Tan Xuan: A Peek Into One of China’s Greatest Poker Players

Being in the presence of Tan Xuan puts you at ease. The natural sense of relaxation you see when he sits at the poker table follows him into life. It’s not that Xuan’s impervious to challenges – he has them, but his demeanour creates an easier leap. He is not flashy. He slides closer to the introversion end of the scale, and while he never foresaw his poker destiny, his key ideal was to be there, fully-prepared for when it happened.  

And it happened.

Xuan is a stick of dynamite on the poker table. Meeting him, he looks immaculate; not a single hair out of place. Then he opens his mouth, and the contrast is startling as he talks in an eclectic mix of Hubei dialect and clumsy Mandarin. You can tell that he finds it uneasy to talk about himself, and the life that revolves around him until you talk about poker. Turn your attention to the table, and he cranes that neck forward and blossoms. 

Poker’s standard ‘Hero’s Journey’ doesn’t fit into the Tan Xuan model. 

There is no ‘rags to riches’ tale.

He was born a boss.

After graduating from college in 2009, Xuan bought an art and dance school. The incumbents of both affectionately named him ‘President Tan.’ Later, Xuan would shift his focus from the arts to other more robust ways of making money, first entering the steel industry and then the financial arena. In the eyes of his peers, Xuan had a perfect life in his homestead of Wuhan. While people packed like sardines on the local bus commute, Tan hired a driver to get him from A to B. That A to B had begun netting him between 2 and 3 million yuan, per annum. 

The Love Affair With Poker

The love affair with poker began in 2014.

“A friend played in the biggest poker club in Wuhan,” said Xuan. “One day, he asked me to join him. When I walked in for the first time, it was an eye-opener. It reminded me of watching the Macau casinos depicted in the movies, and I will always remember hearing the grasshopper chirp of the chips for the first time. 

I used to watch ‘Show Hand’ on TV, and I felt poker was similar. I was far too overconfident at first. After playing two games, they suggested that I watch the 25/50 cash game. I got involved immediately, and by the end of my first session I had lost 20,000. Still, poker hooked me, and the next day I returned, and lost another 70,000. I became addicted, and spent the next two months playing and losing, daily.” 

Soon, the game not only revolved around Xuan, but the poker room set up a second table where people could play, waiting for an opportunity to take a bite at the newest whale! Five months after jumping into bed with the game he loves so much, Xuan had lost close to 20 million yuan (USD 2.8m).

“Newborn calves are not afraid of tigers,” said Xuan nonchalantly. “I just figured that I was running bad. Then I started asking myself, “how could I lose every session?” It was at this time that I started to analyze my game. You have to realize that when I started playing poker, I thought it was 70% luck and 30% skill. It took me a long time to realize that skill is the determining factor.”

Financial Concerns

At the same time, Xuan began realizing that poker was predominantly a game of skill; the profitability of his businesses began to suffer. 

“There was a business that I did together with my friends,” Xuan shared. “I made money, but before I got the money, a leader was caught, and I couldn’t receive the money. I took it on my own and put my money on it. The cash flow gap became bigger. However, I was not a businessman with a greedy copper stink. I only earned what I should have. I would not harm people or friends anyway.”

In just a few months, Xuan lost tens of millions of his fortune. 

Xuan’s father is a cadre of the Education Ministry and a very strict parent. When he found out that Xuan played poker, he was disgusted at the thought and heavily opposed to the idea. 

“When I was a kid, I loved games,” said Xuan. “Give me a ball, and I would play with it. Give me cards, and I played them well, too. My parents knew that playing cards can lead to either big wins or big losses. But when that child grows up, their parents can’t control him anymore. I used to sneak out and play even when they forbade it.”

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The Turning Point

In 2015, understanding the skill-edge of the game, Xuan began monitoring the top players, not only in Wuhan but around the world. 

“I started to follow the top players in Wuhan at that time, learning the skills while watching poker games,” said Xuan. “At that time, I watched videos of Tom Dwan and Phil Ivey playing high stakes, especially the high stakes poker series. When I watched it, I thought the way Dwan played, the values, and the amount he put in the pot trying to bluff were similar to my style and way of thinking. Then I began to think such top players were just so-so; I no longer felt that we had a wide gap in poker skills.

