TOLLERENE MARKS RETURN TO THE LIVE SCENE WITH DEBUT TRITON TITLE IN CYPRUS

Ben Tollerene, champion on only his second Triton Series outing!

Another intriguing tournament on the Triton Super High Roller Series concluded in Northern Cyprus tonight with a heads-up battle between two Triton newcomers and another masterclass in short-stack play.

The trend during recent tournaments on this series is for huge-field events to become very shallow-stacked during the closing stages, with an assortment of GTO masters demonstrating a computer-like grasp of ICM considerations too.

This latest example came in the $30,000 buy-in Event #2, where the final three players from a 123-entry field were Stephen Chidwick, Yuri Dzivelevski and Ben Tollerene. The former of those is a Triton veteran, but he perished in third, leaving Tollerene and Dzivelevski heads-up to decide who took a maiden title in what was only a second Triton tournament for both of them.

They chopped it heads up, based on chip stacks at the time, securing Tollerene at least $777,927 and Dzivelevski at least $749,073. But with $30,000 left on the side to play for, the winner would also take the most money, alongside the Shamballa Jewels bracelet, the trophy and the bragging rights.

Luca Vivaldi oversees the deal between Yuri Dzivelevski and Ben Tollerene

After a short battle, and a couple of pendulum swings, it was Tollerene who ended up taking all of that swag, notching his first Triton title and keeping Brazil waiting for its first. Tollerene, a good friend of the Triton Ambassador Jason Koon, was happy that his buddy had finally persuaded him to come along.

“I’m very tired,” Tollerene said in his winner’s interview. “I was sort of stressed because I haven’t played poker in a while and I was struggling to remember everything.”

But he certain got back into the swing pretty easily, and his $807,000 score is a nice way to start your Triton career.

FINAL DAY ACTION

After a prolonged bubble period last night, 17 players returned today safely in the money, but with a long way still to go until the six-handed final table. Some of those at the top of the overnight counts couldn’t make it through, but others went in the opposite direction. Both Tollerene and Dzivelevski, for instance, had been in the bottom half of the counts overnight, but took their place at the final less than 14 hours later.

The overnight leader was Viktor Kudinov, who prospered especially on the bubble by making a huge call for his tournament life against Tollerene. But it was Kudinov’s departure in seventh, losing a race with AcKc to Dzivelevski’s JhJd that turned the unofficial to the official final.

Event 2 final seven (l-r): Yuri Dzivelevski, Viktor Kudinov, Alex Keating, Ben Tollerene, Fedor Holz, Stephen Chidwick, Ignacio Moron Chavero

Here’s how they lined up with six left, all peering up at Dzivelevski, but with not much between them.

Yuri Dzivelevski – 5.4 million
Fedor Holz – 4.825 million
Ignacio Moron Chavero – 4.625 million
Ben Tollerene – 3.725 million
Stephen Chidwick – 3.425 million
Alex Keating – 2.6 million

This then turned into one of those final tables that could have been over in the blink of an eye but somehow transpired to take far longer. It was because of a number of double-ups with six players still involved.

All of Alex Keating, Chidwick and Ignacio Moron Chavero managed to get their chips in good and stick around, even as the stacks went through their familiar shallowing. We were even looking like getting to a stage of play where there would be 60 big blinds between six players, but then the dam broke.

Chavero, another player making his Triton debut in Cyprus, picked up his first cash in this, his second event, but ultimately he wasn’t able to spin it up into a win. He became the first elimination from the final losing with Kh9c to Dzivelevski’s QsTc. A ten fell on the river, and Chavero earned $215,000 for sixth place.

Ignacio Moron Chavero: First cash for newcomer from Spain

As ever, viewers on the Triton live stream had been enjoying watching these elite talents do battle with one another, but one personal battle had been getting them especially excited. Holz was sitting to the right of Chidwick, and two of the modern game’s great starers had been giving each other eyes from close quarters. It helped, of course, that they were also playing perfect poker, three-betting when they had to, and folding losers when that was required.

Unfortunately even great talents like this couldn’t do much with stacks so short, and this particular sub-plot ended when Holz busted to Tollerene. Holz raised from his stack of abut six big blinds with KhJd. Tollerene defended his big blind with KdQs and flopped top-pair queens.

Holz jammed with a backdoor flush draw and one overcard, but the board bricked out and Tollerene’s hand held. Holz looked amazed to be out, but he’ll take $272,300 and almost certainly reinvest it in the next tournament on the schedule.

An eyeball-popping elimination for Fedor Holz

That left four players, three of whom had not been to any previous Triton events. But all of them were making the right moves at the right time, including Keating, who just happened to be the next man out. Keating’s stack kept dipping then doubling, dipping then doubling, but then he lost what turned out to a decisive pot against Tollerene when Keating shoved the button and ran into a hand.

Keating had Kc2c and Tollerene had AsTd. They both flopped a pair, but aces are always bigger than deuces. Keating finally perished two hands later with Kh6d to Dzivelevski’s Ah6h, but he only had one big blind. Keating won $337,500.

A battling Alex Keating says goodbye

The next man out was Chidwick, the current leader of the Triton Player of the Year race, who had had such an incredible run in Madrid earlier this summer. Chidwick’s push to this final table proved again that he has lost none of his appetite, and he took another $408,000 for his third place here.

Chidwick had tormented everyone when he had a big stack, but was forced to pick his spots with care, like everyone else, once those stacks grew shorter. He actually found what looked like a perfect moment to force through a bluff — he had Jh8s looking at a flop of Qd9h4h — but Dzivelevski made a good read to pick him off with ace-high.

Stephen Chidwick dazzling with his Jacob & Co watch

Chidwick still has his Main Event winner’s watch glinting under the studio lights, even though he’s not going to win them all.

With just two of them left, they quickly decided to do a chip-chop. Tollerene had the slightly bigger stack and took the bigger share, and there was every indication immediately that the two of them were prepared to embrace the volatility of this heads-up battle.

Dzivelevski scored a massive double up with QsJs beating Tollerene’s Qd5c. But then Tollerene managed to battle back into it, and secured a double up of his own with KhQd beating Ah7s.

Yuri Dzivielevski settles for second

The final hand was a cracker, playing through all the streets, with Tollerene limping from the small blind, setting a trap with AsQc. Dzivelevski checked his option with Qh8h. The flop was 6sQd2h, giving both top pair. Tollerene bet, Dzivelevski raised and Tollerene called.

Then the turn was what Dzivelevski must have considered the gin card. It was the 8d. It went bet, raise, call again, with the Brazilian hoping for a double up. However the Ac river gave Tollerene a better two pair, and that’s where the rest of the chips went in. Tollerene was the champion.

Koon gave him a huge hug and Tollerene looked a little shell-shocked that his return to poker after his extended break could be so successful so quickly. And the series is barely started yet…

Jason Koon persuaded his friend Tollerene to come to the Triton Series

Event 2: $30,000 NLH – 6 – Handed
Dates: September 6-7, 2022
Entries: 123 (inc. 46 re-entries)
Prize pool: $3,690,000

1 – Ben Tollerene, USA – $807,927*
2 – Yuri Dzivelevski, Brazil – $749,073*
3 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – $408,000
4 – Alex Keating, USA – $337,500
5 – Fedor Holz, Germany – $272,300
6 – Ignacio Moron Chavero, Spain – $215,000

7 – Viktor Kudinov, Russia – $164,000
8 – Wai Kin Yong, Malaysia – $123,500
9 – Sam Greenwood, Canada – $92,100
10 – Kannapong Thanarattrakul, Thailand – $75,000
11 – Razavi Melika, Iran – $75,000
12 – Jason Koon, USA – $66,400
13 – Artur Martirosyan, Russia – $66,400
14 – Nicolas Chouity, Lebanon – $60,900
15 – Espen Jorstad, Norway – $60,900
16 – Pedro Garagnani, Brazil – $58,000
17 – Paul Phua, Malaysia – $58,000

*denotes heads-up deal

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

FOUR BUBBLE-UPS BEFORE A BURST: HOW THEY REACHED THE MONEY IN EVENT 2 IN CYPRUS

A dejected Pieter Aerts, bubble boy

The bubble period in any poker tournament always offers some prospects of high tension, and even though the super high rollers like to project a feeling of weary indifference, it’s actually very clear how much it means to them when you see it up close on the tournament floor.

Event 2 of this year’s Triton Super High Roller Series stop in Cyprus brought us a really thrilling bubble period late last night, complete with four short-stack double ups (or bubble-ups, to use an alternative term) and then a sickener for a Triton newcomer.

The event was a $30,000 6-Max tournament, with the biggest field ever assembled on the Triton Series for a 6-Max event. There were 123 entries, wiht 46 re-entries, which meant a $3.69 million prize pool, a top prize of $930,000 and, crucially, only 17 players to be paid.

As the tournament clock closed in on the end of Level 17, the scheduled end of the day, the tournament reached the stone bubble with 18 players left. All 18 agreed to play on until the money was reached, and that brought us the exciting passage of play described below.

Bubble-up 1: Garagnani through Yong

Pedro Garagnani’s joy as Jason Koon walks away in disgust

The first bubble-up came on Table 3, i.e., the only table not on the television stage. It came about after Stephen Chidwick, with a big stack, made an early-position raise and Kannapong Thanarattrakul called on the button. Pedro Garagnani, the table short stack, was sitting in the small blind with only 270K in his stack, but he had looked down at AcQh. With so much money in the pot already, and a premium holding, he sigh-shoved it in.

But if he’d have hoped for quick folds, he was immediately disappointed. Wai Kin Yong, in the big blind, re-shoved for 1.7 million. The others did now quickly fold.

Both players now let out a chuckle when hands went on their backs because Yong had the same: AhQd. “Anyone suited?” said Jason Koon, who had abandoned his short stack on Table 2 to come over a see what might happen here. Noticing they were both off-suit, Koon said, “Boring.”

But it turned out to be anything but.

The dealer put the flop out there: 4h6hQs and Garagnani now realised he had forgotten which ace-queen was his. He was relieved to find out that his was the hand with the Ah in it.

When the turn brought the 9h, Garagnani started to believe. And the 2h river gave him the flush and the full double-up. He clenched his fist in celebration, as Koon wandered away muttering expletives under his breath.

Bubble-up 2: Koon through Keating and Dzivielevski

Jason Koon’s prayers were answered with a triple up

After witnessing one of his principal bubble rivals double, Koon was now the man under most threat. And on the next hand, he open-raised to 200,000 from a stack of 235,000, leaving himself just enough to see another hand if things got weird.

Both Alex Keating and Yuri Dzivielevski, in small and big blinds, respectively, called Koon’s bet, and they saw the flop of 5sJh8s. After two checks, Koon pushed the 35K forward, and he picked up two calls.

Koon was now all-in, but there was betting still between Keating and Dzivielevski, so cards stayed face down after the 9d turn. Both active players checked. That brought the 8d on the river and two more checks.

As this was playing out, another massive pot was going down back on Table 3, where two big stacks were playing through every street. So it meant Koon, Keating and Dzivielevski had to keep their hands concealed still.

That other hand also ended with a shove and a call — details below — so tournament director Luca Vivaldi told the Table 3 players to wait and scooted over to Table 2 to see the result of this one first.

Koon tabled AdJc for a flopped pair of jacks, and both his opponents mucked. That was a triple up for the Triton Ambassador.

Bubble-up 3: Kudinov through Tollerene

Viktor Kudinov ponders a tournament-defining decision

Bubble play is usually only really stressful for the short-stacked players who have little fold equity and who know that one false move or bad beat could spell disaster. But sometimes you also get two huge stacks going at it, potentially lighting on fire hundreds of thousands of dollars of tournament equity, else putting themselves firmly in a position to win heaps. These pots usually start off as a kind of sub-plot to the main bubble drama, but can quickly escalate.

That’s exactly what happened in the case of the second Table 3 skirmish of this bubble period, which played out immediately after the Garagnani/Yong confrontation, and concurrent to the Koon/Dzivielevski/Keating hand.

Ben Tollerene had been one of the tournament big stacks almost right from the very start, and was looking to exert more pressure on the medium stacks at his table during the bubble period. Tollerene made a standard opening raise to 110,000 from a 2.5 million stack and Viktor Kudinov, with 1.4 million, called from one seat to his left. The rest of the table folded.

The dealer put the 4hTs5d flop out there and Tollerene bet 250,000. Kudinov called, seeing the 8s on the turn. Tollerene kept with his story and bet 450,000. Kudinov still wasn’t giving up and called.

The river was the 2h, surely a blank, but Tollerene emptied the clip and moved all-in, meaning Kudinov would need to call off everything he had to see a showdown.

Kudinov immediately pushed all of his time bank chips in front of him. There were at least eight of them. One by one they dwindled as time went past in 30 second intervals, and the dealer even had to give him “change” from his five time-bank chip. Eventually, with just 20 seconds left, Kudinov had had enough. He called, potentially ending his tournament right there.

“Hold it, Ben!” Vivaldi, the tournament director, said, as Tollerene went to show his cards. Vivaldi had to scoot over to Koon’s table, as detailed above, to oversee the triple up for Tollerene’s good friend.

By the time Vivaldi had come back, the atmosphere was relaxed on the Tollerene/Kudinov table because it seemed that Tollerene’s hand had been seen and the information perhaps relayed to Kudinov. Although the American had AcTc for top pair, Kudinov’s pocket jacks were good. He was going to pick up a huge double up and survive, leaving Tollerene back in the pack.

Bubble-up 4: Jorstad through Malikeh

The run-good continues for Espen Jørstad

The main feature table, Table 1, had three of the five shortest stacks at the start of bubble play, and after the two on the other tables both doubled, those three were now propping up the chip counts. The first of them to make a stand was the WSOP Main Event champion Espen Jorstad, who got his last few big blinds in and found a double too.

This one was relatively drama free. Razzavi Malikeh was very comfortable, with a huge stack, even though the other leader, Fedor Holz, was sitting to her left. Malikeh nonetheless opened this pot to 115K, from a 3.3 million stack, and Holz got out the way, as did Sam Greenwood to his left.

Jorstad, however, moved all-in for 235,000 and action passed back to Malikeh. “I can’t fold,” she said and tabled As6c. Jorstad was in good shape with JhKc, but certainly not out of it.

This time the dealer did not provide any weirdness. The flop was entirely clean and the pocket pair held up, keeping Jorstad afloat.

Bubble bursts! Keating busts Aerts

A sickening end for Pieter Aerts

The tournament clock had ticked deep into Level 18 as all the bubble shenanigans played out, nearly a full level longer than had been originally planned. And then finally a short stack was unable to find a double up and the pressure finally abated.

The unfortunate player was Belgium’s Pieter Aerts, making his Triton debut here in Cyprus. And this was a forgettable end for him, coming in a blind-versus-blind encounter with Alex Keating.

Aerts, with a 510K stack, raised his small blind to 500K, another one of those “almost” all-ins, but not quite. Keating defended his big blind with a call.

The flop came AsTs8h and Aerts checked. Keating bet 50,000, asking Aerts to commit his last 10,000, which he did. But it was bad news for the Belgian.

Aerts had KcQd, and had a gutshot, but Keating had top pair with his Ad4d. The turn and river were bricks, and a very sick Aerts made his way out the door.

The bags came out leaving the remaining 17 players in the money and heading to Day 2.

*****

End-of-day chip counts:

Viktor Kudinov 3,590,000
Malikeh Razavi 3,515,000
Fedor Holz 3,250,000
Wai Kin Yong 1,955,000
Stephen Chidwick 1,810,000
Ignacio Moron Chavero 1,645,000
Alex Keating 1,495,000
Kannapong Thanarattrakul 1,400,000
Yuri Dzivelevski 1,190,000
Pedro Garagnani 1,060,000
Benjamin Tollerene 965,000
Paul Phua 680,000
Jason Koon 630,000
Espen Joerstad 370,000
Artur Martirosyan 360,000
Nicolas Chouity 355,000
Sam Greenwood 345,000

Payout schedule:

Event 2: $30,000 NLH – 6 – Handed
Dates: September 6-7, 2022
Entries: 123 (inc. 46 re-entries)
Prize pool: $3,690,000

1 – $930,000
2 – $627,000
3 – $408,000
4 – $337,500
5 – $272,300
6 – $215,000
7 – $164,000
8 – $123,500
9 – $92,100
10-11 – $75,000
12-13 – $66,400
14-15 – $60,900
16-17 – $58,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

ANTONIUS EARNS FIRST TRITON TITLE TO GET CYPRUS SERIES OFF TO A FLYER

Champion! Patrik Antonius

The huge banners that hang from the walls of the Triton Series tournament rooms are a who’s who of poker’s most decorated players. Seemingly all of the brightest stars in the world game have won at least one event on this prestigious tour, and these banners are like a picture gallery of poker’s most elevated elite.

But until tonight, there was one very conspicuous absentee — and it happened to be one of the only poker players who could probably be considered pin-up material, even before you factor in his sensational poker skills.

Patrik Antonius has long been one of poker’s true poster boys, and now finally the flying Finn can join that gallery of stars. Antonius took down Event #1 of the Triton Super High Roller Series festival in Northern Cyprus, earning $825,000 for beating a record-breaking field of 131 entries. Long considered a cash-game titan, with a tournament game to stand comparison with anyone else’s, Antonius is now also a Triton champion. And it feels good.

“These are the nicest events that exist in poker…everything is top, top quality,” Antonius said as he reflected on his first tournament win since 2018. “They couldn’t do a better job. I’m happy to play these tournaments and I’m happy to win my first one. I’m happy. I’m happy.”

Antonius also becomes the first player to win an exclusive limited-edition Shamballa Jewels bracelet along with his trophy.

The exclusive Shamballa winner’s bracelet

Antonius beat Fahredin Mustafov heads-up, completing the job on a player who had earlier tried to run an audacious triple-barrel bluff on Antonius, resulting only in the Finn making a sensational hero call for his tournament life with nothing but a pair of deuces. It was a truly amazing call, following a truly audacious play from Mustafov, who was making a move with ten-high. It gave Antonius a lead three-handed that he never gave up.

Not even a classic Steve O’Dwyer rearguard action could halt Antonius, despite O’Dwyer clinging on with a short stack when it seemed impossible, and then building back from one chip to a playable stack. Antonius accounted for O’Dwyer in third ($362,000) and then Mustafov in second ($557,000) to give himself more than $800K to speculate through the remainder of this 15-event series.

FINAL DAY ACTION

The volatile nature of short-stacked tournament play was evident immediately on the resumption of play today, with the overnight leader, Paul Phua, becoming the first player knocked out. Other former big stacks, including Bruno Volkmann and Ivan Leow followed the Triton founder out the door before they reached a final table.

That particular milestone was reached when Artem Vezhenkov and Santi Jiang were eliminated all but simultaneously on neighbouring tables, taking a field from 10 to eight, and leaving the following to battle for the biggest money.

Cyprus Event #1 final table players. Clockwise from top left: Fahredin Mustafov, Danny Tang, Kannapong Thanarattrakul, Viacheslav Buldygin, Patrik Antonius, Ebony Kenney, Steve O’Dwyer, Seth Davies.

It was truly anybody’s game at this stage, but some patterns began to emerge. Antonius, in particular, seized his opportunity to begin some upward momentum, while O’Dwyer drew on all of his experience to know precisely when to make his moves.

Meanwhile, those first-timers, led by Ebony Kenney, were enjoying their time at their debut final table. The conversation was flowing, even as the state of the stacks left the order of eliminations largely in the lap of the gods.

The Triton regular Seth Davies was the first to bust from the final table, taking the first six-figure pay-day of this Cyprus stop. Davies had Ah4h when Fahredin Mustafov had pocket sixes and the pocket pair held up. Davies’ padded his bank-roll to the tune of $109,500.

The end of the road for Seth Davies

The last Thai competitor, Kannapong Thanarattrakul, hit the rail next, speculating his last 10 big blinds with KhQd and also losing to a small pocket pair: this time, pocket fives with Antonius.

Kannapong Thanarattrakul

Antonius was also responsible for the next elimination, when his AdQh held up against Viacheslav Buldygin’s KdJs. Thanarattrakul took $145,700, while Buldygin won $190,500 for seventh and sixth place, respectively.

A decent run for Viacheslav Buldygin

Kenney was having a ball on her first visit to the Triton Series, having stepped up from a regular diet of $5K and smaller buy-ins to mix it in this rarefied company. Kenney was invited to Cyprus to partner Phil Nagy in the Coin Rivet Invitational, but also decided to get some experience at the high roller felt in the tournaments running up to that $200K buy-in event.

She later said that she had settled into the game very easily as players on her first table began discussing relationships and sex. But her poker game was also a match for her conversational dexterity and she cruised into the money — not many players notch a cash on their Triton debut — and she then became the first woman ever to feature at a Triton Series final table.

This particular party ended for Kenney when her last 10 big blinds went in with AhQd. But Mustafov had pocket kings and flopped another one, leaving Kenney drawing to running cards for a straight. They didn’t come and she was gone, picking up $240,500 and heaps of valuable experience for her next tilt at a title.

Ebony Kenney enjoyed a dream debut on the Triton Series

One of the players at Kenney’s first table yesterday, whose table chatter had helped her feel at home, was the Hong Kong-based Triton regular Danny Tang, and Tang had also made it to the final. He also ended up following Kenney out of the door in fourth. Tang now has nine cashes on the Triton Series, but had to make do with $300,000 for fourth place this time, losing his chips to Mustafov.

In his final hand, Tang’s Qs9h rivered a straight, but Mustafov’s AdTd had made a flush. It all went in, and Tang was out.

Another Triton cash for Danny Tang

By this stage, O’Dwyer had seemed a certain bet to be out. He was a short stack before the bubble yesterday, and was down to literally one chip when they were four-handed, after losing a big hand against Mustafov. But he managed to crawl back from the dead to ladder up when Tang departed, and then gather a decent handful of chips thanks to flopping two pair with Th9d against Antonius’s AcQd.

One chip Steve O’Dwyer
More chips!

However, Antonius got his revenge a little while later, getting Ah7s to hold up against O’Dwyer’s Ks6d. That send O’Dwyer into Event 2 with his $300K.

Antonius was purring, and you’ll do well to seek out footage of the hand he played against Mustafov when he called off his tournament life with Jh2h on a board of 7h2c6cQhAd. Mustafov, with Th8c, raised the button and then bet every single street.

Fahredin Mustafov: Couldn’t get past Antonius at the last

Antonius check-called all the way down, including the shove on the river, when staring at elimination. He burnt through all of his time-bank chips before coming to the right decision. “Take a bow, sir,” said Henry Kilbane in the commentary booth. It put the momentum fully with Antonius, and he never looked back.

After O’Dwyer went out, Mustafov and Antonius sat down for their heads-up battle, but it only ended up lasting three hands. Antonius this time flopped a straight with his 7c6s and out-paced Mustafov’s JhJc. It’s the kind of hand that would have ended the tournament anyway, but it was what went before that proved once again just how formidable Antonius can be.

Antonius revels in his victory

“It has a special feel,” Antonius said. “All the top players are playing this tournament, so it’s nice to win, I have to say. It’s a nice way to start a series like this. It’s always a good feeling to win a tournament.”

Event #1 – NLHE – 8-Handed
Dates: September 5-6, 2022
Entries: 131 (inc. 34 re-entries)
Prize pool: $3,275,000

1 – Patrik Antonius, Finland – $825,000
2 – Fahredin Mustafov, Bulgaria – $557,000
3 – Steve O’Dwyer, Ireland – $362,000
4 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – $300,000
5 – Ebony Kenny, USA – $240,500
6 – Viacheslav Buldygin, Russia – $190,500
7 – Kannapong Thanarattrakul, Thailand – $145,700
8 – Seth Davies, USA – $109,500

9 – Santi Jiang, Spain – $81,800
10 – Artem Vezhenkov, Russia – $67,100
11 – Eric Worre, USA – $67,100
12 – Ivan Leow, Malaysia – $59,000
13 – Selahaddin Bedir, Turkey – $59,000
14 – Viktor Kudinov, Russia – $54,000
15 – Bruno Volkmann, Brazil – $54,000
16 – Paul Phua, Malaysia – $51,400
17 – Nikita Kuznetcov, Russia – $51,400

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

DZIVIELEVSKI BECOMES FIRST BUBBLE BOY IN CYPRUS AS PHUA LEADS RECORD-BREAKER

Yuri Dzivielevski: The first bubble in Cyprus

Fourteen super high roller tournaments in two weeks sounds like a good idea until you remember that that means 14 bubbles in the same space of time, and 14 crestfallen poker players.

At around 1.10am today, Yuri Dzivielevski, the brilliant Brazilian, became the first to earn that ignominious distinction at the Triton Super High Roller Series in Cyprus. Dzivielevski was knocked out in 18th place of the curtain-raising Event #1, a $25,000 buy-in no limit hold’em tournament.

As we learned earlier, this tournament was popular — a record-breaker, in fact, with 131 entries making it the most populated of any event on the Triton Series.

But just taking part will be of scant consolation to Dzivielevski, whose name will not appear on the payouts list, and who missed the $51,400 min-cash by the narrowest margins. Seventeen places paid and Dzivielevski did not fill one of them.

Dzivielevski’s departure came at the hands of Viacheslav Buldygin — QcJs losing to KhTd — whose stack made him a strong bet to head towards the final table tomorrow, and an $825,000 first prize. But this tournament has now shallowed out dramatically, to the point that the average stack at the start of play tomorrow will be only around 23 big blinds.

Dzivielevski followed Jean-Noel Thorel out the door, who perished in 19th at the hands of Paul Phua, and whose elimination offered a picture-book in disappointment and anguish. Phua, meanwhile, bagged a chip-leading stack as a result.

Jean-Noel Thorel narrowly misses the money
It hurts…
….a lot

No one is guaranteed a place at the final, however, with the volatility of short-stack play only too apparent.

Super High Roller poker tournaments don’t play like other events in numerous ways, and the bubble is just another example of how these elite players do things differently. Gone are the days where you “just get ’em in!” with a sub-10 big blind stack. Players instead know that you’re never out of it until you absolutely must be and Phil Ivey, for instance, blinded down to just one big blind before he got it in, being knocked out in 21st. Fedor Holz was down to four big blinds before he went, and Adrian Mateos has something similar before he could cling on no more.

None of those are on the list of survivors, which looks like this overnight — and still contains plenty of phenomenal players:

Paul Phua leads the way

Paul Phua – 2,715,000
Seth Davies – 2,710,000
Danny Tang – 2,415,000
Patrik Antonius – 2,280,000
Kannapong Thanarattrakul – 1,855,000
Eric Worre – 1,825,000
Santi Jiang – 1,730,000
Artem Vezhenkov – 1,570,000
Fahredin Mustafov – 1,540,000
Selahaddin Bedir – 1,465,000
Viktor Kudinov – 1,330,000
Bruno Volkmann – 1,205,000
Ebony Kenney – 1,050,000
Viacheslav Buldygin – 875,000
Steve O’Dwyer – 755,000

Event #1 – NLHE – 8-Handed
Dates: September 5-6, 2022
Entries: 131 (inc. 34 re-entries)
Prize pool: $3,275,000

1 – $825,000
2 – $557,000
3 – $362,000
4 – $300,000
5 – $240,500
6 – $190,500
7 – $145,700
8 – $109,500
9 – $81,800
10-11 – $67,100
12-13 – $59,000
14-15 – $54,000
16-17 – $51,400

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

IT’S A RECORD-BREAKER! TRITON CYPRUS EVENT #1 SETS NEW ENTRY MARK

The Triton Cyprus tournament arena

Everyone associated with Triton Poker knew this festival in Cyprus was set to be huge, but not many could have predicted that a record would be set on the very first day.

But that is precisely what happened here during the very short period of time between the end of Level 11 and the start of Level 12 of Event #1 – €25,000 No Limit Hold’em. Someone re-entered just as the late registration period closed, bringing total entries for this curtain raiser to 131.

That’s the most there has ever been in a Triton tournament, eclipsing the 130 entries to the £100K Triton London NLH Main Event in 2019. With 97 unique players in this one, that’s another record.

That means that the first prize pool of Triton Cyprus is $3,275,000, of which the winner will earn $825,000. Seventeen places will be paid — and we’ll decide the winner tomorrow.

Here’s the payout schedule:

Event #1 – NLHE – 8-Handed
Dates: September 5-6, 2022
Entries: 131 (inc. 34 re-entries)
Prize pool: $3,275,000

1 – $825,000
2 – $557,000
3 – $362,000
4 – $300,000
5 – $240,500
6 – $190,500
7 – $145,700
8 – $109,500
9 – $81,800
10-11 – $67,100
12-13 – $59,000
14-15 – $54,000
16-17 – $51,400

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

TRITON CYPRUS GETS STARTED IN SPECTACULAR NEW VENUE

Triton Set

Hello everyone and welcome to Cyprus where we have the news you have all been waiting for: The Triton Super High Roller Series is back!

An army of technicians are currently putting the finishing touches to Triton’s iconic set, ahead of two full week’s of thrilling high stakes poker action. This festival at the spectacular new Merit Diamond poker arena is going to be an absolute monster: 13 events with buy-ins ranging from $25,000 to $200,000.

The location is sumptuous even by Triton’s incredibly high standards.

When we were last in Cyprus, in May, we were in the same resort, but it feels like a world away. Back then, the tournaments took place in the Merit Crystal Cove as this new facility was being built. It finally opened last month and it lives up to everything we were promised.

It’s a cavernous poker room surrounded by balconies, lobbies and secondary rooms, allowing the most innovative and prestigious poker series to expand naturally into its environment. There’s a restaurant outside, serving up a huge choice of meals 24 hours a day, and hundreds of places for players to sit and relax when they’re not playing.

Buffet in the tournament lobby

Inside the tournament room, it’s an incredible scene. There are dozens of poker tables with ample space between them, and that Triton set is spectacular. It has two television tables offering a choice for viewers to watch the action on the Triton live stream.

There will also be more cash games played out there when tournament action is done for the night.

But it’s difficult to overstate how amazing the tournament schedule is. It includes the $200,000 buy-in Coin Rivet Invitational, an event that will play out along similar lines to Triton’s £1m Helping Hand for Charity tournament in London in 2019 — aka, the biggest buy-in poker event in the game’s history.

The field is the perfect mix of poker pro and high-stakes recreational poker enthusiast, with the latter receiving an invitation to play from the organisers, and them then inviting one professional to play the tournament.

The two sides of the field are kept separate for the opening stages, before merging as the tournament progresses. Triton is particularly adept at bringing both these elements of the poker-verse together, and it works especially well in events like this.

But that’s not it, of course. We also have two Main Events with buy-ins of $100K apiece — one in regular no limit hold’em, and one in short deck.

Today we get started with a $25K No Limit Hold’em event, which, if early indications are anything to go on, will attract a really big field. They’re just getting started right now…

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

DWAN HITS THE TWO-TIME AFTER LAST-GASP TURBO SUCCESS IN MADRID

Double champion Tom Dwan is even now getting used to winner’s photos!

Tom Dwan came to Triton Madrid this week with one of the most awesome reputations in the world of poker, but without ever having won a live multi-table tournament. Now, as the curtains come down on this spectacular festival, Dwan is a two-time Triton Series winner, having added victory in the final €30K Short Deck Turbo to his success in the €25K PLO.

He won this event at the exact same time the €150K Short Deck was concluding — two tournaments ending simultaneously with two brilliant Americans, and two Triton Ambassadors, taking the spoils. Koon won his €1.7 million over on the feature table as Dwan was downing Elton Tsang for a €336,000 first prize.

“I wanted that one,” Dwan said. “You want to swap!?!” he bellowed over to Koon.

“Bro, a win’s a win,” Koon said. “You went from no Triton wins to two.”

Dwan shrugged, but he smiled too. He is indeed a two-time champion. And he may even soon get used to having winner’s photos taken. He’s certainly a natural poker talent, but that part of his game still needs work.

Dwan and Luca Vivaldi at presentation time

There were two coolers in the heads up stage, which ruined Tsang’s chances. Both Dwan and Tsang hit full houses on a QcTd8h7s8c run-out, when Tsang had Ts8d and Dwan had Qh8s.

And then the next time they were all in, Dwan had Tc9h and Tsang QhJs when the board was Th9s8cTd8d.

That was what sent Tsang looking for his €233,000 prize and gave Dwan his second taste of success.

FINAL TABLE ACTION

The last-gasp nature of this tournament meant more than just a final chance to score a victory, of course. It was a last chance for a cash — and the last chance for a bubble.

When the field condensed to seven players, one from the money, the two Triton co-founders Richard Yong and Paul Phua were sitting next to one another with micro-stacks. “No bubble!” bellowed Phua, as Chris Brewer noted how crucial the last table redraw might be, positioning one of them away from the button.

Unofficial Final Table in the turbo (clockwise from top left): Chris Brewer, Danny Tang, Ivan Leow, Tom Dwan, Elton Tsang, Richard Yong, Paul Phua.

Seven-handed chip counts
Tom Dwan – 3,402,000 (227 antes)
Elton Tsang – 2,358,000 (157 antes)
Danny Tang – 1,690,000 (113 antes)
Ivan Leow – 1,252,000 (83 antes)
Chris Brewer – 750,000 (50 antes)
Richard Yong – 257,000 (17 antes)
Paul Phua – 156,000 (10 antes)

Unfortunately for Phua, “no bubble” was the exact opposite of what happened. He was the bubble boy again, for the second time on this trip to Madrid. Phua got his last crumbs into a pot against Elton Tsang, and Tsang’s AhQc hit two pair.

Phua’s “Bubble!” was part anguish, part chuckle. He won his first Triton title here in Madrid, so will still remember this trip fondly.

By this point, Yong had doubled through Brewer. And then he pretty much doubled again after he three-bet pushed over Ivan Leow’s open and Leow folded. That meant it was Brewer who was next to depart, picking up €69,500 after losing in a three-way pot against Dwan and Elton Tsang.

Yong’s escape act couldn’t turn into a sun-run. Dwan knocked him out soon after Brewer, when aces stayed good against Yong’s AhJs. It put Dwan further clear at the top of the counts, with four players left.

Another great run for Richard Yong

The quartet opted to skip dinner in favour of a four-way bento box delivery, and they played through two or three levels before the next elimination. It ended up being Danny Tang’s turn to take the fall — another victim of Dwan. This time, Dwan made the nut flush with his AdQc on a 7h6d7d9dTd. Tang did not have the 8d, so had to go looking for a €114K payout instead. That was his fifth cash of the series.

It was a five-cash trip to Madrid for Danny Tang

Ivan Leow is always one of the most dynamic players at any table, and he was happily hammering his chips into the pot with great regularity. But he could never really get his head truly above water in this one, and Tsang turned a straight with his Ah7h and got the last of Leow’s money in on the river. Leow, twice a champion on the Triton Series, won €148,500 for third this time. It was his first cash of a difficult trip to Madrid.

Ivan Leow left it late to secure his first cash of the trip

That left Tsang and Dwan heads-up, two of the very best from their respective continents. They have done battle against each other many times before, in the nosebleed cash games across the world.

They’d never been heads-up in a tournament, however, and certainly never in such strange circumstances, where there was another tournament going through its final stages on an adjacent table.

Heads up Elton Tsang and Tom Dwan

But these two great players ended up at the liberty of the deck. Everyone would have played those two pivotal pots the same. It just so happens that this time, it went to Dwan. And now durrrr is a two-timer. Time to get used to it.

Triton Madrid – Event 14
€30,000 Short Deck Ante Only Turbo


Date: May 25, 2022
Entries: 33 (inc. 9 re-entries)
Prize pool: €990,000

1 – Tom Dwan, USA – €336,000
2 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong – €233,000
3 – Ivan Leow, Malaysia – €148,500
4 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – €114,000
5 – Richard Yong, Malaysia – €89,000
6 – Chris Brewer, USA – €69,500

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

KOON MAKES IT FOUR AFTER DOWNING DVORESS FOR €1.75M SHORT DECK PAYDAY IN MADRID

A new four-time champion: Jason Koon!

By the incredibly high standards they set for themselves, this had been a disappointing trip to Triton Madrid for Jason Koon and Daniel Dvoress. Both men had played everything and cashed twice each — a fourth and a sixth for Dvoress, and two sixth places for Koon. For two of the game’s most decorated elite, it was a relatively poor return.

But you’re never out of it on the Triton Series until the very last card is dealt, and Koon and Dvoress managed to navigate their way to the last two places in the €150K One Bullet Short Deck event on the festival’s closing day, where they were each guaranteed a payday of more than €1.1 million.

They squared off — friend vs. friend; exceptional talent vs. exceptional talent — and played to decide who would be the champion. A first for Dvoress or a fourth for Koon? A pair of black aces in Koon’s hand decided that.

“I get my four-time badge!” Koon said after the dealer had secured it in his favour. “I was denied that twice and I was upset that Mikita [Badziakouski] had it. But I got that now.” He’s right. Koon has 19 Triton cashes and now a fourth win, and this one came with a prize of €1,750,000.

It was the biggest buy-in of all events on this long and draining festival, and landed the Triton Ambassador another massive prize to take back to his wife and young son, Calum.

“Maybe it’s real,” Koon said when asked whether “baby run-good” was responsible for this result. “He’s been here eight months and we’ve won a bracelet and a Triton title. Maybe there’s something to it.”

He added that he was looking forward to getting home with the family, describing himself as “deliriously tired, exhausted.” He added: “But this is what we’re here for.” He paid tribute too to his final table opponents, all of whom are Koon’s buddies and “great competitors”.

He said it presented some demanding positions, and described how he had been both on easy street and against the wall, and how happy he was to have navigated past the sharks.

Elation with Jason Koon

“It was a really grindy final table,” Koon told Ali Nejad. “Everything was smooth sailing, and I was in a really good situation where I got to put tons of pressure on the short stacks. I was up against three guys who understand ICM really, really well, so it wasn’t one of these lotteries where you’re guessing what you think your opponent is going to do.

“I was feeling really good about the situation that was presented, but then I happened to lose a couple of unfortunate all-ins. But then I got lucky with the queen-jack suited against the kings and made a bunch of big hands to close the thing out.”

He could not contain both relief and delight.

As for Dvoress, he took €1.19 million, after another stellar performance.

Daniel Dvoress defeated heads-up

FINAL DAY ACTION

Day 2 began with the closing of the registration desk, but there was still time for last night’s newly-crowned Main Event champion Stephen Chidwick to sneak in, among others, and bring the number of entries up to 34 (including 10 re-entries). That put €5.1 million in the prize pool and offered those two seven-figure prizes at the top.

It quickly became apparent that Chidwick wouldn’t be winning one of them. He lost his stack quickly. And more gradually, dreams also died for Phil Ivey, Paul Phua, Michael Soyza, Tom Dwan and Mikita Badziakouski, among others.

When seven were left, they gathered around a final table, and took a photo, but only six were due to be paid. It meant that one of the following would be leaving with nothing, despite smiles around the table.

The unofficial final table (l-r): Sam Greenwood, Seth Daview, Jason Koon, Lun Lookn, Isaac Haxton, Daniel Dvoress, Dan Cates.

It’s been a wretched trip to Madrid for Malaysia’s Lun Loon too, and proceedings in Casino Gran Via today won’t have made him feel much better. Loon had one of the biggest stacks in the early stages of the day, but went on a steady decline as the bubble drew closer.

His tournament ended in the very worst spot: seventh, with six to be paid. His QdJd lost to Daniel Dvoress’ aces and Loon left with nothing.

A wry smile from the bubble boy Lun Loon

Poker fans have not seen very much of Dan Cates this week, even though he has been in Madrid from the start of the event. Cates has been rumoured to have been in the cash game room for most of the time, only making the briefest of appearances at the tournament tables.

But this big buy-in short deck event ushered him out of exile last night, and he was still playing through the bubble. “Still playing” meant still also chattering away incessantly, sometimes to his opponents, sometimes to people watching the live stream and sometimes to himself. He was also, of course, playing his usual flawless game.

However, with only a handful of antes just after the bubble burst, Ike Haxton was able to trap him. Haxton limped with aces and Cates moved in with AsTd. The aces held and Cates was out in sixth, earning €360,000.

A rare tournament appearance ended in a cash for Dan Cates

Prior to arriving in Madrid, Seth Davies was one of those unfortunate players on the elite circuit who had never cashed on the Triton Series. It was mysterious how this was so, and Davies was able to remedy it quickly this week, cashing in both the €75K NLHE and the €100K Short Deck Main Event.

He made it three in this €150K tournament, but was not able to progress past fifth this time. His day had hit its high point early on, when he managed to double through Elton Tsang with pocket sixes, and his stack barely fluctuated for a long period after that. But 2.1 million went in the middle, calling Jason Koon’s shove, when Davies had AcKc. Koon’s KdKh had Davies strangled and the board offered no help.

Davies’ run this time earned him another €460,000.

Seth Davies hits the rail

The final six players had represented some of North America’s finest poker talents, and that was still true, of course, even after Cates and Davies’ eliminations. Now it was more balanced, though, with two Canadians — Daniel Dvoress and Sam Greenwood — facing off against two Americans — Ike Haxton and Jason Koon.

Dvoress suddenly found himself in an incredible spot three-handed, where he had the covering stack and the chance to knock out both Haxton and Greenwood when all three were all-in. As it turned out, Haxton managed to survive and find a triple up, while Dvoress eliminated his countryman Greenwood.

They got all their chips in with KcJd for Haxton, AhJh for Dvoress and AcQd for Greenwood. But the best pre-flop hand ended up third after a run-out of KhJc7s6h9d.

Greenwood has been so near but yet so far a lot this week in Madrid, and the €580,000 he took for fourth here is another example.

Sam Greenwood with an expression that tells its own story

Haxton was now in a much better position than he had been previously, and it got even better for him when he doubled through Koon shortly after. Haxton’s Ac6c ran down Koon’s pocket queens when an ace came on the river.

Koon’s frustration only grew when Dvoress managed the same doubling trick through the chip leader soon after, Dvoress’s JdTs beating Koon’s AdQd. That put Dvoress into the lead and left Koon the short stack and needing a double. He got it very quickly, through Haxton, with QhJh cracking Haxton’s kings.

Haxton sat on that short stack for a while, getting his chips in every now and again, but either getting no customers or chopping pots. It couldn’t last forever, however, and Haxton did indeed become the next out, losing with Ah8h to Dvoress’ AdQd. The gods of short deck, more cruel even than the regular poker gods, gave Haxton an eight on the flop, but Dvoress a queen on the river.

Haxton won €760,000 for this one, but there was a €400K jump now for the heads-up players.

Isaac Haxton raps the table before leaving

They took a quick break before reconvening for the heads-up, with Dvoress’s 8.8 million ahead of Koon’s 4.8 million. There were still 140 antes between them, but that’s not a massive amount in short deck.

Even so, they did not look at any numbers. They both seemed content to play it out, and so knuckled down to do just that.

Jason Koon and Daniel Dvoress

The early exchanges were fairly benign, but then there was a sudden explosion and a huge double for Koon. He had AhKc against Dvoress’ KdQc and it stayed good. That put Koon up to the dizzy heights of 11 million, and in sight again of the title.

Not long later, he found those AsAc and Dvoress had QsTh. The aces held and the two went to look for their million-plus cheques.

That brought the curtain down on Triton Madrid. What a ride…

Triton Madrid – Event 13
€150,000 Short Deck One Bullet


Dates: May 24-25, 2022
Entries: 34 (inc. 10 re-entries)
Prize pool: €5,100,000

1 – Jason Koon, USA – €1,750,000
2 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada – €1,190,000
3 – Isaac Haxton, USA – €760,000
4 – Sam Greenwood, Canada – €580,000
5 – Seth Davies, USA – €460,000
6 – Dan Cates, USA – €360,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

TRITON SERIES AND JACOB & CO.: AN EXCLUSIVE PARTNERSHIP OF THE VERY BEST

The Jacob & Co Triton Epic X Skeleton

When Stephen Chidwick arrived to play the €150K Short Deck event at Triton Madrid today, there was something different about him. There was something spectacular glinting on his left wrist.

Last night, Chidwick won the Short Deck Main Event here at the Casino Gran Via, and banked €1.8 million. But he also won something that money can’t buy: the exclusive Triton Epic X Skeleton timepiece, created by the luxury jewellers Jacob & Co, which only Main Event victors on the Triton Series can boast.

“Beautiful,” Chidwick said, when asked about the watch immediately after strapping it to his wrist last night. And he now wears it proudly as he returns to action. The only other person with a similar item is Henrik Hecklen, who won his in the No Limit Hold’em Main Event. Hecklen spent the hours after his victory showing off his new accessory around the exclusive players party as his celebrations kicked off.

This brings great pride to both the staff of the Triton Series and Jacob & Co — the result of an exclusive collaboration that underlines the Triton Series’ commitment to offering a complete luxury experience for its players. The timepiece is designed to be both stunning but functional; something that Triton Series players will do everything they can to acquire.

The initial response to it has been universally positive, yet one more detail to match Triton’s most lofty ambitions.

Stephen Chidwick, with his new accessory

Triton Poker has a very simple aim: to be the very best at everything it does. Its staff talk about creating the Champions League of Poker, or liken its four-stop season to the Grand Slams in tennis and golf.

Triton already hosts the most prestigious poker tournaments, with the very best player experience. It visits the most dynamic cities and the most exclusive properties. It hosts the highest class live streams and recorded broadcast content. And it has an industry-leading app for players and fans to follow all the action.

Its new partnerships are with similarly market-leading brands that cater for the most demanding and most exclusive consumers — adding even more prestige to Triton’s exceptional all-round offerings.

“The Triton philosophy is to inspire and give back to the poker community by creating the elite stage for the world best players to compete,” says Chng Zhen Wei, Triton’s head of business development. “Triton also seeks deliver exceptional service to all stakeholders with the highest level of integrity and professionalism, culminating in the full Triton experience.”

He adds that Jacob & Co share this core philosophy. “Jacob & Co also puts its customer in the forefront, which is in tandem with Triton’s mantra as such having two companies that goes all out to give nothing but the best to the customers. This partnership would ideally create an exclusive brand alignment for both companies, allowing customers to express their individuality at the highest level.

“We look for partners that are exclusive, be bold to express themselves, to be a part of the world-class Triton experience and the poker community.”

Ruyi Xu, Regional Brand Director of Jacob & Co, visited Madrid for this first Triton Series stop since the partnership was signed. Some of Jacob & Co’s other exquisite timepieces were on display outside the tournament room, and Xu was keen both to showcase Jacob & Co’s products, and to meet Triton’s players to learn more about their lifestyle and demands.

“Triton is the perfect stage for the most elite poker players and businesspeople — and these are also our potential clients,” Xu explains. “Being here with the players and with Triton allows us to get to know the players. We can come to events and meet these people face to face, and understand their requirements and desires. We share their experiences. We can produce timepieces to reflect the life of an elite poker player. We can forge an emotional link with players.”

Champion Henrik Hecklen receives his new timepiece from Ruyi Xu

She adds: “Triton is also keen to produce a complete experience for its players, even outside of the poker, and as a luxury brand, we can be a part of that.”

All good partnerships offer benefits to both parties, and Xu laid out what Triton can bring to the esteemed jewellers — already one of the world’s leading jewellers.

“Triton has a very high standing in the poker community, and can offer Jacob & Co a lot of exposure,” Xu says. “It has its very popular live streams and social media channels, and its games are broadcast on TV in Asia, North America and Europe. We can appear in those broadcasts too.

“Triton gives us an audience of the kind of people for whom Jacob & Co can offer a lot. No other luxury brand has entered this world. It’s a new universe for us, but it’s been a great start.”

Xu says she hopes the partnership can extend to several years, in keeping with the manner of luxury timepiece production, where quality is prized much more highly than haste.

“Producing timepieces of this quality doesn’t happen overnight,” Xu says. “It takes sometimes up to 10 months. So I would imagine a collaboration to last two or three years. Jacob & Co produces very high end timepieces. We are an American company, but we produce timepieces in the Swiss watchmaking tradition, which takes a long time. So we hope for this to be a long partnership.”

As for the Triton Series watch itself, it’s an incredible piece of work.

It’s a 44mm skeleton timepiece designed with the personalised Triton logo integrated beautifully at the 12 o clock position as a part of the skeleton mechanism. It also features a rose gold face and the exclusive CHAMPION mark on the case-back, to celebrate the achievement of the Triton Champion.

The Triton/Jacob & Co timepiece in action on Stephen Chidwick’s wrist

Xu says: “The Triton Epic X Skeleton is the result of an exclusive collaboration with Triton. A lot of thought has gone into the design.

“Most importantly, this is a luxury watch but it can be worn every day. It is light and comfortable. It has a light titanium case, and a soft leather strap, which is very comfortable to wear over long periods, like a sport watch.

The skeleton timepiece means you can see all its intricate mechanisms; you can see the manual winding coil. You can see the ruby on the balance spring, which is the heart of the watch. The jewels protect the wheels.

The skeleton designs are very popular, and you can see the integrated Triton logo, in the well-known Triton black and gold colours. The Triton logo is part of the mechanical elements. It’s not just for decoration.”

The Jacob & Co stand in the Triton tournament lobby was highly popular, with many Triton players, and others who find a home at these series stops, visiting to learn more about the exceptional jewellery. “We offer players a boutique experience, without having to go to the boutique itself,” Xu said.

The Triton Epic X Skeleton is already the most sought-after accessory in the poker world. And long may this partnership continue.

A boutique without visiting a boutique: The Jacob & Co showcase at Triton Madrid

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

TRITON MADRID — ALL THE REPORTS, PHOTOS AND NEWS

The spectacular tournament area at Triton Madrid

Welcome to the coverage hub for the Triton Super High Roller Series in Madrid. The event, which ran from May 13-25, 2022, featured 13 tournaments in no limit hold’em, short-deck and pot-limit Omaha, with buy-ins from €20,000 through €150,000. You’ll find all you need to know about the event below, including links to completed tournaments and results.


COMPLETED EVENTS

EVENT 14 – €30,000 SHORT DECK TURBO

Double champion Tom Dwan is even now getting used to winner’s photos!
DWAN HITS THE TWO-TIME AFTER LAST-GASP TURBO SUCCESS
Tom Dwan came to Madrid without a live multi-table tournament victory to his name, despite his gloried career. But he leaves as a two-time champion having added victory in the last-gasp short deck Turbo to success in the PLO secured earlier in the week. Dwan’s tournament wrapped at the exact same time as the €150K event, meaning two Triton Ambassadors won simultaneously.

Results:
1 – Tom Dwan, USA – €336,000
2 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong – €233,000
3 – Ivan Leow, Malaysia – €148,500
4 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – €114,000
5 – Richard Yong, Malaysia – €89,000
6 – Chris Brewer, USA – €69,500

33 Entries | €990,000 prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS


EVENT 13 – €150,000 SHORT DECK ONE BULLET

A new four-time champion: Jason Koon!
KOON MAKES IT FOUR AFTER DOWNING DVORESS
The Triton Ambassador Jason Koon put an end to a relatively poor run of form in Madrid, taking down the tournament with the highest buy-in of the trip and banking €1.75 million. It’s his fourth Triton title, bringing him level with Mikita Badziakouski.

Results:
1 – Jason Koon, USA – €1,750,000
2 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada – €1,190,000
3 – Isaac Haxton, USA – €760,000
4 – Sam Greenwood, Canada – €580,000
5 – Seth Davies, USA – €460,000
6 – Dan Cates, USA – €360,000

34 Entries | €5.1 million prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

IMAGE GALLERY


EVENT 12 – €100,000 SHORT DECK ANTE ONLY MAIN EVENT

Stephen Chidwick poses with his haul of goodies
CALM AND CONFIDENT CHIDWICK REPELS TONY G
Stephen Chidwick built back from an early loss on the final day to claim his first Triton title and his second €1m+ payday of this stop in Madrid. He beat Tony G heads-up to win €1.8 million.

Top five:
1 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – €1,800,000
2 – Tony Guoga, Lithuania – €1,305,000
3 – Mikita Badziakouski, Belarus – €840,000
4 – Richard Yong, Malaysia – €640,000
5 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – €490,000

60 Entries | €6 million prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

IMAGE GALLERY


EVENT 11 – €25,000 POT LIMIT OMAHA

Champion at last, Tom Dwan!
DWAN ON CRUISE CONTROL TO TAKE PLO TITLE
Triton Ambassador Tom Dwan knocked out five of his seven final day opponents to breeze to his maiden Triton Series title. They went from eight returning players, through the bubble and to the champion in two-and-a-half hours.

Results:
1 – Tom Dwan, USA – €290,000
2 – Jeremy Ausmus, USA – €199,000
3 – Tom-Aksel Bedell, Norway – €127,000
4 – Patrik Antonius, Finland – €97,500
5 – Filip Lovric, Sweden – €76,500
6 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong – €60,000

34 Entries | €850,000 prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

IMAGE GALLERY


EVENT 10 – €50,000 NLHE TURBO

Champion Laszlo Bujtas
BUJTAS WINS FIRST TITLE AFTER INCREDIBLE SHOW FROM FIRST-TIMER HOMLIAVYI
The Hungarian pro Laszlo Bujtas won a fun and frantic Turbo event, for €630K, but Ukraine’s Denys Homliavyi, playing his first ever poker tournament, took a heroic second place.

Results:
1 – Laszlo Bujtas, Hungary – €630,000
2 – Denys Homliavyi, Ukraine – €434,000
3 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – €277,500
4 – Wiktor Malinowski, Poland – €212,500
5 – Jeremy Ausmus, USA – €166,000
6 – Bali Gee, Malaysia – €130,000

37 Entries | €1.8m prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

IMAGE GALLERY


EVENT 9 – €100,000 NLHE MAIN EVENT

Champion Henrik Hecklen, with timepiece, champagne and extras
HECKLEN STORMS TO MAIN EVENT TITLE
The formidable Danish tournament crusher Henrik Hecklen landed the biggest score of his career, winning the Madrid NLHE Main Event after a heads-up deal with UK-based businessman turned poker player Orpen Kisacikoglu. Both players won more than €2m.

Top five:
1 – Henrik Hecklen, Denmark – €2,170,509*
2 – Orpen Kisacikoglu, Turkey – €2,016,491*
3 – Kevin Paqué, Netherlands – €1,134,000
4 – Aleksejs Ponakovs, Latvia – €888,000
5 – Sam Grafton, UK – €716,000

93 Entries | €9.3m prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

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EVENT 8 – €50,000 SHORT DECK ANTE-ONLY

Champion Chin Wei “Webster” Lim
LIM WINS €50K SHORT DECK TO CLAIM ANOTHER FOR MALAYSIA
A self-confessed poker fan-boy turned high-stakes pro, Chin Wei “Webster” Lim beat many of his idols to claim his first Triton title and more than €850K. There was another final table appearance by Phil Ivey, but Lim beat Bjorn Li heads up to win.

Top five:
1 – Webster Lim, Malysia – €855,000
2 – Bjorn Li, Hong Kong – €618,500
3 – Winfred Yu, Hong Kong – €399,000
4 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong – €302,000
5 – Wai Kin Yong, Malaysia – €233,700

57 Entries | €2.85m prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

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EVENT 7 – €75,000 NLHE 8-HANDED

Michael Addamo with his double trophy haul
ADDAMO DOUBLES UP AFTER DEAL AND DEFEAT OF CHIDWICK
Australia’s Michael Addamo picked up his second title of the series, and a €1m+ payday, but the UK’s Stephen Chidwick took the biggest slice of the €4.725m prize pool after the pair agreed a heads-up deal.

Top three:
1 – Michael Addamo, Australia – €1,152,086*
2 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – €1,291,414*
3 – Seth Davies, USA – €661,500
4 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada – €500,500
5 – Laszlo Bujtas, Hungary – €387,500

63 Entries | 4.725m prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

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EVENT 6 – €50,000 NLHE 7-HANDED

Badziakouski became first to four titles
BRILLIANT BADZIAKOUSKI BECOMES FIRST FOUR-TIME TRITON CHAMP
A field of poker’s superstars built a prize pool of more than €5m — and none could beat Mikita Badziakouski, who won a record-setting fourth Triton title after a marathon heads-up battle with Danny Tang. Ivey, Mateos, Loeliger and Holz all cashed, but Badziakouski was best.

Top five:
1 – Mikita Badziakouski, Belarus – €1,340,000
2 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – €932,000
3 – Fedor Holz, German – €616,000
4 – Mike Watson, Canada – €482,300
5 – Kevin Paque, Netherlands – €389,000

101 Entries | €5.05m prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

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EVENT 5 – €25,000 SHORT DECK

Rui Cao celebrates his second Triton title
RUTHLESS CAO BULLDOZES TO SECOND SHORT DECK WIN
Frenchman Rui Cao put on a masterclass in big-stack aggression to win on the Triton Series for a second time, leaving Richard Yong one place short of emulating his fellow Triton co-founder’s earlier victory. There was another cash for Triton Ambassadors Tom Dwan and Jason Koon.

Top five:
1 – Rui Cao, France – €497,000
2 – Richard Yong, Malaysia – €357,000
3 – Kenneth Kee, Malaysia – €232,000
4 – Tom Dwan, USA – €175,100
5 – Choon Tong Siow, Malaysia – €136,000

68 Entries | €1.7m prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

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EVENT 3 – €20,000 SHORT DECK

Champion Chris Brewer!
BREWER CAPITALISES ON BIZARRE MISTAKE TO WIN FIRST TITLE
After surviving a bizarre moment against Rob Yong that could have eliminated him, Chris Brewer recovered to win his first Triton title during only his second visit to the series. Tom Dwan also made the final, but was knocked out in seventh.

Top five:
1 – Chris Brewer, USA – €372,000
2 – Mike Watson, Canada – €269,100
3 – Rob Yong, UK – €173,600
4 – Max Silver, Ireland – €131,500
5 – Webster Lim, Malaysia – €101,700

62 Entries | €1.24m prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

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EVENT 2 – €30,000 NLHE 7-HANDED

Champion Paul Phua!
AFTER 19 NEAR MISSES, PHUA FINALLY GRABS HIS TITLE
The Triton co-founder and tournament ever-present Paul Phua finally managed to claim a trophy on his 20th in-the-money finish, beating the American Hall of Famer Erik Seidel heads-up. Phua’s victory was greeted by delirious scenes in Madrid as he finally got victory he craved.

Top five:
1 – Paul Phua, Malaysia – €740,400
2 – Erik Seidel, USA – €514,800
3 – Isaac Haxton, USA – €340,300
4 – Kannapong Thanarattrakui, Thailand – €266,500
5 – Ben Heath, UK – €214,800

93 Entries | €2.79m prize pool
FULL RESULTS AND REPORT

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EVENT 1 – €20,000 NLHE

Michael Addamo got straight into the groove with victory in Event 1
ALL ABOUT ADDAMO AS AUSTRALIAN’S PURPLE PATCH CONTINUES
There was no one hotter in world poker than Michael Addamo and the Australian won his first Triton title, sweeping past Michael Soyza heads-up to win the curtain-raising No Limit Hold’em tournament in Madrid. Paul Phua finished fifth, earning his 19th career Triton cash.

Top five:
1 – Michael Addamo, Australia – €478,000
2 – Michael Soyza, Malaysia – €332,000
3 – Tommy Kim, South Korea – €219,5004
4 – Heung Wayne, Hong Kong – €172,000
5 – Paul Phua, Malaysia – €138,500

90 Entries | €1.8m prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

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MORE COVERAGE

GET THE TRITON POKER PLUS APP

The Triton Poker Plus app is like nothing else available
Triton Poker unveiled its sensational new Triton Poker Plus app in Madrid, the best way to follow all the Triton Series events, and stay up to date with player results and the leader board race.

The exclusive Triton live stream shows all the action from the feature table, with hole cards exposed, but the app has complete hand histories for all hands played across all tables in the field.

You can also access the full archive of previous Triton cash game and tournament action.

Download for APPLE or ANDROID
LEARN MORE ABOUT THE APP

More useful links:
SHORT-DECK REFRESHER: What is short deck hold’em? Here’s a quick run-down on the important differences between short deck and regular, long-deck hold’em.
PLAYER OF THE YEAR EXPLAINED: There’s $200,000 in added money for the top performer during this season’s Triton Series. Find out more about this incredible freeroll.