"Jeopardy!" contestant James Holzhauer surpasses $1 million in record time
"Jeopardy!" contestant James Holzhauer topped $1 million on Tuesday in just 14 games, becoming only the second person in history to top $1 million. It was also the fastest any candidate had reached $1 million. In 2004, "Jeopardy!" champion Ken Jennings took 33 games to reach $1 million, according to fan website thejeopardyfan.com.
Holzhauer won $118,816 on Tuesday after correctly answering "Who are Grant and Lee" to the Final Jeopardy clue "On May 1, 1869, these two men met at the White House, four years and three weeks after a more historic meeting between them."
Jennings took home $2.5 million in 2004 over 74 games, the longest consecutive winning streak in "Jeopardy!" history. But Holzhauer has now captured the top seven slots in the "Jeopardy!" Hall of Fame for the highest total in a single game. Holzhauer took home $131,127 on April 17, following by Tuesday's winnings and then by $110,914 on April 9, the day he first smashed the single-game total.
Holzhauer, a professional gambler who lives in Las Vegas, is known for both starting out at the bottom of the board (aka the high dollar amounts), seeking out the Daily Double and betting it all. For his part, Jennings joked on Twitter on Monday that he should get more credit for "making small, sensible Jeopardy wagers, which helped the show with its prize budget."
"It's all about your personal risk tolerance," Holzhauer told ESPN on Monday. "I'm comfortable risking a lot if I know I have a big edge -- sometimes I don't think I have that big edge -- but on 'Jeopardy!,' I'm going to get the Daily Double right a lot more often than I'm not going to, so I just want to maximize that bet."
Holzhauer leaves notes on his Final Jeopardy! answers saying hello to family members. On Monday, he told Trebek he had run out of family members and was saying hello to three friends.
Holzhauer, 34, has also made wagers corresponding to his anniversary, his daughter's birthday or other milestones in his life. "I don't know if I would call that superstition or just a fun thing I wanted to do up there," he told ESPN.