“Later, I watched the high stakes online series I, series II, series III to series VII. I saw them all in pieces. At that time, I was able to learn some things. I don’t know how much I got. I had no concept of capital management. I often played a game with all the money I had. For example, it needs 2 million or 3 million for this event, but all I’ve had is 2 million or 3 million. I never thought what would happen if I lost, because I always thought I would win.”

After a year of studying the game more intensely, Xuan went to Shenzhen to play with friends. During that year, he practised his skills and progressed fast. It became the happiest period in his poker career.

“At that time I played a 200/400 game, and it was fierce,” said Xuan. “People were winning or losing a million in a single game. I was also aware of the concept of bankroll. The game consisted of 100% Chinese players. The action was magical, and there were plenty of battles. A few professionals from Yongli Casino in Macau suffered big losses and thought we had rigged the game. But we all know it’s a regular game after playing for so long. But all kinds of magical actions like 3 bet /4 bet and so on, they were beaten, and confused – they all lost in that game.

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“Some people say that I am highly gifted. I don’t know. I think I play well at every stage. But after this stage, when you recall the previous stage, you find that there are many shortcomings and leaks in the past. People said my progress was the fastest and the biggest.

Now things have become natural to me. After playing games, the brain will automatically go back to review the previous scene and so on. It has become a habit. There’s no need for things like note-taking. Naturally, you can make progress after playing this game. I don’t know why.”

Life After The ‘Magical’ Game

The magical game in Shenzhen eventually died, and Xuan travelled to Xi’an to compete in a 2000/4000 game, which was big for him at the time. Still, the size of the games has never affected Xuan.

“I play a lot better than the average person, that is, the level doesn’t affect me, even if it suddenly rises ten levels, it’s still the same for me.” Said Xuan.

“When I play cards, I either lose the most or win the most,” said Xuan referring to his loose-aggressive style. “I will try to maximize all losses and values. For example, if I play 5000 / 10000, if I play this hand with players like Su Hao, he may lose only 100,000 in his style, and I may lose 1 million in my manner. Similarly, the average person with this hand may win 100k or 200k. Instead, when I’m in the lead, I put my opponent in and empty all his chips at one time. I can win one million and two million. I’ve always played this way, whether it’s 25 / 50 or 2000 / 4000, or even bigger; I just like to tangle with big bosses. “

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On Playing The Game

Xuan graduated quickly and soon rose through the cash game ranks competing in games where winning or losing millions of dollars is the norm. During his trials and tribulations, there is one thing about the game that irks Xuan, and that’s the ‘quiet people’ at the poker table, and he’s not talking about their use of the vernacular.

“It doesn’t matter whether you speak at the table or not,” said Xuan. “The deck has its own language. Your action in each round is a story.”

Mathematics forms part of that story, but it’s not a plotline that Xuan pays too much attention too. 

“I think the calculation of odds is the most basic thing,” said Xuan. “People who can play cards are generally clear about the odds of win and the loss. Everyone is saying that foreigners do well in math, that is to say, they are more accurate. For example, if a card has a roughly winning rate of 58%, then I can calculate between 55 and 60. I’m just talking about a general winning rate. I won’t say how accurate it is, but I know about it. For example, a pair to an AA, that’s about 18%, that’s it. So I don’t know how important mathematics is in playing cards. There must be some basic mathematics, but we all know basic mathematics.

“As far as I’m concerned, the difference between playing well and playing poorly lies in the comprehensive judgment of all aspects of the game. First of all, what kind of action each hand should take in different positions. That is, what kind of cards you should play before the flop, and then how to play in different positions. Then go in and face the flop. After you finish your action, no matter whether you are checking, betting or raising, you need to guess what actions others will take after each action.

“Each round like a flop, turn and the river will make other people’s cards show slowly and clearly. When you know what cards the other player is holding, you can try to win the pot with a suitable strategy. If you’re right, you win the other side’s chips, and you also win when you lose fewer chips. When you read your opponents’ card, you know that you can’t bluff him or beat him at this time, you can give up, and it can be counted as a victory. When you think he can be hung and beaten by you, and then you can win the chips and make him unable to run, this is the maximum value.

