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

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

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

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

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

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

Poker King Confirmed as Triton Poker SHR Series Presenting Sponsor for 2020

Poker King have announced a partnership with Triton Poker, which will see the company as the Presenting Sponsor on all Triton Super High Roller Series festivals in 2020.

The first stop of the year will be in Jeju South Korea from February 10-22, with Budva, Montenegro and London, England next on the Triton SHR roadmap. Other locations are also being planned, but have yet to be confirmed.

Poker King was founded by the world’s leading gaming group: Sun City Group and AG Group, which is headquartered in the Central Business District of Manila in the Philippines.

Poker King is currently the largest and most popular online poker site in Asia with more than 1.2 million registered members.

Poker King’s platform supports all Texas Hold’em formats, such as full deck, short deck, Pot Limit Omaha, SNG and more.

There are between 50,000 to 80,000 daily online games, and the number of players exceeds 100,000.

Poker King have previously partnered with some of the world’s most prestigious tournament brands, including the Asian Poker Tour (APT), the World Poker Tour (WPT) and recently the Boyaa Poker Tour (BPT).

As of 2017, 40 Poker King competitions have been held in different locations across Asia.

Tom Dwan, who is the Ambassador of both Triton Poker and Poker King, stated:  “I will carry out my understanding of poker games onto the Poker King platform and support them to promote a credible and fair gaming environment for all of poker players.”

For more information on Triton Jeju 2020, please visit this link.

Triton Poker Launch Triton Player of the Year Campaign for 2020 Season

For the first time in Triton’s history, the 2020 season will encompass a Player of the Year (PoY) award.  

The Triton Poker Series PoY program is independent of any other related poker rankings, and to compete for the honour of being the PoY, you must compete in Triton Poker Series live tournaments. 

The journey to crown the first PoY champion begins on February 10 when the trident comes crashing down into the floor of the salubrious surroundings of the Landing Casino in Jeju, South Korea

From there, players can accrue PoY points in a total of four stops. Montenegro (May 4-18), and London (Jul 29-Aug 13) are already in the calendar, meaning a Triton surprise is in the offing for autumn/winter.

The Cogs

PoY points are not transferable, meaning players cannot pass them from player to player. Final table deals will not alter the issuance of PoY points. Should a deal happen, including a decision to end the tournament immediately, then the Tournament Director (TD) will insist that the players conclude the competition for PoY points. 

Cash games and restricted buy-in live tournament don’t count towards PoY points. A classic example of this would have been the 2019 Triton Million London: A Helping Hand for Charity, which was an ‘invite-only’ event.

Tournament Area

One of the things that the players love about Triton is their flexibility, and drive to put on a game if there are enough players interested in participating. With that in mind, the PoY points associated with new, non-scheduled games, and alterations to existing game structures will see Triton’s TD announce the PoY points structure in advance of the game. 

The Formula

Triton reserves all rights to the formula created for Triton’s PoY campaign. The method allocates points based on finishing position and then multiplies those points by buy-in amount and the total number of entrants and re-entrants.

There are benefits for punctual players and those who fire multiple bullets. All players who register before the tournament starts, and join the game within the first level, receive an additional 2 points based on the multiplier shown in the below table.

Every entry and re-entry is worth 3 additional points and multiplied as per the below table. Every player who finishes in the money (ITM) will receive an additional 10-points. Finally, Each stop will reward a ‘Player of the Festival,’ and along with the bragging rights, Triton will issue them with 100 additional points. 

The winner of the Triton PoY is declared at the end of the 2020 season, with the new PoY campaign beginning immediately after the end of the final 2020 event. 

The Prize

Along with the claim that you outperformed the very best in the business throughout four challenging series, the winner will also pick up HKD 2,000,000 in prize money. 

Top 5 Triton Poker Moments of 2019

If 2019 was the year of anything, it was the year of the protester. A million people took to the streets of Hong Kong to protest the proposed Fugitive Offenders amendment bill. Algeria’s ‘Revolution of Smiles’ protests continued until President, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, resigned from office on April 2, and the poker community threatened to take up chess if the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series didn’t put on more dazzling events. 

Three Triton events captivated the poker community throughout 2019. 

2-9 March – Jeju, South Korea.

5-17 May – Budva, Montenegro.

