FINALLY A CHAMPION! PHUA SENDS FANS DELIRIOUS WITH FAMOUS WIN IN MADRID

Champion Paul Phua!

The biggest mystery through the Triton Poker Series’ first six years was how come Paul Phua had not won a tournament. The Malaysian businessman turned poker shark has been an ever present on the world’s premier high stakes tournament series, and had amassed 19 cashes from these incredibly elite fields — the most recent of them coming yesterday, in the opening event of Triton Madrid.

It was more than any other person, and just made it all the more confusing that he had never crossed the finish line first.

But hold the front page for here is some spectacular news. The mystery endures no more. Paul Phua is now, finally, a Triton Series champion!

Phua staged an incredible heads-up comeback to beat Erik Seidel and win the €30,000 buy-in seven-handed event at Triton Madrid tonight. Phua’s title came with a payday of €740,400 and brought his career tournament earnings past $25 million. But none of that money will matter to Phua: it’ll be all about the trophy that he can now, finally, call his own.

“I thought the fourth second place is coming,” Phua said. “But somehow the cards fell for me.”

Nobody can begrudge Phua this one, not even Seidel, who had staged a pretty remarkable comeback of his own to be in touching distance of his first win on the Triton Series. Seidel had been down to two big blinds at one point, but built a big heads-up chip lead against Phua. However, Seidel’s pocket sevens lost to Phua’s Js8s when the reverse result would have given Seidel the win; and Phua then also won with KdTc against Seidel’s JdJh.

Phua then closed it out with Ac5s versus Seidel’s Th7c to cue pandemonium inside the Casino Gran Via, Madrid. Friends and supporters mobbed a delirious Phua, who could scarcely contain his delight.

Phua’s celebrations begin

It was lucky number 20. Finally it was not just a cash, it was a win.

Phua hugged Seidel, high-fived everyone on the rail, clenched his fists and pretty much crumpled to his knees. The monkey is finally off his back.

“I knew he’d be tough,” Phua said of his heads-up opponent. “Erik’s so experienced, such a great player, but anything can happen.”

Asked by commentator Ali Nejad if he could have ever have dreamed of Triton Series becoming so popular, Phua said, “Honestly, no. After the first few series, it began to get serious. We tried to get the best things in, the best equipment, the best people…We did a good job. But we will always keep improving.”

The same could be said of Phua’s game.

FINAL DAY’S ACTION

Returning with a field of 21, players knew that eight of them would still need to depart before the remainder were in the money — and it proved to be a real battle to decide those coveted spots.

With such talents as Rui Cao, Timothy Adams and Andras Nemeth already on the sidelines, there were at least 10 short-stack double-ups during the crucial pre-bubble period — “bubble-ups”, if you will.

On the one hand, it was just a matter of sitting and waiting for all those with plenty of chips, including Kevin Paque, Phua and Mike Watson, who led the way at the time. But on the other, they will have been just as keen to try to knock out the obdurate shorties, bringing us to the drawn out impasse.

When the pressure finally became too much, it was Tom Vogelsang who became the bubble boy. His debut on the Triton Series in Cyprus ended in pure delight; this follow up in Madrid gave him a taste of the other side of tournament poker. (He’s made of stern stuff, however, and will surely be back.)

Vogelsang finally burst the bubble after a tortuous period of play

POST-BUBBLE ACTION

The drawn-out bubble period meant that stacks shallowed considerably and most of the players in most danger soon got their last chips in. Fedor Holz, Michael Soyza, Kevin Paque, Danny Tang and Patrik Antonius were all in and out, picking up between €56,000 and €78,100.

There are many ways to understand how impressive the fields are on the Triton Series, but just look at that little lot who fell short of the final table.

How about if we add one more name to that list: Phil Ivey, because it was indeed the all-time great who went out in eighth, officially the final-table bubble in this seven-handed affair.

Ivey is on an incredible run of form through these past couple of months, but there was no room for him at this final. He lost with Ac3c against Isaac Haxton’s Ad9s. They both flopped and ace, but Haxton’s kicked played. Ivey took €103,200 for eighth.

And so we were left with seven, including all of Haxton, Daniel Dvoress and Seidel, who had been critically short on the bubble but somehow managed to survive. They were, however, looking up to Kannapong Thanarattrakui when the final table assembled: the Thai player having managed to navigate this incredibly tough field to sit with 43 big blinds at the start of final table play.

Final table stacks:

Kannapong Thanarattrakui – 5.4 million
Paul Phua – 4.425 million
Isaac Haxton – 4.175 million
Erik Seidel – 1.8 million
Michael Watson – 1.125 million
Ben Heath – 900,000
Daniel Dvoress – 775,000

Blinds: 50K/125K/125K

Event 2 Madrid final table (l-r): Ben Heath, Isaac Haxton, Erik Seidel, Kannapong Thanarattrakui, Mike Watson, Daniel Dvoress, Paul Phua.

At the other end of the ladder, Dvoress, Heath and Watson had fewer than 10 big blinds each, and predictably they were the first three out.

Haxton opened to 250,000 with AcJs and Watson moved all in for his last 1.125 million with KdQs. Dvoress folded pocket eights after thinking long and hard about it, but Haxton made the call.

The flop gave Watson two pair, but he was far from happy. It came 9cQcKc, which left Haxton with a ton of outs. The 9d turn wasn’t one, but the Th river was. Haxton made a straight and Watson was out, for €132,500.

Having seen his decision to fold those pocket eights vindicated, Dvoress might have thought his luck was in, especially when he quickly doubled through Haxton with AcKs. However, he lasted only a few more hands and was knocked out by Phua is another cooler.

Phua opened with KsTs and Dvoress took a flop in the big blind with Qh9d. Like Watson before him, Dvoress flopped two pair, but again like Watson, it still wasn’t great. The specific flop was Qs4s9c, so that was a flush draw for Phua.

The money went in and Dvoress was at risk. The Td didn’t immediately kill him on its own, but in combination with the Jc river, it certainly did. Phua had filled a straight, and Dvoress was toast. He won €167,400 for sixth.

With the two Canadians eliminated, pressure fell on Seidel and Heath. Seidel doubled with pocket tens, again through Haxton, but Heath wasn’t so fortunate. He got his last chips in with the pretty looking QhJh on the button, and although Seidel’s Ah2c in the big blind looked pretty raggedy, he called, turned an ace, and Heath was finished. Heath’s fifth place earned him €214,800.

Heath’s run ended in fifth

If you’d have asked Thanarattrakui at the start of the day whether he’d be happy with a fourth-placed finish, chances are he would have jumped at the chance. But having been in the chip lead seven-handed, he might have reassessed. However, Thanarattrakui did indeed make it to fourth in this one, his first Triton cash, and one suspects he’ll come to be very happy about it.

He had dwindled to a short stack four handed, the result of some mistimed aggression, and got his last two big blinds in with JcTh. Haxton, who had recently doubled through Phua, called with Ac9d and the board bricked out. Thanarattrakui’s maiden cash was for €266,500.

A fine performance by Thanarattrakul

Haxton’s bumpy ride wasn’t to last much longer, however. Phua had been more aggressive during today’s play than perhaps we had ever seen him before, and he open-pushed with KdTs. Haxon, with 10 big blinds and 8hQh did the math and called.

But there was a king on the flop, and Haxton was out in third for €340,300.

When they got heads up — two absolute legends of the game — there was only the matter of four big blinds between them, with Phua slightly ahead. But Seidel’s experience really told as he edged further and further ahead.

Phua was faced with elimination, yet another second place, until he hit those miracle cards. Seidel could only chuckle and offer his heartfelt congratulations. He will almost certainly join Phua’s party tonight.

And what about Phua. What will he do now?

He was clear: “Honestly I don’t care. I won!”

Phua celebrates with his friends and supporters

Triton Madrid – Event 2
€30,000 NLHE 7-Handed


Dates: May 14-15, 2022
Entries: 93 (inc. 37 re-entries)
Prize pool: €2,790,000

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
6 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada – €167,400
7 – Mike Watson, Canada – €132,500
8 – Phil Ivey, USA – €103,200
9 – Patrik Antonius, Finland – €78,100
10 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – €60,000
11 – Kevin Paque, Netherlands – €60,000
12 – Michael Soyza, Malaysia – €56,000
13 – Fedor Holz, Germany – €56,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

WATSON PIPS HOLZ TO LEAD LAST 21 AS EVENT 2 PLAYS HUGE DAY 1

Watson takes a narrow chip lead into Day 2 of Event 2

The Triton Series’ first trip to Spain is happily now into its groove, crowning one champion on the festival’s second day, and playing through the first 15 levels of a second event — an event with another enormous prize pool, of course.

We have heard all about Michael Addamo already, so let’s focus here on that second tournament: a seven-handed no limit hold’em event with a €30,000 buy-in.

That entry fee was a slight increase on the series opener, and there were also a handful more players sneaking through the door on this one. When registration closed at the end of Level 10, the tournament closed with 93 entries, including 37 re-entries, and a prize pool of €2.79 million.

Thirteen players will be paid and the winner will get €740,400. Things are gradually growing as the series continues to gather momentum.

The tournament paused overnight with 21 players left, neatly arranged around three full seven-max tables, but still a way from the money. But the man who will sleep most soundly is the Triton regular Mike Watson, from Canada, who bagged 1.995 million, or 80 big blinds.

Actually, sleeping soundly is probably not something anyone can do when you look down the list of players who will be attempting to hunt Watson down tomorrow. Fedor Holz is only narrowly behind Watson, and he even found a way to defeat Addamo right at the death tonight. Holz knocked out Addamo with aces versus jacks, played slowly through three streets.

Holz heads a formidable chasing pack

Below Holz is the former Master Classics of Poker champion, Kevin Paque, who is playing his first Triton event. And then, lo and behold, there’s Paul Phua. He was near the chip lead at the end of the first day of Event 1, and he is duly there again.

Phil Ivey also showed up today to play his first event of this festival. Patrik Antonius, who fired five bullets for no return in Event #1, is back and this time faring better. Then there are the other Triton stalwarts including Timothy Adams, Rui Cao, Daniel Dvoress, Ben Heath and Michael Soyza.

Ivey is back on the Triton Series after great success in Cyprus

At one stage this evening, the television table featured Ivey, Erik Seidel and Holz, representing about 30 years of poker’s very best tournaments talents. (Nick Petrangelo, Max Silver and Pete Chen were there too, which is not bad as a support act.) That’s the kind of quality we have come to expect on the Triton Series, and many of them are still involved heading into Day 2.

Here are the stacks of the remaining 21 players. The payouts are below. This tournament concludes tomorrow, alongside the start of Event #3, which is a €20K short deck event.

CURRENT STANDINGS:

Michael Watson – 1,995,000
Fedor Holz – 1,970,000
Kevin Paque – 1,870,000
Paul Phua – 1,680,000
Tom Vogelsang – 1,275,000
Isaac Haxton – 885,000
Danny Tang – 865,000
Tim Adams – 860,000
Phil Ivey – 815,000
Erik Seidel – 765,000
Patrik Antonius – 760,000
Michael Soyza – 745,000
Rui Cao – 610,000
Ben Heath – 550,000
Danie Dvoress – 460,000
Bruno Volkmann – 460,000
Kannapong Thanarattrakul – 460,000
Ruida Lin – 420,000
Morten Klein – 420,000
Aleksejs Ponakovs – 405,000
Andras Nemeth – 340,000

Triton Madrid – Event 2
€30,000 NLHE 7-Handed


Dates: May 14-15, 2022
Entries: 93 (inc. 37 re-entries)
Prize pool: €2,790,000

1 – €740,400
2 – €514,800
3 – €340,300
4 – €266,500
5 – €214,800
6 – €167,400
7 – €132,500
8 – €103,200
9 – €78,100
10-11 – €60,000
12-13 – €56,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

ALL ABOUT ADDAMO AS AUSTRALIAN’S PURPLE PATCH CONTINUES AT TRITON MADRID

An incredible display from Michael Addamo earned him the opening title of Triton Madrid

Over the past couple of years, Australia’s Michael Addamo has graduated from the ranks of high-level poker talents to stand alone at the very top of the tree. He has put together a streak of results that stands comparison with any seen before, slicing through elite tournament fields to bank millions.

Addamo today added another title, winning the opening event of the Triton Series Madrid festival, worth €478,000. It is by no means the biggest payday of this incredible purple patch, but it might go down as Addamo’s most satisfying performance.

Addamo was the overnight chip leader of nine players returning today, but was then reduced to a tiny short stack, sitting with fewer than 10 big blinds seven-handed. However, he managed to pick his spots like a true artist, refusing to put his fortunes in the lap of the gods and instead always backing his impeccable judgment. It meant that he was able to rebuild, bounce back from any downturns, and eventually defeat the Malaysian pro Michael Soyza heads up.

Soyza was the last to fall to Addamo

It’s Addamo’s first Triton Series victory, over a field of 90 entries in this €20,00 buy-in tournament, but it will not be his last.

THE STORY OF THE DAY

There were some interesting ICM implications at the start of the day, especially for the medium-sized stacks. Morten Klein had only seven big blinds and Fernando Garcia had 14, which meant it would have been suicidal for anyone sitting in the middle of the pack to bust before them. However, with such a ruthless and well-stacked chip-leader in Addamo, those medium stacks also knew they might easily be targeted by the bully if they were to play too passively.

START OF DAY CHIP COUNTS

Michael Addamo – 4,695,000
Paul Phua – 3,250,000
Tommy Kim – 2,210,000
Michael Soyza – 1,790,000
Heung Wayne – 1,650,000
Rob Young – 1,545,000
Danny Tang – 1,485,000
Fernando Garcia – 700,000
Morten Klein – 345,000

Blinds: 25K/50K/50K

Final nine in Event #1: Back row (l-r): Morten Klein, Paul Phua, Michael Addamo, Tommy Kim. Front row (l-r): Michael Soyza, Wayne Heung, Danny Tang, Fernando Garcia, Rob Yong.

Soyza set a tone on the very first hand of the day, refusing to fold a flush draw despite Addamo’s aggression, and being rewarded by rivering that flush. That gave Soyza a big early pot and showed an early chink in Addamo’s armour. On the very next hand, the Klein problem was solved — the short stack shoved AsTd into Paul Phua’s AcKc, and received no help.

Klein departed in ninth, having played only two hands at the final, but earning €50,400 from his first foray into the Triton shark tank. Phua meanwhile recouped some of the chips he lost in yesterday’s huge final hand against Addamo.

A brief stay at the final for Klein

With the absolute short stack eliminated, play settled down for a while. Addamo was still trying to push things, but wasn’t getting it all his own way, and Phua managed to move back into the chip lead. And Phua received another fillip when Garcia thought his time had come to either double up or go home.

Garcia had 550,000, with the big blind and 80K, and action folded to him in the cutoff. His holding wasn’t amazing — 9s6s — but he shoved it in, and it folded all the way to Phua in the big blind. Phua’s holding also wasn’t great — Ah3d — but Phua made the sighing call.

Garcia was fine with it, especially after he picked up even more equity when the first four cards off the deck were QhJs7d and 8c. But the Ac came on the river, only improving Phua, and Garcia’s day was done.

The lone Spaniard at the final shrugged his shoulders and grinned his way away from the table, happy that his debut on this series had ended with such a deep run. He earned €66,600 and looked keen to get back into the action next time.

Garcia flew the flag for the home nation

At this stage, it might have been fair to assume Addamo would take over. He still had heaps of both chips and experience of precisely these kinds of situations, and he could have now expected to change gears and run things over. However, the only gear he found was reverse.

Addamo doubled up Heung Wayne in a huge pot when both flopped top-pair jacks, but Heung had a better kicker. And the pair then played another 1 million-plus pot, when both had ace high and Heung had the better kicker again. Addamo slumped to 10 big blinds, and will therefore have been grateful to see Danny Tang next to take the fall.

Tang doubled up Rob Yong in a huge pot, when Tang’s queens lost to Yong’s kings. And even though Tang doubled back through Soyza, it was only for a few blinds, and he was eliminated in seventh shortly after the first tournament break of the day.

Tang had Ah4c to Tommy Kim’s KcJc when he shoved for 825,000. But there was a jack on the flop and another on the river, and Tang hit the rail winning €85,600.

Tang never recovered from a queens vs. kings confrontation

Everyone had now locked up a six-figure score and Addamo was still the short stack, but the tournament then underwent another peculiar swerve. Yong, who had scored that huge double up to dent Tang, somehow became the next to bust, and then Phua, who had been a dominant chip leader seven-handed, was out in fifth.

Yong’s elimination was a simple error of timing. Wayne had been making a lot of plays as he chipped up on the final table, and Yong had probably noticed. So when Wayne opened to 300,000 from a 2.6 million stack from the cutoff, with mostly short-stacks behind him, Yong decided to rip in his last 1.85 million with Th9s.

Yong made the money for the first time on the Triton Series

However, this was one time when Wayne actually had it, AsKd to be precise, and Wayne snapped him off. (Addamo folded ace-queen.) Wayne ended up with a king-high flush, while Yong was out in sixth for €108,000. That’s his first cash on the Triton Series.

The same was not true for Phua, of course, who was in the money for the record-extending 17th time. But Phua couldn’t convert it into a title once again, and he busted soon after Yong. His final hand was a tiny bit more tricky: Soyza opened the hijack with As9s and Phua defended the big blind with Kh8h, from a stack of 1.8 million.

The flop was the all-action 2s7d8s, which meant top pair versus the nut flush draw. Phua check-shoved over Soyza’s c-bet of 300,000, and the dealer put the Ts on the turn to end it for Phua.

Phua’s trophy drought continues despite another cash

“GG,” Phua said, taking €138,500 for fifth, still trophy-less.

Even though he had been on a precipitous decline for much of the final day, Addamo had never been all-in and at risk. He had actually dodged two close calls when that might have been the case — once when Yong shoved the small blind with ace-eight and Addamo folded his ace-three, and once when he let that ace-queen go during Yong’s elimination hand.

But he did then shove for his last six big blinds with As9h and earned a double when Wayne called him with Kc9c. That proved to be another major turning point, because Wayne now spiralled downward as Addamo climbed up again. On the very next hand, the same two went at it with the same result. Addamo’s KhQd hitting trip kings to earn a double again through Wayne’s 7c7s.

Addamo was now motoring once more.

It took at least another 45 minutes until those same players tangled again, but this time Addamo had Wayne comfortably covered when the dealer set up a time-honoured AhKs versus QdQh clash.

Addamo had the queens; Wayne had the over-cards, but the queen on the flop made the king all but irrelevant. Addamo took Wayne’s last 2 million chips and left the Hong Kong cash-game specialist looking for his fourth-place prize of €172,000.

Wayne made a real splash on his first trip to Madrid

Soyza still had the chip lead among a very shallow final three. He had 23 big blinds to Addamo’s 21, with Kim sitting with 15. It didn’t seem likely to last very long.

Sure enough, Soyza open pushed the first hand of three-handed play with As6s and Kim called all-in with 3d3c. After nothing much for the over-cards through flop and turn, the river was the 6c and that was it for Kim. He took €219,500 for third.

No much Kim could do as he busts in third

That left Addamo to do battle with Soyza, and the Malaysian had a near two-to-one chip advantage. Soyza had 38 big blinds to Addamo’s 21. But the table were quickly turned when Addamo won the first flip, hitting a seven to match his Ad7d to beat Soyza’s pocket sixes. Addamo this time never lost the lead again.

Heads up between Soyza, left, and Addamo

Soyza did manage one double up after he pushed for his last 2.5 million (nine big blinds) with Ts5s and spiked a 10 on the river to beat Addamo’s Ad4c.

But Addamo again had an off-suit ace-four (this time Ah4d) when Soyza pushed for 2.5 million with Qd2d. This time there was no drama on the board and Addamo was the winner.

Soyza took €332,000, which is a nice way to start any festival. But this one was all about Addamo, who has laid down a formidable marker at the start of this 13-day festival.

Triton Madrid – Event 1 – €20,000 NLHE 8-Handed
Date: May 13-14, 2022
Entries: 90 (inc. 34 re-entries)
Prize pool: €1,800,000

1 – Michael Addamo, Australia – €478,000
2 – Michael Soyza, Malaysia – €332,000
3 – Tommy Kim, South Korea – €219,500
4 – Heung Wayne, Hong Kong – €172,000
5 – Paul Phua, Malaysia – €138,500
6 – Rob Yong, UK – €108,000
7 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – €85,600
8 – Fernando Garcia, Spain – €66,600
9 – Morten Klein, Norway – €50,400

10 – Andriy Lyubovetskiy, Ukraine – €38,700
11 – Cristobal Hidalgo, Spain – €38,700
12 – Jeremy Ausmus, USA – €36,000
13 – Ni Liangce, China – €36,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

ADDAMO LEADS PHUA AND CO AS TRITON MADRID GETS STARTED WITH A BANG

Michael Addamo took the tournament lead in the first event of Triton Madrid

The Triton Series’ first ever trip to Spain started with a bang at the Gran Via Casino, Madrid, today. The first event of a 13-day festival played through its opening day, attracting 90 entries (including 34 re-entries), and building a prize pool of €1.8 million.

Here’s something to remember if those numbers seem enormous: this is the smallest event of the 13 we have planned for the coming two weeks.

With 13 players due to be paid, and room at the end of the day only for the final nine, it meant this opening session compressed just about everything into its 20 levels: the early re-entry frenzy, the tightening up after registration was closed, then the bubble and then the race to the final.

When we got through it all, here’s how they line up for tomorrow’s conclusion:

Michael Addamo, Australia – 4,695,000
Paul Phua, Malaysia – 3,250,000
Tommy Kim, South Korea – 2,210,000
Michael Soyza, Malaysia – 1,790,000
Wayne Heung, Hong Kong – 1,650,000
Rob Young, UK – 1,545,000
Danny Tang, Hong Kong – 1,485,000
Fernando Garcia, Spain – 700,000
Morten Klein, Norway – 345,000

What better name to find at the top of the counts than that of Michael Addamo, arguably the hottest player at the moment in the world of high stakes poker. Addamo has been on a tear through 2021-22 and showed all his ample skills in this one — not least on the very last hand of the day, where he put Paul Phua to the test, won the pot, and leapfrogged Phua to take the chip lead.

Phua would only find out later that he had been outmuscled by the same hand. Both players had ace-king, but Addamo was bolder on an ace-high, three-heart, paired board. Neither had a heart in their hand, but Addamo was prepared to bet big, persuading Phua to let his top pair go.

Phua, right, had a tough late decision in a pot versus Addamo, left

But hats off too for Phua — a man at the very heart of Triton Poker. Phua has played at every stop and has a record 16 cashes. He is still yet to win one of these tournaments, however, and you can watch his latest attempt tomorrow on the live stream tomorrow. He’s a canny operator, but that’s a very tough final table.

The most unfortunate player today was Wu Ye Wei, who burst the bubble at around 11.45pm local time. Sitting with a short stack in the big blind, he thought he had flopped gin with his 9h8c and a board of 2c9c6c. But Ni Liangce had JcAc for the made flush and Wei was out.

That elimination took place on the feature table, and hot on the heels of Phachara Wongwichit’s bustout from the outer table, which negated the need for hand for hand play.

Wu Ye Wei becomes the first bubble boy of Triton Series Madrid

It’ll be scant consolation for Wei, who departed so very close to his first Triton cash in his fourth tournament on the tour. Everyone else was guaranteed €36,000, and that was the amount earned by Liangce himself, who busted to Phua in 13th not long after, and Jeremy Ausmus, who went out next.

Andriy Lyubovetskiy and Cristobal Hidalgo followed soon after, earning €38,700 apiece, and taking us down to that final.

The other headline news of the day was the sheer popularity of this event among newcomers to the Triton family. Seventeen players made their debut on this prestigious series in this tournament: Aleksandrs Ponakovs, Ausmus, Kevin Paque, Luuk Gieles, Klein, Wayne Heung, Brian Kamphorst, Cristobal Hidalgo, Garcia, Juan Pablo Corral, Kannapong Thanarattra, Liangce, Wongwichit, Sirzat Hissoou, Witsarut Ketnarin, Tossapat Chunharas and Yaman Nakdali.

Morten Klein made the money on his first attempt

We have heard about the mixed fortunes of Ausmus, Liangce and Wongwichit already, and you’ll note that Klein and Garcia are through to the final on their first attempt. We hope all the others will stick around for the remainder of the action, which only grows more exciting from here.

You can see below what they’re playing for when the tournament resumes at 1pm local time and plays to a winner. Event #2 will also get going at 2pm. That’s a 7-handed NLHE affair, with a buy-in of €30,000.

Join us tomorrow!

Triton Madrid – Event 1 – €20,000 NLHE 8-Handed
Date: May 13-14, 2022
Entries: 90 (inc. 34 re-entries)
Prize pool: €1,800,000

1 – €478,000
2 – €332,000
3 – €219,500
4 – €172,000
5 – €138,500
6 – €108,000
7 – €85,600
8 – €66,600
9 – €50,400

10 – Andriy Lyubovetskiy, Ukraine – €38,700
11 – Cristobal Hidalgo, Spain – €38,700
12 – Jeremy Ausmus, USA – €36,000
13 – Ni Liangce, China – €36,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

WELCOME TO MADRID FOR A TWO-WEEK POKER FEAST

The Madrid tournament area awaits its players

Hello one and all and welcome to Madrid, Spain, for the second stop of 2022 on the Triton Super High Roller Series!

We had to wait a long time between our visit to London, in August 2019, and Cyprus, in April of this year, but the world’s most prestigious poker series is back again, only a month or so later. Once again, we’re in a new destination, and once again, we’re preparing for a pretty sensational two weeks of play.

Cyprus was a mere appetiser to the feast we have in store in Madrid.

Over the coming 13 days, we will have 13 tournaments with buy-ins ranging from €20,000 through €150,000. We have regular no limit hold’em (both 7-max and 8-max) and short deck hold’em, as well as pot-limit Omaha.

Click for the full schedule

The general plan is that two tournaments play concurrently every day: the conclusion of one event alongside the start of the next one, meaning players can get over their elimination from one event by hopping straight into another one.

This is precisely how the high-stakes players like it, and so this is precisely what Triton delivers. And for the viewers, this will all be streamed live on the Triton app, YouTube and Twitch channels. Get some snacks in and prepare for some incredible coverage.

There will also, of course, be a few high-stakes cash games taking place on the television stage after the tournament action is done for the day. Look out in the usual places for those shows.

Our venue is the opulent Casino Gran Via in the heart of Madrid. It’s a stone’s throw from El Retiro Park and the Plaza Mayor, surrounded by the thrum of Spain’s capital. The building itself was built in the 1920s and proudly displays its period charm. There are pillars and atriums and chandeliers and stained glass ceilings. It’s a wonderful place to be playing poker.

The exterior of the Casino Gran Via Madrid

The focus, of course, will be on the tables, which will also welcome a few new faces. Dozens of players have signed up in advance, many of them sampling the Triton experience for the very first time. We will follow their progress here.

Click for the full schedule. Sit back and enjoy the next two weeks. We know we will.

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

YU DOWNS LEOW FOR SECOND TRITON SERIES TITLE, ENDS CYPRUS STOP WITH A BANG

Winfred Yu: Champion!

The Triton Series is the proud offspring of Asian poker enthusiasts, who created a tour of exclusive, high stakes tournaments to satisfy the demands of the top players from Malaysia, Hong Kong and beyond.

It has also, of course, become very popular among the elite players of Europe and North America, and this week in Cyprus, where the Triton Series Special Edition has been taking place, every tournament before today had been won by players from outside Asia.

But thanks to the final $75,000 buy-in short deck event, it was not a clean sweep. Far from it. Five out of six players who made the money in this one were from Asia, and the tournament finished in a brilliant heads-up battle between two poker legends from the very beating heart of the Triton operation.

It was won by Winfred Yu, from Hong Kong, who defeated Malaysia’s Ivan Leow heads up. And the fact that the absolute cream of the Asian poker scene — including Leow and three of the other defeated final table players — piled on the stage to celebrate with Yu points to his immense popularity in the game.

Yu has long been a very significant figure for poker in the region, arranging the nosebleed cash games and acting as a liaison to bring big players from across the world together. He has a bulging contacts book, and an endlessly personable manner.

And tonight proves again that he has a pretty mean poker game of his own — and another $1.01 million to put in the bankroll. The whole tournament provided a terrific end to a week in Cyprus: two short deck superstars facing off for another million dollar prize. Either would have been a worthy champion.

“Ivan is not only is a good brother, a buddy, and we play a lot,” Yu said. “He’s aggressive, he put me to the test, kept putting the pressure on. I was expecting to play heads up against him, and I got lucky!”

Ivan Leow was the first to congratulate Winfred Yu

The tournament took on a distinctly Asian feel early in the day with the eliminations of Mikita Badziakouski, Mike Watson, Stephen Chidwick, Sam Greenwood et al, and even the overnight leader Seth Davies and the short deck titan Phil Ivey hit the rail far before the money.

With eight players left, playing four handed on two tables, Yu had an enormous chip lead and the short stacks starting battling each other. Ferdinand Putra doubled through Elton Tsang. Daniel Dvoress doubled through Paul Phua and then Wei Hsiang Yeu. Yeu then doubled back through Dvoress.

Usually in these situations, Phua comes into his own. He has survival skills like no one else, and 17 Triton cashes to prove it. But even he couldn’t survive this vicious back-and-forth, losing with AcKh to Yeu’s AsTh when a ten flopped.

Paul Phua, with the expression of a pre-bubble elimination

That brought the field down to its last seven, who all fit around the unofficial final table, but still one more player needed to be eliminated before the bubble burst. The viewers on the live stream, now watching all the action, didn’t need to wait for very long to find out who it would be.

It was Yeu.

The Indonesian player had been prominent in those pre-pre-bubble skirmishes, and he was the first to get his chips in on the stone bubble. His AhJs flopped very well against Tsang’s QdQc when the first three cards off the deck were the AsJc9c. But the turn and river of 7c and Tc filled a flush to Tsang’s queens and Yeu was defeated.

Wei Hsiang Yeu: The smiling bubble boy

Yu was the chip leader still when the actual final table got under way, with Tsang now in second and the resurgent Dvoress in third. Short deck final tables have a habit of being over with either in a flash or after a marathon, so we strapped in to find out which type this would be.

Event 5 final table (l-r): Ferdinand Putra, Danny Tang, Daniel Dvoress, Ivan Leow, Winfred Yu, Elton Tsang.

The initial indications suggested it would be over in a flash. The official final was only a few hands old when Putra got his short stack in the middle. Dvoress called and was ahead, with AsKc (Dvoress) to Ac9s (Putra).

There always seems to be a sweat on every short deck flop and this one was no different. Putra received plenty of help from the Jd8hTd board. However the 8s turn and Ks river didn’t fill his potential, and that ended Putra’s tournament in sixth, worth $208,500.

Ferdinand Putra, out in sixth

After Putra’s elimination, we had to wait more than two hours for the next — an extraordinary length of time in this format with these stack sizes. But Danny Tang, who was the short-stack, managed a remarkable double when his AdKd made a flush to beat the same hand for Dvoress, only without the crucial diamonds of course.

Tang moved upward and Dvoress, who had held the chip lead at once point, slipped down the order. When he found the same hand as Tang before — the AdKd — and pushed with it, he slammed into the KsKc of Yu and didn’t get the same kind of miracle. Dvoress took $268,000 for fifth.

Daniel Dvoress’s run ended in fifth

As can so often be the case, one elimination brought two. Within a couple of hands of Dvoress’s departure, Tsang was walking out too, losing with AdQd to Tang’s KsKd. He tried to cover his face so that the cameras couldn’t see his shame, but he was forced to watch the pocket kings do the damage again. Tsang went looking for a $343,000 payday.

Tsang has cashed every tournament he has played this week, finishing sixth, ninth, and fourth on two occasions. He may have missed out on a title, but he cannot complain with that string of results.

Elton Tsang can’t hide from the pocket kings

There then followed another long and tense period where the three remaining players — Tang, Leow and Yu — exchanged small pots and tended to shove one another out of the big ones. The stacks had evened up, and everyone knew that one false step could represent some ICM peril.

What we perhaps didn’t realise was that we were essentially just waiting for one player to get pocket kings and another to shove, the pattern that had accounted for the two previous eliminations. And it repeated once more.

This time it was Tang who had the smaller stack, and QcTd, while Leow was sitting with the kings KcKh. Again there was a flop sweat, when it came 8hJdQd, but the 7s turn and 6s river were blanks.

Tang, who won a World Series of Poker bracelet in the summer, earned $447,000 for another cash on the Triton Series.

End of the line for Danny Tang

That left us with those two all-time Triton legends: Leow, who has numerous final tables and one title on this series, and Yu, who won a short deck event in Montenegro in 2019, before cashing the Triton Million for Charity in London.

With Leow having only a narrow advantage, there was every chance we could have been in for a long heads-up battle, but they ended up getting their chips in regularly and demonstrating that they were prepared to gamble.

Ivan Leow: Denied a third title

The cards played ball, and gave the ever encroaching crowd plenty of things to cheer. The two pivotal hands came essentially back-to-back, and both went in the favour of Yu.

The first was when Yu’s AdJd defeated Leow’s JsJs through the slow torture of a KdQs6cQhKc run-out, the pocket pair counterfeited on the river.

Not long after, the chips went in again with Leow this time under threat. He had QsQh to Yu’s AcQd this time, and again the dealer saved the punishment until the river. The first four cards off the deck all favoured Leow. They were Js9cTh and Jh. But the Ah river connected with Yu and earned him his second Triton crown.

Yu drew attention to the fact that he came into the second day with the second shortest stack. “Never give up,” he said. Ain’t that the truth.

A who’s who of poker celebrate with Winfred Yu

And with that, the curtain comes down on another hugely successful stop on the Triton Series, the first after such a long a miserable wait.

Across five events in this six-day tournament series, total prize pools hit $19.231 million, and tournament champions won $5.878 million between them. There were 284 entries, including 116 re-entries.

Exciting announcements are planned for upcoming new stops on the Triton Series. Be sure to look out and see you again next time!

TRITON SERIES SPECIAL EDITION CYPRUS
EVENT #5 – $75,000 SHORT DECK

Dates: April 6-7, 2022
Entries: 41 (inc. 16 re-entries)
Prize pool: $2,976,000

1 – Winfred Yu, Hong Kong, $1,010,000
2 – Ivan Leow, Malaysia, $699,500
3 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong, $447,000
4 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong, $343,000
5 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada, $268,000
6 – Ferdinand Putra, Indonesia, $208,500

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

HUNT STARTS FOR ONE MORE MILLIONAIRE ON TRITON SERIES CYPRUS FINAL DAY

The last day in Cyprus for the Triton Series tournament set

It’s the final day of the Triton Series Cyprus Special Edition, and registration is now closed on the last event. Anybody who is not already seated in a Triton tournament will need to wait for the next event to get their hands on a trophy.

The final flurry of registrations this morning brought the number of entries in this one to 41, including 16 re-entries. That meant a prize pool of $2.976 million and a winner’s prize of $1.01 million.

Just one more millionaire on the Triton Series.

Here’s the payout schedule for the final event, and below you can see a reminder of the results from across this series.

EVENT #5 – $75,000 SHORT DECK

Dates: April 6-7, 2022
Entries: 41 (inc. 16 re-entries)
Prize pool: $2,976,000

1 – $1,010,000
2 – $699,500
3 – $447,000
4 – $343,000
5 – $268,000
6 – $208,500

EVENT 1: $50K SIX-HANDED NLHE

Dates: April 2-3, 2022
Entries: 82 (inc. 37 re-entries)
Prize pool: $3,936,000

1 – Andras Nemeth, Hungary, $1,082,000
2 – Laszlo Bujtas, Hungary, $770,000
3 – Tommy Kim, South Korea, $503,800
4 – Phil Ivey, USA, $387,100
5 – Jason Koon, USA, $307,000
6 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong, $240,100
7 – Stephen Chidwick, UK, $188,000
8 – Sam Greenwood, Canada, $147,000
9 – Michael Soyza, Malaysia, $113,000
10 – Eng Siang Ewe, Malaysia, $99,000
11 – Michael Addamo, Australia, $99,000

Tournament report: Nemeth banks $1m as Hungarian High Rollers blitz Cyprus

EVENT 2: $100K EIGHT-HANDED NLHE

Dates: April 3-4, 2022
Entries: 69 (inc. 31 re-entries)
Prize pool: $6,624,000

1 – Teun Mulder, Netherlands, $1,940,000
2 – Tom Vogelsang, Netherlands, $1,390,000
3 – Jake Schindler, USA, $903,000
4 – Mike Watson, Canada, $683,300
5 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada, $529,000
6 – Michael Soyza, Malaysia, $410,500
7 – Paul Phua, Malaysia, $324,500
8 – Ali Imsirovic, Bosnia & Herzegovina, $251,700
9 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong, $192,000

Tournament report: Double Dutch delight as Mulder tops Vogelsang

EVENT 3: $75K SHORT DECK

Dates: April 5-6, 2022
Entries: 51 (inc. 23 re-entries)
Prize pool: $3,706,500

1 – Phil Ivey, USA, $1,170,000
2 – Kiat Lee, Malaysia, $840,000
3 – Mike Watson, Canada, $538,000
4 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong, $408,000
5 – Jason Koon, USA, $315,000
6 – Richard Yong, Malaysia, $241,000
7 – Ivan Leow, Malaysia, $194,500

Tournament report: Ivey blazes through short deck field

EVENT 6: $50K EIGHT-HANDED TURBO

Date: April 4, 2022
Entries: 41 (inc. 9 re-entries)
Prize pool: $1,988,500

1 – Matthias Eibinger, Austria, $676,000
2 – Ben Heath, UK, $467,500
3 – Mikita Badziakouski, Belarus, $298,500
4 – Sam Greenwood, Canada, $228,500
5 – Phil Ivey, USA, $179,000
6 – Chris Brewer, USA, $139,000

Tournament report: Crazy turbo ends with victory for short-stack specialist Eibinger

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

DAVIES LEADS FINAL SHORT DECK EVENT AS TRITON CYPRUS NEARS ITS CONCLUSION

Seth Davies, leading the last short deck

The final tournament of this Triton Series Special Edition reached its half-way point tonight, with players enjoying one last chance to work towards earning a Triton trophy. The game was short deck, with players aiming to dethrone Phil Ivey who won the latest short deck event earlier in the day.

Registration remains open until the start of play tomorrow, but we have already seen 39 entries into the tournament, including 14 re-entries, and so we’re set for one more big payday tomorrow.

The buy-in for this one is $75,000 — a reduction on the initially advertised $125,000, after players requested this slightly smaller level of play. That’s probably because they know they have a full schedule on the Super High Roller Series Europe to play over the coming week, and we’ll be sharing the tournament room with our temporary collaborators tomorrow.

There’s a $25K PLO event kicking off that festival, while we’ll stay focused on the conclusion of the $75K short deck.

Last chance to play a Triton tournament this week!

The stack sizes for the remaining 20 players are as follows. As you can see, Seth Davies rose to the top today, and became the only player in the room with a seven-figure stack. The American has had a relatively quiet Triton Series so far, but has been studying his short deck game recently, which pair dividends tonight.

The Malaysian trio of Wei Hsiang Yeu, Lun Loon and Ivan Leow all follow Davies. They have short deck in their blood.

A buy-in will get you a stack of 300,000 chips if you want to buy-in any time before the resumption at 1pm tomorrow. Antes on the resumption are 6K-12K, so you’ll have 50 antes and be ahead of 25 per cent of the field.

See you tomorrow.

Triton Cyprus Special Edition
Event #5 $75,000 Short Deck Hold’em

Seth Davies USA 1,019,000
Wei Hsiang Yeu Malaysia 949,000
Lun Loon Malaysia 821,000
Ivan Leow Malaysia 821,000
Ferdinand Putra Indonesia 816,000
Phil Ivey USA 809,000
Chris Brewer USA 779,000
Kiat Lee Malaysia 747,000
Paul Phua Malaysia 706,000
Stephen Chidwick UK 672,000
Daniel Dvoress Canada 627,000
Cary Katz USA 568,000
Elton Tsang Hong Kong 483,000
Danny Tang Hong Kong 411,000
Jason Koon USA 347,000
Mike Watson Canada 340,000
Wai Kin Yong Malaysia 285,000
Mikita Badziakouski Belarus 256,000
Winfred Yu Hong Kong 164,000
Jun Wah Yap Malaysia 81,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

MAINTAINING THE FAIRNESS OF THE GAME: TRITON’S TD VIVALDI ON SOME CRUCIAL INNOVATIONS

Triton Tournament Director Luca Vivaldi

After your aces get cracked for the third time in a row, you might find yourself muttering that poker is so unfair. It can seem that way every now and again, but remember nobody can control what cards you see.

However, players on the Triton Series can be absolutely certain of one very important fact: the tournament staff on this tour do everything in their power to ensure fairness in every other aspect of the game.

Where the stakes and skill levels are super high, every tiny detail can be incredibly important. The fields are full of elite players, who base their decisions on precise calculations, and for whom margins are exceptionally thin. It’s only proper that tournament staff do everything they can to ensure a level playing field. No player should worry about their meticulous preparations being undermined by someone else’s negligence.

Triton Tournament Director Luca Vivaldi has overseen high stakes tournaments for more than a decade, and has introduced a few innovations specifically for these exclusive, small-field tournaments, designed to ensure fairness.

To a casual poker fan, the importance of these things might seem vanishingly small, but they are crucial to the elite player, and add to Triton’s overall appeal. Here, Vivaldi talks through three relatively new ways in which fairness is promoted on the Triton Series.

SOFT HAND-FOR-HAND PLAY

When the bubble approaches in tournament poker, it is often in a player’s interests to slow the action down, hoping for someone to be eliminated on another table. The fewer hands you see, the higher your chance of survival, and that means it’s just shrewd tournament management to stall as long as you can before folding.

Shot clocks have helped to address stalling in general. And hand-for-hand play on the bubble is also commonplace is almost all tournaments. But on the Triton Series, we also have a period of play known as “soft” hand-for-hand, in which tournament staff track play on two (or more) tables and ensure that, broadly speaking, all tables play the same number of hands.

Tournament staff monitor hands on multiple tables during soft hand-for-hand

This requires a member of floor staff to stand between the tables and log how many hands are being played on each. If one table ends up playing many more hands than the others, they are told to pause while the others catch up. But, of course, not all poker hands take the same amount of time to complete, and the loggers also record whether action concludes pre-flop, on the flop, turn or river, and make judgments accordingly.

Vivaldi said: “The need for soft hand-for-hand is to stop the players intentionally stalling during the pre-bubble period. Also it’s because sometimes there might be a table that is shorter in players than another table.

For example, in a six-handed tournament, you might have one table that is four-handed and the other two tables are five-handed. We track when the action ended on every table, to see if there’s a need to stop one table from playing, for the other ones to be able to catch up.

Obviously we always want the tournament to play as naturally as possible. We don’t play hand for hand at the beginning of a tournament, of course. We are actively tracking all of these little details to ultimately assure fairness as much as possible in every tournament.”

How far ahead does one table need to get before it is told to stop?

Vivaldi: “It really depends on the data we collect. For example, if one table is ahead by four hands but they only had pre-flop action, and the other table had a lot of action and it went to the river multiple times with all-ins and calls, then we won’t stop it. Obviously if it’s unnatural — if every table went to the river every single time — and after a round, one table is four hands ahead of the other, we’re going to stop that table to make the other table catch up.

The players are on board with it and they really appreciate it, as they are with every other procedure that we introduced first at Triton, such as manual seating at the start of the tournament.”

MANUAL SEATING

Tournaments on the Triton Series are small, with usually no more than about six to eight tables in play even at the busiest period. At the very start of the day, there’s often just two or three.

Vivaldi previously noticed unregistered players coming to the tournament room and looking over at the tables, trying to figure out where the empty seats were and deciding which ones would be the most profitable. They would only then register for the tournament when they figured they had the best chance of being given one of the most profitable seats — a process known as “table shopping”.

Table shopping only works if the tournament uses common poker tournament seating procedures, whereby players get seated at the tables with fewest players. But manual seating, which was pioneered on the Triton Series, solves this problem.

Vivaldi says: “When we start a tournament, and we have enough players to start the game — which usually is 75 percent of one table, or two tables minimum — we ask the players to randomly draw their seats with seat cards.

Manual seating cards solve the problem of “table shopping”

Once we start the tournament, to maintain fairness and randomness in the whole process, we ask the players to pick two cards. The first is a table card, which tells them which table they’ll be at, randomly. And then from that table, they will pick a seat card.

This is because some tables have more seats open than others. Let’s say there are three tables. Two tables are six-handed, two seats open, and the other is five-handed, three seats open. All of a sudden, the player has more chance to pick the table that has three seats open instead of the other two that are two seats open. But to make it fair, we give them the cards that make it 33% which table they get. And after that they get a random seat. Then you balance the tables after that.

During registration, there’s quite a lot of balancing, quite a lot of moving of the players, but they all understand that it is for the fairness of the game. They don’t mind moving. So if they pick a table that is six handed, you’d get seven, six and five. We would balance out to the table with five.”

TRACKING AND BALANCING BASED ON PLAYERS SEATED

Vivaldi again: “Another thing that we do exclusively at Triton is to track which table played the fullest the longest or the shortest the longest, to make sure during the registration period that when we balance a table, from one table to another table, we will do it from the table that played the longest amount of time with more players.

Let’s say there are three tables, tables one and two are six handed and table three is four handed, instead of balancing from the highest table, which would be table two, we would go to our sheet that we were filling in during registration and we can see which one, from the two tables, got six players first. That would be the one that played the fullest longest, and we would take the player from that table, and balance it to table three.

Obviously with 100 tables, it’s something you cannot possibly do. But in these exclusive events, we try to find the smallest details that can really make a difference. In buy-ins this high, with these exclusive players, it’s important.

Nobody complains, even if they are being moved often, because they are regulars with Triton and they know that this is our procedure, this is what we do, and that we do it for the fairness of the game.”

ROTATING THE FEATURE TABLE

Almost all Triton events are streamed live, with hole-card information displayed. There is, of course, a security delay on the broadcast, so players’ cards cannot be seen in real time, but even with this delay, the very fact that a player is essentially showing his cards to his potential opponents can work against him in the long term. All good players will be studying the stream later and looking for tendencies and tells.

All tables get equal exposure on the TV stage

For this reason, it’s only fair that nobody spends more time on the feature table than anybody else. That player may be a fan favourite, but it is not good for game integrity if any one player is forced to play on TV longer than any other. In order to solve this, tournament tables are regularly rotated through the TV stage.

Vivaldi says: “Once again, to maintain fairness, the feature tables are rotated in and out. So in one tournament every table gets rotated onto the feature table.

Obviously for these players, revealing their cards gives information, and information in poker is extremely important. We want to make sure that we’re not unfair to certain players and keep them all day at the feature table. That’s why we rotate every player during the day.”

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

IVEY BLAZES THROUGH SHORT DECK FIELD IN CYPRUS FOR SPECTACULAR $1.17M VICTORY

Champion! Phil Ivey

He is, in many fans’ view, the greatest player ever to sit at poker table, but can Phil Ivey play short deck, the poker variant that has turned the high stakes game on its head?

Previous observers of Ivey at Triton Series events already know the answer to this. But just in case there was any doubt, the emphatic answer coming out of Cyprus today is: yes. Ivey just rampaged through the final day of the Triton Series Special Edition $75,000 Short Deck event to book another famous victory on this prestigious series and earn $1.17 million.

After they hit the final table of seven, Ivey knocked out all but one of his opponents and took the title barely six hours after a field of 11 returned overnight, all with aspirations of victory.

But they met with Ivey in irrepressible, unbeatable form — and that’s as terrifying as it is compelling. Ivey was simply spectacular.

His final opponent was Kiat Lee, from Malaysia, the Asian country that has produced more short-deck specialists than perhaps any other. Lee was on the brink of elimination much earlier in the tournament, but was prominent in a hugely unpredictable pre-bubble period.

Kiat Lee: The face of a man who played Phil Ivey heads up

But victory for Ivey is perhaps the only thing that is truly predictable in the poker world. And AsKs versus AhTh ended the tournament and put the trophy in Ivey’s hands.

When the tournament reached the final table, Mike Watson, who had started the day as the short stack, was the chip leader. He had taken chunks out of Mikita Badziakouski, Dan Cates and Chris Brewer to surge to the top.

Final seven in short-deck (l-r): Elton Tsang, Phil Ivey, Richard Yong, Jason Koon, Mike Watson, Ivan Leow, Kiat Lee.

But it was Ivey who hit the ground running, knocking out the dangerous Ivan Leow with red aces beating red queens. (You see a lot of premium pocket pairs in short deck, and this kind of thing is always going to end a player’s tournament.) Leow won $194,500 for seventh.

Ivan Leow first out in the money

This kind of thing also happens: Ivey knocked out the next player, Richard Yong, with JsTd to Yong’s AhKc. Jack ten is a pretty hand in short-deck, with so many straight possibilities, but Ivey won this one the old-fashioned way, hitting a jack on the turn.

Yong, the Triton co-founder whose son Wai Kin, was eliminated on the bubble, took $241,000.

Richard Yong: Triton co-founder hits the rail

The stacks really weren’t all that short at this stage, but they kept flying into the middle. Jason Koon, the overnight chip leader, had AsKs and got his last 1 million in the middle. Ivey, with Ad6s called off, hit a six, and that was the end of that for Koon.

The Triton Ambassador won $315,000.

Jason Koon survived the bubble, but not a confrontation with Ivey

Elton Tsang was another big stack overnight, but he lost some significant pots at the final table to Lee — and Ivey took a back seat for once as Lee polished off Tsang. On the final hand, Tsang had pocket nines to Lee’s AdJs and a jack on the turn again spelled the end for Tsang. His third cash of the week was worth $408,000.

Elton Tsang: A third cash out of three

The very next hand, Watson found pocket tens and moved all-in. Ivey just happened to find pocket kings again, and snap-called. Ivey flopped a set and Watson was drawing dead by the turn. That put another $538,000 in Watson’s bank account, but another 2.8 million chips in Ivey’s stack.

Mike Watson: Underpair and out

Settling in for heads up play, Ivey had a near four-to-one chip lead over Lee. Lee had a little over 4 million in his stack, or 40 antes, which is not really enough. They didn’t last too long.

Lee got his chips in at the first decent opportunity. His suited ace-ten looked pretty good. But not for the first time, Ivey had better, with that AsKs, and the tournament was over.

Ivey’s victory here confirmed what we already knew. He is an exceptional poker talent. And, in fact, this was not even his first short-deck success. Ivey won a short-deck tournament in Montenegro in 2018, a few days before he finished third in another short-deck event.

So, yes, Phil Ivey can play short deck. And even if plenty of others can too, there’s no beating the American great in this kind of form.

TRITON CYPRUS SPECIAL EDITION

EVENT 3: $75K SHORT DECK

Dates: April 5-6, 2022
Entries: 51 (inc. 23 re-entries)
Prize pool: $3,706,500

1 – Phil Ivey, USA, $1,170,000
2 – Kiat Lee, Malaysia, $840,000
3 – Mike Watson, Canada, $538,000
4 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong, $408,000
5 – Jason Koon, USA, $315,000
6 – Richard Yong, Malaysia, $241,000
7 – Ivan Leow, Malaysia, $194,500

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive