ADRIAN MATEOS SURVIVES MARATHON TO LAND YET MORE TRITON SILVERWARE

Champion Adrian Mateos!

Adrian Mateos came to Triton Montenegro in exemplary form, riding the wave of some fantastic results in both the online and live games and every inch the formidable player we’ve grown to know and love.

He made two final tables from the first four events here in Montenegro, and can point to wicked beats in both halting what had seemed likely to be a charge to the title. But true to form, Mateos simply came back for more, bludgeoned his way to the final once again, and this time came out on the right side of a couple of beats.

It helped him on his way to his second career Triton title in the $50K 8-Handed Hold’em, landing him a payday of $1.761 million. He is now closing in on $10 million on the Triton Series.

“This week I ran so good,” Mateos said. “And I enjoyed it.” He said that he worked very hard on his game and knows that he plays well. “But to win a tournament you have to run good,” he said, adding that it was a “technical” final table, but the kind he has played many times before.

When someone as skilled as this 29-year-old runs good, there are few who can compete.

Adrian Mateos can finally celebrate

The tournament took three days to complete, a day longer than initially scheduled, but Mateos was irresistible throughout. He dominated the final table and secured the top spot by downing Justin Saliba heads-up, leaving Saliba with a $1.188 million runner-up prize.

It was a tournament packed with superstars, many of whom made it to the final. But the late stages were characterised by the sight of Mateos trying to shake off the challenges of Saliba and Triton first-timer Joe Zou. Both were stubborn, but Mateos is indefatigable. And that’s why he’s one of the very best in the world.

TOURNAMENT ACTION

As is the way with Triton, buy-ins gradually crept upwards through the first stages of this trip to Montenegro, and the $50K entry fee proved exceptionally popular. There were 159 entries and nearly $8 million in the prize pool, with the game’s very best all challenging for it.

There was a sensational top five after Day 1: Dan Smith, Phil Ivey, Paul Phua, Kiat Lee and Dan Dvoress. But in the early running, it was the player in sixth, Mikalai Vaskaboinikau, who surged up and into the lead. That was thanks to the double elimination of Daniel Rezaei and Ding Biao in the same hand: Vaskaboinikau’s kings held against queens and AsKs.

It set a tone for a race from 56 players to the 27 who would cash, which only slowed during a tense but entertaining bubble period.

Most of the fun centred on Paul Phua, or Mr Paul as he’s known to friends and staff on the Triton Series. Phua was holding court on one of the outer tables, discussing future Triton plans with Dan Smith, Chris Brewer and Danny Tang, while also fielding questions from players on other tables.

“What is the over/under on number of hands to break the bubble?” Elton Tsang asked, having taken a short stroll in Phua’s direction. Phua consulted the Triton Poker Plus app, learned that the shortest stack was 10 big blinds, and said, “Nine.” He added: “If someone said six, I would take the over.”

Paul Phua burst the bubble, going for the win

Tsang suggested seven-point-five was probably better. Phua seemed to think that was fine too. As it turned out, they should have taken the under.

Hand-for-hand was only about four hands old when Phua got involved in a pot against Smith. Phua limped from the small blind and Smith raised from the big blind, enough to put Phua all in. Phua looked back at his cards and then asked, “What’s the min-cash?” A chorus of opponents replied, “Eighty k!” and intimated that Phua shouldn’t worry about that kind of money.

Eventually, he concurred. “Go for the win,” he said as he dumped his stack over the line.

Phua was in great shape. He had AhQc to Smith’s Ad4c. But after a dry flop, the 4h fell on the turn and there was no miracle queen on the river. That was the end for Phua, who plummeted out of the tournament on the stone bubble.

James Chen, Tan Xuan, Patrik Antonius, Linus Loeliger and Tsang breathed a sigh of relief and bust too fairly quickly after. But they at least locked up that min cash.

Sights then turned onto the final table, but it would be a long, long time until the tournament reached that stage. With around 14 players left, a real slowdown descended and tournament organisers were forced to make alternative plans for the day. What had been intended to conclude on Saturday night was forced to go into Sunday. The news was announced when they did, finally, get down to the last nine.

That happened in the space of two rapid-fire hands. Chris Brewer and Phil Ivey got involved in a big one, with Brewer open-shoving the small blind sitting with enough chips to cover Ivey in the big. But Ivey looked down at AsTs and called for all of it, finding himself ahead of Brewer’s QsJs.

An ace on the flop made it even tougher for Brewer to come back and Ivey’s big double left Brewer with three big blinds.

Chris Brewer lost a big pot against Ivey and the rest went on the next hand

Brewer picked up AsQd on the next deal and committed his last chips. Mario Mosbock, in the big blind, made a mandatory call, even though he had only Tc3c. The dealer made this particularly cruel on Brewer, following the QcJh3d flop with the Jd turn and then the killer 3s river.

Brewer walked away, leaving nine players stacking up as follows:

Ben Tollerene – 5,550,000 (44 BBs)
Dan Smith – 4,875,000 (39 BBs)
Nick Petrangelo – 4,325,000 (35 BBs)
Mikalai Vaskaboinikau – 3,925,000 (31 BBs)
Phil Ivey – 3,225,000 (26 BBs)
Mario Mosbock – 2,725,000 (22 BBs)
Joe Zou – 2,475,000 (20 BBs)
Justin Saliba – 2,425,000 (19 BBs)
Adrian Mateos – 2,225,000 (18 BBs)

Triton Montenegro Event 7 final table players (clockwise from back left): Mario Mosbock, Ben Tollerene, Mikalai Vaskaboinikau, Justin Saliba, Joe Zou, Dan Smith, Phil Ivey, Adrian Mateos, Nick Petrangelo.

The revised plan was to play four more levels or down to four players, whichever came first. It seemed likely to take us to around 1.30 a.m. local time, and would unfortunately mean these guys couldn’t register in time for the $100K event unless they were knocked out within 45 minutes of the final table starting.

Only Mosbock ended up meeting that criteria. Mosbock lost a massive hand with pocket queens when Joe Zou flopped a flush with Jd9d. Mosbock also flopped a set, but couldn’t fill up.

Although Mosbock did find a small double through Tollerene, the last of his chips went to Ivey when the American’s AcKh beat QdJc. Mosbock banked $178,100 for ninth.

Mario Mosbock departed early from the final

The next hour or so of eight-handed play sent chips moving slowly around the table, with everyone retaining their seat. As levels went up, the average stack reduced to just 18 big blinds. Nobody was a runaway leader; everyone was under threat.

When the tension finally broke, it was Dan Smith who ended up on the receiving end of a nasty beat. He got six big blinds in with AcQd and was called by Justin Saliba’s As9d.

Both players matched their ace on the flop, but the nine on the turn spelled trouble for Smith. The river was a blank and eight belatedly became seven. Smith won $215,000 for this one.

Dan Smith led the tournament for long periods, but bust in eighth

All of a sudden, things were moving. Ivey felted Vaskaboinikau on the very next hand. In this one, Ivey found pocket deuces and moved all in. Vaskaboinikau picked up AhTs and risked his last six blinds.

The tiny pair wasn’t threatened through all five board cards and that meant Vaskaboinikau was out in seventh, for $297,000.

Mikalai Vaskaboinikau made the early running on Day 2 but bust before the end

Despite the win, Ivey’s stack was still less than 20 big blinds, and he became the next man to hit the rail. Adrian Mateos, revelling the short-stacked, high pressure battle, had built a commanding tower of chips and Ivey three-bet shoved from the button after the latest Mateos open raise.

Ivey had Ks8d but soon learnt that Mateos wasn’t raising light. Mateos made the call with AsJc and secured the knockout with a jack on the flop and an ace on the turn. Ivey banked $408,000 for sixth.

Phil Ivey had been in great form until he ran into Mateos

Tollerene, only an occasional visitor to the Triton Series, usually after eventually giving in to the hectoring of his good friend Jason Koon, had once again proved why Koon is so keen to get him out of here. He had played a typically flawless game to make it to the final table as chip leader.

However, Tollerene fell short of his second win during the volatility of the late stages, first doubling up Nick Petrangelo in a standard blind vs. blind battle, and then falling to a come-from-behind win for Mateos.

In at least two previous tournaments here in Montenegro, Mateos had suffered the cruel hand of fate in tournament defining pots at final tables, but today it was the Spanish player’s turn to land a lucky blow. Tollerene got his nine-blind-stack in with AdQc but Mateos’ AhTs not only hit a ten, but also four hearts to make the nut flush.

Both those hands were too much for Tollerene, who departed in fifth for $532,000. With that, the tournament paused again for the night, leaving four players to come back for an unprecedented Day 3.

Ben Tollerene again showed Triton what he’s made of

Mateos led with 49 BBs. Saliba sat second with 28 BBs. Petrangelo (23 BBs) was in third and Zou’s six blinds was the shortest. But they had all locked up $667,000 already.

On the return for the third day, Zou immediately doubled with pocket fives, and then shoved the next two hands to earn some more blinds. It helped him tread water as the other two took some potshots at Mateos’ chip lead, with only limited success.

Petrangelo managed to time a couple of shoves well and add some chips. But things went south soon after. Petrangelo found Ad3s in the small blind and just called, with Mateos behind him. Mateos raised to 1 million (the big blind was 300K) and Petrangelo jammed for 7.5 million.

Petrangelo had that ace, but Mateos did too. And the Spaniard’s AhJh was best. The jack played after the board missed everything. Petrangelo left the table $667,000 better off.

Nick Petrangelo found Mateos with a bigger ace

The last three players in this tournament were the bottom three coming into the final. It was indicative of how this final table had turned things on its head.

Mateos was in irresistible form and had more than half the chips in play. But after Zou landed another double up, with pocket nines beating Mateos’ Qs8s, it was a reminder that things can change very quickly. Zou turned his back to the table as the dealer delivered his fate, unable to watch what was essentially a runout determining a $350K pay-jump. But he survived it, leaving Saliba now most under threat.

Zou thought he had Saliba soon after, but Zou’s kings were cracked by Saliba’s Qd8d after a run out of Tc8h2s9hQs. That again elevated Saliba to second place and allowed Mateos to continue to shove with impunity against opponents with near-equal stacks hoping to outlast one another.

Joe Zou can’t watch

Zou managed another double, picking off a Mateos shove with Kc9d beating Qd2d. And on the battle raged.

The level went up and the stacks shallowed some more. And then, finally, Zou’s race was run. He got his last six blinds in with Kh5h and turned his back once more. But this time the trick wasn’t enough to beat Mateos’ AsQd.

Zou is on his first visit to the Triton Series and this was his first cash from the fourth tournament he played. His score of $818,000 put him comfortably in the black.

Joe Zou finally makes way

Both remaining players were now guaranteed a seven-figure payday, with around $600K between first and second place prizes. Mateos, seeking a second title, had 37 blinds to Saliba’s 16. There wasn’t likely to be long left, but it was far from a foregone conclusion.

Except it actually only lasted one hand. Mateos and Saliba both picked up aces and Saliba had a good shot at a crucial double up when his AcTc went up against Mateos’ Ah7h. The money was already all in when the dealer produced the something-for-everyone flop of 8hTh9c.

Second place for Justin Saliba

Both players remained static, even after the Js turn gave Mateos the straight. The Kh river wasn’t what Saliba needed and it handed the title to Mateos.

“My trophies are all in my parents’ house in Madrid,” Mateos said afterward, revealing that it was to the Spanish capital that this latest one was also headed. “I hope more to come,” Mateos continued.

That much seems certain.

Time for Mr and Mrs Mateos to make some more room on the mantlepiece

Event 7 – $50,000 – 8-Handed
Dates: May 17-19, 2024
Entries: 159 (inc. 62 re-entries)
Prize pool: $7,950,000

1 – Adrian Mateos, Spain – $1,761,000
2 – Justin Saliba, USA – $1,188,000
3 – Joe Zou, China – $818,000
4 – Nick Petrangelo, USA – $667,000
5 – Ben Tollerene, USA – $532,000
6 – Phil Ivey, USA – $408,000
7 – Mikala Vaskaboinikau, Belarus – $297,000
8 – Dan Smith, USA – $215,000
9 – Mario Mosbock, Austria – $178,100

10 – Chris Brewer, USA – $151,000
11 – Brian Kim, USA – $151,000
12 – Artur Martirosian, Russia – $132,000
13 – Sirzat Hissou, Germany – $132,000
14 – Kiat Lee, Malaysia – $119,200
15 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – $119,200
16 – Maher Nouira, Tunisia – $107,000
17 – Anson Ewe, Malaysia – $107,000
18 – Aram Sargsyan, Armenia – $95,000
19 – Wiktor Malinowski, Poland – $95,000
20 – Aleks Ponakovs, Latvia – $95,000
21 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong – $87,500
22 – Alex Kulev, Bulgaria – $87,500
23 – Igor Yaroshevskyy, Ukraine – $87,500
24 – Linus Loeliger, Switzerland – $80,000
25 – Patrik Antonius, Finland – $80,000
26 – Tan Xuan, China – $80,000
27 – James Chen, Taiwan – $80,000

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

IGOR YAROSHEVSKYY TURNS SHORT STACK INTO TRITON TITLE AS HAXTON’S WAIT CONTINUES

Champion Igor Yaroshevskyy!

The final moments of the $40,000 Bounty Quattro Event at Triton Montenegro became a battle of east and west. At one end of the table, Ukraine’s Igor Yaroshevskyy was flanked by Viacheslav Buldygin, Shyngis Satubayev and Ramin Hajiyev, representing Russia, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan, respectively.

At the other end, Jason Koon and Ben Tollerene were among the Americans who had come to rail their friend and countryman Isaac Haxton. Yaroshevskyy and Haxton were watching the dealer decide one final coin-flip for the title: pockets sevens versus ace-king.

The neat moment encapsulated the international flavour of the Triton Series and underlined the respect and admiration all these elite players have for one another. When the board ran dry, guaranteeing a first Triton title for Yaroshevskyy, he was the first to console with Haxton, and Koon too crossed the table to celebrate with the new champion and friends.

Viacheslav Buldygin, Ramin Hahjiyev and Shyngis Satubayev sweat the final hand with Igor Yaroshevskyy

This was a terrific result for Yaroshevskyy, which paid $1,052,000 from the regular prize pool and another $120,000 in bounty payments. Having started the final table with the second shortest stack, Yaroshevskyy only actually knocked out one opponent, but it was that man Haxton and it was the knockout that secured the title. It also allowed Yaroshevskyy to cash in his own bounty token.

“It’s amazing,” Yaroshevskyy said, adding that poker players have a clear aim when they start playing. “It’s these big titles!”

He continued: “I’m feeling great.”

For Haxton, it was yet another near miss. He has a staggering 39 cashes on the Triton Series and earnings of $12 million. But that title continues to elude him, and he left the stage at the end of this tournament to hotfoot it into the neighbouring tournament room to play the $50K NLHE. Haxton will always be a threat in any game and it’s statistically ridiculous that he hasn’t yet won here.

Isaac Haxton’s long wait for a Triton trophy continues

But no matter. He took $716,000 — and in Yaroshevskyy he fell to another worthy opponent. The Ukrainian has been to at least one final table at each of the four stops he has visited on the Triton Series. This victory was well deserved.

“I am so excited,” the new champion said. “It’s an amazing feeling. Today is my day. Thank you guys!”

Igor Yaroshevskyy begins his celebrations

TOURNAMENT ACTION

After the thrills and spills of the Mystery Bounty yesterday, this tournament was slightly more conventional: of the $50,000 buy-in, $15,000 went into the bounty prize pool, with bounties introduced when 25 percent of the field remained. Each of 32 bounties was worth $60,000, so there was plenty of incentive to secure knockouts.

Twenty-eight players came back to play Day 2, with those bounties already in play, but in comparison with many other tournaments this week, the stacks were still deep. We had the pleasure of sitting around and watching some of the cream rise to the top.

Cash-game crusher Santhosh Suvarna found himself on the wrong end of a bubble collision here, getting his money in with AhTc and being called by Paulius Vaitiekunas and his Qd5d.

Vaitiekunas himself has been the bubble boy once this week, but this time he came from behind to burst it. A queen on the flop sealed Santhosh’s fate.

Santhosh Suvarna lands the wrong side of the bubble

Vaitiekunas had enough chips now to make his way to the final table, but others including Jason Koon, Chris Brewer, Michael Soyza and Mike Watson fell short this time. Bulgaria’s Dimitar Danchev emerged as the controlling force during this period of play — knocking out Watson along with Brian Kim in a huge three-way coup — and taking a sizeable chip lead to the eight-handed final table.

They stacked up as follows:

Dimitar Danchev – 6,840,000 (114 BBs)
Adrian Mateos – 4,260,000 (71 BBs)
Shyngis Satubayev – 3,370,000 (56 BBs)
Isaac Haxton – 2,930,000 (49 BBs)
Punnat Punsri – 2,895,000 (48 BBs)
Paulius Vaitiekunas – 1,920,000 (32 BBs)
Igor Yaroshevskyy – 1,885,000 (31 BBs)
Patrik Antonius – 1,100,000 (18 BBs)

Triton Montenegro Event 6 final table players (clockwise from back left): Igor Yaroshevskyy, Shyngis Satubayev, Patrik Antonius, Dimitar Danchev, Paulius Vaitiekunas, Punnat Punsri, Adrian Mateos, Isaac Haxton

It was still comparatively deep with plenty of play guaranteed, but unfortunately for Patrik Antonius, he couldn’t be part of it. The short stack coming into the final did not win a hand when it mattered most and departed at the hands of Isaac Haxton.

With AdTc in his hand, and a board of 6dTdKh9sAs on the board, Antonius called Haxton’s river shove.

Haxton’s JsQd had now filled a straight to beat Antonius’ two pair, and that was that for the Finn. Eighth place paid $136,000.

Another final for Patrik Antonius, but second title still elusive

After the bubble heroics, Vaitiekunas had found a tidy double up nine-handed to secure his place at the final, and then held firm during the late stages as the field thinned to its last seven. However, the first meaningful pot he played at the final was his last.

Vaitiekunas found a poor time to three-bet shove after an Adrian Mateos open, finding himself flipping with KdTc against Mateos’ pocket eights. The eights held, felting Vaitiekunas and sending him to the payouts desk where $183,800 awaited him. He also added $120,000 from two bounties.

Paulius Vaitiekunas burst the bubble on the right side this time

Mateos was at his second final table of the week, well stacked and looking in the zone. However, also for the second time, he found himself in a great spot to knock out a dangerous opponent, sitting with a dominating hand, only for it to go wrong.

Much as Brian Kim had come from behind to oust Mateos from the GG Million$ final table, Punnat Punsri became a nemesis at this one.

Mateos had AsKc and got it all in pre-flop against Punsri’s AdQs but a queen on the river doubled Punsri and left Mateos in real trouble. He couldn’t recover and lost the remainder of his chips to Punsri soon after.

Mateos was sixth again, for $245,000.

Tough beat and then elimination for Adrian Mateos, left

Shyngis Satubayev is very often Kazakhstan’s sole representative at the Triton tables, but he continues to put on a show to make his country proud. Here he was again in the deep stages, recording his seventh Triton cash, and at his second final table.

But Kazakhstan will need to wait more for its first champion as Satubayev became Punsri’s next victim. Satubayev was short and shoved the button with As4s. Punsri gave him a spin with Tc4d in the big blind.

Punsri couldn’t miss at this point and sent Satubayev packing when a ten appeared on the flop. Satubayev won $313,000 for fifth.

Shyngis Satubaev continues to fly the Kakakh flag on the Triton Series

Despite being the wrecking ball that took this tournament so quickly to its final table, things slowed considerably for Danchev once the field consolidated on the TV stage. He won a few pots with pre-flop aggression, but otherwise mostly sat on the sidelines as Punsri, in particular, seized control.

Danchev had dwindled to 10 big blinds when he found AdJh in the big blind and saw Punsri rip it in from the small blind ahead of him. It was plenty good for a call, but not plenty good for a win. Punsri’s Ks3d ended up hitting a full house, and that sent Danchev out in fourth for $390,000.

Dimitar Danchev couldn’t convert a chip lead into the win

Punsri was seemingly unstoppable. He began three-handed play with 18 million in chips, 60 big blinds, with his two opponents boasting only 7 million between them. If Punsri’s steamroller carried on rolling as it had, there was seemingly nothing anyone could do to stop him.

It did not, however, continued rolling as it had. Instead, it suddenly started hitting every obstacle in the road. Yaroshevskyy hit a flush to double. Haxton hit trip tens. Haxton hit a pair of tens to beat Punsri’s AhJh, and then Haxton found nines, called one more Punsri shove, and flopped a set.

Punsri was behind with Ac4h at the start of the hand, but was drawing dead by the turn. He got up to shake hands of his opponents and headed out the door. This time, Punsri took $473,000 for third — plus $300,000 for five bounties.

Punnat Punsri’s roller coaster comes to an end

And so we were down to two. Both Igor Yaroshevskyy and especially Isaac Haxton have been deep in the money numerous times on the Triton Series, but neither yet had a title. One of them would end that hoodoo, and they were delicately poised, 32 blinds to 31, as they entered heads up play.

Over the previous four nights of this series so far, the heads up battles have often been drawn out, with stacks shallowing to just a handful of blinds. Not this one. When both players got big hands for the first time, 7h7c for Yaroshevskyy and AcKs for Haxton, all the money went in.

Yaroshevskyy had the slight chip advantage and his hand held through a blank flop. That ended it in Yaroshevskyy’s favour and Ukraine can celebrate its latest champion.

Igor Yaroshevskyy clasps his lucky Triton card protector

RESULTS

Event 6 – $50,000 – Bounty Quattro
Dates: May 16-17, 2024
Entries: 126 (inc. 54 re-entries)
Prize pool: $6,300,000 (inc. $1,920,000 in bounty pool)

1 – Igor Yaroshevskyy, Ukraine – $1,172,000 (inc. $120K in bounties)
2 – Isaac Haxton, USA – $896,000 (inc. $180K in bounties)
3 – Punnat Punsri, Thailand – $773,000 (inc. $300K in bounties)
4 – Dimitar Danchev, Bulgaria – $690,000 (inc. $300K in bounties)
5 – Shyngis Satubayev, Kazakhstan – $463,000 (inc. $150K in bounties)
6 – Adrian Mateos, Spain – $495,000 (inc. $240K in bounties)
7 – Paulius Vaitiekunas, Lithuania – $303,800 (inc. $120K in bounties)
8 – Patrik Antonius, Finland – $136,000

9 – Henrik Hecklen, Denmark – $105,000
10 – Artur Martirosian, Russia – $147,500 (inc. $60K in bounties)
11 – Michael Watson, Canada – $147,500 (inc. $60K in bounties)
12 – Brian Kim, USA – $196,600 (inc. $120K in bounties)
13 – Michael Soyza, Malaysia – $196,600 (inc. $120K in bounties)
14 – Yaman Nakdali, Spain – $70,000
15 – Ramin Hajiyev, Azerbaijan – $100,000 (inc. $30,000 in bounties)
16 – Brandon Wittmeyer, USA – $63,500
17 – Jason Koon, USA – $183,500 (inc. $120K in bounties)
18 – Jules Dickerson, UK – $57,000
19 – Chris Brewer, USA – $57,000
20 – Frederic Delval, France – $57,000

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

TRITON DEBUTANT ARTSIOM LASOUSKI TURNS FIRST EVER CASH INTO MYSTERY BOUNTY TITLE

Champion Artsiom Lasouski!

If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.

That, quite literally, is all Artsiom Lasouski had to do here in Montenegro at the first Triton stop of his career. The 25-year-old from Belarus has never been to this Super High Roller Series before, and arrived unannounced to play the first three events of the series.

He whiffed Events 1 and 2. But attempt three made him a champion. Lasouski tonight took down the $40,000 Mystery Bounty tournament banking $669,000 — and then added a further $680,000 from his 12 bounties when the draw took place the following day. He is the youngest Triton champion since Linus Loeliger burst onto the scene in 2019, and now has more than $1.3 million in his bankroll to continue his journey.

Not many players sample such success so soon. There are plenty of Triton regulars who have been coming to the tour for many years without ever hoisting a trophy. But Lasouski was the picture of calm in a roller coaster of a final table today, only breaking into grimaces and smiles during a topsy turvy heads up battle with Samuel Ju.

Ju had been down to one big blind at one point of the final, but pulled off a miraculous surge to the point that he could have won it himself. But Lasouski managed to claim that crucial last bounty, the one that came with the title.

“I am very excited about this moment,” Lasouski said, through a translator, at the awards ceremony. “I can’t believe how great it is.”

An emotional winner: Artsiom Lasouski

It will surprise few to learn that Lasouski learned his trade online and that he has some significant results to his name with a mouse in his hand. But this is by some measure his biggest tournament series and, it follows, his biggest win.

Remember, this tournament was only partially done on the first day. The draw for the Mystery Bounty prizes took place the next night, at which point the second half of the prize pool was awarded. Lasouski had 12 of the 47 bounties on offer, knowing that one bounty envelope contained $400,000 and two of $200,000 apiece.

As he left the stage on the opening night, Ju admitted he only had one bounty to pull tomorrow, but said hopefully: “It’s the bounty of Chris Moneymaker. It’s a good one.” It wasn’t really. It was “only” $40,000.

Samuel Ju will pray to turn his one bounty into more riches

TOURNAMENT ACTION

The Mystery Bounty element changes poker gameplay in mostly marginal ways–slightly looser calls, perhaps, in touch-and-go spots–but other times it’s more obvious. With bounty tokens not introduced until the second day, far fewer players bust on Day 1 than would normally be the case. They came back for today’s play with 47 players and the bubble still some way off.

Jason Koon scores the bubble-up

After the usual rush of bustouts, with players collecting their first knockout tokens, Jason Koon became one of those to be threatened with elimination on the stone bubble. Luckily for Koon, he had pocket aces and they held. The Sword of Damocles hovered over Paulius Vaitiekunas instead, and his AdJd went up against Anson Ewe’s pocket fives.

Paulius Vaitiekunas can’t bear to look as he falls on the bubble

The dealer showed an ace on the flop but also a five. And Vaitiekunas was drawing dead by the turn. That put everyone left on the right side of the bubble, with dual aims: collect as many bounties as possible and progress to the final table.

Koon slipped back to one big blind, then raced up to 33, but then was knocked out in 18th. Ewe too went out before the final.

The last elimination before the final table sent Sam Grafton heading away. Grafton made a straight draw with 9cTc on a flop of Qh7s8c. But Nikita Kuznetsov had hit a pair of sevens and Grafton couldn’t shift him.

Final table bubble for Sam Grafton

Grafton took $68,000 for ninth and the final table was set. For the third day in a row, the overnight chip leader was top of the charts heading to the final too.

FINAL TABLE STACKS

Nikita Kuznetsov – 7,400,000 (74 BBs)
Artsiom Lasouski – 6,250,000 (63 BBs)
Daniel Rezaei – 5,000,000 (50 BBs)
Chris Moneymaker – 3,675,000 (37 BBs)
Samuel Ju – 3,000,000 (30 BBs)
Dylan Linde – 1,975,000 (20 BBs)
Stephen Chidwick – 1,950,000 (20 BBs)
Danny Tang – 925,000 (9 BBs)

Triton Montenegro Event 3 final table players (clockwise from top left): Dylan Linde, Samuel Ju, Artsiom Lasouski, Danny Tang, Chris Moneymaker, Nikita Kuznetsov, Daniel Rezaei, Stephen Chidwick.

Tournament organisers had planned a dinner break at the point the final table was set, but with registration potentially closing soon on Event 5, the last eight in this one unanimously agreed to crack straight on and eat at the table, if they wished.

The two players most anxious to forego dinner were the two shortest stacks — nothing worse than only min-cashing *and* missing reg — and lo and behold, Danny Tang and Stephen Chidwick were the first players out from the final.

Stephen Chidwick busts in eighth, free to take a seat in the next event

As Moneymaker requested a menu, settling in for the long haul, Chidwick ran AcJd into Moneymaker’s pocket jacks to bust in eighth. Then Tang couldn’t get pocket eights to beat Daniel Rezaei’s AsTs, especially when the suited cards made a flush.

Chidwick added $82,000 to his ledger. Tang took $114,000. And, yes, they both made it in time to play the next one.

Danny Tang managed one double, but this time he was out

Despite the bounties in front of all the players still, or perhaps because of them, we had to wait a good couple of hours before the next elimination. Short stacks repeatedly doubled up, with Dylan Linde in particular pulling off a Lazarus-style resurrection when seemingly dead and buried. Meanwhile players like Moneymaker and Kuznetzov bounced up and down the leader board.

Daniel Rezaei mostly sat this out, but had to make a move sooner or later as the blinds began swallowing up his stack. He wasn’t in terrible shape when he opened/called all-in with JcTs agaisnt Artsiom Lasouski’s Ah2h. However any equity he had vanished when the flop brought an ace, and Rezaei’s second final table of the week finished in sixth. He took $156,000 plus whatever he’ll get in bounties.

Another slowdown descended and it resulted in the average stack among the last five slipping t just 15 big blinds. We were once again in that purgatory where any slip up is potentially terminal and a boatload of equity slides away.

Germany’s Samuel Ju, at his first Triton final table, enjoyed and endured both the highs and lows of the experience in quick succession. He shoved with 8s8h and got looked up by Kuznetsov, ending the hand with a straight and a double up.

But two hands later, his chips were in again with Ac8c and this time he lost to Kuznetsov’s pocket jacks. Although he now only had three big blinds and was in the big blind next hand, he must have been thrilled to see Lasouski three-bet shove over Linde’s raise, with Linde not having the stack to do anything but call.

Ju folded and left them to it, and Lasouski’s KcJh made two pair to beat Linde’s Ad2d. That put Linde out in fifth for $202,000 and allowed Ju to see another hand.

Dylan Linde managed to double when staring at elimination

And what a hand it was. Ju found AcJh and was obviously happy to get his chips in after Lasouski shoved his button. Amazingly enough, Kuznetsov called all in from the big blind too, having seen Ad5h.

Lasouski wasn’t bluffing, though. He had AcQc, putting the two others at risk. A jack on the flop saved Ju but Kuznetsov was knocked out. It meant another step up the ladder for Ju as the erstwhile leader bust in fourth for $253,000.

Nikita Kuznetsov was knocked out by the only player who could

Ju had five big blinds now, with Moneymaker sitting with 10 and Lasouski riding high with 60. How long was left in this one now?

Well, Ju certainly wasn’t giving up the ghost. He was all in again on the next hand and turned pocket tens into a flush to beat Lasouski’s ace high. That gave him 12 big blinds and put him in second place, with Moneymaker now on the ropes.

Samuel Ju begins a sensational comeback

Having come back from one big blind himself to win the GG Million$ earlier in the festival, Moneymaker must have appreciated Ju’s escapology skills here. But it was now Moneymaker who fell victim to it. The American shoved the button with Js3d and, with the confidence of someone who could do no wrong, Ju snapped him off with KhTs.

Moneymaker didn’t hit anything and was out in third, adding $311,000 to what is already a very, very good week here in Montenegro.

Chris Moneymaker falls a little short of a second title of the week

What had seemed to be a pushover was now a contest. Ju had a miraculous 20 big blinds entering the heads-up portion of play, with Lasouski sitting with 55. It was a big lead, but one double and the tables would turn. And that’s exactly what happened.

Ju had edged closer when the pair got to a flop of Qd6d8h. A bunch of chips went in there, but the remainder got in the middle after the 5s turn. Lasouski showed his AdKd but it now needed to hit a diamond because Ju’s 8c5c was now two pair. The diamond missed and Ju was now in a significant chip lead.

Artsiom Lasouski can’t bear to watch during heads-up play

Could he close it out now? No. He could not. Lasouski quickly doubled back into the chip lead with KdQs holding against KhTc. But then the pendulum swung back into Ju’s favour after a dry runout kept his JdTd better than Lasouski’s Jh3h.

However, after Lasouski nudged back into the lead, they once again butted heads in a major coup. With a board of 6c3dJd9c9s out there, Lasouski bet enough to put Ju all in.

Ju agonised, but made the call. However, Lasouski’s pocket queens were still better than Ju’s 8s6h. And with that, we have a new champion. Third time lucky.

Artsiom Lasouski can’t quite believe it

RESULTS

Event 5 – $40,000 – Mystery Bounty NLH – 7-Handed
Dates: May 15-16, 2024
Entries: 151 (inc. 52 re-entries)
Prize pool: $6,040,000 (inc. $3,020,000 in bounty pool)

1 – Artsiom Lasouski, Belarus – $1,349,000 (inc. $680,000 in bounties)
2 – Samuel Ju, Germany – $492,000 (inc. $40,000 in bounties)
3 – Chris Moneymaker, USA – $511,000 (inc. $200,000 in bounties)
4 – Nikita Kuznetsov, Russia – $553,000 (inc. $300,000 in bounties)
5 – Samuel Ju, Germany – $282,000 (inc. $80,000 in bounties)
6 – Daniel Rezaei, Austria – $716,000 (inc. $560,000 in bounties)
7 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – $214,000 (inc. $100,000 in bounties)
8 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – $282,000 (inc. $200,000 in bounties)

9 – Sam Grafton, UK – $188,000 (inc. $120,000 in bounties)
10 – Aleksandr Zubov, Russia – $177,500 (inc. $120,000 in bounties)
11 – Danilo Velasevic, Serbia – $217,500 (inc. $160,000 in bounties)
12 – Anson Ewe, Malaysia – $90,000 (inc. $40,000 in bounties)
13 – Andrew Chen, Canada – $50,000
14 – Mario Mosbock, Austria – $85,000 (inc. $40,000 in bounties)
15 – Xianchao Shen, China – $45,000
16 – Pieter Aerts, Belgium – $40,500
17 – Phil Ivey, USA – $40,500
18 – Jason Koon, USA – $36,000
19 – Thomas Santerne, France – $36,000
20 – Roland Rokita, Austria – $36,000
21 – Leon Sturm, Germany – $293,000 (inc. $260,000 in bounties)
22 – Hossein Ensan, Germany – $33,000
23 – Henrik Hecklen, Denmark – $33,000
24 – Alex Boika, Belarus – $30,000
25 – Stoyan Madanzhiev, Bulgaria – $30,000
26 – Benjamin Chalot, France – $30,000
27 – Santhosh Suvarna, India – $30,000

Other bounty winners:

Anvar Muratov – $40,000
Orpen Kisacikoglu – $80,000

Luca Vivaldi and Ali Nejad prepare for the bounty draw

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

MIKE WATSON MAKES IT FOUR AS KIAT LEE DENIED AGAIN IN MONTENEGRO

Champion Mike Watson!

The first seven-figure payout of Triton’s latest trip to Montenegro went into the coffers of Mike Watson tonight, taking the Canadian’s haul on the series to more than $10 million.

In landing his fourth career Triton title, his first in no limit hold’em, Watson denied Malaysia’s Kiat Lee a long-overdue first. Lee had been the chip leader at the end of Day 1 and carried that lead not only to the final table, but into heads-up play too, with all the rest of the 154 entries having departed.

But Watson’s wily brilliance helped him recover from a significant deficit, and then earn the maximum when he found a couple of big hands in the shallow late stages. Lee grimaced as he realised he had run into it, seeing another chance at Triton glory slip through his fingers. He has 23 cashes but no win.

Kiat Lee flicks his chips to Watson

But Watson, who turned 40 a couple of weeks ago and whose wife and young child are here supporting him in Montenegro, was as ruthless as one has come to expect. Though his days as a “Mad Dog” are largely behind him, he remains a formidable talent at the tables, and becomes only the second player to win a title in all three Triton disciplines: no limit hold’em, short deck and pot limit Omaha.

“Every time you come to a Triton stop you want to come away with a trophy,” Watson said. “You want to get a win. It feels really good to get one in hold’em now, which I hadn’t done either. Just want to keep adding.”

He stated in an early interview today that the no limit hold’em prize was the one he coveted, and the prize of $1,023,000 from a $30,000 buy-in tournament was a clear sweetener to go with the trophy. Watson was here in Montenegro when the tour first visited in 2018 and expressed his happiness that Triton has grown as his skills have continued to develop.

“The growth of the Triton tour has been incredible,” Watson said. “Now there’s no chance I can ever skip one. The fields are so big, they’re so good. Jeju was insane and Montenegro has been good as well.”

Four time Mike Watson

Watson also reserved some praise to his beaten heads-up opponent, stating that he and Lee had played many times at the short deck tables, but that Lee is now expanding his game too. He said: “Kiat has been playing all the hold’em recently and he’s gotten really good really quickly. He’s definitely a very tough player. The heads-up match was definitely a grind.”

But Watson had a feeling that this one wasn’t over, even when he was down to a handful of blinds. “I felt good, confident for whatever reason. I thought maybe this was going to be my time.”

It certainly was.

TOURNAMENT ACTION

There were 154 entries into this one which, combined with the slightly elevated buy-in compared with Events 1 and 2, put $4.62 million in the prize pool and guaranteed that seven-figure winner’s prize.

The typically speedy Day 1 took the field down to its last 25, including the bursting of the money bubble when Mario Mosbock bust to Morten Klein and walked away with nothing. Klein bagged an overnight stack that was right around the average of 21 big blinds, but Kiat Lee had nearly four times that and a massive chip lead.

The journey from the Day 2 start point to the final table was especially rapid this time and ended with two German speakers, Hossein Ensan and Daniel Rezaei, all in and called on neighbouring tables.

Hossein Ensan sweats Daniel Rezaei doubling up to stay alive

Ten were left at this point, and Ensan’s fate was decided first. His Ks2s lost to Leon Sturm’s Ac2h, denying Ensan a place at the final. But Ensan then came over to watch with Rezaei as he saw AcQd beat Lee’s Ac7h to survive.

Rezaei took his place at the final, alongside chip-leading Lee, with the last nine stacks as follows:

Kiat Lee – 6,225,000 (50 BBs)
Mike Watson – 5,800,000 (46 BBs)
David Yan – 5,125,000 (41 BBs)
Ding Biao – 3,750,000 (30 BBs)
Leon Sturm – 2,700,000 (22 BBs)
Morten Klein – 2,525,000 (20 BBs)
Stephen Chidwick – 2,100,000 (17 BBs)
Sirzat Hissou – 1,475,000 (12 BBs)
Daniel Rezaei – 1,100,000 (9 BBs)

Triton Montenegro Event 3 final table players (clockwise from back left): Morten Klein, Daniel Rezaei, Mike Watson, David Yan, Sirzat Hissou, Kiat Lee, Leon Sturm, Stephen Chidwick, Ding Biao.

Although still the short stack, Rezaei managed to ladder one spot thanks to Stephen Chidwick’s nosedive. Chidwick lost a flip to Sirzat Hissou, with jacks going down to KcQc, and the remainder of the Brit’s chips went to Mike Watson, whose Ah9d ended up quad nines.

Chidwick’s QsTd couldn’t match that, leaving Chidwick looking for $103,400 and a ninth-place finish.

Stephen Chidwick was first out from the final this time

It was, however, Rezaei’s turn next. The Austrian found a double through Watson with pocket queens beating pocket sevens, but two hands against Morten Klein spelled the end. Rezaei lost with As6s to AdJc. And then KhJs went down to KdAd.

That was the end of Rezaei, who banked $125,000.

Daniel Rezaei laddered one spot before busting

Leon Sturm has been on a long heater through the past year or so, and a first Triton title is surely only just around the corner. But it wasn’t to be in this one, with Sturm finding an unfortunate spot to shove from the small blind. Action folded to him and he open jammed 18 blinds with Kc7c. He only had to get through Lee to his left, but Lee looked down at pocket queens and called.

The queens stayed best and Sturm departed in seventh for $173,000.

Leon Sturm ran into it from the small blind

Sirzat Hissou was now the last German in the field, and he was looking healthy after a double through Watson with Ad6d hitting a flush to crack pocket kings. However, Hissou landed on the wrong side of a tough beat soon after, apparently flopping gold with KhQc on a board of 9dKdKcTh5h.

However David Yan was lurking with JhQd and sized his bets perfectly as a straight draw got there on the turn. Hissou maybe thought he was laying a trap, but when Yan shoved the river, he had the best hand. Hissou was out. he won $238,000 for sixth.

Sirzat Hissou fell into Yan’s trap

Yan was also responsible for the next elimination. It was Klein who hit the rail this time, losing a straight race. Ding Biao opened the pot but Yan, with pocket nines, three bet the small blind.

Klein found AdKc in the big blind and was happy to get it all in. But there was no help for him on an all low board and Yan’s pocket nines took it. Klein’s second final table of the week ended in fifth, for $309,000.

A second final table already for Morten Klein

Here we were again. Four players left, an average stack of around 25 big blinds, and a short-stacked shootout for the big prizes. Yan and Lee traded top spot, Ding Biao was slightly behind with Watson bringing up the rear. But there was still time for plenty to change.

And change it did. Yan’s stay at the top of the counts quickly came to an end in a hand against Biao. Biao’s pocket tens ended up making a flush in diamonds, earning him a near 4 million chip pot that Yan had check-called all the way down. Worse was to come for Yan, however. He called Lee’s three-bet shove with AcKh and was well ahead of KsQs.

But the dealer put a queen on the flop and nothing else of relevance, meaning Lee won the massive pot and sent Yan into the next event. His fourth place was worth $387,400.

David Yan suffered a grim beat to bust in fourth

The three players left had five Triton titles between them, but Lee won’t have needed reminding that none of them belonged to him. Despite being a final table regular, and perennial Player of the Year contender, Lee had never got over the line in one of these events before. Here was another great chance.

His prospects grew even stronger after the next pot of real note. Lee open shoved the button with Ac7d and Biao found pocket jacks in the big blind. That represented a clear call, but the dealer again was up to their tricks.

The ace on the flop was disaster for Biao but brilliant for Lee. It left the former picking up $475,000 for third while Lee assumed a big chip lead for heads up play.

Ding Biao makes his way out in third

Watson has won three Triton titles, but none in no limit hold’em, and he was therefore highly motivated to take this one down. He had only 15 big blinds to Lee’s 47, however, so had his work cut out.

After a 15 minute break to reset the table, Watson and Lee prepared to square off.

Watson’s all round skills helped him draw the stacks level pretty quickly. But then Lee pulled way ahead again. But then Watson secured a double with Ad3s beating Qs2s and Watson was back in contention.

Stacks shallowed some more to the point that there was only 38 big blinds on the table. They also stayed relatively even, meaning the next inevitable all-in confrontation could be the end of it.

So it proved. In a hand that played all the way through the streets, Lee flopped top pair with Qs6c on the 9cQc7h flop as Watson’s 8h6s became a straight draw.

The 5h turn completed that draw for Watson, and it was now just a case of getting all the money in the middle. He managed it with a river shove that sent Lee deep into the tank. Lee eventually made a crying call — it seemed to be reluctant — and learned the bad news.

Kiat Lee ponders a huge call

The massive pot left Lee with only three big blinds and they went in on the next hand. Watson had pocket fives and flopped a set. Lee couldn’t catch up.

Watson’s Triton tally now goes beyond $10 million and his trophy haul now moves up to four. Lee’s day will surely come, and he has $691,000 to ease the pain. But while the erstwhile Mad Dog might have gone out howling at the moon tonight, the new one was hurrying home to the family.

“To my wife Sara and baby girl Serena, looking forward to get back to see you guys,” Watson said.

Mad Dog Mike Watson is back

RESULTS

Event 3 – $30,000 – 8-Handed
Dates: May 14-15, 2024
Entries: 154 (inc. 54 re-entries)
Prize pool: $4,620,000

1 – Mike Watson, Canada – $1,023,000
2 – Kiat Lee, Malaysia – $691,000
3 – Ding Biao, China – $475,000
4 – David Yan, New Zealand – $387,400
5 – Morten Klein, Norway – $309,000
6 – Sirzat Hissou, Germany – $238,000
7 – Leon Sturm, Germany – $173,000
8 – Daniel Rezaei, Austria – $125,000
9 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – $103,400

10 – Hossein Ensan, Germany – $88,000
11 – Patrik Antonius, Finland – $88,000
12 – Damir Zhugralin, Kazakhstan – $76,300
13 – Orpen Kisacikoglu, Turkey – $76,300
14 – Fedor Holz, Germany – $69,300
15 – Adrian Mateos, Spain – $69,300
16 – Dimitar Danchev, Bulgaria – $62,300
17 – Seth Davies, USA – $62,300
18 – Justin Saliba, USA – $55,400
19 – Xianchao Shen, China – $55,400
20 – Dylan Weisman, USA – $55,400
21 – Punnat Punsri, Thailand – $50,800
22 – Dylan Linde, USA – $50,800
23 – Chris Moneymaker, USA – $50,800
24 – Mikita Badziakouski, Belarus – $46,200
25 – Stanley Choi, Hong Kong – $46,200
26 – Chuck Chu, Vietnam – $46,200
27 – Andrew Chen, Canada – $46,200

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

ANDY NI GOES WIRE-TO-WIRE TO WIN FIRST TITLE WITH A BANG

Champion Andy Ni!

The Triton Super High Roller Series served up a thriller tonight in Montenegro, where China’s Andy Ni landed a first title after ending the $25K NLHE tournament with a bang.

With chips flying back and forth in an entertaining but perilously short-stacked finale, Ni managed to knock out two players in the final hand, taking the tournament from three to one in an instant.

Observers are fairly sure it’s the first time a Triton tournament has ended with a double knockout, but it was no more than Ni deserved after a dominant performance. The 41-year-old, originally from China but who has lived in Spain since childhood, had led at the end of Day 1 and maintained that lead when the final table began.

He then survived the ups and downs of a crazy final to emerge on top, ending the challenges of Nicolas Chouity and Chris Brewer in that spectacular end. Ni banked $785,000 for the win, which was his third and biggest cash on the Triton series.

Chouity settled for $531,000, his second runner-up finish on the series. Meanwhile Brewer took third for $354,000, and took his Triton total winnings to around $7.5 million.

But this one was all about Ni, who did his post-game interviews in Spanish and can perhaps take some of the weight off Adrian Mateos as the only Spanish Triton champion so far. He told reporters that he is mostly a recreational player, who only plays tournaments occasionally, but was persuaded to come to Montenegro by a friend.

Ni played for the first time in Madrid a couple of years ago, but has cashed his first two tournaments here in Montenegro, including this breakout win. He acknowledged he needed two big coups to go his way at the final, drilling a three-outer and a two-outer at crucial moments. But he earned his place at the winner’s table.

Andy Ni begins life as a Triton champion

TOURNAMENT ACTION

The tournament attracted 135 entries but after a speedy Day 1 only 18 were left. That meant they were all already in the money, with Matthias Eibinger having burst the bubble. Eibinger lost the majority of his stack in a clash with Alex Kulev, when the Bulgarian’s AdQh won the race against pocket jacks.

The last of Eibinger’s chips went to Patrik Antonius, who also held jacks but beat Eibinger’s AhTs.

There was just time for a few more players to go broke, including Triton stalwarts Mikita Badziakouski, Seth Davies and Kiat Lee, before bagging and tagging for the night. Eighteen came back, with Andy Ni leading the way.

Everyone was guaranteed at least $42,500 at this point, but the target was the final table of nine.

Luminaries continued to fall by the wayside, with Steve O’Dwyer, Ben Tollerene, Nick Petrangelo Henrik Hecklen, Zhou Quan, Patrik Antonius and Tobias Schwecht among those departing. Ben Heath had less than two big blinds remaining on the final table bubble, but managed to triple up and remain involved as simultaneous bust-outs took us from 10 to eight in one fell swoop.

On the outer table, chip-leading Ni bust Paulius Vaitiekunas with KsQs beating ThKc. It happened at the same time as Heath ran his pocket fours into Nacho Barbero’s Ac9c and Danny Tang’s pocket aces, with Tang all but tripling up as a result.

Ben Heath ended up chopping ninth and tenth place money

Heath and Vaitiekunas took $72,150 each as the payouts were modified to reflect the simultaneous elimination. Meanwhile, the final table of eight settled down to play to the champion. The stacks were as follows:

Andy Ni – 5,475,000 (44 BBs)
Chris Brewer – 4,600,000 (37 BBs)
Danny Tang – 4,300,000 (34 BBs)
Nicolas Chouity – 3,925,000 (31 BBs)
Nacho Barbero – 2,650,000 (21 BBs)
Alex Kulev – 2,375,000 (19 BBs)
Viacheslav Buldygin – 2,200,000 (18 BBs)
Aram Sargsyan – 1,475,000 (12 BBs)

Triton Montenegro Event 2 final table players (clockwise from top left): Alex Kulev, Nicolas Chouity, Nacho Barbero, Danny Tang, Andy Ni, Viacheslav Buldygin, Aram Sargsyan, Chris Brewer.

Ni had held the chip lead from the start of the day, and early action at the final only consolidated it. Ni knocked out Kulev to get things started, with pocket aces staying good against Kulev’s AsQs. It left Kulev on the rail, with a $98,500 payout.

Ni was not able to run away with things, however, and Chris Brewer continued to keep him in his sights. It helped that Brewer was the next to find aces in a pivotal spot, busting Nacho Barbero who was more than happy to get his chips in with AdKh. There were no miracles for Barbero here and he ended with a $133,600 payout.

Not much Nacho Barbero could do

As Ni and Brewer were collecting chips during the major elimination hands, Nicolas Chouity was chipping up consistently in smaller pots. To this point, Chouity’s graph showed a very steady incline: no sharp peaks taking him in either direction, and he landed at the top of the six-handed battle. Even when he was then involved in a major hand, he landed on the right side of it.

Danny Tang, who was returning to the venue where he made his Triton debut five years ago, had been holding firm through the early exchanges of the final table. But when he found a premium — pocket queens — and got his chips in, Chouity was sitting behind with AdKd.

Chouity called Tang’s three-bet shove and hit a king on the river to send Tang out in sixth, collecting $180,500.

Danny Tang’s career has blossomed since his Triton debut here in Montenegro

Viacheslav Buldygin was another player making a welcome return to the Triton Series here in Montenegro, and he too had progressed to the final. But he never managed to put together a big stack today (at least not big enough to really challenge) and he ended up dwindling down to a shoving stack. He got it in with Kc8h but lost to Brewer’s Ah3c.

Buldygin won $233,000.

Viacheslav Buldygin finished in fifth

Triton first-timer Aram Sargsyan had made the final table in only his second tournament on the tour, and his progression to fourth place had shown his chops. The final stages of his performance had been mostly a case of clinging on with a short stack, but he finally got it in good against Chouity.

Sargsyan had pocket tens but Chouity couldn’t fold Qd7d with a dominant stack and facing only a three blind shove. Chouity hit a queen on the flop and Sargsyan was out. He took $290,000 to get his Triton career up and running.

A fourth-place finish on Aram Sargsyan’s Triton debut

There had been precious few dramatic moments to this point, with the best hands usually holding up. That pattern continued in three-handed play, with Brewer and Chouity first to clash. Brewer’s AcTd beat Chouity’s As7d when they got it in pre-flop.

It gave Brewer a big lead. But it didn’t last long.

As is so often the case in this world, the stacks were shallow and getting shallower. The three players got their chips in repeatedly but chopped pots seemed to be the order of the day. It left them at one point with only two big blinds separating them, and stacks of 19, 18 and 17 blinds. It made it anyone’s game.

Chouity was sticking to his policy of firing at almost all flops and continuing to stay afloat. He slid a bit, but then moved back into a narrow lead. Brewer assumed the shortest stack. But then Brewer found kings and doubled, following up with another double with AdJd and suddenly he was our chip leader once more.

Chris Brewer was involved in most of the biggest pots at the final

There were now only 45 blinds at the table, and the volatility continued. Ni went from shortest stack to leader after a double through Brewer, with KhTd bettering KsJs when a 10 landed on the turn.

And that proved to be a big moment because it gave Ni the stack to take on anyone who came at him — even if both his opponents fired together.

Brewer ponders folding in a three-way all-in

So it happened: a three-way all in to end a Triton event. It may not have ever happened before. Brewer opened with his Ac8s, Ni looked down at AhJc and moved all in from the small blind. Chouity found AsTd in the big and called all in.

That put Brewer in a really tough spot. He had less than a big blind, but knew he might be able to fold the hand and limp into second. It was the best part of a $200K decision. After a while, however, he was persuaded to call — but regretted it.

The best hand held up. Chouity was officially second, for $531,000. Brewer took third for $354,000. But it meant Ni was our champion: chip leader at the start of the day, at the start of the final, and then a double killer to wrap it up.

A second runner-up finish for Nicolas Chouity

RESULTS

Event 2 – $25,000 NLHE – 8-Handed
Dates: May 13-14, 2024
Entries: 135 (inc. 45 re-entries)
Prize pool: $3,375,000

1 – Andy Ni, China – $785,000
2 – Nicolas Chouity, Lebanon – $531,000
3 – Chris Brewer, USA – $354,000
4 – Aram Sargsyan, Armenia – $290,000
5 – Viacheslav Buldygin, Russia – $233,000
6 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – $180,500
7 – Nacho Barbero, Argentina – $133,600
8 – Alex Kulev, Bulgaria – $98,500

9 – Ben Heath, UK – $72,150
10 – Paulius Vaitiekunas, Lithuania – $72,150
11 – Tobias Schwecht, Germany – $65,800
12 – Patrik Antonius, Finland – $57,500
13 – Henrik Hecklen, Denmark – $57,500
14 – Nick Petrangelo, USA – $52,300
15 – Zhou Quan, China – $52,300
16 – Ben Tollerene, USA – $47,300
17 – Steve O’Dwyer, Ireland – $47,300
18 – Xiaohui Tan, China – $42,500
19 – Kiat Lee, Malaysia – $42,500
20 – Klemens Roiter, Austria – $42,500
21 – Krasimir Neychev, Bulgaria – $39,200
22 – Seth Davies, USA – $39,200
23 – Mikita Badziakouski, Belarus – $39,200

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

IT’S BOOM-TIME AGAIN AS CHRIS MONEYMAKER LANDS TRITON TITLE IN MONTENEGRO

Champion Chris Moneymaker!

So much of what we love about modern poker owes a huge debt of gratitude to one man.

It was Chris Moneymaker’s victory in the 2003 World Series of Poker Main Event that is credited with igniting the poker boom — a boom that burned and grew through the following two decades, and eventually ended up with incredible tours like the Triton Super High Roller Series.

Tonight in Montenegro, as the Triton Series begins the final stop of it third season, Moneymaker has bossed his way into the headlines again. The man who was once just a plucky amateur, a fresh-faced 27-year-old accountant from Tennessee changing the poker landscape, tonight came of age as a high roller.

Moneymaker, now 48, beat a field of 163 entries to claim the first Triton title of his career, along with $903,000. It came in the $25,000 GG Million$ tournament, which kicked off Triton’s visit to the Maestral Resort in Montenegro.

“I wasn’t going to lose today,” Moneymaker told reporters as he celebrated his victory, calling home and then hugging friends on the rail. “I could have put it in with any hand and I would have won. I ran pure.”

Moneymaker was on the brink of elimination on the bubble, when he got a tiny stack into the middle and needed to hit an ace to survive. It came on the river, steering him into the money and beginning another boom. This time it was his stack, which just kept growing through the next few hours.

Moneymaker said: “I hit a three-outer, a six outer. I thought to myself, ‘You know what, this is going to be 2003. I’m not going to lose any more hands today.'”

Chris Moneymaker begins celebrations with Brian Kim, his beaten heads-up opponent

It ended with Moneymaker downing countryman Brian Kim heads up to land another famous triumph. It was once said that if Moneymaker could win the World Series, anyone could, and that sent millions of players to their local casinos or the online tables. If anyone wants to try to emulate Moneymaker on the Triton Series, there are 15 more events here in Montenegro for them to have a go.

And the man himself would encourage it.

“I don’t really play a whole lot of high rollers, but when I do I enjoy it,” Moneymaker said. “I probably won’t play a ton more, but I’m sure I’ll be back out at a Triton stop. They do a really good job. It’s insane how well they run tournaments.”

TOURNAMENT ACTION

Our first tournament of the trip meant the first bubble of the trip and it’s conceivable that we don’t see another to match the drama and duration of this one.

In early going, there was the rare sight of two WSOP Main Event champions all in and under threat on neighbouring tables, but Hossein Ensan and Chris Moneymaker both doubled up.

That came to be a lasting theme as short stacks around the room survived numerous tense moments. Moneymaker was again among them (he’d put himself back in the mire by bluffing off most of his stack to Igor Yaroshevskyy), but Moneymaker again pulled a spectacular Houdini act. Faced with two opponents, Biao Ding and Brandon Hamlet, Moneymaker got his last chips in with AdJc.

Chris Moneymaker managed a series of unlikely double ups to survive

Ding and Hamlet played through the streets until Ding folded with four community cards showing: 6c8d9h2h. That’s when Hamlet showed his pocket queens, leaving Moneymaker drawing to three outs. With cameras poised to watch his elimination, the dealer delivered the Ac on the turn to keep him alive. And Moneymaker set about making the most of this reprieve.

Malaysia’s Kiat Lee, by contrast, finally became the unfortunate man to end all the pain. He was involved in a pot against Byron Kaverman, with Kaverman having recently doubled thanks to some pocket kings. Kaverman and Lee got to a flop of TdTs8h, at which point the remainder of Lee’s chips landed over the line.

Lee had Jd8c but Kaverman had found another monster pocket pair. His pocket aces were now super strong thanks to the two tens on the flop, meaning even the Jc turn didn’t help Lee. The Qd ended it and burst the bubble. It left 27 in the money.

After a long and tortuous bubble, Kiat Lee relieved the tension

At this stage, Moneymaker was still one of the short stacks, despite the double up. But in another prolonged period of play, as the field slowly thinned to its final table of nine, Moneymaker began a steady upward rise.

Ensan was one of those going in the other direction, landing on the rail alongside players including Phil Ivey, Patrik Antonius, Nick Petrangelo and Seth Davies. The tournament got stuck for more than an hour with 10 players left, but Moneymaker knocked out Kaverman with pocket tens against AsJc, and set the final.

That final coup vaulted Moneymaker all the way to the top. The final table lined up as follows:

Chris Moneymaker – 11,300,000 (57 BBs)
Biao Ding – 6,125,000 (31 BBs)
Adrian Mateos – 5,250,000 (26 BBs)
Brian Kim – 5,000,000 (25 BBs)
Danilo Velasevic – 4,350,000 (22 BBs)
Lewis Spencer – 3,350,000 (17 BBs)
Isaac Haxton – 2,575,000 (13 BBs)
Morten Klein – 1,800,000 (9 BBs)
Igor Yaroshevskyy – 1,000,000 (5 BBs)

Triton Montenegro Event 1 final table players (clockwise from back left): Brian Kim, Ding Biao, Igor Yaroshevskyy, Lewis Spencer, Chris Moneymaker, Danilo Velasevic, Adrian Mateos, Morten Klein, Isaac Haxton.

The tournament was nothing if not shallow at this stage, with only Moneymaker able to feel even slightly comfortable. However, every payjump was worth navigating and nobody was preparing to throw caution to the wind.

Isaac Haxton became the first player eliminated from the final table, and that was only because he found a mid-sized pocket pair at the same time as Ding Biao had a bigger one. After Moneymaker opened from mid-position, Biao called on the button with pocket jacks.

Haxton had pocket nines in the small blind and sensed a good squeeze spot. The chips went in, Moneymaker folded, but Biao snapped Haxton off. The board ran dry and Haxton was bumped in ninth for €91,300.

Isaac Haxton continues the hunt for a first title

Morten Klein was still among the short stacks at this stage and the Norwegian high roller wasn’t able to get the double up he needed. Klein lost about half his stack when he got involved in a pot against Brian Kim where Kim three-bet shoved the turn on a board showing two jacks.

Klein folded to fight another day, but lasted only two hands more. Kim again was his nemesis, opening from the button, then calling Klein’s three-bet jam from the big blind. Klein’s QcJh lost to Kim’s Ac7c, leaving Klein with $110,500 for eighth. It also put Kim to the top of the chip counts, but only with 35 big blinds.

No more Morten Klein

In the GGMillion$ format, the blind increases are determined by the number of hands played rather than by the clock. But there’s still the grim inevitability of those levels going up and short stacks becoming even shorter. By the time players went on a break at the end of Level 25, the average stack sat at only 15 big blinds, with the chip leader sitting with 30.

It was inevitable that eliminations would now come in a hurry, but three players in as many hands was still a comparatively rare sight. Lewis Spencer, Adrian Mateos and Danilo Velasevic went bang, bang, bang.

Lewis Spencer’s face says it all

Spencer three-bet shoved pocket threes over Moneymaker’s button open, but Moneymaker’s pocket nines were better throughout. However, Mateos’ bust was a good deal more grim: he raise/called Kim’s big blind shove when Kim was the man now sitting with pocket threes.

Mateos had pocket jacks, but Kim spiked a three on the river to fell Mateos.

Adrian Mateos gets rivered by Brian Kim

Kim’s roll wasn’t done. On the very next hand, he had AsQc and Velasevic this time had pocket jacks. This time Kim hit his killer ace on the turn and Velasevic hit the skids.

Danilo Velasevic became the third player out in three hands

The two players at the top of the counts both won big pots, while Spencer collected $153,000 for seventh, Mateos took $209,500 for sixth and Velasevic won $272,000 for fifth. Igor Yaroshevskyy, who had found a lucky double before all this carnage (cracking kings with QsTh) looked on with glee.

Kim was in a commanding lead, but Moneymaker soon gave him a taste of his own medicine. The two chip leaders clashed with Moneymaker three-bet ripping from the big blind after Kim opened the button.

Kim wasn’t bluffing though. He had pocket queens. Moneymaker was in trouble with Kc9c, but he spiked a king on the river to not only survive, but double into the chip lead.

This was frantic now, and Ding Biao got his chips in as a three-bet shove from the button. Kim was once again the opening raiser, and once again he had a real hand. This time Kim’s AdKh beat Biao’s AsTs and they were down to three. Biao won $341,000 for fourth.

Yaroshevskyy might have been on the rail five eliminations ago, but he was now involved in the three-handed battle and guaranteed $419,000. He surely wouldn’t have complained about the end of his run at this point, losing his last four blinds with Qd3h to Moneymaker’s Ad8h.

Igor Yaroshevskyy hits unlikely double before a triple elimination

That left the two Americans heads up, with nearly $300K between first and second place. Moneymaker had the lead:

Moneymaker: 25,700,000 (51 BBs)
Kim: 15,050,000 (30 BBs)

And very soon, Moneymaker had the win.

Second place for Brian Kim, worth $609,000

The first two hands of heads up were uneventful. The third ended it all. Moneymaker opened with AcTc and Kim jammed with As8h. Moneymaker snapped him off and saw a ten on the flop to make things even better.

Two more cards couldn’t give Kim enough help. And with that, Moneymaker joins Espen Jorstad and Koray Aldemir as WSOP Main Event winners with a Triton Super High Roller title as well.

A born champion: Chris Moneymaker

RESULTS

Event 1 – $25,000 GG Million$ Live
Dates: May 12-13, 2024
Entries: 163 (inc. 56 re-entries)
Prize pool: $4,075,000

1 – Chris Moneymaker, USA – $903,000
2 – Brian Kim, USA – $609,000
3 – Igor Yaroshevskyy, Ukraine – $419,000
4 – Ding Biao, China – $341,000
5 – Danilo Velasevic, Serbia – $272,000
6 – Adrian Mateos, Spain – $209,500
7 – Lewis Spencer, UK – $153,000
8 – Morten Klein, Norway – $110,500
9 – Isaac Haxton, USA – $91,300

10 – Byron Kaverman, USA – $77,500
11 – Brandon Hamlet, USA – $77,500
12 – Justin Saliba, USA – $67,200
13 – Hossein Ensan, Germany – $67,200
14 – Phil Ivey, USA – $61,100
15 – Pieter Aerts, Belgium – $61,100
16 – Wai Leong Chan, Malaysia – $55,000
17 – Patrik Antonius, Finland – $55,000
18 – Ken Tong, Hong Kong – $48,900
19 – Diego Zeiter, Switzerland – $48,900
20 – Aleksandr Zubov, Russia – $48,900
21 – Nick Petrangelo, USA – $44,800
22 – Andy Ni, China – $42,900
23 – Aram Oganyan, USA – $42,900
24 – Klemens Roiter, Austria – $42,900
25 – Chris Nguyen, Germany – $42,900
26 – Seth Davies, USA – $41,000
27 – Gregoire Auzoux, France – $41,000

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

FEDOR HOLZ HITS FOUR AS TRITON JEJU GETS OFF TO RECORD-BREAKING FLYER

Champion Fedor Holz!

Poker’s young prince is back in the Triton Poker Series throne tonight after Fedor Holz defeated a record-breaking field to win the first event of this second visit to Jeju, South Korea.

Holz, who is still only 30 despite a reign of dominance that has lasted close to a decade, won the fourth Triton Series title of his career, taking Triton winnings past $12 million thanks to this $786,000 first prize.

That was the lion’s share of a $4.035 million prize pool, comprising 269 entries of $15,000 apiece. It kicked off the visit to Jeju in spectacular fashion, vastly increasing the numbers on this ever-growing series.

But the more things change, the more they stay the same, and in Holz we saw a very familiar champion. He won the first two Triton events he played, in the Philippines and Montenegro in 2016 and 2017, and added a third win last year in London.

“It’s just nice winning tournaments, no matter what,” Holz said, adding that the presence of his girlfriend Annelina here, along with many of his friends, made this one special.

Celebrations begin for Fedor and Annelina

Holz late-registered for this event but was his customary relaxed presence at the table, managing to find big hands and big outdraws at precisely the right time to down Seth Gottlieb heads up. Holz has seen it all before and told reporters, “I always try to focus on just the hand I’m playing. That’s always been my mantra.”

Although Holz has occasionally intimated that he may move away from poker, the Triton Series has continued to enthral this brilliant German. “It’s a really big deal,” he said. “The best players in the world play these tournaments…It’s the nicest feeling.”

Gottlieb, the 41-year-old Digital Marketing executive, was gunning for a second Triton title of his own, but found Holz in unforgiving form. Gottlieb had his aces cracked in the heads-up battle and could never recover. He took $500,000 for second.

Seth Gottlieb felt the force of Fedor Holz

Other superstars including Dimitar Danchev and Nick Petrangelo made the final table but fell short of the title. But when Holz is sitting close by, there only ever seems to be one man clutching the trophy at the end.

FINAL DAY ACTION

After a blockbuster opening day, which began with a traditional Lion Dance in the lobby and then moved to the lion’s den of the poker room, only 48 players remained. That was notable for two reasons: firstly, it was the remainder from a starting field of 269 entries, which represented a new Triton record.

Secondly, only 47 players were due to be paid, so they returned on the stone bubble. The first player knocked out today would leave with nothing, while the others could celebrate at least a min-cash from this opening event.

Quan Zhou not only had the smallest stack in the room, he was also drawn into the big blind for the first hand. That was an especially unfortunate turn of events, but he looked down on pocket sixes after the opening deal, which was likely far better than he might have hoped.

Jesse Lonis opened the pot from middle position, Zhou shipped in his last six blinds and Lonis then called. They were flipping. Lonis had KcJh.

“I could have burst the bubble last night,” Lonis said, detailing a pot in which his kings were beaten by the ace-king of Andrey Andreev. Had Lonis won that one, he would have stacked 3 million going into Day 2.

It was perhaps small consolation, but a king on the flop this morning accounted for Zhou and gave Lonis a small amount of chips. More importantly, it put everyone in the money.

Pocket sixes not good enough for Quan Zhou

Zhou still had some hope. Two other players were all-in and called on the same hand and, had either or both of them been knocked out, they would have split the $23,000 prize for 47th. However, both Alex Theologis and Xie Haoqi doubled their short stacks to survive, leaving Zhou the only person out. He applauded loudly as Luca Vivaldi announced that everyone else was in the money and that hand-for-hand was over.

Discounting the small matter of a few pay jumps, the principal focus now turned to making the final table. There were still 47 players left and only nine seats for the finale, and the field quickly went about filling those chairs.

Everyone involved in bubble shenanigans was knocked out. So was the overnight leader Stephen Chidwick, who perished in 12th. The American titan Ike Haxton had a decent-ish stack when they got 10 handed, but it ended up being slid in the direction of his countryman Seth Gottlieb to leave Haxton on the rail.

Haxton had AcJh to Gottlieb’s AhKc when it all went in pre-flop. The king paired and that was that. We reached the final nine.

FINAL TABLE CHIP COUNTS

Seth Gottlieb – 15,525,000 (78 BBs)
Dimitar Danchev – 7,975,000 (40 BBs)
Dominykas Mikolaitis – 6,940,000 (35 BBs)
Fedor Holz – 6,025,000 (30 BBs)
Nick Petrangelo – 5,600,000 (28 BBs)
Lun Loon – 3,850,000 (19 BBs)
Josh Mccully – 3,675,000 (18 BBs)
Ken Tong – 3,250,000 (16 BBs)
Pieter Aerts – 950,000 (5 BBs)

Jeju Event 1 final table (clockwise from top left): Seth Gottlieb, Ken Tong, Pieter Aerts, Dimitar Danchev, Nick Petrangelo, Fedor Holz, Dominykas Mikolaitis, Lun Loon, Josh Mccully.

Haxton’s elimination was especially welcomed by Pieter Aerts, who had been sitting with a short stack for a long while. The Belgian player, who won his first Triton title in Cyprus last year, locked up $81,000 by virtue of making it to the final here. But he could go no further.

On the very first hand of final table play, Aerts was in the big blind and found 7h9s. Gottlieb opened from early position and Aerts called.

The flop of Js6sTc showed enough to encourage Aerts to part with his last two blinds. But Gottlieb had flopped best with AdTd and stayed good.

Pieter Aerts managed only a short stay at the final

That left only eight.

Ken Tong now assumed the duties of short stack and he similarly couldn’t spin it up. Tong made his debut on the Triton Series in Monte Carlo last November, and landed on the Main Event final table, where he finished sixth.

His tournament here ended at the hands of Fedor Holz, who opened with pocket tens. Tong, in the big blind, shoved with Kh9d but whiffed the flop. Holz took over the chip lead, while Tong banked $98,000.

Another final table for Ken Tong

Australia’s Josh Mccully is riding a hot streak at the moment, having earned a career-best score of more than $275,000 at a WPT event in Cambodia in January. He returned to Asia for his Triton Series debut and made his way to the final table in the first event he played.

Mccully’s run ended in seventh, when he became the third player in succession to get into trouble defending his big blind.

Nick Petrangelo opened and Mccully paid to see the flop with QsTh. The flop seemed friendly. It came ten high. Mccully checked, Petrangelo shoved with the covering stack and Mccully called for his tournament life and about 12 big blinds.

Mccully was ahead. Petrangelo showed only QhJc, meaning he was drawing to three outs (or some backdoor flush possibilities). Unfortunately for Mccully, the Jd was a killer. He hit the road in seventh for $134,000.

Josh Mccully’s hot streak took him to seventh in his first Triton event

By this point, Gottlieb had reassumed the chip lead, but it didn’t last long. Now came the rise of Lun Loon.

Loon initially profited from the perfect set-up: action folded to the big stacked Gottlieb in the small blind. He made an “any-two” shove, with three times the stack of Loon in the big blind. But Loon looked down at pocket aces and was more than happy to risk it all.

Gottlieb’s 7d3s wasn’t quite the worst starting hand in poker, but it wasn’t far off. It didn’t catch the aces, so Loon doubled.

After the Malaysian businessman then pushed Petrangelo off a pot, Loon was top of the charts. However it was a very brief stay; after the rise came the fall.

Loon somehow conspired to become the next man out. Petrangelo got his revenge with pocket aces to Loon’s eights, and on the very next hand, Loon had AdJh but couldn’t beat Dimitar Danchev’s AcQc.

Loon added another $182,000 to his bankroll for a sixth-place finish.

Lun Loon: One minute chip leader, the next on the rail

Dominykas Mikolaitis was another Triton first timer enjoying a terrific run during the first event he had ever played. An online crusher from Lithuania, Mikolaitis flexed his muscles on the Triton Series too and took a seemingly effortless cruise to this final.

The run ended in fifth, however, with Holz doing most of the damage. Mikolaitis and Holz got it in pre-flop, with Holz at risk. Mikolaitis flopped top pair with his As4s, but Holz’s pocket queens flopped a set.

Holz ended up with a full house and a full double, leaving Mikolaitis short. He was out not long later, with Gottlieb taking the last couple of blinds. Gottlieb had Ad3h to Mikolaitis’ 8cKc. Fifth place was worth $240,000, his best ever live result.

A fine first showing from Dominykas Mikolaitis

The tournament edged into Level 29, right around the time it starts to get incredibly short, even with a record-breaking number of entries. It followed that the chip lead swung wildly, with any pot of significance usually sending its winner surging and its loser down to the bottom.

Petrangelo’s rocky ride was the next to come to its conclusion. In a final table characterised by big hands, Petrangelo smacked into the latest: pocket kings belonging to Gottlieb.

Gottlieb raised it up, Petrangelo looked at KhQs and three-bet/called it off after Gottlieb shoved for 21 big blinds. Petrangelo couldn’t overturn Gottlieb’s advantage and was knocked out in fourth, earning $303,000.

Petrangelo is still without a Triton title, but is now knocking on the door frequently. It’s only a matter of time.

Nick Petrangelo: His time will come

Gottlieb now had a significant advantage over the remaining three, but Holz pulled closer thanks to the hand that knocked out Danchev.

This was a tough coup between two comparative short stacks: Holz shipped from the small blind with AdTs and Danchev saw As4s and only 16 big blinds in his stack.

In the commentary booth, Nick Schulman acknowledged that it was a difficult decision for Danchev, and he maybe regretted getting it in. The board only favoured Holz, eventually giving him a diamond flush.

Bulgarians have quickly become a force on the Triton Poker Series and with Monte Carlo champion Ognyan Dimov watching from the rail, Danchev went looking for the $375,000 that came with his third place.

Disappointment for Dimitar Danchev

The final two settled in for the heads-up duel, with Gottlieb’s 55 big blinds ahead of Holz’s 35. Both men had been here before: Holz already had three titles, while Gottlieb won his first in London last year (having only just learned the rules of PLO).

Most of the early small pots headed in Gottlieb’s direction, and it soon looked as though he would be finishing the job in no time. Gottlieb picked up aces and slow-played them to perfection, limping the small blind and then only calling after Holz bet.

That meant they then saw a flop of Jh5c4d and Holz, with 8d5s continued to bet. Gottlieb called again.

The 7d on the turn, followed by a check from Holz, was the moment Gottlieb sprang the trap. He shoved with the covering stack. Holz called for his tournament and learned he was behind. But then the 5h on the river was one of his miracle outs. Stacks were all but even once again.

“The five-eight hand I got lucky and I’m really happy about that,” Holz said when everything was said and done.

Heads up between Seth Gottlieb and Fedor Holz

Gottlieb tried to climb back on the horse and wear Holz down again. But although he continued to snag the smaller pots, Holz always seemed to come out on top when there was the most on the line.

Holz four-bet shoved with Ad8c and 27 bigs, earning a call from Gottlieb’s KhJc. The board changed nothing and Holz doubled into the lead.

Gottlieb now had only 10 big blinds and Holz did not let this one slip from his grasp. He found pocket jacks while Gottlieb had QcTh and it all went in pre-flop.

The jacks held and Holz was champion once again. “It’s nice to win the first tournament,” he said. “It gives you confidence.” Like this man needs any more of that.

Another trophy for Fedor Holz

Event #1 – $15k NLH 8-Handed
Dates: March 5-6, 2024
Entries: 269 (inc. 93 re-entries)
Prize pool: $4,035,000

1 – Fedor Holz, Germany – $786,000
2 – Seth Gottlieb, USA – $500,000
3 – Dimitar Danchev, Bulgaria – $375,000
4 – Nick Petrangelo, USA – $303,000
5 – Dominykas Mikolaitis, Lithuania – $240,000
6 – Lun Loon, Malaysia – $182,000
7 – Josh Mccully, Australia – $134,000
8 – Ken Tong, Hong Kong – $98,000
9 – Pieter Aerts, Belgium – $81,000

10 – Isaac Haxton, USA – $67,800
11 – Weiran Pu, China – $67,800
12 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – $60,000
13 – Phil Nagy, USA – $60,000
14 – Wei Hsiang Yeu, Malaysia – $53,500
15 – Axel Hallay, France – $53,500
16 – Yulian Bogdanov, Bulgaria – $47,000
17 – Aleks Ponakovs, Latvia – $47,000
18 – Roman Hrabec, Czech Republic – $41,500
19 – Xie Haoqi, China – $41,500
20 – Jamil Wakil, Canada – $41,500
21 – Lewis Spencer, UK – $37,500
22 – Dong Chen, China – $37,500
23 – Aram Zobian, USA – $37,500
24 – Li Yuan, China – $33,500
25 – Dan Dvoress, Canada – $33,500
26 – Kevin, Indonesia – $33,500
27 – Andy Wang, Australia – $33,500
28 – Jesse Lonis, USA – $29,500
29 – Ferdinand Putra, Indonesia – $29,500
30 – Fahredin Mustafov, Bulgaria – $29,500
31 – Paulius Vaitiekunas, Lithuania – $29,500
32 – Alex Boika, Belarus – $25,800
33 – Alex Theologis, Greece – $25,800
34 – Seth Davies, USA – $25,800
35 – Aleksander Zubov, Russia – $25,800
36 – Ognyan Dimov, Bulgaria – $25,800
37 – Michael Soyza, Malysia – $25,800
38 – Sosia Jiang, New Zealand – $25,800
39 – Andrey Andreev, Russia – $25,800
40 – Timothy Adams, Canada – $23,000
41 – Shi Chun, China – $23,000
42 – Frederic Delval, France – $23,000
43 – Alexandre Vuilleumier, Switzerland – $23,000
44 – Ramin Hajiyev, Azerbaijan – $23,000
45 – Yu Xiangyu, China – $23,000
46 – Espen Jorstad, Norway – $23,000
47 – Biao Ding, China – $23,000

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

RAISE FOR CHANGE CHARITY EXHIBITION GAME AT TRITON POKER SERIES JEJU SENDS $30K TO GOOD CAUSES

The set for the Raise for Charity Exhibition Game

Ever since its inception, the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series has made a firm commitment to helping charitable causes. The company’s founders and players have donated many hundreds of thousands of dollars through the years, with charities across the world benefiting from this philanthropy.

Underlining the commitment, the Triton Series’ second visit to Jeju, South Korea, kicked off today with the “Raise for Change Charity Exhibition Game” — a single-table tournament in which seven of the world’s best poker players did battle, and guaranteed another $30,000 for three charities.

Half of that came from the buy-ins of the poker players. Triton Series matched the other half.

It meant that when Chris Brewer, Dan Dvoress and Christoph Vogelsang finished in first, second and third places, respectively, their chosen charities benefited to the tune of $20,000, $12,000 and $8,000.

Chris Brewer was able to earn $20,000 for a charity close to his heart

Brewer opted to give the money to the Melanoma Research Alliance, a charity dedicated to end suffering and death due to melanoma; Dvoress’ went to Evergreen, whose mission is to create a healthier future through better public spaces; Vogelsang’s success benefitted Mary’s Meals, which seeks to find a simple solution to world hunger.

Each of the tournament’s seven participants — Brewer, Vogelsang and Dvoress, as well as Dan Smith, Mario Mosboeck, Seth Davies and Tony Lin — paid $5,000 to enter, creating a prize pool of $35,000.

The top three received their buy-in back, with the remaining $20,000 pledged to charity. The winner took $10,000, second took $6,000 and third took $4,000. Triton Series then matched each of these amounts.

“We were thrilled to organise the game,” said Andy Wong, Triton Poker Series CEO. “By matching the winnings of the top three players, we hope to encourage even more players to participate and support this worthy cause.”

Triton CEO Andy Wong

Wong added: “Poker has the power to bring people together and make a positive impact and we were delighted to see this event succeed.”

As you would expect, the atmosphere was buoyant as the players took their seats, only a couple of hours before Event 1 of the Triton Series Jeju began. Triton players are good friends with one another, and the charity format allowed them to be even more relaxed than usual.

Brewer’s exceptional recent tournament hot streak extended into this event too, with a jubilant cruise to the win. “It feels good,” Brewer said, adding that he always has fun playing poker even if his own bankroll will feel no immediate benefit.

However the cause is close to his heart. “My mom had a melanoma scare this year,” Brewer said, adding that she is now having preventative infusions to ensure she remains cancer free. “I’m happy to be able to give something to a cause I care about.”

Today’s game is only the beginning of a process by which Triton will continue to ensure the money raised has maximum positive impact. Wong intends to visit the organisations to discuss their work and learn how the Triton Poker Series’ donation will be spent.

A second place for Dan Dvoress will benefit Evergreen charity in his native Canada

Triton Series is keen to make a lasting difference to local communities and is happy that three distinct charities from across the world will receive funds from this game.

In the broader context of the growing popularity of charity poker games, the Raise for Change Charity Exhibition Game presented an exciting opportunity for industry players to showcase their skills while contributing to worthwhile causes.

Triton has previously been instrumental in sending significant amounts to non-profit organisations, most notably from the Triton Million: A Helping Hand for Charity event in 2019. The £50,000 registration fee from each of 54 participants in the event went to a number of global charities selected by Triton.

Christoph Vogelsang took third and won $8,000 for Mary’s Meals

With numerous events planned for the coming year and beyond, there will be further opportunities for players to earn significant funding for charitable causes of their choosing.

Watch this space.

Let the fun commence at Triton Jeju

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

PERFECT 10 FOR KOON, ADDS PLO TITLE TO RECORD HAUL TO CLOSE MONTE CARLO EVENT

Champion Jason Koon!

On a night when at one point we seemed set to raise a glass to the record-breaking exploits of Danny Tang, we instead find ourselves flabbergasted once again at an altogether more familiar result.

The Triton phenom Jason Koon — truly in a league of his own on the tour for which he is an ambassador — wrapped up this first trip to Monte Carlo with a last-gasp, high-speed turbo triumph, securing a 10th title.

This one came in the $25K PLO Turbo, which brought the curtain down on this spectacular festival in Monaco, and it earned him another $365,000. But this victory further cements his reputation as the leading Triton Series talent. In winning this one, Koon becomes the first player to win titles in hold’em, short deck and PLO — and he’s done so simply so many times.

The last player standing in Koon’s way tonight was the online PLO wizard Eelis Parssinen, who plays nosebleed stakes pretty much every day. But Parssinen was stepping into Koon’s manor on the familiar black and gold Triton set, and there’s usually only one winner.

Eelis Parssinen defeated heads up

“Happy to close it up,” Koon said, admitting that it had been a weird trip to Monte Carlo where he had been on the wrong side of variance.

“Every night I go home and I study my play and I think I played the best I’ve played in a couple of years,” Koon said. “It’s bizarre to get wiped out but playing really well.”

Koon was referring to the hold’em section of this festival in particular, where he had not quite got over the line in pretty much any event. But Koon always finds a way.

Jason Koon ground this one out

TOURNAMENT RECAP

After its structure was changed slightly to accommodate one more level in the registration period, the info board showed 50 entries, including 15 re-entries, and $1.25 million in the prize pool.

Levels were only 20 minutes long at the start, reduced to 15 minutes later, so there was no time to

The bubble slowed things down for a little while, but Li Tong ended up seeing his aces cracked by Laszlo Bujtas when his short stack was in the middle, and that took them through the money threshold.

Everyone else was now certain a payday of at least $36,500, but for the players of the Triton Series, all that really seems to matter is the title.

Bujtas was out in front. Eelis Parssinen was a distant second, with Jason Koon and Sam Greenwood further back. But such is the volatility of this game, particularly with a turbo structure, that Tom-Aksel Bedell, Ren Lin, Joao Vieira and Sergio Martinez would not have considered themselves out of it, despite sub 15-big-blind stacks.

Very quickly, and while the tournament was still eight handed, 15 big blinds would have been considered a luxury. It was pretty cagey and the average stack slipped to 10 big blinds at one point.

But the dam had to break eventually, and all of a sudden Martinez (eighth, $47,500) and Bedell (seventh, $61,500) were cast aside.

Sergio Martinez – out in eighth
Tom-Aksel Bedell made two cashes on the same day

Bedell cashed for the second time today after also making the money in the $50K PLO that concluded earlier. And with that tournament now off the main stage, tournament organisers shifted the turbo up beneath the studio lights for its final short-stacked shootout.

Bujtas still led, with 22 big blinds. The average stack was only 11 and Eelis Parssinen was the only other player with more of that. All of Greenwood, Vieira, Koon and Lin had less than 10 bigs.

Lin hit the rail first. He was the latest player to lose with aces when Parssinen’s JdAd7h3h connected with the board containing two sevens. Lin took $77,500 and his third cash of the trip.

Ren Lin enjoyed a great trip to Monte Carlo

Another Omaha specialist Bujtas perished next, this time with kings losing to Parssinen’s KsQdAd8h. These two have likely clashed in online hands far bigger than the total prize pool in this event, but this one went to Parssinen and sent Bujtas out, looking for $100,000.

Laszlo Bujtas: PLO wizard downed

Koon started his charge right about now. He doubled through Parssinen after flopping a flush draw but hitting a crucial nine on the river to make two pair. He then knocked out both Greenwood and Vieira, mopping up their micro-stacks.

Greenwood banked $129,000 for fourth and Vieira took $171,000 for third. It left Koon and Parssinen to play for the title, with Koon holding a small chip lead.

Fourth place for Sam Greenwood
Joao Vieria: Nearly a first Triton win

They were spectacularly short and the first time it got all in this time, the dealer decided it in Koon’s favour. He had As5s9h4h and Parssinen Jh5h7cAc.

Eelis Parssinen: At least he’s warm

The board ran 3sQd8d7s2s and that was that. It sealed Koon’s sixth title of the year and by the time his trophy was awarded, the wall banner bearing Koon’s face also showed the legend “10 TIME CHAMPION”.

“I’m going to go home, get myself in shape, and hang out with my family,” Koon said, describing his immediate plans. Amen to that.

See you all in Jeju!

RESULTS

Event #13 – $25,000 PLO Turbo
Dates:November 4, 2023
Entries: 50 (inc. 15 re-entries)
Prize pool: $1,250,000

1 – Jason Koon, USA – $365,000
2 – Eelis Parssinen, Finland – $262,000
3 – Joao Vieira, Portugal – $171,000
4 – Sam Greenwood, Canada – $129,000
5 – Laszlo Bujtas, Hungary – $100,000
6 – Ren Lin, USA – $77,500
7 – Tom-Aksel Bedell, Norway – $61,500
8 – Sergio Martinez, Spain – $47,500
9 – Li Tong, New Zealand – $36,500

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

DVORESS BAGS TITLE NUMBER TWO AS $50K PLO CONCLUDES IN MONTE CARLO

Champion Dan Dvoress!

Canada’s Dan Dvoress has a habit of leaving things late.

Back in Cyprus earlier this year, he won the first Triton title of his career in the series’ very last tournament, telling reporters he had no time to party because he had to dash off to catch a flight home.

Tonight in Monte Carlo, Dvoress put himself among the multiple champions with victory in the $50,000 buy-in PLO event — and it too came on the very last night of play on Triton’s first trip to the principality.

Not only did Dvoress need to beat a 72-entry field, he had to overcome the Monte Carlo sensation Danny Tang heads up. Tang had an enormous chip lead too, and would have become the first player to win titles in no limit hold’em, short deck and PLO had he closed it out.

But Dvoress had other ideas. He found a couple of double ups as the heads-up game got short stacked, and then ground Tang down until they got it all in with Dvoress holding trips and Tang’s overpair needing to hit.

It didn’t, and Tang’s festival ended with one win, one second, two third places and a sixth. But this one belonged to Dan Dvoress.

Danny Tang beaten heads up this time

“It’s fun!” Dvoress told Ali Nejad during his winner’s interview when asked how he stays motivated. “I enjoy the process. Of course, it’s great to win money as well.”

Dvoress took $956,000 for this one, beating by a huge margin what he won for his short-deck title in Cyprus. But Dvoress’ mastery of all games has earned him more than $10 million on the Triton Series, from 11 final tables and 28 cashes.

“There are elements that transfer,” he said, describing how one player manages to excel at more than one variant. “Skills such as keeping it together under pressure.” He went on to pay tribute to his friends and fellow pros with whom he can share frustrations and celebrations. “Most of the time tournaments don’t go that well and it’s extremely important to get things off your chest,” he said.

Dan Dvoress buoys the crowd

Tonight, it’s about celebration, however. And Dvoress has already said he’ll be back for Triton’s next stop in Jeju.

So will Tang, no doubt, with $664,000 more in his coffers from this second-place finish.

TOURNAMENT RECAP

After a comparatively steady opening day, the starting field of 70 entries had been reduced to 15 players. That left all the drama for Day 2: the bubble, which would appear when 14 were left (13 places paid), the subsequent push to the final, and then, of course, the crowning of a champion.

To deal with the first of those landmarks: our bubble boy this time was the Brazilian crusher Yuri Dzivielevski. He had been reduced to his last one-and-a-half big blinds, but must have watched in glee as Tom-Aksel Bedell was all-in and called on another table.

However, Bedell doubled up, which meant Dzivielevski had no choice but to watch the button pass gradually around the table and simply pray for good cards when the big blind next reached him.

Those prayers were not answered. When the time came he looked down as 4c3h3d9c and ended up coming third in a three-way coup.

Yuri Dzivielevski couldn’t cling on with one big blind

With Dzivielevski out the way, they ground on toward a final. It was remarkably slow going, but eventually Rajamurthy Kabeelan, Eelis Parssinen, Bedell and two of yesterday’s final table players, Dylan Weisman and Iakov Onuchin departed.

That left another of yesterday’s feature table players, Dan Dvoress, ahead of the pack and the remarklable Danny Tang at yet another final. The last eight lined up like this:

Dan Dvoress – 49 BBs
Chris Parker – 48 BBs
Nacho Barbero – 25 BBs
Dylan Linde – 16 BBs
Keith Lehr – 11 BBs
Mads Amot – 11 BBs
Danny Tang – 10 BBs
Shyngis Satubaev – 10 BBs

Triton Monte Carlo $50K PLO final table players (clockwise from back left): Keith Lehr, Dan Dvoress, Shyngis Satubaev, Nacho Barbero, Chris Parker, Danny Tang, Mads Amot, Dylan Linde.

Shyngis Satubaev is the first player from Kazakhstan to play on the Triton Series and this was already his second cash. He would need something of a miracle to spin up his short stack at the final — and that miracle did not come.

He managed to double up on one of the first hands, getting the beautiful looking AdTdThJh to make a flush and crack Chris Parker’s kings. But on the very next hand he ran queens into Dvoress’ aces and this time all his chips went to the Canadian.

Satubaev took $133,000 for eighth.

Shyngis Satubaev was first out from the final

Dylan Linde had endured a difficult trip to Monte Carlo, with no cashes before this one. (Don’t worry, there are plenty of players that endure that kind of run. Variance in tournament poker is a terrible thing.)

While it’s doubtful whether this tournament could provide a complete trip-saver, it’s always good to make a final — but Linde’s tournament ended in seventh. This was another case of aces cracked. Nacho Barbero limped, Linde raised with AhAd6sTc and Barbero called.

The flop might have seemed innocuous at first glance, but there was danger lurking. It was 2h4h3s. Linde moved in, at least blocking the nut flush draw and the bottom end of the straight. But Barbero called with 5c6c3d6d and his flopped straight stayed good.

Linde won $171,000.

Dylan Linde picked up a cash in the final event

Mads Amot decided to come to Monte Carlo for his first Triton event this week and played just the PLO events. The $30K Bounty didn’t work out for the Norwegian, but here he was at this final justifying his trip.

He was another to curse the sight of Nacho Barbero, however, as Barbero flopped another straight with Tc7d6c8d on a flop of 8c5d4c.

Amot’s pocket queens were already defeated, but Barbero ended up with a boat after the 7c turn and 8s river.

Amot had to make do with $216,000 for sixth.

Mads Amot’s trip to Monte Carlo was worth it in the end

Keith Lehr is another player for whom the Triton Series is quickly becoming something of a home away from home. The American businessman accepted an invitation to play the $250K in London this year, and subsequently received and accepted another one to play the $200K here in Monte Carlo.

Neither of those invitational tournaments worked for him, but he cashed a PLO tournament in London and here he was again with his deepest run yet.

Lehr made it to fifth, but couldn’t make it any further. He ended up being knocked out with three aces in his hand — not quite such a good thing in Omaha as it might seem. His AhAcAs9d ended up as only a pair of aces after a run-out of KcQd7dTd9s. Meanwhile Chris Parker and Danny Tang both had a straight.

Lehr took $277,000 but seems likely to return to the Triton Series for more.

Keith Lehr lands another PLO cash

Parker, however, was the next man out. The British player was yet another Triton first timer here in Monte Carlo, and had played two events before this one. Those were whiffs, but he had made this one stick and he’d been chip leader for periods today.

But Dvoress was now the man to beat, and Parker couldn’t do so in a big pot that ended the latter’s tournament. Dvoress had AhAdJc6d and Parker AsKhJd4c.

All the money went in after a flop of AcKd7d, where Parker had top two and Dvoress had a set. It was a rough way to end for Parker, but his $344,000 payout was three times his previous tournament scores combined.

Chris Parker tripled documented lifetime poker earnings

So it was that three Triton titans remained: Dvoress, Tang and Barbero. The latter led, but Tang doubled up to get back in contention, and that left Barbero most under threat.

Barbero had actually asked tournament officials to tinker with the schedule of the $25K Turbo taking place in the same room to potentially allow him time to register, should he be eliminated from the $50K. But by the time he was actually put at liberty, the turbo was on the bubble, with registration long closed.

Barbero’s elimination hand came in a four-bet pre-flop pot, with Barbero’s As9c8c8s losing out to Dvoress’ AcKdJs6c.

Barbero this time had to settle for $439,000 — but at least didn’t lose heads-up yet again.

Nacho Barbero made yet another final table

That left the two Dans heads up: Tang versus Dvoress, both of whom were at their second PLO final in as many days. Chip stacks were fairly even, but stacks were short. This could go either way still.

But those aces just kept on coming out. They landed in Tang’s hand — AcAs5s8c — and the double-paired aces was plenty good enough to call after Dvoress five-bet shoved with QsJcJh9h.

“Hold!” Tang shouted, and hold it did, giving Tang more than 60 big blinds to Dvoress’ seven.

“Da-nny Tang! Da-nny Tang!” chanted Kiat Lee and Punnat Punsri as they answered the bat signal to come to the tournament room to watch another Tang show. They immediately learned the news that their man had doubled, and took their seats in the stands to watch it all play out.

Dvoress doubled up fairly quickly with a flush. He then doubled once again with a full house. And all of a sudden the stacks were even.

The heads-up duel from this point was conducted in precisely the way you would expect from players as skilled as these. They kept pots small and tried to gently out-manouevre one another.

But Dvoress had the momentum and the prevailing wind blew the chips in his direction. When he had ground Tang down to a short stack, they got it in on a flop of 7s8s8d. Tang had Ac8sQcTs but Dvoress was ahead with 8h4d6d5s.

The 3c turn and 9h river couldn’t come to Tang’s rescue. And the title belonged to Dvoress.

Dan Dvoress allows himself a smile

RESULTS

Event #12 – $50,000 PLO
Dates:November 3-4, 2023
Entries: 72 (inc. 29 re-entries)
Prize pool: $3,600,000

1 – Dan Dvoress, Canada – $956,000
2 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – $664,000
3 – Nacho Barbero, Argentina – $439,000
4 – Chris Parker, UK – $344,000
5 – Keith Lehr, USA – $277,000
6 – Mads Amot, Norway – $216,000
7 – Dylan Linde, USA – $171,000
8 – Shyngis Satubaev, Kazakhstan – $133,000

9 – Iakov Onuchin, Russia – $101,000
10 – Dylan Weisman, USA – $77,500
11 – Tom-Aksel Bedell, Norway – $77,500
12 – Eelis Parssinen, Finland – $72,000
13 – Rajamurthy Kabeelan, Malaysia – $72,000

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive