The Triton Montenegro Main Event is on course for a monstrous prize-pool after 41 players contributed 57 entries, at HKD 1 million ($127,000) apiece, on the opening day of this year’s tournament at the Maestral Resort, Budva.
With registration still open for another two levels on Day 2, the total number of entries seems certain to surpass the 63 who played the same event last year, at which Mikita Badziakouski won the $2.5 million first prize.
Badziakouski was in today’s field and made it through the day, but is one of the 32 remaining players peering upward in the leader board at Hong Kong’s Danny Tang. Tang, 28, increased his starting stack of 250,000 to 1.268 million, all the more impressive because he only entered in about Level 6 today and played only a couple of levels.
“It started when I made a right call against Steve O’Dwyer,” Tang said, before describing how he called a big over-bet from O’Dwyer looking at a board with four to a straight on it and one over-card to his pair of eights. O’Dwyer had nothing.
Tang then finished the job against O’Dwyer with aces to the American’s queens, and also picked off a bluff from Henrik Hecklen to knock him out. “It was a smooth day,” Tang said. “Sometimes poker is like that.”
The overnight top five includes Triton Ambassador Jason Koon, who was again at his very best, and Christoph Vogelsang, who sat at Tang’s table for much of the late stages. Tony G made a late and garrulous entry and quickly knocked out at least two people to amass a stack of 844,000. Matthias Eibinger, Steffen Sontheimer and Bryn Kenney are also among the big stacks.
Jason Koon: Yet another great day on the Triton seriesChristoph Vogelsang: Top five stack
Kenney, of course, has already won one title here in Montenegro this week, but everyone will have their work cut out to prevail from a frightening field. Tom Dwan, another Triton Ambassador, sat down for his first tournament of the week, as well as fellow cash game beasts Timofey Kuznetsov and Dan “Jungleman” Cates.
Tom Dwan: New ambassador
Triton co-founders Paul Phua and Richard Yong played much of the day at the same table, while Richard’s son Wai Kin, also a former Triton Series winner, is also involved. Richard was one of Tony G’s late victims, but will almost certainly re-enter tomorrow.
The full list of remaining players, and their chip counts and Day 2 seat draw, is below.
Play resumes at 12pm local time, with registration open until just after 2pm. The full extent of the prize-pool will be known then, before they will play to the final table.
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Winfred Yu is best known across the poker world as the kingmaker for the legendary Asian cash games. It’s from this environment — invite-only get-togethers held behind closed doors, where pots regularly swell into the millions — that the short-deck variant of poker originates. Take the low-ranking cards away and there’s even more gamble to the game, perfect for the deep-pockets and action hungry poker fans of the east.
However, today at Triton Montenegro, where short-deck finds its natural home in a high-stakes tournament series, Yu showed that he’s as good a player as he is organiser. Yu finished first in Event #3, the first short-deck tournament of the week at the Maestral Resort, Budva, earning a payday of HKD 2.04 million ($260,000). He beat a field of 70 entries of HKD 100,000 apiece, including many of the top-ranked poker players in the world. His last opponent, Isaac Haxton, is already regarded as one of the absolute elite, and he admitted that he’s been studying short-deck play keenly over the past few months. But even he couldn’t get past the obdurate Yu.
Winfred Yu and Isaac Haxton go head-to-head for the title
Yu played this one especially snugly, spending much of a turbulent day flying under the radar as huge pots and vicious beats continued to fly in front of him. But he also showed plenty of his own fearlessness and picked his spots perfectly, getting lucky when it mattered most. When his chance came to seal the deal he took it, and was quickly joined on the stage by his friends and Triton co-founders Paul Phua and Richard Yong, keen to share in Yu’s moment.
“I’m very excited,” Yu said. “It’s my first Triton championship. Last year I came fourth in the short-deck main event, this time I got the job done.”
Richard Yong, Paul Phua and Ivan Leow join Winfred Yu for his presentation ceremony
The day started at noon with 11 players left, and all eyes were on Leon Tsoukernik and Peter Jetten, who played a massive pot at the end of the first day to decide the overnight chip lead. Jetten won that one, but Tsoukernik, the Czech casino owner, was quickly back on the horse today to push everyone into the money, knocking out both Phua and Sam Greenwood in 10th and ninth, respectively.
Tsoukernik flopped two pair with to beat Phua’s pocket queens. Then Tsoukernik cracked another pair of queens, Greenwood’s, when he flopped bottom set with a pair of sixes. Tsoukernik said he “had a feeling”. It must have felt good.
Tsoukernik tells the story of his “feeling” as Sam Greenwood bursts the bubble
With a minimum HKD 260,000 ($33,800) now guaranteed, players set about determining where the biggest money would go. Dutchman Jordi Urlings was not the biggest stack, but neither was he the smallest, when he saw his connect rather excellently with a flop. He got his 50 ante stack in at that point, but Haxton, sitting behind him, had , which was a bigger straight. Urlings missed his flush outs and was instead flushed out, finding himself first in the payouts line, and missing out on the official final.
Jordi Urlings: Pipe dreamsFinal table players (l-r): Tam Tek Lon, Leon Tsoukernik, Winfred Yu, Isaac Haxton, Steffen Sontheimer, Ihor Shkliaruk, Peter Jetten
Haxton almost laid the same treatment on Tam Tek Lon very soon after, when Haxton’s flopped a straight draw on the board. Lon was sitting with pocket jacks and so had flopped a set, and he scored a double when the case jack rivered for quads. It sent Lon to the top of the counts.
But that was only a very temporary state of affairs. Not long after, Lon lost heaps when he had the misfortune of tangling with Tsoukernik. Lon had in the hole and Tsoukernik had . The flop had a ten on it, and all the money went in. Lon was still a 69 percent favourite, but the king on the river was terminal. “He played his hand perfectly,” Randy Lew said in the commentary booth. “Unfortunately, in short deck, things happen.”
Tek Lon Tam: A bad turn of events
It left Lon with three antes and Haxton took them on the next hand. Lon won HKD 330,000 ($42,900).
The next things to happen were the eliminations of Ukraine’s Ihor Shkliaruk and Germany’s Steffen Sontheimer, sandwiching a massive double up for Jetten through Tsoukernik.
Shkliaruk’s bust-out came first, and it is one that will confuse spectators who only understand full-deck hold’em. He got into a pot against Tsoukernik while holding . The board read when Tsoukernik bet 100,000 and Shkliaruk moved all-in for 1 million.
Ihor Shkliaruk: Straightened out
Why? Well, because an ace plays as the lowest card in the deck in short-deck and Shkiliaruk had a straight, ace-six-seven-eight-nine, completed on the turn. However Tsoukernik had and had filled a full house by the end. Shkliaruk shook his head and hit the rail with HKD420,000 ($53,500) to his name.
Then came the latest in a growing list of major pots between Jetten and Tsoukernik. Jetten flopped a set of tens on a board of , but there was no way Tsoukernik was going to fold his even after Jetten got all his chips in. However Tsoukernik’s royal flush draw whiffed turn and river, which meant Jetten doubled his near 4 million stack.
Jetten then turned his attentions to Sontheimer, winning another huge pot in a classic match-up. Short-deck changes some fundamentals about the game we all know, but queens versus ace-king is still very often a pre-flop all-in shove-call situation. So it was this time, with Sontheimer’s life on the line.
Steffen Sontheimer: Another dream dies
If the queens had held, Sontheimer would have moved into the lead. But they didn’t — an ace came on the river — and that meant Sontheimer moved only to a seat in the main event, via the cashier, where he collected HKD540,000 ($69,000).
At this stage, it was still essentially anyone’s game. Jetten was out in front, followed by Tsoukernik, but both Yu and Haxton were still also sitting with enough to challenge. But this is a game that encourages gambling, and things change very quickly. Tsoukernik had been on a wild ride, and it would end with him next on the rail.
The nature of his elimination was especially grim: he got 5.2 million chips in with and was up against two opponents, Haxton and Jetten, who both held ace-jack. The dealer placed the all-in triangle next to Haxton’s cards because he had the smallest stack. But the dealer’s next action was to put two jacks on the flop, giving both of Tsoukernik’s opponents trips and leaving his tournament in tatters. “I think I played it perfect,” Tsoukernik said, when he had recovered his composure after the beat. “The last hand was a miracle hand. It was a great tournament, I’m happy to be in fourth place.” He took HKD700,000 ($90,000) for that.
Leon Tsoukernik’s wild ride ends in fourth
Jetten now took possession of more than 50 percent of the chips in play, and Haxton admitted in a quick interview that he and Yu were battling now for second, simply trying to outlast one another. But it didn’t work out like that.
Haxton was the first to double through Jetten with against . And then Yu did it too, flopping a set of aces and turning quads, when Jetten had called all-in with a flush draw. Jetten therefore went from leader to last, with Haxton and Yu tied at the top. The three of them buckled down for another couple of hours.
And then Jetten suffered the last of his beats, flopping a pair of aces and turning two pair, but watching helpless as that also filled Haxton’s straight. Jetten had to make do with HKD 920,000 ($117,000).
Peter Jetten busts in third
Haxton had a big chip lead — nearly three-to-one — when he went heads up with Yu, but true to the way this tournament had played over both days, there were plenty of shocks still to come. Yu doubled with to Haxton’s , which put him in the lead. Haxton then wrestled it back. But then Yu doubled again with to beat Haxton’s . And then Yu cracked Haxton’s kings with , rivering three jacks.
No luck for Isaac Haxton
They shook hands and the news quickly spread across the room that Yu was a champion. “Finally!” Phua bellowed from his table as the room broke out in applause.
Event #3 – Short Deck Ante Only Dates: May 7-8, 2019 Buy-in: HK$100,000 (US$12,750 approx) Entries: 70 (inc. 28 re-entries) Prize pool: HK$6.58 million (US$838,000 approx)
1 – Winfred Yu, Hong Kong – HK$2,040,000 (US$260,000) 2 – Isaac Haxton, USA – HK$1,370,000 (US$174,551) 3 – Peter Jetten, Canada – HK$920,000 (US$117,217) 4 – Leon Tsoukernik, Czech Republic – HK$700,000 (US$89,185) 5 – Steffen Sontheimer, Germany – HK$540,000 (US$69,000) 6 – Ihor Shkliaruk, Ukraine – HK$420,000 (US$53,510) 7 – Tam Tek Lon, Macau – HK$330,000 (US$42,044) 8 – Jordi Urlings, Netherlands – HK$260,000 (US$33,126)
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The first short deck hold’em event of the 2019 Triton Series Montenegro is under way — and an explosive final hand of the evening offered further evidence why this variant is so beloved of the game’s gamblers and thinkers alike.
Until the very last deal of a 12-level day, Czech casino owner Leon Tsoukernik had made the tournament his own, building a stack of more than 5 million (from a starting 300,000) when pretty much nobody else crossed the 3 million mark. However he then found Peter Jetten in particularly obdurate mood, re-raise shoving over Tsoukernik’s open and putting his entire 2.2 million stack on the line.
Tsoukernik had in the hole, a super-strong hand in short-deck, and was put through the wringer, evidently unsure whether he might even be a favourite against pocket aces. (Short-deck does all kinds of odd things to established poker probabilities.)
Leon Tsoukernik: Couldn’t resist a last-hand call
Tsoukernik couldn’t resist and slammed in a call, learning he was up against Jetten’s . Tsoukernik flopped a straight draw, but the turn and river were blanks, and that rocketed Jetten up to 4.445 million and the chip lead. Tsoukernik can rebuild tomorrow from 2.92 million.
Those two are still strong favourites to make the money. Eleven players remained at the close of play and eight will cash, so they will quickly enter bubble play on the resumption. The full payouts schedule is below.
As is customary on the Triton Series, plenty of players fired, missed and reloaded on multiple occasions today. Of the 70 total entries, 28 were re-entries. John Juanda and Michael Soyza had four each, and both are out now for good. Tsoukernik was on his first bullet, while Jetten had two.
Jetten’s closest challenger is Tek Lon Tam, from Macau, whose tournament resume is blank at present, suggesting a cash game player taking a stab at these high buy-in events offered by Triton. Tam had 2.925 million, a single chip ahead of Tsoukernik, with Steffen Sontheimer one further place back.
Tek Lon Tam: A rare trip to the tournament tables
Triton’s short-deck specialist Paul Phua has started in Montenegro as he finished in Jeju, with another deep run. Winfred Yu, best known as the organiser of many of Asia’s biggest cash games, also enjoyed this opening flight and bagged 2.225 million. The full counts of the final 11 are below.
Paul Phua: the king of short-deckWinfred Yu: Nothing to see here
Although the tournament has the smallest buy-in of the 10-event festival, the 70 entries at HK$100,000 apiece built a prize pool of HK$6.58 million (US$838,000 approx). It allowed a few of the more circumspect players a chance to test their skills at this variant, with players from across Europe, Asia and North America taking their seats. If they like it, there will be plenty of other chances to sample short deck here in Montenegro. Events #6, #7, #9 and #10 are short-deck, while Event #11 is the short-deck main event and has a buy-in ten times the size of this one.
This tournament plays to its champion tomorrow, with HK$2.04 million on offer to the winner. The full deck hold’em Main Event also gets under way, with a HK$1 million (US$127,500 approx) buy-in, and the poker room at the Maestral Resort will likely be full as a result.
Although the tournament has the smallest buy-in of the 10-event festival, the 70 entries at HK$100,000 apiece built a prize pool of HK$6.58 million (US$838,000 approx). It allowed a few of the more cautious players a chance to test their skills at this variant, with players from across Europe, Asia and North America taking their seats.
The tournament plays to its champion tomorrow, with HK$2.04 million on offer to the winner. The full deck hold’em Main Event also gets under way, with a HK$1 million (US$127,500 approx) buy-in, and the poker room at the Maestral Resort will likely be full as a result.
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Bryn Kenney is the latest champion at Triton Montenegro, winning HK$11.23 million (US$1.43 million) in the second event of the week — and describing his performance as “ferocious” as he blasted away a 79-entry field.
The list of the fallen from this HK$500,000 6-Max tournament included such luminaries as Steve O’Dwyer, Linus Loeliger, Tony G and Mikita Badziakouski. The overnight chip leaders — Xuan Tan and Erik Seidel — went out on the bubble. And then all of Daniel Dvoress, Sergio Aido and Ivan Leow led at the final table only to find themselves wrecked.
But Kenney is the perfect man for such occasions. There are few players in world poker with a skill set so equipped to master these forces. Kenney can be ruthless when ahead and sneaky when chasing; he has a savant’s grasp of critical calculations and the mind-reading skills of a clairvoyant. He looked like running away with proceedings at one point, but was happy to take a back seat as Dvoress went on a rush and led nearly two-to-one heads-up. But Kenney turned the tables quickly, flopping a straight and fading Dvoress’s flush draw to double up, and then pressing home his advantage. It left Dvoress still seeking the first major title of his career, while Kenney added another to his bursting collection.
“I made a lot of really good value bets, really good bluffs, played really ferocious, feel real strong,” Kenney said in the immediate aftermath of his victory. “When you get in such a zone for a while, you can only really think about cards. I feel great, just because I only really care about how I play.”
Kenney rises in triumphDaniel Dvoress: Second in Event #2
Both these men had already outlasted the previously unimpeachable Triton Ambassador Jason Koon, who departed in fifth, and Richard Yong, the series co-founder, who cashed in seventh. And there are still eight more events in this series for everyone else to seek redemption. But for now, Montenegro belongs to Kenney, whose reputation as one of the modern greats is once again underlined.
In fairness, we should have seen the collisions approaching when the overnight leader board turned itself upside down in the run-up to the money bubble. Tan and Seidel finished the first day on a high, sitting pretty at the top of the counts. But they both left with nothing today. Seidel’s elimination came after a classic one-two combination: he flopped a set of fours, but Dvoress rivered a flush. Then he flopped two pair to lose to Kenney’s runner-runner two pair. Similar happened to Tan. Richard Yong won a huge flip to leave Tan in tatters, and the last of his chips went to Sergio Aido.
Xuan Tan: Bubble boy can barely lookErik Seidel: Two sucker punches
Even for someone with Seidel’s experience, the game can sometimes hurt. “Poker isn’t always fun,” he tweeted soon after elimination, with the footage of the hand against Dvoress included.
Cheong Cheok Leng and Danny Tang were the two short stacks as they edged into the money, and they were quickly dispatched. Leng’s lost to Ivan Leow’s , and a few hands later Tang pushed with and a flop of exposed, but Kenney had and called. That took them down to a final table.
Danny Tang: First cash of the week Final table (l-r): Sergio Aido, Richard Yong, Daniel Dvoress, Bryn Kenney, Ivan Leow, Jason Koon, Christoph Vogelsang
Richard Yong, the Triton co-founder, was in the money again, but he couldn’t ladder any further after running pocket nines into Dvoress’s pocket aces. Christoph Vogelsang, who had also nursed a short stack for a while lost with fours to Koon’s sixes. Yong’s prize was HK$1.82 million, while Vogelsang took HK$2.3 million.
Richard Yong: Easy come, easy goEarly series cash for Christoph Vogelsang
Despite his pedigree, and a useful double-up with against Kenney’s ace-king, Koon was next out. He lost with pocket jacks to Kenney’s pocket kings in the kind of hand that would have played the same way in any poker tournament across the world, including one costing HK$500,000 to play. Koon has three titles to his name already, but didn’t emerge with the trophy this time.
Not this time, Jason Koon
The Spanish whiz Aido won the biggest tournament of his career last week in Monte Carlo, where he won a Super High Roller event on the EPT. And Aido continued his form after trading one Monte for another, finding his way to the last four in this one. He dwindled to a short stack, however, and pushed with . It couldn’t beat Dvoress’s .
Another good run for Sergio Aido
Kenney and Dvoress, who were now two of the last three, have spent plenty of time opposite one another at poker tables the world over. But it’s only in recent years that they have also been facing off against Leow, the man who joined them this evening. Leow is a former winner on the Triton series and already has $6.5 million in cashes to his name, which is all the more remarkable when you learn he only took up the game four year ago.
This time, he had to settle with third, the same place in which he finished this event last year. Dvoress’s pocket queens did for Leow’s and Leow took HK$5.07 million (US$646,172).
Ivan Leow: Moving up the Malaysian money list
Dvoress had 9.98 million chips when the table was rearranged and Kenney sat at the other end with 5.85 million. But true to form in this event, everything quickly span around and Kenney never let the advantage slide again. He closed it out by rivering a flush with and forced Dvoress to depart with “only” $7,430,000 (US$946,954), the biggest single result of his career.
Heads up between Daniel Dvoress and Bryn Kenney
There’s only one thing certain: that won’t be the last we see of either of them, and the Triton Series is all the better for it.
Triton Montenegro Event #2: 6-Max Hold’em Dates: May 5-6, 2019 Buy-in: HK$500,000 Entries: 79 (inc. 34 re-entries)
1 – Bryn Kenney, USA – HK$11,230,000 (US$1,431,264) 2 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada – $7,430,000 (US$946,954) 3 – Ivan Leow, Malaysia – HK$5,070,000 (US$646,172) 4 – Sergio Aido, Spain – HK$3,820,000 (US$486,859) 5 – Jason Koon, USA – HK$2,970,000 (US$378,527) 6 – Christoph Vogelsang, Germany, HK$2,300,000 (US$293,135) 7 – Richard Yong, Malaysia, HK$1,820,000 (US$231,959) 8 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong, HK$1,410,000 (US$179,705) 9 – Cheong Cheok Ieng, Macau – HK$1,080,000 (US$137,646)
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partypoker LIVE was created in January 2017 as a global poker tour, with the aim of bringing large field, high guarantee tournaments to players all over the world. Within just 12 months the partypoker LIVE tour has grown into the world’s largest ever poker tour and is guaranteeing over $70,000,000 in the 2018/2019 season.
The Triton Series Montenegro slipped quickly into top gear at the Maestral Resort in Przno today as 45 players took their seats to play the second event of a 10-tournament series, no limit hold’em six-max. Between them they amassed 79 entries of HK$500,000 (US$63,733 approx) apiece. That created a prize-pool of HK$37.130 million (US$4.73 million) and ensured we’ll quickly be naming our first millionaire of this high buy-in festival.
The winner, to be decided on Tuesday, will take HK$11.23 million (US$1.43 million) — and get his visit to Adriatic coast off to the best possible start.
After 12 levels of play today, China’s Tan Xuan took the overnight chip lead, bagging 1.876 million from a starting stack of 200,000. Xuan was the first man registered for the tournament, and clearly likes playing in Montenegro. He recorded the biggest result of his career this time last year when he finished second to Triton Ambassador Jason Koon in the short deck main event, and he is already the man to catch in this one.
Erik Seidel: A menacing figure in second place
Of course, he’s got a super high quality field already breathing down his neck. Xuan’s closest challenger is Erik Seidel, who bagged 1.308 million, but all of Koon, Alex Foxen, Igor Kurganov, Sergio Aido, Christoph Vogelsang, Bryn Kenney and recent Triton Jeju champion Timothy Adams are in the mix.
The full counts for the 24 players who survived are as follows. Everyone else will need to wait until 3pm tomorrow for another chance. That’s when Event #3 beckons the short-deck demons to the Maestral Resort to play their favourite game for HK$100,000 per entry. Join us then.
CONFIRMED PRIZE POOL:
Triton Montenegro Event #2: 6-Max Hold’em Dates: May 5-6, 2019 Buy-in: HK$500,000 Entries: 79 (inc. 34 re-entries)
12BET is an online betting company specializing in sports betting and casino products. 12Bet became operational in 2007, quickly becoming one of the most popular online betting options throughout Europe and the Asia-Pacific region.
partypoker LIVE was created in January 2017 as a global poker tour, with the aim of bringing large field, high guarantee tournaments to players all over the world. Within just 12 months the partypoker LIVE tour has grown into the world’s largest ever poker tour and is guaranteeing over $70,000,000 in the 2018/2019 season.
The first of ten winners at The Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Montenegro 2019 has signed the camera lens, and it’s the familiar squiggle of a man who has won more than $27m playing the toughest live multi-table tournaments (MTTs) in the world.
Steve O’Dwyer collected HK$3,708,784 after a heads-up deal that saw his good friend and mentor, Isaac Haxton, pick up HK$2,901,216 for his runner-up finish. O’Dwyer typically keeps his emotions in check but allowed a little love to flow, holding a birthday placard for his mother as the camera lens’ cracked into life at the end.
Day 2 of Event #1: HK$250,000 No-Limit Hold’em Turbo 8-Handed began with seven players prepared for an eyebrow-raising four buy-in bubble that would greet the final six players.
Here is the state of play at the beginning of the day.
Final Table Chip Counts
1. Sam Greenwood – 2,100,000
2. Linus Loeliger – 1,755,000
3. Beh Kok Weng – 1,475,000
4. Dietrich Fast – 1,160,000
5. Isaac Haxton – 890,000
6. Steve O’Dwyer – 820,000
7. Wei Lim Chin – 805,000
O’Dwyer came into the event as the second lowest stack after what he described as a nightmare ending to Day 1. The only player with fewer chips than O’Dwyer was Wei Lim Chin, and as so happens in these situations, he was the first to hit the rail.
With blinds at 25k/50k/50k, Beh Kok Weng min-raised to 100,000 holding pocket eights, and called after Lim moved all-in holding pocket sevens. The flop handed Weng a set, and the turn improved his hand to quads. Lim was out in seventh place.
O’Dwyer and Haxton Rise During Crazy Bubble Period
Heads Up Isaac Haxton & Steve O’Dwyer
The elimination of Lim led to the official money bubble, and as previously stated, it was a monster. The stakes were HK$1,020,000 (USD 130,000) or nothing, and it turned out to be the most exciting period of action over the past two days.
With blinds at 25k/50k/50k, the action folded to Dietrich Fast in the small blind, and he looked down to see . Haxton sat in the big blind. Fast, who had him covered, moved all-in, and Haxton woke up with pocket kings. The board held no salvation for Fast, and just like that, the German had less than a single big blind; Haxton became one of the chip leaders.
With everyone expecting Fast to wither away at the speed his name implies, O’Dwyer woke up with pocket jacks, under the gun, and opened to 700,000. The action folded to Weng, seated in the cutoff, and the Malaysian star made the call holding . Fast, folded the button and crossed his fingers.
The flop fell , O’Dwyer checked, Weng moved all-in, and O’Dwyer, who was at risk of elimination, made the call, much to the delight of Fast. The board ran out , and suddenly O’Dwyer was a significant threat.
As the camera panned to Fast, you could tell by the demoralised look on his face that his chance had gone.
And then he got another one.
Steve O’Dwyer looked down to see pocket queens, in late position and opened with a raise. Sam Greenwood, who had the chip lead, looked down to see and moved all-in. O’Dwyer, with Fast still on less than a big blind, made the call and vaulted into the chip lead after flopping a set.
There wouldn’t be a third opportunity for Fast.
With blinds at 30k/60k/60k, and Fast forced to play his big blind, Haxton created a family pot that involved O’Dwyer and Weng, and Haxton took the eventual hand holding on , and Fast, and his slippers, exited in the worst position possible after his low hanging trash hand connected with nothing.
“Some people just want to lose their money,” Fast told the Triton Series Reporter after his loss, referring to the moves that saw O’Dwyer take the chip lead at such a crucial time.
With Fast gone, everyone was guaranteed HK$1,020,000, and that’s the exact amount that Greenwood banked after leaving the contest in the fifth position. With blinds at 30k/60k/60k, Haxton opened the betting from the cutoff holding , O’Dwyer called in the small blind with two scarlet sixes, Greenwood moved all-in for 870,000 in the big blind holding , and only O’Dwyer called. The sixes held, and Greenwood was out.
Four quickly became three when we lost Beh Kok Weng.
With blinds at 30k/60k/60k, O’Dwyer opened to 120,000 from under the gun holding , Weng moved all-in for 865,000 on the button with , and Linus Loeliger also moved all-in for 1,390,000 holding pocket queens to shift O’Dwyer out of the equation. The flop of handed Loeliger a set, and Weng was drawing dead after the smacked the river.
The two old friends would tussle in heads-up action after Loeliger departed in the third spot. O’Dwyer opened to 160,000 on the button holding , and Loeliger defended his big blind with . The flop of gave each of them a pair and a gutshot, and Loeliger called a 125,000 O’Dwyer bet. The turn was the , handing Loeliger two-pairs, but giving O’Dwyer the straight. Loeliger checked, O’Dwyer moved all-in for 1,700,000, and Loeliger made the call. The was a brick for young ‘LLinusLlove’, and he hopped straight into the Six-Max.
O’Dwyer Beats Haxton Heads-Up For the Title
O’Dwyer began heads-up with more than a 2:1 chip lead, and the pair agreed to a chop that looked like this:
O’Dwyer – HK$ 3,458,784
Haxton – HK$ 2,901,216
It left HK$250,000 to play for, and all the early action went the way of Haxton including a nifty river raise that moved a confused O’Dwyer off the best hand. Then as the gap began to close, there was no gap. With blinds at 50k/100k/100k, Haxton limped-shoved with , and O’Dwyer called holding the dominating .
O’Dwyer flopped a second queen, and Haxton’s hand never found the assistance it needed to keep up the partypoker Ambassador’s momentum. Haxton was out, leaving O’Dwyer to take all the plaudits.
Event #1 Champion Steve O’Dwyer
“It worked out exactly how I hoped it would,” O’Dwyer told the Triton Poker Reporter after his win, before waltzing over to the cash desk to compete in the Event #2: HK$500,000 No-Limit Hold’em Six-Max.
And the Triton wheels keep on turning.
ITM Results
1 – Steve O’Dwyer HK$3,708,784* 2 – Isaac Haxton – HK$2,901,216* 3 – Linus Loeliger – HK$ 1,720,000 4 – Beh Kok Weng – HK$ 1,240,000 5 – Sam Greenwood – HK$ 1,005,000 * Indicates a heads-up deal
Sam Greenwood Leads Event #1: HK$250,000 No-Limit Hold’em Turbo on the Opening Day of Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Montenegro 2019.
The banners surrounding the poker room in the Maestral Resort & Casino tell you it’s the place where high stakes dreams are dealt. At the end of Day 1 of Event #1: HK$250,000 No-Limit Hold’em 8-Handed we’re about to find out, as everyone involved in this incredible tour catches 40-winks before waking up and doing it all again.
The opening gambit of this ten-day poker extravaganza attracted 31 unique entrants, and with unlimited re-entries open until the start of Level 9, the crowd dipped into the piggy bank 11-times, to seal the prize pool at HK$10,575,000 (USD 1,348,000).
The high roller scene is busy this time of year, with the Triton Poker Series in Montenegro sandwiched in between the European Poker Tour (EPT) Monte Carlo and the World Series of Poker (WSOP). Those that ran deep in the French principality, and competed in Event #1 included Sam Greenwood, Daniel Dvoress and the two-time Triton Poker Series Main Event winner, Mikita Badziakouski. However, none of them fared better than the Triton Jeju Main Event winner Timothy Adams, who flew into Montenegro with three final tables under his belt including a €25,000 No-Limit Hold’em event victory and a deep run in the Main Event finishing 8/922.
Badziakouski couldn’t find the cards that helped him become a back-to-back Triton Main Event winner, bowing out in 37th place, and the Belarusian didn’t even bother to fire a second bullet. Adams fared a tad better finishing in 13th place after running Td8d into the Jd9d of Chan Chung Yin, and Greenwood, did what Greenwood typically does – he finished the day with more chips than anyone else.
Greenwood has made the final table of two Triton Poker Series events, finishing fourth in the HK$ 2,000,000 No-Limit Hold’em Main Event in Jeju back in 2018, and runner-up to Michael Soyza in the HK$ 500,000 No-Limit Hold’em event in Jeju back in March – could this be his moment to pick up the win?
The Canadian is the only player to bag up more than 2 million in chips. Players who felt the full might of Greenwood were Bryn Kenney, running AT into AK, blind on blind, and his compatriot Daniel Dvoress whose AT lost a fatal race against pocket deuces.
Linus Loeliger
Joining Greenwood at the final table is the online superstar Linus “LLinusLLove” Loeliger, the exceedingly watchable Beh Kok Weng, the WPT Champions Club member, Deitrich Fast, final table ever-present, Isaac Haxton, high stakes MTT powerhouse Steve O’Dwyer, and Malaysia’s Wei Lim Chin.
Day 2 begins on Monday 6 May, noon, where we two people will miss out on a four buy-in money bubble.
Brutal.
Here are the finer details.
Triton Montenegro Event #1: No-Limit Hold’em Turbo
The poker journey is different for everyone, but there is a Joseph Campbellesque archetype that all poker heroes must transcend if they want a shot at the treasure.
“Follow your bliss and the universe will open doors where there were only walls.” Joseph Campbell.
Tournament Area Entry
From the moment you arrive at the Maestral Resort & Casino, in Budva, Montenegro, there are only open doors. From the doorman paving the way to luxury, the veranda leading to the Adriatic coastline, and the red carpet that leads to the poker room where high stakes dreams are dealt, and heroes are born.
The Triton Poker Series is back.
After jubilant Jeju, we’re in magnificent Montenegro at the beginning of what will be the most ambitious Triton series to date with ten high stakes tournaments, the grandest cash games in the world, and millions in euros to be handed out to those that reach the end of their respective yellow brick roads.
We start with something new – Event #1: HKD 250,000 (€28,000) No-Limit Hold’em 8-Handed Turbo. It’s the first time Triton has asked their Titans to pick up the pace, and you can bet it’s going to lead to a magnificent spectacle on the best live stream in the business.
It’s a two-day event, with cards expected in the air at 3 pm, Sunday 5 May. Flexibility is key as players stream in from all over the globe. When we do begin, each player will start with 200,000 chips, and the blinds will increase every 30-minutes. Players can expect a 15-minute breather every two hours, and there is unlimited re-entry until the start of Level 9.
Day 2 is scheduled to start at noon, Monday 5 May, when the door remains open for one man, or woman, to walk through to collect the top prize and all the trappings that come with being a Triton Poker Champion.
Timothy Adams
Players expected to be competing over the next ten days include the Triton Poker Series Jeju Main Event winner, Timothy Adams, the reigning Montenegrin champion, Mikita Badziakouski and the all-time Triton Poker Series money leader and ambassador, Jason Koon.
Not everyone reaches the apex of high stakes poker. Why do some become such stars that people want busts of them in their garden, while others ping pong between the stakes never settling on the side where millions of dollars are won and lost, daily? In ‘Tips From High Stakes Poker Players’ Lee Davy brings you the common principles and practices he has found in the stars of this ever-evolving hierarchy, beginning with the importance of asking ‘Why?’
Tom Dwan is an intensely private person. Interviewing him is challenging. Interviews are a dish better served hot. If you don’t include the right blend of ingredients, then it quickly goes cold. One of the most crucial elements of a memorable interview comes in the form of questions, and it’s ‘the question’ that sets this private man apart from the many who have tried and failed before him.
Amongst the high stakes tribe, you find some incredibly creative people, and creativity is a primal aspect of humanness. It doesn’t matter if you are Walt Disney, Steve Jobs or Tom Dwan – humans are at their creative best as children.
As children we are aware of the noise of passing insects, find incredible beauty in the form of pinecones and seashells, and make the most fabulous art with our food (very often on the floor).
It’s at this early age that we are still unaware that we are adhering to a blueprint of life. The ‘zombification model’ handed to us by our parents, the educational system and early employers.
With children, pregnant with fire, we encourage the behaviour of asking questions, but as we enter the educational system things change. The operatic way in which we get curious about the world is knocked out of us by the need to ‘fit-in’, and the constraints of the classroom clock and cockeyed curriculum.
Dwan shifts uncomfortably in his chair, looks down, prepares to answer my first question, looks directly at me, and a lopsided smile breaks out on the right-hand side of his face, one end almost touching his earlobe. Then his mouth opens for the first time.
“I always had this thing about me,” says Dwan with a pause. “I would ask, “Why?” If I had to do some work at school, or whatever it may be, I could do it, but I need to ask why? It needs to make sense to me.”
Paradoxically, as children there is a biological drive to become part of a tribe; not just any tribe, but THE tribe. We feel it in every organ, breath and cell. At the same time, this tractor like drive to be in someone else’s gang can also lead to a lack of character.
It’s as we approach our teenage years that creativity, and being different begins to feel weird. We start to feel ashamed of who we are. We don’t want to ask ‘why?’ because we feel judged by our classmates. We fear to ask questions because we don’t want people to see who we are. If the mask slips slightly, we are out on our arse. Anyone who has pressed the intercom only to be greeted by silence understands the crushing insanity of loneliness.
Even those brave enough to ask ‘why?’ – People like Tom Dwan – are oppressed because the teachers don’t have time to deal with all the raised hands. There is a schedule to follow, and answering questions isn’t in the curriculum.
And it’s for these reasons that we slip into the zombification of life, taking orders from the thumb and forefinger of unimaginative people; quickly forgetting about the internal war that raged throughout our teenage years as a defensive mechanism for keeping the cognitive dissonance at bay.
High stakes poker players don’t fit into that blueprint.
People like Tom Dwan found a way to escape.
They realised there was a price to standing out, and they were happy to pay for it.
As the author of Feck Perfuction James Victore puts it:
“Knowing that you don’t fit in is your first glimpse of greatness.”
Having an Opinion
Victore believes the point of life is to have an opinion, and the artist extraordinaire once said that ‘normalcy’ is barbed wire to the soul, and that questions are the wire cutters’.
There is nothing ‘normal’ about Tom Dwan.
“I think there is a reason that I gravitated towards poker,” Dwan told me. “It’s because I got to pick my version of what made sense to me. I would choose the games that were more fun, or seemed like I could make money; picked the hours that I wanted. I didn’t realise any of that when I got into poker, but I think that’s part of the reason I stuck with it and was able to be pretty good at it.”
I have a two-year-old, and an eighteen-year-old, and I have realised that as a parent, I encourage the nipper to ask questions about life, and yet with the boy becoming a man, I slip into a modus operandi of forcing my opinion on him.
There are times when my son has voiced controversial opinions, and rather than explore the reason why I have taken out my Nunchuks and smashed every word to bits the moment it leaves his lips. I see him in me, and why not – he trusts me and wants to emulate me in many ways.
Speaking to Tom Dwan and many other high stakes poker players I see the value of raising children to trust their opinion so that they can share it with the world either verbally or through a form of artistic impression or creative endeavour.
We have to feel the fear that other people will not like what we have to say and to say it all the same, and we do this by training our voice and allowing it to evolve, and most specifically, to sing, because if it doesn’t create a crescendo then how will anyone ever hear it? We need to replace the dulcet tones of zombification with a chorus of hues that illuminates the chandeliers of life.
Why We Care.
Bernadette Jiwa is a marketing genius, author of a myriad of top-notch books, and the creator of The Right Company. Jiwa believes the ability to ask the right questions is the key to a successful company, and I will further that by replacing ‘company’ with ‘person’.
Jiwa wants marketers to ask: “Why will people care about this?”
I believe Dwan and many of his peers, have become accustomed to asking the question, “Why should I care about this?” It’s a question that created a cumulonimbus of speech bubbles that led to the world of high stakes poker.
Why does this idea matter to me?
Why should I give this my priority?
Dwan learned from a young age the compelling need to ask the right questions at the right time and to discern and prioritise essential tasks that emerged from these questions.
In becoming a ‘question-asking machine’ Dwan also dug deeper than most, mining the gold that appeared on the face of the root cause rather than dilly-dallying with the symptoms like so many of us do.
The secret to creativity is curiosity.
The secret to curiosity lies in the questions.
And it couldn’t have been easy for Dwan and his peers. Nobody likes a rock, and some teachers are no different. The kid with no curiosity, the one who never raises his hand, is no problem at all. The Rocks are easily managed when compared to the kid who can’t keep still, and won’t stop asking, ‘why?’
It’s the same in the workplace.
Managers want you to follow orders, not ask questions.
Without the ‘why?’ there is no thought of ‘how can we improve this?’
We think that asking a stupid question is risky, but it’s dangerous not to ask the stupid question.
“The worse thing you can do is deny who you are, try to be someone or something you’re not, and live a life bent and molded by others.” James Victore.
What I have taken away from my conversation with Dwan and some of his peers is that resurrecting our ability to ask great questions is a crucial skill in life. But Dwan’s success comes down to the way he acts once he receives an answer. There has to be a genuine interest in the response you receive. Let’s not question things for the sake of it. That will win us no favours. Be honest with ourselves about the ‘why?’ Poker is a game where you need to be several steps ahead of your opponent, and this is no different – be prepared with how you are going to respond to the answer to your why?
I suggest to Dwan that he must have been a royal pain in the arse in school, because of his refusal to fit into their box. He thinks about my statement for a second and then shakes his head.
“Not really,” says Dwan. “It was more about WHY do I need to be in this box? If this box says, ‘You can’t quit because the fish wants to keep playing,’ I will play for 50-hours. But I need the reason to make sense to me. That’s the thing I like about poker. There is a lot of freedom in certain respects.”
There isn’t a player competing in the highest stakes of the game, professional or businessperson, who contorted to fit into a box, square or office cubicle. The world has enough boring, bland, bullshit. Tom Dwan and the men and women of poker who followed the same path are artists; geniuses, people who don’t fit in, and from the very outset, didn’t even try.
April 2019 – Triton Poker prides itself in designing world-class poker experiences, and for that, you need the counsel of world-class poker players. For this reason, Triton Poker is delighted to announce Tom “durrrr” Dwan as the latest brand ambassador.
Dwan has been a supporter of the Triton Poker Series since inception. In recent years, Triton has been the only window into the life of one of poker’s most private and peerless performers. As a brand ambassador that relationship will delve deeper than ever before.
In the early 2000s, Dwan rose to prominence competing in online cash games under the moniker ‘durrrr,’ where Dwan turned a $50 online deposit into a net profit of more than $2m. Dwan has also cashed for $3.1m playing live tournaments, but the live cash games are where Dwan has earned his bread and butter in recent years.
Dwan is the second world-class poker player to join Triton Poker as a brand ambassador after Jason Koon arrived in January, and Koon is delighted with the appointment.
“I’m thrilled to be in the company of Tom Dwan as a Triton Ambassador,” said Koon. “When I began my journey as a poker player Tom was already crushing the biggest games in the world. When the poker action started booming in Asia Tom was one of the first to dive into the action. He’s one of the most exciting players to watch, and play against, and I can’t think of a better addition to the Triton roster.”
Triton Poker was founded in 2015 by the Malaysian businessman, philanthropist and poker lover, Richard Yong, who felt there was a gap in the market for an exclusive tournament series for affluent businesspeople and high-end professional poker players set in some of the most luxurious locations in the world all in the name of charity. Funds from Triton Poker events have helped charitable organisations such as Project Pink and the Red Cross.
Previous winners of Triton Poker events include Fedor Holz, Daniel ‘Jungleman’ Cates, Justin Bonomo, Timothy Adams, John Juanda, Dan Colman, Jason Koon, Phil Ivey, and Mikita Badziakouski.