“Then it is to play against the opponent’s style that some of your actions or some kind of betting chips can make him feel that this card is very strange, illogical. This can confuse him and let him fall into your trap, so as to achieve what you wanted. There is also some mind-reading, some habit learning, yeah? All of those mentioned are very important. Poker is not merely a math problem.”

“Maybe math is useful to less than 100 BB. You play for a long time according to the mathematical probability, and it will be + EV. But beyond 100 BB, EQ and reading quotient also serve for certain functions in card playing. Foreigners lack this thing. They have advantages in one aspect, but on the other, they may not be better than Chinese people. Anyway, I don’t think foreigners play much better than Chinese people when all aspects are combined. At the 2000 / 4000 level or above, Chinese professionals are not afraid of foreign professionals, and foreigners can’t take advantage of Chinese opponents as well.

“A poker player must have confidence, when you play at a table, just imagine others are fish. That’s how I am. I have to be confident to play well. It can’t be said to treat them as fish, I will respect every opponent, but I will think that I am better than you, I can hold you down, to play a good game. In China, there are Zang, Abu, Luo, Su Hao, YC, TJ and Elton who play well. In foreign countries, there are Jungleman, Trueteller and Holz who rarely plays cash. Dwan and Ivey play more Short-deck.

“Those who play well are professionals. They don’t agree with each other. Except Su Hao, he thinks foreigners do play better. Others, including me, won’t admit that they are better than themselves. “

Becoming ‘Known”

In 2015, Xuan conquered a field of 1,075-entrants to win the $281,185 first prize in the China Poker Games (CPG) Main Event in Sanya. It was the second time he has competed in the CPG, and he ran hot, leading wire-to-wire. 

Suddenly, the name of Tan Xuan was up in neon lights.

“It was easy to play CPG,” said Xuan. “I can steal. It’s not that the opponent is weak, but that they have many leaks. When I should make a value bet, I do it well. When I should bluff them, it’s easy to bluff. At that time, the players who were generally poor were numerous. 

“Being reported and becoming famous is not good for my cash game action. In fact, the relationship between the game and cash is not so big. But they’ll reject me for some reason. In fact, this is a circle of interests. When he wants to exclude you, he will always find some excuses. Playing a match is the biggest, the most direct and objective reason they find, saying that you are professional. “

In 2017, the game of Short Deck became more popular throughout the Asian high-stakes scene. It was in a Short Deck tournament, the 1m HKD Short Deck event at the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series in Montenegro, where Xuan’s name became associated with high stakes poker globally (Xuan lost to Jason Koon, heads-up, for the consolation prize of USD 2.8m, and Koon called him one of the best Short Deck players in the world).

Xuan became a ‘boss’, or did he?

“We are beginners. We are the boss. We are professionals. We are not welcome to play,” said Xuan. “The definition of “boss” that we all agree with now depends on what kind of identity you are in the crowd – and on your age. The younger one is not the boss, which is a very symbolic thing, unless it is an undeniable sign, such as running a big business outside, being known by everyone, and breaking away from poker. They will admit that you are a “boss”, the rest are classified as professional. “

It’s not only Koon who has openly waxed lyrical on Xuan’s skills on the felt. The Triton co-founder, Richard Yong, once said that Xuan is the ‘complete player, with equally good skills on both short deck and hold ’em poker.’

“Short deck is easy to play,” said Xuan. “I think it is on the same level as Hold ’em. Poker is like a piece of paper, once you poke it, you will suddenly realize that each kind has the similar rule. You have to be attentive, when you really indulge yourself in the game then you will get it. It’s quite simple.”

And outside of the game?

What does Xuan get up to when he’s not playing cards?

“I’m not an otaku deep inside, but in some cases, you have to be, sometimes you can’t find someone to go out with, and you don’t want to be alone,” said Xuan. “I’m the kind of person who prefers to be single. I don’t want to date a person I don’t like. A lot of people advised me to marry a virtuous wife. But marrying a wife – I don’t want to buy a vase and put it at home. I just like what I like, plus my circle is relatively single, there is no chance to meet girls. My last relationship was with my first love five years ago in college.

“Usually, I would go and take care of my invested businesses. If I don’t play cards in my spare time, I stay at home. Sometimes I smoke cigars and drink tea with friends. It’s almost like an old man’s life.”

It sounds like the life of the perfect boss. 

Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Montenegro 2020 Cancelled Due to Coronavirus Pandemic

Mar 2020 – It’s time for the game tattooed on our hearts to take a backseat. The world is under siege from the fastest spreading pandemic of our time. COVID-19 has infiltrated more than 197 countries and territories, and in a bid to stop it, many world leaders have imposed severe restrictions on movement. 

With this in mind, and to give you as much advanced warning as possible, we will cancel the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series planned to take place in the Maestral Resort and Casino, Montenegro May 8 -22.

In many ways, Montenegro’s leg has become the heart of the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series. Still, we must do what is right and prioritize the safety of everyone involved in the production of our events. 

It’s the second Triton Poker Super High Series event to fall victim to the Coronavirus pandemic after February’s Jeju event also became a casualty.

Past Montenegrin Main Event Champions include Manig Loeser (2017), Mikita Badziakouski & Jason Koon (2018), and Bryn Kenney & Rui Cao (2019). 

Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Jeju 2020 Cancelled Due to Coronavirus Risk

March 2020 – It’s with great sadness that Triton Poker announces the cancellation of the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series, Jeju. Originally, planned for February, Triton Poker took the unprecedented step of postponing the series after the outbreak of Coronavirus (COVID-19) began in China’s Wuhan Province.

Since the decision to postpone the event, the virus has spread globally. As accurate as of March 2, Korea’s confirmed COVID-19 cases had reached 5,328 with 33 deaths – the second highest case rate, and fourth-highest death rate, hence the cancellation. As of March 4, there have been 93,191 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 3,203 deaths.

The next event on the Triton Poker High Roller Series schedule is in Montenegro, where the Maestral Hotel & Casino will play host May 8 – 22.

Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Jeju 2020 Dates to be Planned in Due Course

Feb 2020 – No dates have been confirmed for the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series in the South Korean province of Jeju as the Triton Poker team monitor the situation.

Initially, planned to occupy most of February, the outbreak of the Coronavirus in China forced Triton officials to make the unfortunate step of postponing the event.

The Coronavirus has currently taken the lives of 600 people, with all but two of them occurring in China, with the city of Wuhan in the Hubei province taking the brunt of the deaths. There has been a death in Singapore, and one in Hong Kong. There have been more than 28,000 confirmed cases worldwide, with China suffering most of the devastation.

It has also been revealed that if the Coronavirus pandemic continues to worsen over the next several weeks, a decision to cancel Triton Jeju 2020 is a possibility.

Coronavirus Outbreak Leads to the Postponement of the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series in Jeju

Jan 2020 – It’s with a heavy heart that we inform you of the postponement of the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series in Jeju after the World Health Organisation (WHO) called the Coronavirus outbreak a ‘Public Health Emergency.’

Since the Coronoavirus first leapt from animals to humans in China a few weeks ago, close to 10,000 people have been infected, and it’s killed more than 200. All of the deaths have been inside China, but the virus has spread to more than a dozen countries.

The safety of our players and support staff remains our utmost priority. Coupled with our duty to do everything we can in our power to prevent the virus from spreading, we’ve taken the difficult but correct stop of postponing the event with immediate effect.

The thoughts and prayers of the Triton Poker Team are with the families of those that have lost their lives and for the ones fighting the virus all over the world.

Another official announcement in regards to the potential resurrection of the event will be made on February 10th, 2020.

The 5 Best Hands of the 2019 Triton Poker Super High Roller Series

The best pros in the business understand that the only metric for success is to play each hand optimally. If they can avoid the twisted ankle of tilt dragging them away from this ideal, then they can sleep well at night safe in the knowledge that the Poker Gods will do whatever the Poker Gods will do.

In 2019, the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series scorched across the horizon with a program of high stakes cash games and tournaments the poker world had never seen.

The best pros.

The best non-pros.

The highest stakes.

Intensity.

Pose.

Joy.

It had it all.

Trying to dilute this pack of dogs into five pedigree hands was challenging. In doing so, we wanted to show the intensity, pose and joy that’s present when Triton puts on a show.

We think we did a good job.