31 Jul – 8 Aug – London, England.

The Triton Poker Super High Roller Series in Jeju had 8-events. The Montenegrin series extended that to 13, before the inaugural visit to London capped things off with an 8-event series, including the record-busting £1m buy-in, Triton Million: A Helping Hand for Charity, and it’s at that event that we begin our round-up of Top 5 Best Triton Moments of 2019. 

1. Aaron Zang Wins Triton Million

https://twitter.com/tritonpoker/status/1157769124346507265

After countless nights of grinding teeth, yanking hair, and itching armpits, Triton managed to do something unique in the poker world – host, a £1m buy-in No-Limit, Hold’em (NLHE) event with 54-entrants. 

The event, held in the Hilton on Park Lane in London, broke several records, notably: largest prize pool outside of the World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event (£54m), the most significant buy-in (£1m), and the biggest single payout (Bryn Kenney, £16.9m).

The uniqueness of the event saw the pros and non-pros separated for the first six-levels. A non-pro had never won a 7-figure buy-in event that included pros, and that’s one of the things that makes Aaron Zang’s win standout.

Zang began life as a Magic The Gathering champion, and he defeated another former Magic champion, Bryn Kenney, heads-up, to win the title after the pair agreed upon a deal that saw Zang pocket £13,779,491, and Kenney £16,890,509. 

When the field was down to five players, Zang, a cash game player, faced the combined might of three of the best NLHE tournament players in the world (Stephen Chidwick, Dan Smith, and Bryn Kenney).  

“I don’t know what I am doing!” Said Zang during a break in play. “I just hope for a miracle.”

He’s too kind.

Zang overturned a 3:1 chip deficit, and a vast gap in tournament experience to become the first winner of the Triton Million. 

2. Bryn Kenney Tops The All-Time Money List

The Triton Million: A Helping Hand for Charity was such a huge event; seven players could have replaced Justin Bonomo at the top of The Hendon Mob (THM) All-Time Money List if results went their way. It was a fact not lost on Bryn Kenney, who began the series in fourth place, needing an $11m score to hit the top spot. 

Kenney was the only person singing from the swanky London rooftops that he would win the tournament, and take his rightful place at the top of the All-Time Money List. As the Triton Million: A Helping Hand for Charity tournament progressed, this race became a story within a story. 

With four players left, three of them would still hit the top with a win, until Kenney eliminated two of them (Stephen Chidwick and Dan Smith), before eventually falling to Aaron Zang, heads-up. 

The reason you see Kenney smiling so much after the event is he and Zang cut a deal that saw Kenney bank £16,890,509, the largest single prize dished out, ever, and a win that saw him reach $55,505,630 – good for the top spot.

3. Paul Phua All Time In The Money Finishes

Coming into 2019, Paul Phua sat second in the Malaysian All-Time Money List on THB with $5,116,041 in live tournament earnings, trailing his Triton partner, Richard Yong, by $6,232,651. 

How long would it take Phua to overtake Yong?

Less than a year. 

Despite starting to play poker in his mid-40s, Phua put in a tremendous run of consistency to feature in the money (ITM) 11 times, 16 lifetime, two more than his nearest rival, Jason Koon.

A typically humble Phua said his success boils down to his desire to compete in every single event. When you’re competing against the best in the world, you need more in your arsenal than merely showing up. 

Ten of those 11 ITM finishes were final table appearances, finishing in the Top 3 spots on five occasions, with the only blot on his copybook a big fat zero in the registered wins column – a stat that won’t last long. 

4. Jason Koon’s Incredible Jeju Performance

https://www.instagram.com/p/BuyQsF-gWjt/

The most celebrated sportsmen in the world need a platform to anchor them so the whole world can see how great they truly are. For Jason Koon, that platform has been the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series. 

Koon burst on the Triton scene when he conquered all in the 2018 event in Montenegro, winning the HKD 1m Short-Deck Main Event for $3.5m, as well as appearing in two of the largest-ever televised cash game pots in history. 

Koon would later join Triton as their first brand ambassador, and in 2019, in Jeju, he blew everyone away like dandelion seeds on the end of the big bad wolf’s huff and puff, making four final tables, and winning two while gathering $4.6m in the process. 

To date, Koon has won three titles (an honour he shares with Mikita Badziakouski and Wai Kin Yong), has finished ITM 14 times (only Paul Phua beats him with 16), and earned $12,334,232 in prize money.

5. Bryn Kenney Incredible Montenegro Performance

https://www.instagram.com/p/BxSoFEQJkjO/

Bryn Kenney appears for the second time thanks to his outstanding display in Triton’s event in Montenegro. It was a smash and grab performance by Kenney, who flew in to compete in a few games, before moving on to pastures new. 

Kenney, who had complained that the buy-ins weren’t high enough for him, won the HKD 500,000 NLHE 6-Handed event, beating 79-entrants to capture the $1,431,376 first prize, before going on to outlast 75-entrants in the HKD 1m NLHE Main Event for $2,713,859. 

The two wins came two months after the heartbreak of losing to Timothy Adams in the heads-up stage of the HKD 2m NLHE Main Event in Jeju, where he picked up another $3m. Kenney also finished 4/81 in the HKD 500,000 NLHE 6-Handed event for $500,000.

Nobody has earned more money on the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series than Kenney, with $30,373,405 in prize money accrued over 7 ITM finishes.

Does Kenney deserve the accolades?

You won’t find any protestors in the street. 

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

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

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

The best pros.

The best non-pros.

The highest stakes.

Intensity.

Pose.

Joy.

It had it all.

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

We think we did a good job.

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

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

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

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

Enjoy.

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

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

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

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

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

But the New Yorker would rebound like a true champion.

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

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

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

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

The Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Returns

It’s time to do it all again. 

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

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

Are you ready for more high stakes dreams?

Then get these dates into your calendars.

Jeju, South Korea – 10-22 February

Budva, Montenegro – 4-18 May

London, England – 29 Jul – 13 Aug

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

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

Well, break time is over!

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

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

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

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

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

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

Here is the full schedule:

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

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

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

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

Chinese Coverage:

ZhiboTV: www.zhibo.tv/10004

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

Triton Fully Release €500k Montenegro 2019 NLH Cash Game

We have fully released all 6 episodes of the long awaited €500k Buy-In No Limit Hold’em Cash Game from Triton Montenegro 2019 on our official YouTube channel, featuring the likes of Antanas Guoga (Tony G), Daniel (Jungleman) Cates, Paul Phua, Isaac Haxton, Mikita Badziakouski, Tan Xuan, Timofey (Trueteller) Kuznetsov and Linus (LLinusLLove) Loeliger.

The Triton Poker Super High Roller Series has recently been on a break following the Triton London event back in August, but this cash game will definitely fill in the content gap until the next event is officially announced.

The set of episodes sees the first time poker legend Tony G has joined a Triton TV cash game table, with online pro LLinusLlove also making his first appearance.

The first episode can be watched via this link: https://youtu.be/FrUdWj8B-nk

Stay tuned for further news on our plans for 2020, as well as new content set to be released in the very near future.

Brilliant Bonomo wins Triton short-deck, then hints at retirement

Justin Bonomo started this month as the No 1 money earner in world poker, the result of a stellar 2018 in which he won more than $25 million and leapt to the top of the all-time money list. He will go into the second week of the month in second place, having yielded his top spot to the all-conquering Bryn Kenney–but Bonomo tonight had one last laugh.

The brilliant New Jersey native, long a tournament poker crusher, added his second title on the Triton Super High Roller Series tonight, beating Malaysia’s Wai Kin Yong heads up and winning £2.67 million. It still leaves him short of Kenney, but it was yet another superlative tournament display from Bonomo, not least because of the man he beat at the end.

Two days ago, Yong won the full deck main event, and was on for a remarkable double. But Bonomo was able to deny Yong the title, not long after Yong’s father had fallen slightly short in his bid to win another event going on tonight.

“There was part of me that was rooting for you and your dad to win at the same time,” Bonomo told Yong. “That would have been super cool.”

Could have been very different for Justin Bonomo, who doubled heads up

But the ruthless streak that has earned Bonomo so many plaudits and trophies kicked in, and he left Yong with £1.835 million for second.

Bonomo previously won on the Triton series in Jeju in March, but hinted that he might not be doing all this for much longer. “My 2018 was incredible, so I’m kind of easing my way into retirement,” Bonomo said. “My plan is to play less poker, Bryn’s plan is to play a lot of poker, so as far as I’m concerned I’ll probably never get number one again. It’s not really a goal of mine, and I’m totally fine with that.”

He added: “I’m not going to completely retire, but I’m playing a lot less. Because of 2018 I’ve nothing but pride to look back on. I’ve nothing left to prove to anyone.”

Bonomo also said that behind the placid exterior, and the two titles, he finds the volatility of short deck to be a strain on his calm temperament.

“I like it when I win, but honestly I don’t like crazy all ins,” Bonomo said. “I don’t like getting it all in with 55 percent but you have to in this game. Some people enjoy the all ins. I find them extremely stressful. Obviously when you win tournaments it’s great, but other than the fact that I’m winning these tournaments, I wouldn’t say it’s my favourite game.”

The tournament only ended tonight about after a series of double ups between the two last players, which followed a tortuous five-hour three-handed session.

“The hardest part was three handed,” Bonomo said. “There was a very big pay jump from third to second and we were all aware of that. The big stack, whoever it was, just tried to put on the pressure. There were a lot of very tough bets made on the turn, especially by Wai Kin.”

Beaten heads up, Wai Kin Yong

The final hand came about at around 12.10am, when Yong got his stack in with Ac8c and Bonomo called with KcJd. The dealer left it to the river on a board of 7s8sQhTdJc to seal Yong’s fate and wrap it up for Bonomo.

The final table started at around 1pm with plenty of play still guaranteed.

Ming Zhong Liu became the first player out from, pushing all in for 1.76 million from the hijack with 9c8c and seeing Justin Bonomo re-shove to isolate from the cutoff with AcKh. In short deck, this set-up is as good as a flip, but Bonomo’s 54 percent equity vaulted to 89 percent on the 6sKc6d flop. The Jc and 8s completed the board, and Liu took £482,200 for seventh.

Tough break for Ming Zhong Liu

The only player with a shorter stack than Liu at the beginning of the day was Isaac Haxton, but the American high stakes regular had done good work in gradually building his stack. But that climb only made the crumble even more dramatic: Haxton perished in a huge three-way all-in that sent Yong flying even higher into the clouds.

Haxton committed his 2.85 million stack with AsAc from under the gun and Yong, with a stack three times as big, re-raise shoved to isolate. He had KcKs. Rui Cao, the Montenegro short deck champion, then looked down at JdTd and in short deck that’s probably a call. Sure enough, he committed his stack of close to 3 million, but needed to outdraw both bigger pairs.

Tea? Oh, OK. Isaac Haxton busts

Everything has been running impossibly smoothly for Yong over the past few days, and the flop of Qd6sKh was dreamy. He faded all the outs through the Tc turn and 6c river, and won a monster. His stack grew to 16 million, which was about half the chips in play four-handed.

Haxton, meanwhile, was confirmed as the sixth-placed finisher and won £611,900. Cao picked up £783,000.

Rui Cao

Talk now began in earnest not only of a back-to-back victory for Yong, but also that he could end up going heads-up against Phua for the second day in a row. Phua was short stacked, but had come back from more perilous positions in previous tournaments.

However, lighting did not strike twice. Phua pushed for his last 1.105 million with KsQc and Yong made an easy call with his AsQs. Yong again flopped beautifully, with the KhJsTc board making Broadway. The 7s turn and 9s river turned it into a flush.

Paul Phua: Out for good from Triton London

Phua went out in fourth, cashing for £974,500, his third in-the-money result of the week. When you add his most recent score to the £2.07 million from the other main event, and the £49,500 from the six-handed turbo, it’s been another pretty good week.

Yong, Bonomo and Liang Xu then settled down for what proved to be a long session of three-handed play. Xu was the shortest, but doubled up through Bonomo with AhKd against AcQh when he got his 6.16 million stack in pre-flop. The best hand held up. Then Yong proved that his game isn’t only about hitting big hands: he pulled off a terrific fold to ensure he didn’t give more chips to Bonomo.

In this one, Yong flopped trips with QsTs on a KsQcQd board, but he correctly folded to Bonomo’s aggression on the river — after the 8d turn and 7d river completed the board. By that point, Bonomo had Kd6d for the flush.

The stacks were deep and the players were reluctant to get them on in unnecessarily. The trio played small ball for upwards of five hours (there were one or two double ups and split pots) before two big hands between Yong and Liang. Liang won the first, doubling up with QhKd to Yong’s QsTc. But then Yong doubled back shorly after, with AsQs against Liang’s KcKd. Yong spiked an ace on the river.

Wai Kin Yong hits an ace on the river to double

That left Liang with fewer than 40 antes and in real trouble, while putting Yong back on the top of the pile.

Bonomo finished Liang off. They got it in pre-flop, with Bonomo’s Th9h very much more than live against Liang’s KcQh. The TcTd6s flop smashed Bonomo in the face, and Liang was drawing dead after the 7h turn.

Liang, who is becoming something of a fixture in the deep stages of super high roller events, won £1,202,500.

Liang Xu’s tournament ends

They were all but even as heads up began, with around 105 antes apiece. The best of Asia versus the best of the rest of the world. In many ways it was the perfect representation of the Triton brand, which brings these two factions together for this peerless series of high roller tournaments.

West vs. East: Bonomo vs. Yong

While most of us were settling in for a very long duel, the pair at the table actually started playing some sizeable pots right off the bat. One particularly huge encounter came about with a board of 9d6hQcJc7h on the table. Bonomo bet about 4 million at it, a third of his stack. Yong used two time-bank chips before calling with Js7s and Bonomo’s Tc9h was beaten.The pot gave Yong a near three-to-one chip lead.

But Bonomo chipped back and then doubled himself, setting up the big finale. Kenney was long gone from London, back in the United States and enjoying his new status on top of the world. But for all Bonomo’s insistence that’s he’s not chasing, results like this put him right back in the hunt.

Champion Justin Bonomo

Triton London Short Deck Main Event
Dates: August 6-8, 2019
Buy-in: £100,000
Entries: 108 (inc. 55 re-entries)
Prize pool: £10,370,000

1 – Justin Bonomo, United States, £2,670,000
2 – Wai Kin Yong, Malaysia, £1,835,000
3 – Liang Xu, China, £1,202,500
4 – Paul Phua, Malaysia, £974,500
5 – Rui Cao, France, £783,000
6 – Isaac Haxton, United States, £611,900
7 – Ming Zhong Liu, Macau, £482,200

8 – David Benefield, United States, £368,100
9 – Stephen Chidwick, UK, £269,600
10 – Jason Koon, United States, £217,700
11 – Furkat Rakhimov, Russia, £217,700
12 – Tom Dwan, United States, £191,900
13 – Cary Katz, United States, £191,900
14 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong, £177,000
15 – Richard Yong, Malaysia, £177,000

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Liang chews up the raptor, claims Triton £50K short deck title

The Marshall Islands, a tiny country in Micronesia, in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, does not exactly have a rich poker history. But as of tonight, it has a Triton Super High Roller Series champion after the quiet, unassuming and ruthless Yu Liang beat David Benefield heads up to win the £50,000 buy-in short deck tournament at London’s Park Lane Hilton.

Two days ago, Benefield won the first major poker tournament of his career when he took down a £25,000 short-deck event. But even the Texan, who goes by the name “raptor” online, couldn’t chew up Liang. As the clock struck midnight on the final day of this long and lucrative festival, Liang’s Tc7c flopped best against Benefield’s AcQc when the dealer put the Qh7s7d on the board. All the chips went in and a long and gruelling tournament ended with the As turn and 8d river not enough to push Benefield back in front.

Liang too £777,000 for the victory, while Benefield adds another £560,500.

No back-to-back for David Benefield

The tournament started slowly yesterday, with a clock ticking down above empty seats. But then four hardy souls — Peter Jetten, Daniel Dvoress, Sam Greenwood and Mikita Badziakouski — got things started, and others eventually decided that they wanted in too.

With registration remaining open into the second and final day, it allowed for 52 entries to land on the cash desk and a prize pool of £2.465 million. It was the smallest of the festival, but not a single person would sniff at the £777,000 first prize.

£50K took a while to get going, but got there in the end

Sniff was all that all of those four pioneers — plus a roll call also including the likes of Jason Koon, Cary Katz, Seth Davies, Gabe Patgorski and Danny Tang — could do, however, as they perished before the final table was even close. But we then saw a Triton first: a double knock-out on the stone bubble, on two different tables, meaning two players split the seventh place prize.

Those two were Malaysia’s Tong Siow Choon, whose AhQc lost to Richard Yong’s AdKh and Mike Watson, whose QsQh lost to David Benefield’s As8h.

Bubble 1: Tong Siow Choon

With all due respect to Choon, the latter bust-out was far more significant. Watson was sitting in second place in the overall chip counts nine-handed when he got it in, with Benefield the only player who could possibly knock him out. It was particularly grim, therefore, for Watson to see an ace on the flop: his wretched fortune in Triton events continues, even though he took £64,750 for a chop of seventh. (He was only in for one bullet, so that’s a profit.)

Yet another Triton sickener for Mike Watson

The knock-on effect of this was that Beh Kok Weng was the retrospective bubble boy, though he was long gone by that point.

Thanks in a large part to that huge hand, Benefield went to his second short-deck final of the week as a soaraway chip leader. The full line up looked like this:

1 – David Benefield, 5.98 million
2 – Richard Yong, 2.585 million
3 – Yu Liang, 2.08 million
4 – Romain Arnaud, 1.41 million
5 – Chin Wei Lim, 1.41 million
6 – Stephen Chidwick, 815,000

Final table in the £50K (l-r): Yu Liang, Richard Yong, Stephen Chidwick, Romain Arnaud, Chin Wei Lim, David Benefield

Chidwick has had a brilliant Triton London festival, cashing four of the five tournaments he has entered, including the £1 million event. He was in for four bullets in this final event, however, so needed to finish fourth or better to return a profit.

He doubled his short stack through Benefield early in final table play, but almost immediately sent the whole lot over to Yong, when his AcKd lost to Yong’s As8d when Yong rivered a flush. Chidwick rounds off his week with £160,200 on to the ledger.

The last event, last knockout of Stephen Chidwick

As for Yong, his star was in the ascendant. Though Benefield was still clear at the top, Yong also then managed to knock out Romain Arnaud in fifth place in a standard AcKh > AdQc coup. Arnaud won £209,500.

Romain Arnaud busts, with no tears

As tends to happen in short deck tournaments, the stacks were suddenly relatively deep so the action slowed down a little. But Chin Wei Lim found himself growing shorter and made a stand with AsKh. Benefield had all the chips to play with and TcTh was plenty good enough to take a free hit at Lim.

Benefield flopped a set, Lim turned a straight and then Benefield rivered a full house. Anyone still questioning why short deck is a volatile game should replay that run out over and over. It happens all the time. Lim cashed three times this week, including in the £1 million tournament, and this one was worth £271,300.

As tends to happen in short deck tournaments, the stacks were suddenly relatively deep so the action slowed down a little. But Chin Wei Lim found himself growing shorter and made a stand with AsKh. Benefield had all the chips to play with and TcTh was plenty good enough to take a free hit at Lim.

Benefield flopped a set, Lim turned a straight and then Benefield rivered a full house. Anyone still questioning why short deck is a volatile game should replay that run out over and over. (In full, the board was Js7cTsQdJc) Lim cashed three times this week, including in the £1 million tournament, and this one was worth £271,300.

A rap on the table and it’s goodbye for Wei Lim Chin

Much like in the short deck main event, taking place on the neighbouring table, three-handed play took a good long while. But unlike in the main event, the Yong in this tournament found himself in trouble. And then he was out. With young Wai Kin Yong occasionally wandering over to see how his father, Richard, was faring, Yu Liang did his bit in trimming the Yong quotient in half.

Liang’s QhKd stayed better than Yong’s QsTc through a board of AdQc9s7c6s. Yong won £357,000.

Richard Yong knocked out in third

Benefield had found himself heads up for a short deck tournament only a matter of two days ago, and had come through that battle with flying colours. But this one proved to be much more of a test. Even though Benefield opened up a big lead, it was Liang who scored the first major double up when his tournament life was hanging by a thread.

They got their stacks in on a flop of 8s6dJh with Benefield’s 8c6c representing a very fragile two pair against Liang’s 9sTd. The 9c turn gave Liang even more cause for optimism, then the Qd river completed his straight. That then gave Liang a three-to-one chip lead: 150 antes to Benefield’s 45.

Benefield tried to get something going, and had seemingly abandoned his strategy from yesterday when he said the key to short deck was just to “go all in”. The pots were comparatively small. But then there was that huge flop, with trips to Liang and top pair to Benefield, and neither was backing down.

Benefield congratulates Liang at the end

Triton London Short Deck
Dates: August 7-8, 2019
Buy-in: £50,000
Entries: 52 (inc. 21 re-entries)
Prize pool: £2.465 million

1 – Xu Liang, Marshall Islands, £777,000
2 – David Benefield, United States, £560,500
3 – Richard Yong, Malaysia, £357,000
4 – Chin Wei Lim, Malaysia, £271,300
5 – Romain Arnaud, France, £209,500
6 – Stephen Chidwick, UK, £160,200
7= – Mike Watson, Canada, £64,750
7= – Choon Tong Siow, Malaysia, £64,750

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Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive