playing on-line allowed me more time to practice all the strategy I had been studying from authors such as Lee Jones, David Sklansky, and Mike Caro.
I taught myself to juggle when I was about 12 years old. I distinctly remember my first day of learning because I was using tennis balls on a hardwood floor. This is the worst
possible setup to learn with. I spent most of that day chasing down dropped balls that bounced
and rolled out of reach. (Note: It's much better to learn, using beanbags. They stay put when
they hit the floor.)
Over the years I gradually added a few tricks and even managed to teach myself to juggle five balls. Then in 2002, I met up with a group called the New Orleans Jugglers, who meet and juggle every week. It was here that my juggling passion took off. It is so much more fun to juggle with other people (seeing new tricks, passing clubs, comparing techniques, etc.)
You may have noticed in the KingsCascade logo that I refer to myself as "the world's greatest juggling poker player". This is NOT an official title. If you care to dispute my self-imposed title, feel free to send me evidence of your accomplishments (video of juggling and some sort of poker records) along with a $50 processing fee, and I will be glad to review your case. :)