Of the chosen hands, three of them involved Mikita Badziakouski. The Belarusian is one of only three players to have won three Triton titles (joining Jason Koon and Wai Kin Yong). He is also the only player to win back-to-back No Limit-Hold’em (NLHE) Main Events (Jeju and Montenegro) and has amassed $11.8m playing on the Triton Series. Two of the hands involved Stephen Chidwick, one of the best proponents of NLHE tournaments in the world, and you see why.

The Triton Poker Super High Roller Series hosts the biggest cash games in the world, and two of these hands came from those sessions: one NLHE, and the other Short-Deck, with Montenegro and Jeju the settings.

The most compelling hands come from the Triton Million London: A Helping Hand for Charity. When you pay £1m to play in a tournament, it stretches you both mentally and technically. The confrontations between Stephen Chidwick and Sam Trickett, and Stephen Chidwick and Vivek Rajkumar bust lungs considering the consequences of making the wrong decision.

Here are our five favourite hands of the 2019 Triton Poker Super High Roller Series – big bad bluffs, hero calls, and even a classic Royal.

Enjoy.

Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Set to Return to Jeju, Montenegro, London and More in 2020

There was once a time when even the most experienced poker trackers would find it challenging to sniff out a high stakes tournament that sent shivers down your spine. Today, trackers don’t need to look out for broken twigs and the soles of expensive Dolce Gabbana slippers. High stakes poker is like sand on a beach; yet only one tournament series builds castles upon castles. 

In 2019, the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series hit unprecedented heights. The greatest players in the world, joined by the most ambitious non-pros in the world, skipped along the yellow brick road from Jeju to London via Montenegro, winning and losing millions in the process. 

Triton’s ambassador, Jason Koon, dominated Jeju, March 2019, winning the HKD 1m Short-Deck and HKD 1m Refresh for a combined haul of $3.8m. There were wins for Timofey Kuznetsov, Michael Soyza and Devan Tang. Timothy Adams won the HKD 2m No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) Main Event for $3.5m. 

Adams defeated Bryn Kenney to win that Main Event title. Despite collecting $3m for his runner-up finish, Adams left Kenney feeling like a spear had punctured his heart. 

But the New Yorker would rebound like a true champion.

In Montenegro, May 2019, Kenney won the HKD 500k NLHE 6-Handed event and the HKD 1m NLHE Main Event for a combined bounty of $4.1m. The Montenegro event was a monster, with 13-events. Henrik Hecklen, Steve O’Dwyer, Winfred Yu, Hing Chow, Quek Sheng, John Juanda, Mikita Badziakouski, Ben Lamb and Daniel Cates were amongst the winners. Rui Cao took down the HKD 1m Short-Deck event for $3.3m.

Kenney continued his heater in Triton’s first visit to London by winning the £1m Triton Million: A Helping Hand For Charity. It was an event that captured the imagination of the entire poker community, raising more than $2.7m for charity, and establishing Kenney at the top of the All-Time Money List.

The record-breaking event attracted 54-entrants, and Kenney banked $20.5m, the highest single payout in poker history, after agreeing upon a heads-up deal with the eventual winner Aaron Zang, who collected $16.7m. 

In London, there were also wins for Linus Loeliger, Charlie Carrel, David Benefield, Justin Bonomo, Yu Liang, and Wai Kin Yong who became the third player to win three Triton titles when he won the £100,000 NLHE Main Event for $3.1m.

The Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Returns

It’s time to do it all again. 

The Triton team has sketched three events into its pad, with schedule details and potentially even more stops to come, shortly. 

The first event takes place at Jeju Shinwa World in South Korea with the action set to take place between 10-22 February. From there, the series returns to the Maestral Resort and Casino pitched on the side of the beautiful Adriatic Coast in Montenegro, before returning to London for its second successive season, where once again, the philanthropic nature of Triton will rise to the fore.

Are you ready for more high stakes dreams?

Then get these dates into your calendars.

Jeju, South Korea – 10-22 February

Budva, Montenegro – 4-18 May

London, England – 29 Jul – 13 Aug

Triton Poker returns to Jeju South Korea for First Stop of 2020

After taking you to a whole ‘nother level during the Triton Millions: A Helping Hand for Charity we felt like you needed a break from all of the excitement.

Well, break time is over!

Pack your bags, or prepare to tune in from home, because the Triton Super High Roller Series returns with its first event of 2020, and it promises to be another whizz, bang, wallop of a high stakes series.

February 10-22, 2020, Triton returns to South Korea and Jeju Shinhwa World for 12-days of mind-blowing poker, at the highest-stakes involving the best pros and semi-pros in the business. 

When the Triton Poker Series first planted a flag in the Jeju Province in 2018 there were five events on the schedule. The return in 2019, saw that increase by two. 2020 adds even more value for the players and consumers of world-class poker content with an increase to 11 tournaments, featuring No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE), and Short Deck formats, as well as a Mixed Short Deck and No-Limit, Hold’em game.

The two eye-catching events are the HKD 1m NLHE Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Main Event, and the HKD 1m Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Short-Deck Main Event.

In 2018, when the Main Event buy-in was HKD 2m, Mikita Badziakouski became the first player to win back-to-back Triton Poker Super High Roller Series NLHE Main Events, defeating 55-entrants on his way to an HKD 41,250,000 (USD 5,257,027) first prize. Kenneth Kee took down the 60-entrant HKD 1m Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Short-Deck Main Event for HKD 22,500,000 (USD 2,867,009).

The series returned in 2019, with Timothy Adams winning the HKD $2m Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Main Event, conquering a field of 48-entrants to win the HKD 27,760,500 (USD3,536,550) first prize. Jason Koon vanquished 81-entrants to win the HKD 22,300,000 (USD 2,840,945) first prize in the HKD 1m Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Short-Deck Main Event.

Here is the full schedule:

Amongst the glitterati confirmed to participate in the festival, include Triton Poker Ambassadors Tom Dwan and Jason Koon, Triton Million London winner Aaron Zang and the legendary poker ace Phil Ivey

Players receive five nights free accommodation at the Marriott Hotel Jeju Shinhwa World for every HKD 1m in tournament buy-ins they compete in. For example, if you compete in HKD 2m worth of buy-ins then you receive 10 nights free accommodation. 

Once again the Triton Super High Roller Series offers unparallelled digital coverage, available in English for free on the official Triton Poker Twitch, YouTube, and Facebook channels, and the Triton website. 

English Coverage:
Triton Website: www.triton-series.com
Twitch: www.twitch.tv/tritonpoker
YouTube: www.youtube.com/tritonpoker
Facebook: www.facebook.com/tritonpoker

Chinese Coverage:

ZhiboTV: www.zhibo.tv/10004

For more information on the Triton Jeju 2020 festival, CLICK HERE.

Triton Million London: Boris Becker to Compete in Event #1: £25,000 No-Limit Hold’em Six-Handed Turbo

A young lad spots the ball before taking three strides back, and two to his left. His arms hang by his side, pulled to the earth’s core. One breath, two, a shrug of the shoulders, and then he kicks the ball towards the posts. 

It falls short. 

An older man, late 50s, maybe early 60s, offers a thumbs up from behind the posts. The lad turns around, picks up another ball, and goes through the same routine.

Again.

And.

Again.

And.

Again.

Champions outwork the competition. Champions love what they do. Champions have heart. Champions have courage. Champions have unrelenting effort. Champions know pain. Champions know suffering. Champions know joy. Champions are strong in hard times. Champions never give up. Champions retain the hunger even when they’re at the top. Champions never settle. Champions are never satisfied. Champions are courageous. Champions sacrifice. Champions know no boundaries. Champions have no limits. 

On July 31, champions from the world of poker will pour into The Hilton in London’s Park Lane like a searing flame. For nine nights there will be no respite as decades of preparation hits flop, turns and rivers like battering rams. Chip stacks will rise, and they will fall. Bodies will crash into the rail. Decks will carve open souls. 

The arena is Triton Million London, and joining the champions of poker, is a champion of tennis. Boris Becker was 17-years, and 227 days old, when he became the first unseeded player, first German, and youngest-ever Grand Slam winner when he won the men’s Wimbledon singles title. A year later, he proved it was no fluke when he successfully defended his title. 

Throughout his career, the man whose powerful serve earned him the nickname ‘Boom-Boom,’ made people’s eyes water with his suffocating style of tennis. Forty-seven more titles followed, including another Wimbledon title, two Australian Open titles, and a US Open. His win rate in single’s action was 79%, and even when his time had come, he turned all of his knowledge, experience and technical ability and injected it into Novak Djokovic, helping him to pick up six Grand Slam titles. 

Boris Becker is coming to Triton Million London.

The 51-year-old will compete in the Event #1: £25,000 No-Limit Hold’em 6-Handed Turbo – an event that will fly through the halls of the Hilton like a whirlwind, done and dusted in a single day. 

Becker has previously worked in poker with PokerStars and partypoker. He has $111,416 in live tournament earnings, including a 40/338 finish in the 2009 $25,500 World Poker Tour (WPT) Championships. He also had a deep run in the 2013 European Poker Tour (EPT) Main Event in Berlin finishing 49/912.

Triton Million London consists of seven events with buy-ins of £25,000, £50,000 and £100,000, and the pièce de résistance, the £1m buy-in Triton Million: A Helping Hand For Charity.

High stakes dreams will be dealt. 

Champions will crush champions. 

And you can experience every blow at triton-series.com.

Triton Million London Update: 35 Players Confirmed; World-Class Commentary Team Announced; One Drop Foundation Added as Beneficiary

How’s this for a fulfilling and healthy breakfast.

Three organic apples, a spoonful of honey and the juice of half of a lemon blitzed in a Nutribullet. Scoop the contents into a bowl, add raisins, chopped walnuts, dates, goji berries, mulberries, and coconut flakes. 

The secret ingredient – the finger on the trigger of the rifle that when pressed, explodes into a childhood memory – is cinnamon. Prices vary wildly from the cheap rubbish in the local supermarket to the expensive stuff in trendy organic stores.

The Triton Poker Super High Roller Series is that expensive stuff. 

First Jeju.

Then, Montenegro.

Now, London.

The apex of high stakes poker returns July 31st from London’s Hilton on Park Lane, the purple part of the Monopoly board that everyone wants to own. 

It’s the perfect setting for Triton’s third event of 2019, and to celebrate they have created something unique. Triton Million: a Helping Hand for Charity, is a £1,050,000 buy-in event, the most affluent live poker tournament the world has ever seen – a world-record to be.

We’ve broken down the nitty-gritty, previously, in this article (Triton Million: a Helping Hand for Charity Set to Hit London August 1-3 – https://www.paulphuapoker.com/triton-million-a-helping-hand-for-charity-set-to-hit-london-august-1-3/). 

It’s time for an update.

Triton Million London Update: Petrangelo, Greenwood and Kurganov Confirmed; RaSZi, nanonoko, Schulman and Gross on the mic; partypoker LIVE sponsor; One Drop added as a beneficiary

The Triton Million event takes place Aug 1-3, and at the time of writing, 33 players are ‘confirmed’. The game is by invite with invites open to business people and recreational players only. Once invited, each person can choose one professional to compete in the event, ensuring parity between pros and non-pros for the first time at these mind-boggling stakes.

Here are the confirmed names.

Paul Phua – Tom Dwan

Richard Yong – Daniel ‘Jungleman’ Cates

Stanley Choi – David Peters

Wai Kin Yong – Rui Cao

Bobby Baldwin – Jason Koon

Cary Katz – Bryn Kenney

Kiang Yu – Mikita Badziakouski

Ivan Leow – Timofey Kuznetsov

Rob Yong – Sam Trickett

Alfred De Carolis – Stephen Chidwick

Chin Wei Lim – Wai Leong Chan

Chow Hing Yaung – Christoph Vogelsang

Pat Madden – Nick Petrangelo

Talal Shakerchi – Igor Kurganov

Sosia Jiang – Sam Greenwood

Wang Qiang – Elton Tsang

Zang Shu Nu – Tan Xuan

Rick Salomon – TBA

Nobody has cashed in more seven-figure buy-in events than Rick Salomon, and so far, he’s the only invitee not to name a pro. The word on the grapevine is it’s likely to be a top-notch American high roller. 

Four non-pros who have publicly invited top pros are Dusk till Dawn (DTD) owner, Rob Yong, Poker Central Founder, Cary Katz, Hedge Fund Manager, Talal Shakerchi, and Triton co-founder, Paul Phua. Yong invited Sam Trickett because he’s a good friend, and began playing $1/$2 cash games at his club in Nottingham. Katz chose Bryn Kenney because he wants to compete with the best in the world, and believes Kenney is THE best. And Shakerchi wanted the player who would donate the most of his winnings to charity, and Igor Kurganov ticked that box. 

Tom Dwan and Paul Phua

Speaking on the choice of Tom Dwan as his partner, Phua said: “Tom {Dwan} is the first pro that I ever befriended who had some success in our private games in Asia. I think highly of Tom as a person, and while he may not be a high roller tournament specialist, the decision wasn’t even close. Not only is he a brilliant poker player, but every fan of No-Limit Hold’em loves watching Tom Dwan play his incredible brand of poker.”

There is also a player in the field who not only knows what it’s like to compete in a $1m buy-in event, he knows how to win one. In 2016, Elton Tsang conquered the 28-entrant field in the €1m Monte Carlo One Drop Extravaganza for €11,111,111. Tsang enters the fray courtesy of an invite from Wiang Qiang. 

And the headcount hasn’t stopped rising with Triton’s co-founder, Richard Yong, confident that ’42-players is a very realistic target’, and that there is a ’10 to 1 chance’ that the event gets 48 players.

If you wish to compete in the event, then send an email to register@triton-series.com. Triton has set up a voting committee who will determine your classification as either a recreational player/business person or a professional. If you are classified as a recreational player/business person and don’t have a nominated pro in mind, we will provide you with a list of interested players. 

Lex Veldhuis, Randy Lew, Nick Schulman, Ali Nejad and Jeff Gross Call The Shots

It’s not only on the tables that the world-class feel of Triton’s brand is prominent. It’s also in production. ShareHand will provide world-class live stream content. Lex ‘RaSZi’ Veldhuis returns to his perch alongside Randy “nanonoko” Lew, after missing out in Montenegro. Supporting them for the first time at a Triton event are Nick Schulman, Ali Nejad and Jeff Gross. Schulman is a Triton Champion, winning the HKD 100,000 No-Limit Hold’em Short-Deck event in Jeju (2018). He’s also coming off the back of his third WSOP bracelet in the summer and another exemplary shift in the WSOP commentary booth. The quicksilver quartet will add their unique style of commentary throughout an insane week of high stakes action broadcast across Triton’s website, Twitch, YouTube and Facebook, as well as Chinese TV channels.

partypoker LIVE Continue to Partner With Triton

partypoker LIVE continue their partnership with Triton as sponsors of the event. partypoker and Triton ambassador, Jason Koon, said he “couldn’t be more excited to be invited to play the Triton £1 million tournament – big tournaments have always been my true love when it comes to poker and to get to play the biggest one of all time is a real honour. It’s a surreal moment for me as a poker pro.”

Triton Poker founder Richard Yong said: “We’re very excited about the forthcoming Triton Poker High Roller Series in London and delighted that partypoker LIVE will be joining us for this historic event. The Triton Poker High Roller Series offers the world’s most affluent recreational players and top-level pros the chance to compete for very high stakes against incredibly tough competition. Our tournaments really get players’ adrenaline going and now we are about to host the biggest buy-in poker tournament ever held. All those that take part will become a part of poker history as well as helping to raise millions for worthy causes.”

The One Drop Foundation Joins The List of Beneficiaries

One drop logo for Triton Million

Finally, there is also fantastic news on the beneficiary front with 15% of the charitable haul heading to the One Drop Foundation. It’s a fitting addition, as One Drop’s founder, Guy Laliberté, was the inspiration behind the first-ever $1m buy-in event.

Other charities benefiting from Triton Million are Credit One World Charity Foundation, Caring For Children Foundation, REG, and Healthy Hong Kong. 

Should a ‘confirmed’ player renege on their intention to play, then the £50,000 registration fee goes straight into the charity pool. To give you a flavour of the kind of money Triton Million is raising for charity, 33 players equates to £1.65m – and that buys you a lot of cinnamon.

Here is the schedule in full:

https://triton-series.com///triton-super-high-roller-series-london-2019/