KOON MAKES IT FOUR AFTER DOWNING DVORESS FOR €1.75M SHORT DECK PAYDAY IN MADRID

A new four-time champion: Jason Koon!

By the incredibly high standards they set for themselves, this had been a disappointing trip to Triton Madrid for Jason Koon and Daniel Dvoress. Both men had played everything and cashed twice each — a fourth and a sixth for Dvoress, and two sixth places for Koon. For two of the game’s most decorated elite, it was a relatively poor return.

But you’re never out of it on the Triton Series until the very last card is dealt, and Koon and Dvoress managed to navigate their way to the last two places in the €150K One Bullet Short Deck event on the festival’s closing day, where they were each guaranteed a payday of more than €1.1 million.

They squared off — friend vs. friend; exceptional talent vs. exceptional talent — and played to decide who would be the champion. A first for Dvoress or a fourth for Koon? A pair of black aces in Koon’s hand decided that.

“I get my four-time badge!” Koon said after the dealer had secured it in his favour. “I was denied that twice and I was upset that Mikita [Badziakouski] had it. But I got that now.” He’s right. Koon has 19 Triton cashes and now a fourth win, and this one came with a prize of €1,750,000.

It was the biggest buy-in of all events on this long and draining festival, and landed the Triton Ambassador another massive prize to take back to his wife and young son, Calum.

“Maybe it’s real,” Koon said when asked whether “baby run-good” was responsible for this result. “He’s been here eight months and we’ve won a bracelet and a Triton title. Maybe there’s something to it.”

He added that he was looking forward to getting home with the family, describing himself as “deliriously tired, exhausted.” He added: “But this is what we’re here for.” He paid tribute too to his final table opponents, all of whom are Koon’s buddies and “great competitors”.

He said it presented some demanding positions, and described how he had been both on easy street and against the wall, and how happy he was to have navigated past the sharks.

Elation with Jason Koon

“It was a really grindy final table,” Koon told Ali Nejad. “Everything was smooth sailing, and I was in a really good situation where I got to put tons of pressure on the short stacks. I was up against three guys who understand ICM really, really well, so it wasn’t one of these lotteries where you’re guessing what you think your opponent is going to do.

“I was feeling really good about the situation that was presented, but then I happened to lose a couple of unfortunate all-ins. But then I got lucky with the queen-jack suited against the kings and made a bunch of big hands to close the thing out.”

He could not contain both relief and delight.

As for Dvoress, he took €1.19 million, after another stellar performance.

Daniel Dvoress defeated heads-up

FINAL DAY ACTION

Day 2 began with the closing of the registration desk, but there was still time for last night’s newly-crowned Main Event champion Stephen Chidwick to sneak in, among others, and bring the number of entries up to 34 (including 10 re-entries). That put €5.1 million in the prize pool and offered those two seven-figure prizes at the top.

It quickly became apparent that Chidwick wouldn’t be winning one of them. He lost his stack quickly. And more gradually, dreams also died for Phil Ivey, Paul Phua, Michael Soyza, Tom Dwan and Mikita Badziakouski, among others.

When seven were left, they gathered around a final table, and took a photo, but only six were due to be paid. It meant that one of the following would be leaving with nothing, despite smiles around the table.

The unofficial final table (l-r): Sam Greenwood, Seth Daview, Jason Koon, Lun Lookn, Isaac Haxton, Daniel Dvoress, Dan Cates.

It’s been a wretched trip to Madrid for Malaysia’s Lun Loon too, and proceedings in Casino Gran Via today won’t have made him feel much better. Loon had one of the biggest stacks in the early stages of the day, but went on a steady decline as the bubble drew closer.

His tournament ended in the very worst spot: seventh, with six to be paid. His QdJd lost to Daniel Dvoress’ aces and Loon left with nothing.

A wry smile from the bubble boy Lun Loon

Poker fans have not seen very much of Dan Cates this week, even though he has been in Madrid from the start of the event. Cates has been rumoured to have been in the cash game room for most of the time, only making the briefest of appearances at the tournament tables.

But this big buy-in short deck event ushered him out of exile last night, and he was still playing through the bubble. “Still playing” meant still also chattering away incessantly, sometimes to his opponents, sometimes to people watching the live stream and sometimes to himself. He was also, of course, playing his usual flawless game.

However, with only a handful of antes just after the bubble burst, Ike Haxton was able to trap him. Haxton limped with aces and Cates moved in with AsTd. The aces held and Cates was out in sixth, earning €360,000.

A rare tournament appearance ended in a cash for Dan Cates

Prior to arriving in Madrid, Seth Davies was one of those unfortunate players on the elite circuit who had never cashed on the Triton Series. It was mysterious how this was so, and Davies was able to remedy it quickly this week, cashing in both the €75K NLHE and the €100K Short Deck Main Event.

He made it three in this €150K tournament, but was not able to progress past fifth this time. His day had hit its high point early on, when he managed to double through Elton Tsang with pocket sixes, and his stack barely fluctuated for a long period after that. But 2.1 million went in the middle, calling Jason Koon’s shove, when Davies had AcKc. Koon’s KdKh had Davies strangled and the board offered no help.

Davies’ run this time earned him another €460,000.

Seth Davies hits the rail

The final six players had represented some of North America’s finest poker talents, and that was still true, of course, even after Cates and Davies’ eliminations. Now it was more balanced, though, with two Canadians — Daniel Dvoress and Sam Greenwood — facing off against two Americans — Ike Haxton and Jason Koon.

Dvoress suddenly found himself in an incredible spot three-handed, where he had the covering stack and the chance to knock out both Haxton and Greenwood when all three were all-in. As it turned out, Haxton managed to survive and find a triple up, while Dvoress eliminated his countryman Greenwood.

They got all their chips in with KcJd for Haxton, AhJh for Dvoress and AcQd for Greenwood. But the best pre-flop hand ended up third after a run-out of KhJc7s6h9d.

Greenwood has been so near but yet so far a lot this week in Madrid, and the €580,000 he took for fourth here is another example.

Sam Greenwood with an expression that tells its own story

Haxton was now in a much better position than he had been previously, and it got even better for him when he doubled through Koon shortly after. Haxton’s Ac6c ran down Koon’s pocket queens when an ace came on the river.

Koon’s frustration only grew when Dvoress managed the same doubling trick through the chip leader soon after, Dvoress’s JdTs beating Koon’s AdQd. That put Dvoress into the lead and left Koon the short stack and needing a double. He got it very quickly, through Haxton, with QhJh cracking Haxton’s kings.

Haxton sat on that short stack for a while, getting his chips in every now and again, but either getting no customers or chopping pots. It couldn’t last forever, however, and Haxton did indeed become the next out, losing with Ah8h to Dvoress’ AdQd. The gods of short deck, more cruel even than the regular poker gods, gave Haxton an eight on the flop, but Dvoress a queen on the river.

Haxton won €760,000 for this one, but there was a €400K jump now for the heads-up players.

Isaac Haxton raps the table before leaving

They took a quick break before reconvening for the heads-up, with Dvoress’s 8.8 million ahead of Koon’s 4.8 million. There were still 140 antes between them, but that’s not a massive amount in short deck.

Even so, they did not look at any numbers. They both seemed content to play it out, and so knuckled down to do just that.

Jason Koon and Daniel Dvoress

The early exchanges were fairly benign, but then there was a sudden explosion and a huge double for Koon. He had AhKc against Dvoress’ KdQc and it stayed good. That put Koon up to the dizzy heights of 11 million, and in sight again of the title.

Not long later, he found those AsAc and Dvoress had QsTh. The aces held and the two went to look for their million-plus cheques.

That brought the curtain down on Triton Madrid. What a ride…

Triton Madrid – Event 13
€150,000 Short Deck One Bullet


Dates: May 24-25, 2022
Entries: 34 (inc. 10 re-entries)
Prize pool: €5,100,000

1 – Jason Koon, USA – €1,750,000
2 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada – €1,190,000
3 – Isaac Haxton, USA – €760,000
4 – Sam Greenwood, Canada – €580,000
5 – Seth Davies, USA – €460,000
6 – Dan Cates, USA – €360,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

CALM AND CONFIDENT CHIDWICK REPELS TONY G TO WIN SHORT DECK IN MADRID AND €1.8M

Stephen Chidwick poses with his haul of goodies

Arguably the best player in modern poker without a Triton Series title remedied the situation in dramatic fashion on Tuesday night as Stephen Chidwick, the online phenom turned high-stakes tournament boss, won the €100K Short Deck Main Event in Madrid. To do so, Chidwick had to battle past Tony Guoga (aka Tony G) heads up to claim a €1.8 million first prize.

“It feels incredible,” Chidwick said. “Such a big event. It feels amazing.”

Chidwick had been heads-up once before this week, taking the largest slice of a two-way chop with Michael Addamo, before being defeated with just the trophy and title on the line. But Chidwick made no mistake at the final table in this huge Main Event, overcoming an early blow that looked like scuppering his chances, to refocus, rebuild and then remain immune to the particular challenges of playing Guoga heads up.

His prize is that enormous pay-check, of course, plus the exclusive Jacob & Co timepiece, offered only to Main Event champions. (“Beautiful,” Chidwick said.) He also picks up a huge number of Player of the Year points, putting him into the overall lead.

These two men had played what had seemed like a tournament-defining pot within the first hour or so of play beginning, back before even the bubble had burst. In that one, Guoga cracked Chidwick’s aces with pocket queens and scored an enormous double up. It allowed Guoga all the privileges of a monster stack for the vast majority of the day, and forced Chidwick back on the ropes.

But when the two became reacquainted after everyone else had departed, Chidwick got the better of the old foe. Guoga, looking for a second career Triton title, banked €1.305 million for second. He had also had to bounce back from a micro-stack at one point to put himself in contention again.

A frustrated Tony G

There couldn’t really be a starker contrast between the table demeanour of these last two players. Chidwick is silent, focused and menacing; Guoga is no less of a tyrant, but does everything with more of a flourish, a rub-down and with the volume turned up. Guoga tried all his tricks at the final table, cracking wise, loudly ordering expensive drinks, attempting to get under Chidwick’s skin.

But the British player could not be shifted and would not be beaten. The only amazing thing is that it has taken Chidwick so long to lift a trophy, but he has a third, a second and now a first-place finish from this trip alone. And the floodgates could be about to open.

“It was a super long final table and I was short for a lot of it,” Chidwick said. “I lost count of the all-ins I won.” But he added that he was thrilled to win finally, especially on such a prestigious tour, and vowed only to “keep playing” and expressed a desire “just to get better”.

Champion Stephen Chidwick!

FINAL STAGES ACTION

The bubble burst when Webster Lim went out in ninth — read the bubble recap here — but the official table only allowed seven players. So the tournament progressed on for a little while on two four-handed tables. That was until Michael Soyza was knocked out in eighth, losing the last of his chips to Stephen Chidwick.

Soyza shipped a few to Danny Tang in a previous hand, and then open-pushed the hijack with As9s, for 665,000 (27 antes). Chidwick was in the hijack with TdTc and re-shoved for 1.125 million. That persuaded Richard Yong to fold his JhQh.

Michael Soyza cashed, but fell short of the final

The board would have smashed Yong. It came 8hQc7hQs7c. But Yong was irrelevant, and it missed Soyza. “GG boys,” Soyza said as he walked away, looking for €240,000. That’s his third cash of this trip to Madrid.

They finally now consolidated around a final table and Tony G, after his massive pre-bubble hand against Chidwick, still held a sizeable chip lead.

The stacks at the start of the official final were as follows:

Tony G – 5,025,000 (201 antes)
Mikita Badziakouski – 3,205,000 (128 antes)
Richard Yong – 2,880,000 (115 antes)
Danny Tang – 2,770,000 (111 antes)
Stephen Chidwick – 1,865,000 (75 antes)
Isaac Haxton – 1,485,000 (59 antes)
Seth Davies – 770,000 (31 antes)

Antes: 25K/50K

Short deck Main Event final table (clockwise from back left): Isaac Haxton, Richard Yong, Danny Tang, Tony G, Seth Davies, Mikita Badziakouski, Stephen Chidwick.

Seth Davies was the shortest stack and was obviously looking to get his chips in. The real problem with short deck, however, that even if you find the perfect spot, you never really have as much equity as you would probably like.

Here’s an example: Davies had AdKh and was looking at a flop of AcKs9c in a single raised pot. Mikita Badziakouski made a bet of 175,000 and Davies moved in for his last 555,000.

Badziakouski called with a dominated AhQh, but the turn and river were JcTd and that was a straight for Badziakouski. Davies was dust, but won €305,000.

The end of Seth Davies

Ever since the pre-bubble double up, things had been pretty easy for Tony G. His tracking line was pretty much flat, and any pronounced jerks were in the upward direction. He beat Danny Tang out of a pot with aces over ace-king and crept further upward — until he was forced to pay out Yong in full when the Triton co-founder turned a full house with KsQh. This wasn’t a loose call by Guoga, though. He also had a full house with his KdJs.

It pegged Guoga back a small amount, keeping him in sight of the chasing pack, now led by Yong.

By contrast to some of the leaders’ tracking graphs, Isaac Haxton’s suggested someone in need of a defibrillator. He was up, down, up and then down again, this final time being permanent. After Haxton opened pre-flop with QhJd, from a stack of around 2 million, Yong put it all-in, covering the American’s stack.

Haxton called and saw that Yong had him dominated with AdQd. Haxton flopped a gutshot, but missed it, and with that his tournament was done. Haxton’s third cash of the series earned him €380,000.

Isaac Haxton’s last stand

As players departed, the rich got richer and the smaller stacked — Tang and Chidwick, in particular — had to look for spots to either double or leave. When they clashed against one another, it was always likely to prove terminal for the loser. They did indeed butt heads, with Chidwick’s KsQs flopping a straight to beat Tang’s QhQd and though Tang had the marginally bigger stack, and doubled it quickly afterwards, Tang was knocked out on the first hand back from the dinner break.

This time his pocket jacks lost to Badziakouski’s AhQc and Tang’s tournament ended with a visit to the payout desk looking for €490,000. Tang has cashed four times this trip, and leapt almost immediately into the €150K event, looking for No 5. (He was sat next to Haxton.)

Danny Tang couldn’t double for a second time

All established patterns continued for the next level or so, where Tony G was able to raise frequently and take pots uncontested, while Chidwick had to navigate a minefield with his tiny stack and somehow find a way to grow it. He did exactly that in two major pots, doubling up first through Yong and then through Guoga, and that gave him 40 antes. That was roughly the same as Yong, so the table now split down the middle: Yong and Chidwick both equally short, and Badziakouski and Guoga equally much bigger.

There’s frankly not much point attempting to explain what happened next. Guoga began a steep downward slide, his magic touch having seemingly deserted him. Having been so dominant, he now spent a small amount of time as the tournament short stack. However, his fortunes turned back just as quickly, and in the space of about 15 minutes he was chip leading again, ruining the prospects of Yong in the process.

Tony G in formidable form

Guoga doubled through Chidwick, with Kd9s beating JsTs. And then he doubled through Yong, with KcKh beating AdQd.

The next time those two got their chips in, Guoga had Jh8h against Yong’s Ad8d and Guoga won that too. And that was the end for Yong, who took €640,000 for fourth.

Yong already had one second place finish from his Triton Madrid visit, and now had to make do with fourth as his search for a second title continues.

Another deep run for Triton co-founder Richard Yong

So what of Badziakouski? The Belarusian master had mostly taken a back seat in this short-handed insanity, but he doubled up Yong shortly before his elimination (Ah7h losing to AsKc) and he then lost a big one to Chidwick, shortly after they went three-handed.

Chidwick had Ac9s to Badziakouski’s KcJc. Badziakouski flopped a king, but Chidwick rivered an ace and a flush, to win it two ways. It left Badziakouski very, very short and his chips went in with QsTd, which ended up inferior to Guoga’s Ac6c. Badziakouski, with four titles already to his name, will have to wait for number five. He took €840,000 for third.

Mikita Badziakouski will have to wait for title No 5

And so there they were, heads-up, with Chidwick now in the last two for the second time. He previously banked €1.2 million after chopping Event #7 with Addamo, and he was now guaranteed another €1.3 million, at least. As for Guoga, he was eyeing a second Triton success, having won in Rozvadov in 2019.

Guoga had the chip lead again — 11.15 million (112 antes) to Chidwick’s 6.85 million (69 antes) — and we settled in for the long haul. “Tune in to Triton Poker for the greatest heads-up battle!” Guoga bellowed to the cameras.

The first meaningful pot heads up was a huge double for Chidwick. It went call, shove (from Guoga) and call from Chidwick pre-flop, with Chidwick’s 5.2 million stack effective. Chidwick was in bother with KsQs to Guoga’s AdKd, but rivered a queen to double.

Stephen Chidwick and Tony Guoga heads up

It was small ball from there, with Guogo nibbling back at Chidwick, and once turning down the oppotunity to gamble for it after Chidwick shoved pre-flop. “You’re too good to go all in,” Guogo jibed, looking for info. “You’re probably a very nice guy inside.”

Chidwick didn’t blink and Guogo folded that one.

Not long later, he did get it all-in, however. Both players had found big aces — AsQd for Chidwick and AdJs for Guoga. And despite a lot of outdraws in previous pots, this one ran pure.

That was it. Chidwick was the champion.

Triton Madrid – Event 12
€100,000 Short Deck Ante Only


Dates: May 23-24, 2022
Entries: 60 (inc. 28 re-entries)
Prize pool: €6,000,000

1 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – €1,800,000
2 – Tony Guoga, Lithuania – €1,305,000
3 – Mikita Badziakouski, Belarus – €840,000
4 – Richard Yong, Malaysia – €640,000
5 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – €490,000
6 – Isaac Haxton, USA – €380,000
7 – Seth Davies, USA – €305,000
8 – Michael Soyza, Malaysia – €240,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

SHORT DECK BUBBLE BURSTS AMID TENSION AND SILENCE IN MADRID

Another bubble for the unfortunate Webster Lim

The stereotypical short-deck hold’em hand features wild bets driven by pure speculation, then unlikely suck-outs, celebration and commiseration. But honestly, it’s not always like that.

Today at Triton Madrid, they’re playing the €100K Short Deck Main Event, where there’s €6 million in the prize pool and €1.8 million up top. But first there was the matter of a €240K bubble — and that meant play for the opening couple of levels took place in library-like silence, with pots kept mostly small as only nerves ratcheted up.

There were notable exceptions. On the very first hand of the day, Chris Brewer lost the last of his stack in a pot worth 2.8 million: QhQc losing to Stephen Chidwick’s AcKh. And then Jason Koon, the overnight short stack, was out with AhJd beaten by Isaac Haxton’s pocket queens.

Tony Guoga took the chip lead

The volume spiked fairly rapidly a few orbits after that, however, when Tony G doubled into the chip lead. Guoga limp-called Chidwick’s raise, and the pair saw the 6cQc9h flop. Guoga checked and Chidwick moved in, his 2.3 million covering Guoga’s stack by about 1 million.

Guoga called and showed his pocket queens. Chidwick’s pocket aces were in trouble, and didn’t get any help.

“Run the aces down, beat the pros,” a triumphant Guoga explained, prowling between the two tables. Chidwick shipped the chips over and assumed the duties of a short stack.

Even Guoga quietened down a little during the next hour or so as Phil Ivey silently departed. Guoga actually knocked him out, with Kh9h beating Ivey’s Jh9d, and Seth Davies, with QhQc also losing a chunk in a three-way pot. The board was 7h6h6d8cKc, with the river king sealing it.

Phil Ivey silently departed

Then Bjorn Li, who had finished in second in a previous short-deck event, headed out in 10th. All the eliminations to this point had come from the same table, but Richard Yong sent Li packing from the other table, with AcKd to Li’s KsQh.

That took nine players on to the stone bubble, and some difficult tournament administration for the floor staff. One table had five players and the other had four, but they would not combine until they were down to seven (and into the money). At this stage, they would play hand-for-hand, but they also had to be prepared to balance the tables.

Luca Vivaldi, the Triton tournament director, has introduced a number of innovations to make sure these kinds of situations are as fair as possible in these high-stakes tournaments, and here was another. After one round of play on the five-handed table (i.e., five hands) a player would be balanced from that table, on to the four-handed table. But in order that players didn’t adjust their play knowing they were about to be moved from a table, this balancing would only take place after a random number of subsequent hands.

The floor staff performed a random draw from one to five, out of the players’ sight, and after that many more hands, the under-the-gun player was due to move tables. If hand-for-hand went on for another five hands, then the process would repeat and a player would come back from the five-handed table onto the four-handed one. Repeat, repeat, like a tennis ball, for as long as it took.

So, first they needed to play five hands and, during this period, Isaac Haxton moved all in from the cutoff and pinched Mikita Badziakouski’s button ante. But Badziakouski pushed all-in on both the next two hands, earning it back from Chidwick and Seth Davies.

While they still awaited the result of the balancing lottery, Chidick and Badzkiakouski then played through the streets on a limped pot, with Chidwick’s pair of jacks winning it. “Nut low,” Badziakouski declared on the checked river.

They had played eight hands on the five-handed table when action paused because Webster Lim was all in on the feature table. He had been called by Yong. Lim, all-in for 620K or 25 antes, had QdJd and Yong had AhQc.

Lim picked up a flush draw on the turn, but missed everything and was out in ninth. It was the first all-in call of the bubble period and ended in elimination. That’s Lim’s second bubble of this stop, but he has also won an event, so is still going to come away from Madrid happy.

Webster Lim struggles to contain the disappointment

As are the other eight players, all now in the money in this €100K event. That’s a nice place to be.

Triton Madrid – Event 12
€100,000 Short Deck Ante Only


Dates: May 23-24, 2022
Entries: 60 (inc. 28 re-entries)
Prize pool: €6,000,000

1 – €1,800,000
2 – €1,305,000
3 – €840,000
4 – €640,000
5 – €490,000
6 – €380,000
7 – €305,000
8 – €240,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

BADZIAKOUSKI IN POLE POSITION IN SHORT DECK MAIN EVENT, EYEING NO. 5

Can Mikita Badiakouski make it five?

There may only be two days remaining of Triton Madrid 2022, but there are still three tournaments to conclude. Based on what we saw today, each of them will be a monster.

After Tom Dwan’s quick-fire win in the PLO earlier, short-deck hold’em took over again at Casino Gran Via, specifically the €100K Short Deck Main Event. They played through 10 levels today and it was frantic stuff, with bullets ricocheting around the place like a Wild West saloon.

There were 60 entries, including 28 re-entries, which means a prize pool of an even €6 million. The winner of this one is due to get €1.8 million, and even the runner-up will become a consolation millionaire. Second place gets €1.305 million.

When the bags came out tonight, there were 13 players remaining, led by Mikita Badziakouski. Again. The Belarusian already has one title from this Triton Madrid stop, his fourth overall, and he is a long way clear at the top of the counts tonight. He has 3.127 million and his closest challenger, Tony G, has 1.737 million.

The trail of the departed is long a glittering: Mike Watson, Sam Greenwood, Elton Tsang, Rui Cao and Tom Dwan were among those who fired and missed. There was also a first tournament appearance in Madrid for Dan Cates, but there was no miracle for him. He’s been hanging out in the cash-game area since he’s been here, and one suspects he headed straight back there after his cameo today.

A short day for Dan Cates

It’s worth also flagging the appearance in another Day 2 of Richard Yong, having another attempt at matching his Triton co-founder Paul Phua’s Madrid victory. The two players who finished heads up in the previous short deck event, Webster Lim and Bjorn Li, are also both still alive in this one.

And also note Stephen Chidwick, Danny Tang, Chris Brewer and Ike Haxton, who are all in the top eight of the Player of the Year race. Michael Addamo, who is top of that leader board, does not play short deck, so his lead is vulnerable.

Richard Yong still in with a shout of short deck triumph

The big points are awarded tomorrow, along with the big money, so keep an eye on the app and the stream as it plays out.

Here are the stacks at this stage:

Mikita Badzkiakouski – 3,127,000
Tony Guoga – 1,703,000
Phil Ivey – 1,669,000
Stephen Chidwick – 1,656,000
Richard Yong – 1,536,000
Isaac Haxton – 1,330,000
Seth Davies – 1,214,000
Bjorn Li – 1,159,000
Danny Tang – 1,148,000
Webster Lim – 1,143,000
Chris Brewer – 1,100,000
Michael Soyza – 803,000
Jason Koon – 373,000

And here’s what they are playing for:

Triton Madrid – Event 12
€100,000 Short Deck Ante Only


Dates: May 23-24, 2022
Entries: 60 (inc. 28 re-entries)
Prize pool: €6,000,000

1 – €1,800,000
2 – €1,305,000
3 – €840,000
4 – €640,000
5 – €490,000
6 – €380,000
7 – €305,000
8 – €240,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

DWAN, ON CRUISE CONTROL, TAKES MAIDEN TRITON TITLE IN MADRID

Champion at last, Tom Dwan!

Triton Poker Ambassador Tom Dwan has his first title on the series where he holds legendary status already — bludgeoning through the €25K PLO field in Madrid to win €290,000.

It was a clinical display from Dwan, 35, who led the field from the mid-point of Day 1 and never relinquished it through a quick-fire final table. They went from eight players, through the bubble, and all the way to a champion in two-and-a-half hours.

That was due to Dwan’s formidable talents as a pot limit Omaha player. He never gave any of his opponents any chance to settle, and enjoyed the run of the cards as well. He was able to blast past opponents including his fellow online nosebleed superstar Patrik Antonius, and then ran over Jeremy Ausmus heads-up.

“It was cool,” Dwan said. “Honestly, it was fun to play because I had a big stack, and with this kind of structure you get to get away with a lot…That’s the fun kind of poker, and then every time I got called, I just got there. So that was fun.”

Never has a high-stakes tournament win seemed so easy. Never has a winner seemed so comfortable. After six previous cashes on the Triton Series, Dwan’s picture will now also appear on the board of champions.

Ali Nejad described Dwan’s performance as like a “hot knife through butter” and asked Dwan how he managed it. “Most of it was run-good,” Dwan said, but added that he thought some people were playing too tight from about 12 players onward.

Dwan also said how content he was playing on the Triton Series. “There’s a warm vibe, a warmer atmosphere,” he said. “It’s pretty chill.”

An unflustered Dwan is a joy to watch, and repeats of this final will be worth looking at if you’re looking for an entirely pure run to a major title.

Tom Dwan on cruise control

FINAL DAY ACTION

The day began with eight players, but the doom-filled knowledge that only six would be paid. It was therefore an exercise in attempting to look unflustered by the looming sight of a €60,000 bubble, particularly for Jeff Gross, Paul Phua and Tom-Aksel Bedell, whose smaller stacks put them most under threat.

PLO Final Table (l-r): Tom-Aksel Bedell, Filip Lovric, Jeremy Ausmus, Elton Tsang, Tom Dwan, Patrik Antonius.

DAY 2 STARTING STACKS

Tom Dwan, USA – 3,240,000
Jeremy Ausmus, USA – 1,980,000
Patrik Antonius, Finland – 1,795,000
Filip Lovric, Sweden – 960,000
Elton Tsang, Hong Kong – 660,000
Tom-Aksel Bedell, Norway – 595,000
Paul Phua, Malaysia – 550,000
Jeff Gross – 390,000

Gross had stepped out of the commentary booth to play this one, and was making his first appearance at the tables on the Triton Series. He certainly seemed to be enjoying himself, but he couldn’t cap it with a debut win. He became the first elimination of the day, losing with AhQhJh4s to Dwan’s QsTd8h5d, all-in pre-flop.

Jeff Gross narrowly missed out on the money

Dwan ended up pairing his five on a board that didn’t really connect with either of them, and Gross departed.

Nobody on the Triton Series loves poker more than Phua. He set the whole thing up, after all, because of his insatiable appetite for the game. We’ve talked before about his incredible short-stack play, but even he couldn’t navigate his way into the money in this tournament. He had only three big blinds and got them in with AdKc6c2d. Antonius called with AhKhJs9h and although those hands looked pretty similar, Antonius flopped a nine to expose their differences.

Paul Phua became the bubble boy

Phua chuckled his way off the tournament stage, and ambled through the tournament room stating, “Bubble boy!” to everybody, whether or not they asked. He’ll be back for the short-deck Main Event. No doubt about that.

Shortly before Phua’s elimination, Bedell had managed a double up through Dwan, which not only helped him through the bubble, it also pushed him at least one more spot up the ladder.

His cause was also helped by Elton Tsang becoming the next man out: Tsang pushed over Dwan’s open with AcKdKhJs. Dwan called with TsTd7d5h and the board of 7h7c6c9d8c gave Dwan a straight.

The end of Elton Tsang

Tsang’s kings were cracked and he picked up €60,000.

That was the first explosion in a rapid-fire period of play, which took us down to five, then four, then three and two players before the day was 90 minutes old.

Next out was Filip Lovric, who had the misfortune to find a big pocket pair in the small blind, when Ausmus had a bigger pair in the big blind. Dwan started this hand, opening to 210,000, and that was enough to prompt Lovric to jam for 465,000 with QdQhTd3h.

Filip Lovric, right, hits the rail

Ausmus looked down at the very pretty double-suited KsKh3s2h and also moved all-in, which persuaded Dwan out of it.

Lovric picked up a straight draw on the flop, but whiffed turn and river. His first appearance on the Triton Series earned him €76,500.

Fans of the online nosebleed cash games will have been licking their lips when first seeing this final table line-up as it gave the clear potential of an Antonius v Dwan heads-up duel. Those old adversaries have played thousands of hands against one another through the years, and the prospect of seeing a few more on the Triton live stream was very exciting.

Tom Dwan eyes Patrik Antonius

The problem was, Dwan had hit this particularly purple patch of form in this tournament, and was managing to win pretty much every pot he entered, including a huge showdown with Antonius when there were still four of them at the table.

With Dwan in the big blind, and 770,000 in his stack, Antonius opened to 280,000 under the gun. Dwan called. The flop was 8s5sAh and Dwan bet enough to put Antonius all-in. Antonius called.

Antonius had bottom two pair with his KcQc8h5h, and Dwan had a flush draw with his JsTs7h2d. The 2s on the turn hit Dwan, and Antonius couldn’t fill up on the river.

Patrik Antonius out in fifth

Antonius was out in fourth for €97,500, missing out on that heads-up duel with Dwan.

With Dwan seemingly unimpeachable, it was now down to Ausmus and Bedell to determine which one would try to take down Dwan in the final confrontation. Bedell had seemed like a huge underdog at the start of the day, but was still sticking around.

However, he ended up becoming the next player crushed by the Dwan juggernaut, in another pot where the inferior pre-flop holding came good. Dwan raised with his Td8h6h5c and Bedell called with his AcQs5h3h. That left him only 150K behind, two big blinds, but he didn’t see reason to risk it all yet.

Salute Tom-Aksel Bedell and his third-place finish

After the 7h2s6s flop, Dwan bet all the draws and Bedell put the rest of his chips in. Turn and river came 4s and 3s, and Dwan’s straight was one pip bigger than Bedell’s.

Bedell won €127,000 for third, his second cash in only his third Triton event. “Nice playing with you,” Ausmus and Dwan both echoed, as they shook Bedell’s hand.

The heads-up battle was thus decided: two Americans would go at it. Dwan had a more than three-to-one advantage — it was 2.5 million to Ausmus, 7.7 million to Dwan — but there were enough blinds in play to make it interesting. They were still in the 40K/80K level.

Ausmus, making his debut on the Triton Series in Madrid, won a couple of early pots to narrow the gap slightly, but Dwan then won pretty much everything else. His tracking graph, on the Triton Poker Plus app was a near enough straight upward slope.

Ausmus had only about 10 big blinds when they played the final hand. Dwan raised to 300,000 with QdQsJd3c and Ausmus called with 9d5s4d3h.

After the Jh8d3d flop, Ausmus moved in with his bottom pair and diamond draw, but Dwan called with an overpair and a better draw (as well as a three) and the 8s turn followed by the Kh river were blanks.

Jeremy Ausmus couldn’t get anything going against Dwan heads-up

Ausmus won €199,000, which was his second cash of his trip to Madrid, but Dwan was the deserving champ. It was all done and dusted by 2.30pm local time — just in time for the short-deck Main Event, a tournament Dwan also has his eye on.

“I like playing tournaments,” he said. “It’s nice not to be bummed out from not winning. Hopefully I’ll be up here again in a day or two.”

Triton Madrid – Event 11
€25,000 Pot Limit Omaha


Dates: May 22-23, 2022
Entries: 34 (inc. 9 re-entries)
Prize pool: €850,000

1 – Tom Dwan, USA – €290,000
2 – Jeremy Ausmus, USA – €199,000
3 – Tom-Aksel Bedell, Norway – €127,000
4 – Patrik Antonius, Finland – €97,500
5 – Filip Lovric, Sweden – €76,500
6 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong – €60,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

DWAN BACK TO HIS BEST TO LEADS LAST EIGHT AS PLO COMES TO MADRID

Tom Dwan leads his old adversaries in the PLO

While most of the attention in the Casino Gran Via tournament room was focused on the Main Event this afternoon, there was also the not-insignificant matter of a PLO event getting started.

No one denies that Triton players tend to favour no limit hold’em and short deck, but the four-card game also holds a good degree of fascination for many high stakes players. This tournament, with a €25,000 buy-in, attracted 34 entries, including 10 re-entries, which meant €850,000 in the prize pool.

The schedule was to play to the final table tonight, and that’s exactly what happened — although the eight players remaining are not yet guaranteed to cash. They will return tomorrow knowing that two will depart before the bubble is burst. After that, it’s a €60K payday minimum.

The field was lean but very tough. At one stage, Erik Seidel, Phil Ivey and Paul Phua sat in a line, with Patrik Antonius at the other end of the same table. With Tom Dwan also in the field, there were echoes of those old nosebleed PLO games online, where Dwan and Ivey and Antonius and a few others used to flay each other for regular six-figure pots.

Erik Seidel, Phil Ivey and Paul Phua: Three greats in a row

There was no room on the final day for Ivey. He bust in 10th to Dwan — and that was the pot that put Dwan on top of the counts at the halfway stage. The Triton Poker Ambassador was last seen in the tournament room late last night, playing a Triton staff sit n go. No word on how he made out in that one, but he was back to his best at the “real” tables today, and bagged 3.24 million, more than 1 million more than his closest rival.

Never count out Antonius, of course, nor Jeremy Ausmus, who make up the top four. Jeff Gross, from the live stream commentary team, is also still battling.

Here’s how they line up at the close of play. The payout schedule is below. Join us tomorrow as they play to a winner.

Tom Dwan, USA – 3,240,000
Jeremy Ausmus, USA – 1,980,000
Patrik Antonius, Finland – 1,795,000
Filip Lovric, Sweden – 960,000
Elton Tsang, Hong Kong – 660,000
Tom-Aksel Bedell, Norway – 595,000
Paul Phua, Malaysia – 550,000
Jeff Gross – 390,000

Triton Madrid – Event 11
€25,000 Pot Limit Omaha


Dates: May 22-23, 2022
Entries: 34 (inc. 9 re-entries)
Prize pool: €850,000

1 – €290,000
2 – €199,000
3 – €127,000
4 – €97,500
5 – €76,500
6 – €60,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

HECKLEN STORMS TO MAIN EVENT TITLE, TAKES €2.17M FOR SECOND TRITON WIN

Champion Henrik Hecklen, with timepiece, champagne and extras after becoming Triton Main Event champ

The formidable Danish tournament crusher Henrik Hecklen is the Triton Series Madrid No Limit Hold’em Main Event champion, emerging from a tense and turbulent final table here at Casino Gran Via to win €2,170,509.

It is the biggest win of the 31-year-old’s career, and came after a heads-up deal with Orpen Kisacikoglu, the UK-based Turkish businessman, whose poker game has come on leaps and bounds over the past few years.

Both heads-up players already had one Triton Series title to their names, so this final battle offered the chance to join the small club of players with two. And Hecklen’s victory means he is also the first player to win the exclusive Jacob & Co timepiece, specially produced by the master jeweller in collaboration with Triton Series.

The final table had long periods where it looked like it might be anybody’s game, with nine players returning overnight and all in with a shout. Hecklen, who started in the middle of the pack, managed to avoid most of the early action by being card dead. Then as the blind levels grew, the stack sizes became very short and each pot seemed crucial.

Henrik Hecklen endured some difficult periods at the start of the day

For all that, the heads-up battle might have lasted a long time. There was still enough money on the table to make it worth playing for, even after a deal, and they had a decent number of blinds between them too. However, a pocket pair versus pocket pair situation — kings versus fours — ended it on the very first hand of heads-up play.

“It was a great final table, fun players to play with,” Hecklen said.

He recalled that he had been down to 20 big blinds at one point, but, like everyone at the table, managed a few double ups in crucial spots. He said he’d been lucky, but certainly wasn’t complaining.

“It’s a great event,” Hecklen said. “I’m definitely going to get drunk, I guess.”

FINAL TABLE ACTION

A long Day 2 had left nine players still in the tournament, with bags of experience between them.

Final nine in the Main Event (clockwise from back left): Bruno Volkmann, Henrik Hecklen, Patrik Antonius, Alfred DeCarolis, Sam Greenwood, Aleksejs Ponakovs, Orpen Kisacikoglu, Sam Grafton, Kevin Paque.

START OF DAY COUNTS

Kevin Paqué, Netherlands – 5,125,000
Sam Grafton, UK – 4,225,000
Aleksejs Ponakovs, Latvia – 3,465,000
Henrick Hecklen, Denmark – 2,855,000
Sam Greenwood, Canada – 1,810,000
Patrik Antonius, Finland – 1,720,000
Bruno Volkmann, Brazil – 1,630,000
Orpen Kisacikoglu, Turkey – 1,505,000
Alfred DeCarolis, USA – 820,000

The first 45 minutes or so of play passed by without significant incident. The short-stacked DeCarolis got his chips in but wasn’t called. And Patrik Antonius also three-bet shoved and received no customers.

Sam Greenwood did the same, three-bet shoving for his last 1.3 million over Paqué’s open, and he definitely would have wanted a customer, sitting with KhKd. Paqué thought about it for a while, but then made the call with 8h8d.

It was a good spot for Greenwood, but it quickly became a disaster. Another eight appeared on the turn, and Greenwood’s disconsolate flicker of the eyelashes, truly the smallest physical motion, revealed a world of hurt.

A pretty grim outdraw accounted for Sam Greenwood

How did it feel to be on the rail in ninth, the TV interviewer asked Greenwood. “Not great,” he said, with admirable restraint. Greenwood won €260,500 but will have hoped to have laddered at least a couple more spots.

The next significant incident resulted in a big upward spike in Patrik Antonius’ tracking graph. He three-bet jammed for his last 1.1 million over Aleksejs Ponakovs’ mid-position open, and Ponakovs called it off when action passed back to him. This ended up being a classic queens-versus-ace-king showdown and Antonius turned a king to keep his tournament alive.

All of a sudden, stacks were evening out and shallowing. The longer they went without an elimination, the more tense and quiet the table became. However, there was little to lose now for the short-stacked Orpen Kisacikoglu, and that allowed him to get his chips in — and go on a bit of a rush.

Kisacikoglu got to a three-way flop with DeCarolis and Ponakovs after a single raise. The board came Ks3h2h. Ponakovs bet, DeCarolis folded and Kisacikoglu moved all-in. Ponakovs called, and Kisacikoglu was in bad shape. His pocket nines were now behind Ponakovs’ KcTh.

Orpen Kisacikoglu with the double

However the nine on the turn not only gave him a crucial double up, it gave him the chips to fully turn around his fortunes. Kisacikoglu won two further sizeable pots, from Grafton and Antonius, and went to the first break in the day second in chips. Only Ponakovs had more.

Antonius ordered some food during the break and began eating it when play resumed. He had to chow down quickly, though, because he was soon sitting with only five big blinds after being pushed out of a pot by Paqué. Everyone to Ponakovs’ left was short, in fact, which is how come the Latvian player was able to open-shove if action had folded to him, expecting to get a lot of folds.

However, on one such occasion Henrik Hecklen found pocket fives in the big blind and called all-in, for his last 1.4 million. Ponakovs had Kd4d and was drawing dead after Hecklen turned another five. Hecklen then vaulted to what seemed like the relative safety of 23 big blinds. (The leader had only 35.)

Antonius was the short stack again, but doubled again. This time he managed to turn a straight with AsTh against DeCarolis’ AdKh, which left DeCarolis back on the ropes.

We were already at the stage of play where almost all pots were either folded pre-flop, or resulted in a change of the chip lead. Nobody could get clear, but nobody was ever truly out of it either.

Something absolutely had to give, and it was DeCarolis who could hold on no longer. The sole non-professional at the table had nonetheless put on the kind of showing that revealed the truth of his skills: he is an experienced cash game player from some of the highest-stakes games in the world. He barely put a foot wrong today, but his last chips were in with 6h9h and Bruno Volkmann’s Ah9d held.

Alfred DeCarolis continued his 100% Triton record

DeCarolis, a restaurant chain CEO when he’s not playing poker, won €344,000. But he also kept up an unblemished record in Triton events. He has only played twice and has cashed twice. No one else in the world has that 100 percent rate.

Volkmann’s win in that pot put him second on the overall leader board, but it was all still incredibly tight. And the Brazilian then got involved in a pivotal pot with Grafton, which was pretty much certain to spell curtains for whomever lost it.

Volkmann opened the cutoff with AhQd and Hecklen called on the button. Grafton then squeezed all-in for 3.7 million, more than what Hecklen had and almost exactly what Volkmann was sitting with. Grafton had TdTc.

Volkmann called and Hecklen folded, leaving the two big stacks at the races. The flop seemed good for the over-cards when it came Qc8cJh, but Grafton willed a straight on the 9c turn.

The last of Bruno Volkmann’s chips leave him

Grafton was back in the chip lead, and Volkmann’s one big blind went to Kisacikoglu two hands later. (For the record, it was Ac3s < AsQh). Antonius had performed some miracle laddering, but his turn now came in sixth. Action folded to Ponakovs, who shoved from the button with AcTd. Antonius looked down at 7s7h and called off his last 2 million, or 13 big blinds. A ten on the flop soon added that 2 million to Ponakovs and left Antonius looking for €558,000 for sixth, and a seat in the PLO event that was still registering. Patrik Antonius bids farewell[/caption]

Just as Ponakovs might have thought he could now start bullying again, he lost a big one to Paqué. It was two big pairs: kings for Paqué and jacks for Ponakovs, and that shipped 3 million in Paqué’s direction. The flurry of eliminations was over; they were back to double ups.

Hecklen was next. He won with pocket kings against Grafton’s pocket threes, and the 3.3 million swing put the Dane in the chip lead for the first time.

It also left Grafton in a spot of bother. Like others, he had been in the lead, particularly after the big pot against Volkmann, but he had also been on the ropes. And the knockout blow came from his good friend Kisacikoglu. Grafton, on the button, looked at 5d5h and ripped in 4.3 million. That was amazing for Kisacikoglu, who had aces in the small blind.

Sam Grafton learns of his elimination with his good friend Orpen Kisacikoglu

They sweated it together, but there was nothing mad about the runout this time. Grafton’s journey came to an end in fifth for €716,000.

They headed to another tournament break, returning to blinds of 100K/200K and stacks ranging from 30 BBs (Hecklen) to 10 BBs (Kisacikoglu). But the trend of double-ups hadn’t ended yet, and Kisacikoglu found another one, through Ponakovs. Kisacikoglu did it very trickily too, limping from the small blind with AdAc.

Ponakovs checked his option and may have been licking his lips with his 3h2h when the board ran 5d8hAh5h3c with betting on every street. He turned a flush, but that also gave Kisacikoglu an invisible full house, only revealed after a shove and a call on the end.

To further underline how narrow the margins were at this point, Kisacikoglu doubled into the chip lead while Ponakovs became the short stack. And not long after, he was out.

Aleksandrs Ponakovs sees the bad news

Ponakovs’ final hand was 7h4h losing to Hecklen’s Qh9d, but really it was just a last-ditch hail Mary from the Latvian player, hoping to pick up some more blinds. Instead, he took €888,000 for fourth.

Paqué was another player who had endured some real ups and downs during the final day — a distinct contrast to his two previous days at the end of both of which he had held the chip lead. He was the three-handed short stack and couldn’t find the uptick he needed.

Kevin Paqué out in third for a third cash of the week

He perished at Hecklen’s hands, with Ah5d losing out to AcJc. They were all-in pre-flop, of course, and the board blanked.

Paqué’s €1,134,000 payday was the biggest of his career so far, by some measure, and he adds it to the other two cashes he has picked up on his first Triton Poker visit. It looks like he may become a fixture here — an 11th, fifth and third so far suggests a victory cannot be too far away.

That left two: Kisacikoglu and Hecklen, both already guaranteed the biggest score of their tournament careers, but both now looking for a second Triton title. Hecklen had a slight chip lead — it was 12.625 million to 10.625 million — and they decided to look at the numbers. Ben Heath came in to negotiate on Kisacikoglu’s behalf, as Hecklen asked for a little more than his ICM share.

TD Luca Vivaldi looks at the numbers

Triton TD Luca Vivali moderated the friendly chit-chat and they came to an arrangement that gave €2,090,509 to Hecklen and €2,016,491 to Kisacikoglu, with €80,000 to play for. There was also only one wrist that could wear the Jacob & Co watch, however, and open the huge bottle of champagne. (And there was the not insignificant matter of 100 Player of the Year points too.)

All of those bonuses stayed on the table, as they shook on the money.

There was every chance the heads-up battle could have been a marathon. Every poker player these days knows how to keep things small, work the angles, and try to allow their skill to prevail heads up. But when they each looked down at pocket pairs, they went to war: Kisacikoglu limped, Hecklen raised 1.2 million, Kisacikoglu three-bet all-in and Hecklen called.

There was no outdraw this time and Hecklen’s kings were good. And with that, we had our Main Event champion. Cue the ticker tape parade.

Hecklen’s celebrations begin

Triton Madrid – Event 9
€100,000 NLHE Main Event


Dates: May 20-22, 2022
Entries: 93 (inc. 34 re-entries)
Prize pool: €9,300,000

1 – Henrik Hecklen, Denmark – €2,170,509*
2 – Orpen Kisacikoglu, Turkey – €2,016,491*
3 – Kevin Paqué, Netherlands – €1,134,000
4 – Aleksejs Ponakovs, Latvia – €888,000
5 – Sam Grafton, UK – €716,000
6 – Patrik Antonius, Finland – €558,000
7 – Bruno Volkmann, Brazil – €440,500
8 – Alfred DeCarolis, USA – €344,000
9 – Sam Greenwood, Canada – €260,500

10 – Linus Loeliger, Switzerland – €200,000
11 – Chris Brewer, USA – €200,000
12 – Brian Kamphorst, Netherlands – €186,000
13 – Sirzat Hissou, Germany – €186,000

*denotes a heads-up deal

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

BUJTAS TAKES FIRST TRITON TITLE, BUT FIRST-TIMER HOMLIAVYI STEALS HEARTS AND HEADLINES

Laszlo Bujtas sealed the deal after a titanic head-up duel

Triton Poker’s motto is “Where High Stakes Dreams Are Dealt” and it was never more apparent than at Casino Gran Via, Madrid, tonight, where first-timer Denys Homliavyi, from Ukraine, was inches away from winning his first Triton Poker title.

We’ll pause right here to make it clear that he didn’t. He came second to Laszlo Bujtas, the Hungarian pro. But Bujtas himself will surely be content for us to focus first on the player who came second, because this is a crazy story.

When Homliavyi came to Madrid this week, with a few poker-playing friends, he didn’t even really know the rules of the game. But he sat in the lobby of the tournament area for a couple of days and avidly watched the Triton Poker live stream, learning from scratch. He then thought he’d give it a go, and bought into the €50,000 Turbo, encouraged by his friend Bali Gee. Flash forward a few hours, and both Gee and Homliavyi were in the money, but Homliavyi was sitting with the biggest stack opposite some of the many sharks who swim through the Triton waters.

By the point he went heads up with Bujtas, at around midnight local time, the blinds in the tournament were ridiculously high, meaning stacks were ridiculously short. Both Bujtas and Homliavyi doubled up countless times, sometimes with the best hand, sometimes not. And Bujtas had only one big blind at one point, but played on for another 40 minutes at least.

The brilliant first-timer Denys Homliavyi

Eventually, at past 1am local time, Bujtas finally got it to stick, winning with 2c3c to Homliavyi’s Ad9s. There was a two on the turn, which was where the money went in. Bujtas took €630,000 and his first Triton trophy, another notable feather in his cap.

But Homliavyi, a crypto-currency investor, who had turned to poker only at the very last moment, was the story of the day. Do you remember your first poker tournament? Homliavyi will very fondly remember his. He earned €434,000.

“Poker and crypto are similar,” Homliavyi said. “You have risk management in crypto and risk management in poker.” He said he might well be back at the tables for more.

Bujtas agreed that it was nothing like he had ever played before. “I had to make adjustments, for sure,” he said of the long heads-up battle. “I played 100 percent of hands.”

He added that he felt very satisfied to win his first Triton event, acknowledging that he got lucky in the key spots. (He also got unlucky plenty of times, but in the end he got the lot.)

But let’s give it up too for Homliavyi, who was utterly delighted at his success. He literally only learnt poker two days ago, and is now the talk of Madrid.

THE DAY’S ACTION

The turbo events are always played not only at a break-neck speed, but with a real sense of fun. Those two new players — Gee and Homliavyi — were adding a really unusual dynamic to proceedings, and were both clearly having a ball.

It helped that they both made the money, even as the usual glittering array of talent had fallen by the wayside. Jason Koon made the top 10, but it wasn’t good enough. And Ike Haxton was knocked out in eighth, again without troubling the cashiers.

However, the stone bubble burst after Stephen Chidwick and Danny Tang got involved in a blind-versus-blind clash, which ended in tears for Tang.

Chidwick raised to 125,000 from the small blind and Tang called. The flop fell 9h9cXx and both players checked. The turn was the 7h and Chidwick bet 130,000. Tang called, which brought the Kd on the river.

Danny Tang departs on the bubble

Chidwick put forward a big stack of chips, covering the 270,000 that Tang had back. Tang pondered for a moment, but then threw the chips in, only to be shown Chidwick’s 9d4c.

Tang mucked his cards, but made a point too of showing his Xx, the rivered top pair. But Chidwick’s flopped trips were good and the bubble was burst.

The last six in the turbo (l-r): Laszlo Bujtas, Denys Homliavyi, Bali Gee, Wiktor Malinowski, Jeremy Ausmus, Stephen Chidwick

They were all now in the money, with Homliavyi leading, Bujtas and Chidwick similarly stacked in equal second, and Gee, Wiktor Malinowski and Jeremy Ausmus with fewer than 15 big blinds. There was a quick pause for a photograph, and then they pushed on.

Chidwick was making most of the running, but he then had to double up Gee — 6h6c losing to Gee’s XxXx — and Malinowski — As3s losing to Malinowski’s pocket sevens. He had to pull back from table captain duties for a bit.

Malinowski all but doubled immediately after, when his pocket jacks beat Gee’s pocket sevens. They were almost equal stacks, although Gee was left with 25,000. “A chip and a chair,” he joked, but he soon had neither.

His elimination hand was pretty cruel. He had AhJd and was up against Malinowski’s QhTs. Malinowski flopped top pair, but then Gee gradually made two pair. The only problem was that Malinowski made a straight, and Gee was second best a different way.

“I thought I won that,” Gee said.

“I also thought you won it,” said Jeremy Ausmus.

But even as the reality sank in, it didn’t seem to matter to Gee.

“Thank you guys, this was fun,” he said. “I’m going to remember this for the rest of my life.”

Bali Gee: Another brilliant debut

He wrapped his Real Madrid scarf around his neck and headed off beaming. “I won money!” he told everyone in the corridor as he left. It was €130,000.

Everyone was already perilously short-stacked even though there were five players left. Ausmus managed one double up of his three big-blind stack, then chopped another when he was all in again. But he then lost his last chips to Bujtas when ace-queen couldn’t beat pocket jacks. Ausmus took €166,000.

Jeremy Ausmus earned his second cash of the trip

Malinowski had been short. And he’d been in the chip lead. And next he was out. He lost a pot to Chidwick, after the Brit reshoved from the small blind. And then he became Homliavyi’s first victim from the final in another fairly standard spot.

The pair got all the chips in with Malinowski holding KsJc to Homliavyi’s AhQh. The board was totally dry and Malinowski hit the rail in fourth for €212,500.

Chidwick’s time at the table ended next, the next victim of the smash and grab. Chidwick moved in from the small blind for his last 450,000 and Homliavyi called from the big blind. Chidwick had only 5h2s and Homliavyi’s AdTd was never in jeopardy.

Stephen Chidwick

Fresh from a $1.2m payday in Event 7, Chidwick added €277,500 for this third place.

That then left us with the rookie versus the pro, Bujtas versus Homliavyi, and Bujtas had a near two-to-one chip lead. But poker doesn’t always respect reputations, and there were some thrills and spills heads up.

Two pots were chopped when Homliavyi had an inferior ace. The board double-paired both times. Then he managed a couple of doubles, including one in which a jack popped up on the river for his JcQc to beat Bujtas’ Ah8c.

Heads up featured at least 10 short-stack double ups

Bujtas continued to grind him back down again, but then Homliavyi kept doubling back into it. There was a huge confrontation where Bujtas had pocket eights and Homliavyi had kings, and that might well have been the absolute end. Bujtas only had one big blind.

But there were at least 10 short-stack doubles after that, until there were only 25 big blinds in play. And then, finally, the bigger stack actually won one, and Bujtas was the champion.

Triton Madrid – Event 10
€50,000 NLHE Turbo


Dates: May 21, 2022
Entries: 37 (inc. 9 re-entries)
Prize pool: €1,800,000

1 – Laszlo Bujtas, Hungary – €630,000
2 – Denys Homliavyi, Ukraine – €434,000
3 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – €277,500
4 – Wiktor Malinowski, Poland – €212,500
5 – Jeremy Ausmus, USA – €166,000
6 – Bali Gee, Malaysia – €130,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

PAQUE LEADS MAIN EVENT AS MASSES DESCEND ON MADRID

Kevin Paqué: Day 1 Main Event chip leader

The buy-in hit six figures at Triton Madrid today as the €100,000 No Limit Hold’em Main Event kicked off.

Although we are only through one day of three, and registration is not yet closed, it’s already clear that we’re looking at an enormous event. There have been 72 entries, including 18 re-entries, which means €7.2 million in the prize pool already.

The pattern established early in this Triton Series stop has continued: the higher the buy-in, the busier the event. Or maybe it was just the lure of the sirens standing next to the registration desk.

Some additional visitors to the tournament room today

Either way, the world’s elite poker players were all in attendance, as well as many of the familiar figures from the world of business who enjoy mixing it in poker’s top echelons in their spare time.

The opening line-up on Table 6 was a perfect distillation of that: the high stakes superstars Michael Addamo, Michael Soyza, Stephen Chidwick and Steve O’Dwyer were all in a line, but playing into them was Alfred DeCarolis, a man who has played only once on the Triton Series. That just happened to be the €1 million buy-in event in London in 2019, where DeCarolis made the final table and more than $2 million.

Of course, the line-up changed significantly as the day progressed. Players came and went; stacks grew and shrank. When the tournament paused after its first eight 40-minute levels, Kevin Paque was out in front.

The Dutch player secured a big knockout early in the day, dispatching Sirzat Hissou. And after that it was a story of steady accumulation.

There were also fine showings from Mikita Badziakouski, Orpen Kisacikoglu and Aleksejs Ponakovs, with Patrik Antonius rounding out the top five, and they will all come back confident of further progress tomorrow.

Day 2, which resumes at 1pm, will play on until we reach a final table. That will mean a few more entries early on — registration is still open for two 50-minute levels — and then a rush to the bubble, which will likely be around 15 players. Then they will need to cram onto the final table, ahead of a big finale on Sunday.

Here are the full chip stacks at this stage:

Kevin Paque – 1,460,000
Mikita Badziakouski – 880,000
Orpen Kisacikoglu – 833,000
Aleksejs Ponakovs – 816,000
Patrik Antonius – 769,000
Michael Addamo – 696,000
Elton Tsang – 684,000
Ferdinand Putra – 639,000
Phil Ivey – 598,000
Phachara Wongwichit – 555,000
Michael Soyza – 544,000
Daniel Dvoress – 532,000
Christoph Vogelsang – 495,000
Tom-Aksel Bedell – 489,000
Chris Brewer – 480,000
Fedor Holz – 402,000
Laszlo Bujtas – 401,000
Nick Petrangelo – 395,000
Kannapong Thanarattrakul – 393,000
Paul Phua – 383,000
Andy Ni – 366,000
Wiktor Malinowski – 359,000
Stephen Chidwick – 356,000
Henrik Hecklen – 348,000
Seth Davies – 339,000
Jeremy Ausmus – 330,000
Andriy Lyubovetskiy – 287,000
Jason Koon – 239,000
Steve O’Dwyer – 218,000
Matthias Eibinger – 213,000
Sam Grafton – 211,000
Alfred DeCarolis – 208,000
Andras Nemeth – 206,000
Luuk Gieles – 202,000
Ivan Leow – 186,000
Sam Greenwood – 175,000
Danny Tang – 163,000
Sergio Aido – 162,000
Linus Loeliger – 155,000
Wai Kin Yong – 142,000
Artur Martirosyan – 132,000
Brian Kamphorst – 131,000
Wayne Heung – 123,000
Yaman Nakdali – 100,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive

MALAYSIA BAGS ANOTHER IN MADRID AS LIM CLAIMS LATEST SHORT DECK TITLE

Champion Chin Wei “Webster” Lim

Triton Poker’s strong Malaysian contingent again found reason to celebrate tonight as one of their most dogged performers, Webster Lim, closed out victory in Event 8 – €50,000 Short Deck at Triton Madrid, banking €855,000.

Lim has been a regular on the series ever since its early days, picking up five previous cashes but never managing to get beyond fourth as luck deserted him when it mattered most.

However, Lim today put on a near-perfect show, rising from the middle of the pack (he was 13th of 21 returning today) to overhaul two previous chip leaders, Wai Kin Yong and Bjorn Li, and take down his first event.

Li, who has considerably more heads-up short deck experience than Lim, led for the longest periods of the day, but was beaten heads up and had to settle for €618,500, also his biggest Triton cash.

Lim was delighted — and immediately acknowledged that he had the run of the cards today. “A lot of bad beats came my way, but in the €20K I didn’t run so good. So things kind of get even here,” he said.

He then added that it was still a strange experience for him, a player who only took up poker in 2013, to be sitting alongside so many of the top stars who inspired him to learn the game. “Every time I sit at the table with them [Tom Dwan, Phil Ivey, etc.] it still feels surreal. Back in the day I watched them on YouTube, and now I’m sitting with them. It’s a dream come true, I guess.”

Lim also said that he may have to reassess his previous statement that he preferred the long deck version of the game. “I guess short deck is my favourite now.”

Whatever version he plays, Lim has proved that this fan boy is now a real contender.

Webster Lim looks adoringly at his new trophy

FINAL DAY ACTION

Some of the players who have enjoyed a profitable Triton Madrid stop to date had at one point seemed certain to add to their winnings, but all of Seth Davies, Stephen Chidwick, Chris Brewer, Danny Tang, Mikita Badziakouski and Rui Cao were eliminated before the bubble.

That left nine, but one more needed to depart before the money kicked in. On this occasion the sword fell on Sam Greenwood, though his elimination was formed of two parts. Firstly, he was one of three players involved in a three-way all-in: Elton Tsang had pocket kings, while both Greenwood and Cao had ace-queen. All the money went in pre-flop and Tsang was in great shape, facing opponents who had each other’s outs.

There was a king on the flop and Tsang all but tripled through. Cao, with a shorter stack, busted, and Greenwood was left with just a handful of antes. He tried to cling on to them as long as possible, but another AcQd cost him the rest.

Tough luck for bubble boy Sam Greenwood

Lim shoved with QhTd and that gave Greenwood one of those super difficult tournament decisions. He was ahead of most chip-leader shoving ranges, but short deck does strange things. Eventually he called, but Lim filled a straight to his ten. Greenwood had to take the walk.

Lim was the dominant force in the tournament, which was still being played over two tables at this point. He only got more powerful after knocking out Rene Van Krevelen in eighth. Lim shoved again, with AdKc, on the four-handed table, and Van Krevelen called it off with KdTs.

Van Krevelen took €114,000 for eighth, his first Triton cash, as the last seven now consolidated around one table.

Seven left in Event 8 (l-r): Webster Lim, Elton Tsang, Phil Ivey, Bjorn Li, Ryan Yum, Wai Kin Yong, Winfred Yu.

FINAL TABLE CHIP COUNTS
Webster Lim – 4.525 million (301 antes)
Bjorn Li – 3.887 million (259 antes)
Elton Tsang – 2.305 million (154 antes)
Ryan Yum – 2.025 million (135 antes)
Winfred Yu – 1.783 million (119 antes)
Wai Kin Yong – 1.411 million (94 antes)
Phil Ivey – 1.115 million (77 antes)

Ante: 15K/30K

It’s not often you see Phil Ivey clinging on to a short stack, but Ivey managed to find his spots to get his chips in and chip up a small measure. It was certainly enough to enable him to ladder one spot.

Ryan Yum, who has now run deep in two short deck events this week, became the first to leave the feature table, losing the kind of flip you see most often in the long-deck game. Yum had pocket jacks to Wai Kin Yong’s AdKs. The board was unnecessarily emphatic: AcKc9hKdAs.

Yum took €145,400.

And after that, it was Ivey. The all-time great showed in flashes exactly why his game is so revered, repeatedly finding very thin opportunities to chip up from that short stack. (He also managed a double up with aces through Bjorn Li’s AcKs, but anyone can do that.) But even Ivey couldn’t do very much about Lim outdrawing his AhKc with KsJd.

It was a pot worth 2.2 million, but it was all Ivey had. He finished sixth for €182,400.

A smirk and then Phil Ivey was gone

This Madrid stop has been a very good one so far for the extended Triton family, with Paul Phua winning his first title, and his co-founder Richard Yong finishing second in another event. Richard’s son Wai Kin has a better record than both the senior parties — he has three titles already — and he was at this final table, looking for his fourth.

However, Yong’s chances took a nosedive in a big pot against Lim — although it at least ended with a chuckle. After an early-position limp from Winfred Yu, Li continued his bullying with a shove from the cutoff. Yong had 1.3 million in his stack on the button and decided KhQh was good enough to call.

He was up against Li’s Ah8d and Yong got very excited when he saw the board of 6s9h7hQsKd. He thought his two pair was good and began to celebrate.

Wai Kin Yong’s moment of realisation that he was out

But Li had the “hidden” short-deck straight, and Yong suddenly realised with a pang of horror that he was out. He laughed and went looking for €233,700. (If you have his WhatsApp, send him this short-deck explainer.)

The next man out was Elton Tsang — another player who seems perfectly happy with whatever is happening, even when he’s busting. After a blockbuster Cyprus stop, Tsang had had a quiet start to his Madrid festival, but was in his element back at the final table today.

Tsang had never really had what you might call a big stack today, and was sitting with only 1.6 million when he felt that his time had come. He had AhQc and was in pretty good shape against Lim’s AcTd, especially after he begged for, and then hit, a queen on the flop.

However the full board was QdKc9c7dJc and that was another straight for Lim. Tsang was toast in fourth and won €302,000.

Elton Tsang prayed for a queen, but he got more than he wanted

This Triton Madrid stop has been characterised so far by some very long and tricky short-handed battles. Three-handed and heads up play has lasted an eternity. The pattern repeated this evening after Lim, Li and Yu became the final three, with chips moving between them for a good couple of hours.

Yu, who won a short deck event in Cyprus last month, was always the short stack among the three, and eventually the pressure told on him. Yu was down to 1.8 million, 22 antes, when he moved all-in with JsJh. Lim had a big stack and his favourite AdTc. Once more, he filled a straight.

Winfred Yu hit the rail in third

Yu picked up €399,000 for this one as he day ended in third.

The heads-up chip counts — and recent history — suggested this might go on for a long time yet. The two remaining players, who had been the dominant forces at the final, had around 114 to 100 antes, which gave them plenty to play with.

There wasn’t, however, much meaningful action heads-up until suddenly there was a flurry. Li limped pre-flop and Lim checked, taking them to a flop of Kc8d9h. Li checked, Lim bet 300,000 and Li now raised to 1 million. Lim called.

What did they have? Well, at this stage, not all that much. Li had Kh9d, for two pair (good, but vulnerable). Lim had Jd7d, which was nothing but a gutshot at this stage. However Lim also had the chip lead so could afford to peel.

Bjorn Li: A valiant second

The Td turn was great for Lim. But what was even better was the shove, for his last 5.9 million, from Li. Lim called with the straight and managed to fade Li’s redraw outs on the river. It was all over.

Lim has now finished fifth and first during this series (and has been the bubble boy once), so he is truly finding his feet. With five more events still to come, he’s going to be a danger for the rest of this festival.

Triton Madrid – Event 8
€50,000 Short Deck Ante-Only


Dates: May 19-20, 2022
Entries: 57 (inc. 24 re-entries)
Prize pool: €2,850,000

1 – Webster Lim, Malysia – €855,000
2 – Bjorn Li, Hong Kong – €618,500
3 – Winfred Yu, Hong Kong – €399,000
4 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong – €302,000
5 – Wai Kin Yong, Malaysia – €233,700
6 – Phil Ivey, USA – €182,400
7 – Ryan Yum, Hong Kong – €145,400
8 – Rene Van Krevelen, Netherlands – €114,000

Photography by Joe Giron/PokerPhotoArchive