GARAGNANI BESTS VOLKMANN AS BRAZILIANS SAMPLE TRITON TURBO SUCCESS

Champion Pedro Garagnani!

Brazilian players have become the dominant force at the online poker tables over the past few years, and today a swarm of them took the Triton Series by storm as well. The final stages of the $30,000 buy-in NLH Turbo at Triton London ended with two of Brazil’s leading lights Pedro Garagnani and Bruno Volkmann heads up, with a packed rail of other Brazilians just waiting to celebrate as one.

Garagnani took the chip lead into that all-Brazilian affair, and he translated it into his first Triton victory too, worth $459,000 after he had agreed a deal with Volkmann. Volkmann secured himself $375,300 and burnished his reputation as someone to watch in the high stakes world as well.

“I’m super happy,” Garagnani said. “It was my first Triton title and the first Triton title for a player from Brazil and I’m very honoured.”

He added that it was extra special to play heads up against his buddy.

“It’s amazing,” Garagnani said. “Both of us wanted to win. I respect him a lot as a player and a friend. I love him. I’m sure he will soon have a title.”

Pedro Garagnani and Bruno Volkmann took first and second for Brazil

Those two were the most experienced and calmest players at a final table fuelled by a love of turbo action and booze. They navigated their way past some of Asia’s most tricky stars, as well as a hometown first-timer who was enjoying the added extras of the Triton Series (namely, free drinks).

It was all spectacularly good natured, and ended at around 2am local time with a very worthy champion. The poker world has known for quite a while that the Brazilian invasion shows now sign of ending, and in Garagnani the country has a very worthy first champion on this series.

“The tournament was super fun,” Garagnani said. “It was really cool,” he added, saying that the unpredictable players at the final just made it even more enjoyable.

TOURNAMENT ACTION

The nature of turbo tournaments is that blind levels fly up quickly, and action comes thick and fast. But there was still a $32,600 money bubble, so the period just before the cash kicked in was necessarily fraught.

Kane Hope went into this period as a dominant chip leader, but he lost a number of big pots against Bruno Volkmann, Oya Masashi and, in particular, Choon Tong Siow. The latter two were clashing with each other as well, despite having huge stacks relative to plenty of players with less than five big blinds.

Taago Tamm actually had only one big blind at one point, but trebled up twice in successive hands. He was still seated when the Israeli player Roman Samoylov became the stone bubble boy, losing with pocket fours to Webster Lim’s AcKd. Samoylov made a quiet exit, which was in stark contrast to the fireworks over on the other table where Hope was providing a well-lubricated commentary on every hand.

Roman Samoylov lost a crucial race to bubble

The long bubble left numerous players in deep peril, and all of Eric Wasserson, Stephen Chidwick, Jonathan Jaffe and Tamm eventually succumbed. When Yuri Dzivielevski and Matthew Wood followed them, we were at a nine-handed final.

Anson Ewe made it with one big blind, but it’s worth noting the achievement of Julie Klein too, who made the final in her first ever Triton event. She is the daughter of Triton stalwart Morten Klein, and the pair became the first father/daughter combo to play on the tour. Morten was eliminated early, but was a doting father on the rail as Julie got there to the final.

Julie Klein became the first woman to cash during this stop on the Triton Series

Here’s how they stood when they lined up at the last table:

Oya Masashi – 33 BBs
Pedro Garagnani – 29 BBs
Kane Hope – 27 BBs
Choon Tong Siow – 22 BBs
Jack Germaine – 12 BBs
Bruno Volkmann – 12 BBs
Webster Lim – 11 BBs
Julie Klein – 6 BBs
Anson Ewe – 1 BB

Event #8 final table players (clockwise from top left): Oya Masashi, Pedro Garagnani, Julie Klein, Anson Ewe, Choon Tong Siow, Kane Hope, Webster Lim, Bruno Volkmann, Jonathan Germaine

Despite Ewe’s tiny amount of chips, he managed to duck out of the way for the first couple of hands. That was enough time for Pedro Garagnani to win a pot from Hope, and then to knock out Klein.

It was a pretty unfortunate way for Klein to end what was surely an overwhelmingly positive experience. She got her chips in with KdJd against Garagnani’s 9c7c. Even though Klein flopped a king, Garagnani flopped a seven and hit another on the river.

Klein took her medicine and earned $49,900 for ninth place.

Morton Klein rails his daughter Julie at the final table

Ewe’s survival skills paid off once again when Garagnani won another big pot to eliminate Webster Lim. This was always going in even in tournaments with deeper stacks — Garagnani had AsKh to Lim’s pocket queens. A king on the flop ended Lim’s tournament in eighth, worth $68,100. He also had six bounties, worth $15K apiece.

Two time champ Webster Lim fell short of a third

Ewe seemed like he was on the comeback trail, but when he finally got a premium hand — AdKd — it cost him his tournament life. He was all in against two players, Garagnani and Masashi, but both of them had a pair. Garagnani’s Ac3c hit a three while Masashi’s QdJh hit a queen.

It meant that Masashi doubled through Garagnani and Ewe hit the rail in seventh for $89,200.

Anson Ewe laddered two spots with one big blind

Six rapidly became five, with Triton first-timer Jack Germaine smashing into Volkmann’s aces. Germaine played the GG Million$ at the start of this festival and cashed in 24th place. He spun that up in this event, banking $113,500 for sixth. His record now reads Played 2, Cashed 2. His final hand was Ad7d, but he couldn’t catch up with the aces.

Jack Germaine

The table was now revolving around Kane Hope and his wishes for a top up to his drink. He’d been cut off by the tournament staff, but wasn’t giving up in his crusade. His opponents could only sit and watch and attempt to knock him out.

But he just wouldn’t go. Hope was involved in the next major pot, which ended in the elimination of Choon and a triple up for the Brit.

Volkmann opened with a min-raise, Hope called and Choon then moved in for 1.125 million (blinds were 100K-200K). Volkmann called and Hope said that he was now priced in and made the call as well. The dealer put the Js7s4d flop on the table.

Volkmann checked and Hope moved all in, for another 2.225 million. Volkmann called.

The cards went on their backs and Volkmann was ahead with JcTs. Hope had a smaller pair with his 8c7d, while Choon had over cards with his KhQs.

The 7d that then appeared on the turn catapulted Hope into the lead, and there was no jack on the river to change anything. Hope apologised for the “dirty” hand. But he stacked up the chips nonetheless as Choon hit the rail taking $145,000.

Choon Tong Siow was knocked out in a three-way skirmish

Players took an unscheduled break, at Hope’s behest. The others weren’t keen, but he offered them $500 per person to give him 10 minutes away from the table. They quickly agreed. When they came back, Garagnani scored a huge double up through the erstwhile chip leader when he flopped a flush with Kc6c and got Hope to put his chips in with a flush draw that couldn’t win even if it hit.

Garagnani assumed the lead, and only consolidated it in another enormous pot against Masashi and Hope, with the latter finally running out of road.

After Masashi opened, Hope and Garagnani called and the three of them got to a flop of 8cQc6c. They all checked it. The 6h came on the turn and Hope led the betting, with both opponents calling again.

The river was the 2d and Hope blasted all-in. A measured Garagnani announced a call, while Masashi quietly folded.

“I’m bluffing,” Hope said.

Kane Hope was the most vocal presence in the tournament and made it all the way to fourth

Garagnani turned over Th6d. Hope’s 7sJs was no good and he was now out. It was a fine and improbable run, which he clearly enjoyed immensely. He took $180,500 for fourth.

Masashi was now the short stack and although he managed one double up through Garagnani, the chips were returned to the Brazilian pretty quickly thereafter. Masashi’s final hand was an all-in push with 7s6s, which slammed into Garagnani’s KcQd. There was a queen on the turn and that was that.

Masashi took $222,700 for third.

The two Brazilians, who are good friends, quickly agreed to look at the numbers and agreed a deal. Garagnani’s bigger stack would guarantee him $444,000, while Volkmann would lock up $375,300. There was $15,000 on the table to play for.

A second-place finish for Bruno Volkmann

With 70 blinds in front of them, there was still play to be had, but the friendly atmosphere at the table had the feel of a home-game rather than a high stakes top ranking tournament.

When they got it all in for the first time, Garagnani’s pocket sixes stayed best against Volkmann’s Ks5s and the Brazilian supporters flooded the stage for photographs and cheers and hugs.

We’ve seen this before across multiple tours. And now here it is on the Triton Series.

Event #8 – $30,000 NLH 8-Handed Turbo Bounty
Dates: August 2, 2023
Entries: 96 (inc. 17 re-entries)
Prize pool: $1,920,000

1 – Pedro Garagnani, Brazil – $459,000*
2 – Bruno Volkmann, Brazil – $375,300*
3 – Oya Masashi, Japan – $222,700
4 – Kane Hope, UK – $180,500
5 – Choon Tong Siow, Malaysia – $145,000
6 – Jack Germaine, UK – $113,500
7 – Anson Ewe, Malaysia – $89,200
8 – Webster Lim, Malaysia – $68,100
9 – Julie Klein, Norway – $49,900
10 – Matthew Ward – $40,300
11 – Yuri Dzivielski, Brazil – $40,300
12 – Taago Tamm, Finland – $35,500
13 – Jonathan Jaffe, USA – $35,500
14 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – $32,600
15 – Eric Wasserson, USA – $32,600

Team Brazil at Triton London

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

IT’S EIGHT, MATE! JASON KOON CHAMPION AGAIN AT TRITON LONDON

Champion Jason Koon!

Stop me if you’ve heard this before.

Jason Koon is tonight celebrating success on the Triton Series, the high stakes poker tour for which he is an ambassador and by far the most successful player.

This incredible talent, originally from West Virginia, tonight won his EIGHTH Triton title, double the amount of his closest challenger.

This latest victory, in a $60,000 buy-in 7-Handed No Limit Hold’em event at Triton’s latest stop in London, earned Koon another $1,570,000, which is not a bad way to celebrate the birth of your second child just a month ago.

Not much more than a year ago, Koon had “only” four Triton titles. But he’s been on an extraordinary tear since then. He won in Madrid and Vietnam, and then twice in Cyprus at Triton’s most recent stop. It was enough to earn him the Ivan Leow Player of the Year award, and put him a mile ahead of anybody else.

“It might be getting old for you, man, but I like it, I’ll keep doing it,” Koon said to Ali Nejad after the Triton commentator joked that these presentation ceremonies were getting a bit predictable. “It’s the same story in a lot of ways. I play because I love the game. I play a lot less than I used to but when I show up I’m very focused and I’m the best version of myself.”

A champion again, Jason Koon

Koon expanded on what has kept him at the top of the game so long.

“You have to have the drive and grit to want to win, but at the same time there were several times along the way in my career when I wanted to quit,” he said. “Really it just comes down to staying fresh, staying in the chair, doing what you love. And for me that’s poker. Surround yourself with people who are better, smarter and better than you are at your job. And for me, I have a crew of guys that are probably better poker players than me. I just keep learning from them and getting better.”

He rebuffed the suggestion that he was the best in the world, admitting that he was “one of them” and “I wouldn’t want to bet against me”. But Koon admitted that he had been both running and playing hot, and was just happy to ride the rush.

Tonight’s victory came after a long final table, but a brief heads-up battle against the Brazilian first-timer Rodrigo Selouan. By that point, Koon’s fellow Americans Phil Ivey, Dan Smith and Justin Saliba had departed the final, as well as fellow Triton champs Matthias Eibinger and Espen Jorstad.

All are sensational players in their own right. But Koon just knows how to get things done.

FINAL DAY ACTION

There were 32 players remaining overnight, with that man Koon sitting prettiest at the top of the counts. It was by no means certain that he would translate that position into an in-the-money finish, at least based on what we’ve seen so far this week, where stacks have swung dramatically in the early periods of a new day.

No such issues for Koon, however. He remained top of the shop while all the dogfighting went on below him. When the bubble moved into view, Dan Smith, Leon Sturm, Justin Saliba, Espen Jorstad, Santhosh Suvarna and Paul Phua were all in danger, but not Koon.

Nacho Barbero was also not in immediate peril, but he doubled up both Smith and Sturm to land in some hot water. And then Saliba doubled through another table’s big stack, Dan Dvoress.

Jorstad stayed out of harm’s way, but Suvarna and Phua ended up tangling with one another, with the loser of the confrontation pretty much certain to end on the scrapheap.

A terrible river card for Paul Phua

Phua had a mere 5,000 more chips than Suvarna — not even an ante — when the pair got it all in. Suvarna had JhTh to Phua’s AsQd. Both players flopped a pair when the dealer put the JdQs6c on the felt. The 2c turn was a blank, but the Tc river smacked Suvarna.

“Aye, yie, yah!” yelped Phua.

Suvarna celebrated, but Phua was left with that solitary chip, which went to Rodrigo Selouan. It was a bubble for Mr Paul, while the others got ready to battle towards a final.

Paul Phua couldn’t stage a miracle comeback

Unfortunately for Suvarna, he wasn’t able to go all the way. He was out in 12th. By that point, Dvoress had also perished after losing a classic flip, while Sturm and Barbero had hit the sidelines too. The eight players who made it to the final lined up like this:

Jason Koon – 65 BBs
Matthias Eibinger – 54 BBs
Dan Smith – 32 BBs
Justin Saliba – 30 BBs
Phil Ivey – 24 BBs
Espen Jorstad – 23 BBs
Rodrigo Selouan – 23 BBs
Alex Kulev – 10 BBs

Event #6 final table players (l-r): Matthias Eibinger, Justin Saliba, Espen Jorstad, Dan Smith, Alex Kulev, Phil Ivey, Rodrigo Selouan, Jason Koon

The Bulgarian force Alex Kulev was the player most under threat and he kicked off the final table in expensive fashion, losing a significant pot to Koon. Kulev had KsQs and opened from under the gun. Koon called with pocket sevens.

Both players checked the ace-high flop, and Kulev bluffed for a single blind on the 6h turn. Koon called. Kulev bluffed for another blind after the 9s river, and Koon picked him off once more with his fourth pair.

Kulev couldn’t recover from that and lost the rest of his chips on the next pot, to Matthias Eibinger’s AsQs. Kulev had only Kd3d. Kulev collected $209,000 for eighth nonetheless.

A wry smile and an eighth place for Alex Kulev

It was only a couple of days ago that both Phil Ivey and Espen Jorstad were seated at the same feature table playing one of the greatest finals the Triton Series has ever hosted. Jorstad came out on top of that one, and now here they both were once again.

However, Jorstad’s visit this time was brief, thanks in no small part to the kind of come-from-behind pot that kept everyone doubling up at the previous final table. This time, it sent him to the rail. Jorstad was in the big blind with AhTc and called all-in after Justin Saliba’s shove with As8s.

It was looking rosy for Jorstad until the 8c river card, which sent him spiralling out. Jorstad is not one to complain. He is still running and playing very well. He picked up $277,500, which will get him into the other event starting today.

Another final table for Espen Jorstad

The chips didn’t stay with Saliba all that long. He lost a flip very soon after, doubling up Rodrigo Selouan. Selouan’s pocket sevens beat Saliba’s AsKc, and it set the Brazilian off on a remarkable rise.

He won a small pot from Ivey and then a big one from Eibinger and it brought Selouan all but neck-and-neck with Koon at the top. The average stack was already only 28 big blinds, so the table seemed to be heading in a familiar direction.

Although Eibinger now had the fewest chips, it turned out to be Ivey who followed his previous-day vanquisher Jorstad away next. Ivey got involved in a blind-versus-blind raising battle with Dan Smith, which ended with Smith shoving from the small blind.

Ivey hadn’t been bluffing. He had AcKc, which had the pre-flop lead against Smith’s JsTs. Ace king is always vulnerable, however, and Smith flopped a jack to take the lead. Ivey’s hand never caught up.

Ivey banked $363,000 for sixth place, and the $200K field, playing alongside, just got immediately tougher.

Phil Ivey falls short again

Eibinger managed to cling on to see Ivey’s elimination, but he was’t able to do much more than tread water over the next few orbits and eventually lost out to Saliba. The pair were the smallest stacks and in the blinds, a position that forced Eibinger to shove with his last eight big blinds with Js5c. Saliba made the call with Kh5h and his hand stayed good.

The two-time champion Eibinger made it to fifth in this one, a result that padded his bankroll to the tune of $460,600.

Matthias Eibinger will have to wait for a third title

The blinds were now getting big relative to stacks, and a couple of orbits with no hands to play left Saliba bottom of the pile and dwindling. His opponents were obviously attacking his big blind too, costing Saliba large chunks of his stack with each fold. He had slipped down to just five big blinds…but then Dan Smith was knocked out.

Smith had been sitting pretty but he then found Ac7c in the big blind and saw Koon open with a min raise from early position. Smith moved in. Koon had enough to call with, however: TsTc and the pocket pair stayed best.

Smith therefore won $571,000 for fourth.

The end of the road for Cowboy Dan Smith

Saliba would have been delighted to see Smith’s demise, and was equally happy when he quickly got the double up he needed. He played it cute and made a straight with Qh9d against Koon’s Ad3c, only shoving on the river. Koon called with a pair of threes and paid him off.

It was only a temporary stay of execution, however. Koon returned to the scene of the crime to finish off Saliba soon after. Koon opened with Kd9h, Saliba pushed with Ks8s and the dealer presented no surprises.

Another member of the Triton team then handed Saliba $690,000, a new career high.

Justin Saliba bettered his career best score

Koon shook the departed’s hand and prepared for yet another heads-up battle on the Triton Series. He had a lead of 53 blinds to Selouan’s 31, and of course had infinitely more experience in these kinds of surroundings than his Brazilian opponent.

Selouan had handled himself impeccably, however, and had the likes of Yuri Dzivielevski and Pedro Garagnani on his rail, analysing the stream and offering their support. Selouan is a crusher at the online tables, and knows his spots. This wasn’t over yet.

Rodrigo Selouan picked up a seven-figure score of his own

Selouan started chipping away at Koon’s lead, but both men seemed to be content at the beginning to play it small ball. However, things quickly exploded in a hand that played through all the streets.

Koon bet all the way, sizing immaculately to set up a river shove, as the dealer spread a board of 3hKc6dAsTc. Koon then sprung the trap on the river.

Selouan was out of time bank chips, so had to make a quick decision. He came to it. He called. Koon, sitting with AcKh, knew that he’d won it at this point. Selouan showed Js6s for a hero call gone wrong. He had the consolation of a $1,060,300 second-place prize.

Koon slapped hands with Danny Tang, who had come over to watch. A role call of the world’s best then came over to congratulate Koon on yet another exceptional triumph.

He now has eight titles, and the race to 10 is on. He might even do it this week.

Eight up!

Event #6 – $60K NLH 7-Handed
Dates: July 31-August 1, 2023
Entries: 104 (inc. 37 re-entries)
Prize pool: $6,240,000

1 – Jason Koon, USA – $1,570,000
2 – Rodrigo Selouan, Brazil – $1,060,300
3 – Justin Saliba, USA – $690,000
4 – Dan Smith, USA – $571,000
5 – Matthias Eibinger, Austria – $460,600
6 – Phil Ivey, USA – $363,000
7 – Espen Jorstad, Norway – $277,500
8 – Alex Kulev, Bulgaria – $209,000

9 – Nacho Barbero, Argentina – $156,000
10 – Leon Sturm, Germany – $128,000
11 – Seth Gottlieb, USA – $128,000
12 – Santhosh Suvarna, India – $112,300
13 – Sam Greenwood, Canada – $112,300
14 – Alex Boika, Belarus – $103,000
15 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada – $103,000
16 – David Malka, USA – $98,000
17 – Fedor Holz, Germany – $98,000

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

SCHEMION MAKES IMMEDIATE IMPACT ON TRITON SERIES, WINS $1.35M IN $50K BUY-IN NLH

Champion Ole Schemion!

The world’s best tournament poker players tend to gravitate to the Triton Series. It has the biggest buy-ins, the most prestigious locations and is the undisputed market leader in high stakes events. But even now, as we start our third season, there are still a handful of players who you know would love it here, but who have strangely stayed away.

When Ole Schemion first walked into the tournament room at the JW Marriott Grosvenor House for the Triton London event this week, he finally became the Triton Super High Roller player everyone knew he could be. Schemion has been one of the world’s best for more than a decade, but he had never registered a Triton event before this week.

But now, in his fourth event, Schemion is a Triton champion. He led pillar to post in today’s final table of the $50,000 8-Handed NLH, earning $1.35 million and yet another trophy for his bulging cabinet.

After the insane volatility of the three previous final tables this week, this one was plain sailing. It helped that the big stack was with the fearless Schemion, and so were most of the best cards. He eventually saw off the obdurate Dao Minh Phu, a Triton champion from Vietnam earlier this year, heads-up.

Schemion became the second 30-year-old German player to win a title this week, following Fedor Holz.

“I was a bit lazy the last few years,” Schemion said, explaining his mysterious absence from Triton events to date. “I didn’t want to play so much. I was thinking of coming this year, to Cyprus and Vietnam, but I didn’t make it. But here I am.”

A famous win for Ole Schemion

He added that he enjoyed everything about the experience, and once suspects we’ll be seeing much more of him from hereon out.

“It was a fun final table,” Schemion told Ali Nejad. “I had a really good feeling from the start.” Of Triton itself, Schemion said: “Actually it’s a really nice experience. Nice tournaments. Nice fields. Lot of fun to play. Nice people.”

That trophy is pretty nice too.

FINAL DAY ACTION

Day two resumptions have not been kind to overnight leaders so far at the Triton Series’ visit to London. Seth Davies plummeted out before the money in Event 1, and the dame thing happened today to Ignacio Moron. The Spaniard led the 43 remaining players into the concluding day, but was knocked out before the money bubble.

The bubble itself was quick but far from painless. On the first deal of hand-for-hand play, two players were all in and called. One was Wai Kin Yong, who played a pot through all the streets against David Yan. Yan raised from early position and Yong defended his big blind with 8h8c.

It went check, bet, call after the 7d9h2s flop, then check, bet, call after the Ts turn. The Tc completed the board and Yan now moved in. Yong called it off.

Unfortunately for Yong, Yan’s AcTd had made trips, so that knocked Yong out. But he had one last chance to rescue something from the tournament: Sam Grafton was all-in on a neighbouring table, and if he busted Yong and Grafton would split the 20th-place money.

Wai Kin Yong salvaged half a buy-in thanks to the bubble split

Grafton was in great shape, though. He had pocket aces to Erik Seidel’s pocket kings and table chatter revealed that one king had been folded. Grafton got his phone out to film it, giving animated commentary about how Seidel had “lost his head” with pocket kings.

But even though Seidel was drawing to just one out, that case king duly arrived on the flop. That meant Grafton and Yong perished on the same hand and chopped up the $73,000 prize. Both were disappointed, but $36,500 is a lot better than nothing.

Sam Grafton films his own demise

From there, players quickly accelerated towards the final table, with Schemion, Jamil Wakil and Phu flying up the counts, while others such as Linus Loeliger, Ike Haxton and Mikita Badzikouski hit the rail (via the payouts desk).

After Event 1 winner Luc Greenwood was frozen out by Schemion in 10th, they assembled around the final table with stacks as follows:

Ole Schemion – 47 BBs
Jamil Wakil – 42 BBs
Dao Minh Phu – 37 BBs
Orpen Kisacikoglu – 33 BBs
Roberto Perez – 32 BBs
David Yan – 32 BBs
Leon Sturm – 24 BBs
Nacho Barbero – 22 BBs
Danny Tang – 10 BBs

Event #5 final table players (clockwise from top left): Jamil Wakil, Dao Minh Phu, Orpen Kisacikoglu, Leon Sturm, Nacho Barbero, Roberto Perez, Danny Tang, David Yan, Ole Schemion.

Tang didn’t last long. Pocket jacks was far too good a hand to be letting go with his stack, and it was just unfortunate for Tang that Schemion was sitting with queens. That was the first hand of the final. It was pretty brutal for David Yan that Schemion had aces a few hands later. Yan had AdKs and hit the rail.

Schemion had knocked out three players in fewer than 10 hands. Tang won $134,000 for ninth and Yan took $173,000 for eighth.

Danny Tang was first out from the final
David Yan was coolered out of it by Schemion

While big hands accounted for both Tang and Schemion, Nacho Barbero’s demise was death by a thousand small cuts. He lost pots to Leon Sturm and Dao Minh Phu, then had to fold his blinds a couple of times to aggression elsewhere. He took a stand with JhTc but Jamil Wakil had KcJs, which was decisively better.

Barbero has made a happy habit of reaching final tables on the Triton Series, but this one ended in a seventh-place finish. It earned the Argentinian $235,000.

Another final for Nacho Barbero

Sturm has become a familiar face on the tournament tables of Europe over the past couple of years, graduating from the online game to become one of the most respected young hotshots. He burnished his reputation by winning a first World Series bracelet this summer, and the logical next step is a debut appearance on the Triton Series.

Sturm whiffed his first three events, but got himself into the black thanks to a final table appearance in the $50K, but his good run came to its conclusion in sixth place. Like others before him, Sturm was knocked out holding a premium, but his opponent, Roberto Perez just had a better hand.

Sturm’s AhQd was down by Perez’s AdAc. Sturm won $313,000.

Leon Sturm continued his good form this summer

At this stage, the double Triton champion Orpen Kisacikoglu was the shortest stack, while Schemion was still sitting pretty at the top. Kisacikoglu managed one big double through another Triton title holder, Phu, and that left three players close to even staring up enviously at Schemion.

But the best hands kept going to the relentless German, and he was then able to turn his attention to Jamil Wakil. The Canadian is another Triton newcomer making a debut in London, and he too whiffed the first three events.

But even though his tournament ended in fifth, falling with a dominated queen to Schemion’s AcQs, he banked $400,000, which puts him in profit for the trip so far. Wakil is another player with a fine online reputation, who has enjoyed a great 2023 to date. It’s just getting better.

Jamil Wakil fell in fifth

Kisacikoglu was again the short stack, but two hands after Wakil’s departure, the London-based Turkish businessman looked down at AcKs in the big blind and saw Schemion open-shoving his button.

That was a snap-call, but Schemion was winning every race, including this one. Schemion had pocket deuces which held up and bounced Kisacikoglu. There was $497,000 waiting at the payouts desk on his way out.

Orpen Kisacikoglu remains a double champ after busting in fourth here

At this point, it seemed as if no one could lay a glove on Schemion. He had more than 70 big blinds while his two challengers had only half of that between them. But Phu proved in Vietnam that he had little respect for reputations and he managed to find the first chink in Schemion’s armour.

It came thanks to AcQc in his hand, which beat Schemion’s Kc6c. Schemion flopped top pair, but the same board gave Phu a straight and prompted his trademark jubilant celebration.

Hands aloft for Dao Minh Phu

The Spanish player Roberto Perez was not quite so fortunate. Perez was yet another Triton debutant here in London, but he cashed the only two events he had played so far, landing 20th in the $40K Mystery Bounty and 19th in the $25K GGMillion$.

He had made it three from three when he got through the bubble again in this one, and here he was now sitting in the last three. Unfortunately for him, he couldn’t translate the position into a win. He three-bet shoved with KdQc after yet another Schemion open. Schemion again was packing, though. His AdKs hit nothing but didn’t need to.

Perez was toast in third, earning $604,000.

Three from three for Roberto Perez

When they started heads-up play, Schemion had an enormous advantage. He was sitting with 17 million to Phu’s 4.5 million. However, Phu has demonstrated before some remarkable staying power in the late stages of tournaments, and once again he showed he was up for the battle.

Phu scored a major double up when he managed to find a miracle deuce to win with Jd2d to beat Schemion’s KcJc. That gave Phu a decent stack and the chance to try to take down the German boss.

However, Schemion soon dished out a dose of the same medicine on Phu. They got it in again pre-flop, with Phu holding AdKd against Schemion’s Ac9d.

Schemion flopped a straight draw and then spiked the 9c on the turn. Phu offered his hand to Schemion, but the German jokingly waved it away, knowing Phu still had seven outs on the river. This time he missed, however, and was condemned to a second-place finish and “only” $915,000. He now has a first second and a third on this series. Schemion of course now did shake his hand and gave him a hug.

Not yet with the handshake
Ole Schemion and Dao Minh Phu embrace at the end

And as for Schemion? He has now made his indelible mark on the Triton Series, just like he has everywhere else in the world.

RESULTS

Event #5 – NLH – 8-Handed
Dates: July 30-31, 2023
Entries: 112 (inc 73 re-entries)
Prize pool: $5,600,000

1 – Ole Schemion, Germany – $1,350,000
2 – Dao Minh Phu, Vietnam – $915,000
3 – Roberto Perez, Spain – $604,000
4 – Orpen Kisacikoglu, Turkey – $497,000
5 – Jamil Wakil, Canada – $400,000
6 – Leon Sturm, Germany – $313,000
7 – Nacho Barbero, Argentina – $235,000
8 – David Yan, New Zealand – $173,000
9 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – $134,000

10 – Luc Greenwood, Canada – $112,000
11 – Erik Seidel, USA – $112,000
12 – Mikita Badziakouski, Belarus – $98,000
13 – Matthias Eibinger, Austria – $98,000
14 – Isaac Haxton, USA – $89,000
15 – Johannes Straver, Netherlands – $89,000
16 – Linus Loeliger, Switzerland – $81,000
17 – Sean Perry, USA – $81,000
18 – Biao Ding, Vietnam – $73,000
19 – Pedro Garagnani, Brazil – $73,000
=20 – Sam Grafton, UK – $36,500*
=20 – Wai Kin Yong, Malaysia – $36,500*

*eliminated on same hand from different tables; chop 20th place money

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

JORSTAD LANDS MAIDEN TRITON VICTORY AFTER SHORT-HANDED TURBULENCE IN LONDON

Champion Espen Jorstad!

Three of the best players in world poker played an incredible short-stack shootout tonight to decide the latest winner on the Triton Super High Roller Series. The fickle finger of fate finally pointed at Espen Jorstad and named him the winner of what was an extraordinary contest.

“The three-way was the craziest three-way I’ve ever played,” Jorstad said, shortly after securing the first Triton title of his career. It was every bit as hard fought as the WSOP Main Event victory that vaulted him into the esteemed company he finds on the Triton Series.

“Legends left, legends right,” Jorstad, 35, said of his first impressions of this tour.

The Norwegian was the last man standing after a captivating conclusion to a $40,000 buy-in Mystery Bounty tournament, which had 133 entries and an incredible final three: Jorstad alongside the UK’s leading talent Stephen Chidwick and the player many consider to be the greatest of all time, Phil Ivey.

Three handed play

It was an irresistible line-up but the three players must have often felt like mere pawns in some metaphysical game. The stacks grew incredibly short and each player was both chip leader and short stack numerous times as a series of double ups kept things going late into the night.

Jorstad came back from about two big blinds on more than one occasion, eventually downing Chidwick in third and then busting Ivey heads up. Ivey missed out on the chance to become a four-time winner, as Jorstad banks $639,000 for his win — so far.

Half of this $5.32 million prize pool is still technically to be played for. They will draw the Mystery Bounty envelopes tomorrow, with a top prize of $400,000 still lurking inside one of them, alongside a minimum $40,000 per bounty token. Jorstad has five of them, so a minimum $200K more. (See below for more about the Mystery Bounty portion of the tournament.)

We have all of that fun to look forward to tomorrow, but take a deep breath and prepare for an epic recap from this final day. It was full of bizarre twists and turns and incredible comebacks, none moreso than from that man Jorstad.

FINAL DAY ACTION

The second and final day of the tournament began with 38 players still involved — otherwise known as 38 bounties now on offer. The regular payout structure offered prizes to the top 20 finishers, so there was a delicate line to be trod between bounty hunting and self-preservation.

One of the biggest pre-bubble pots took place between Henrik Hecklen and Eric Wasserson, with the former three-bet shoving his big stack over Wasserson’s only marginally smaller holding. Wasserson had the goods — AcKc — which dominated Hecklen’s As7s, and Wasserson scored an enormous double. It left Hecklen with only two big blinds.

Henrik Hecklen weeps over his one big blind

Chris Brewer, sitting between Wasserson and Hecklen, will have greatly enjoyed watching the hand play out, especially because he had only seven big blinds in front of him. However, Hecklen managed to cling on a few more hands, enough time for Wasserson to turn his attention to Brewer.

Wasserson open-shoved with three tiny stacks sitting to his left, including both Hecklen and Brewer. Brewer looked down at pocket eights and spent a couple of time-bank chips before deciding whether to risk his tournament life. He determined that it was.

What he didn’t know at this juncture was that Wasserson hadn’t even looked at his cards. It was only after Brewer had called off that Wasserson saw he had pocket kings.

Brewer leapt out of his seat in mock incredulity and, after action finally concluded on neighbouring tables, the dealer put out five cards that all missed Brewer’s eights. Brewer has been in incredible form of late, including a second-placed finish yesterday, so he didn’t seem too cut up about this bubble. Everyone else was now in the money, including Hecklen and his one big blind.

Chris Brewer bubbles: “How do you find kings when you haven’t looked!?!”

There were, of course, only eight spots around the final table so the focus now shifted to reaching that marker. Players such as Nacho Barbero, Elton Tsang and Ben Heath couldn’t rally sufficiently to get to final stages. (Hecklen surrendered his short stack too.)

Spain’s Ignacio Moron led the field for some portion of the day, but it was his elimination in ninth place that set the final. He took a rough beat too: he was involved in three-way pot against Phil Ivey and Keat Liu Chun and had the best hand with QcQh to Ivey’s pocket jacks and Chun’s AcKh. However, the dealer put a jack on the turn to give Ivey close to a triple up and send Moron out.

Ivey is good enough without that kind of assistance.

We therefore assembled the following final table:

FINAL TABLE STACKS

Johannes Straver – 69 BBs
Phil Ivey – 59 BBs
Daniel Dvoress – 39 BBs
Espen Jorstad – 37 BBs
Stephen Chidwick – 28 BBs
Eric Wasserson – 18 BBs
Keat Liu Chun – 15 BBs
Alek Boika – 3 BBs

Event 3 final table players (l-r): Keat Liu Chun, Stephen Chidwick, Johannes Straver, Eric Wasserson, Phil Ivey, Daniel Dvoress, Alex Boika, Espen Jorstad

Alek Boika was obviously the man in most jeopardy, but he found aces to double through Stephen Chidwick and was then able to hang on long enough to watch Chun’s unfortunate streak continue. Chun picked up AdTs in the big blind, which was plenty good enough to ship all in after an open from the chip-leading Straver.

However Straver had a real hand, AhQh, and it stayed best. It sent Chun to the rail, earning a second Triton cash, worth $82,500.

Boika’s stay of execution endured for another few orbits, but his stack was still the smallest at the table and it couldn’t last forever. He ended up getting his last chips in in a decent spot — sitting with Ah4h to Ivey’s Qh8h, but fortune favoured Ivey again as he hit an eight on the river to take another bounty.

Boika won $111,500 for seventh.

Alex Boika brought a short stack to the final but laddered one spot

There was no let up in the fierceness of this competition, of course, and players of the calibre of Stephen Chidwick and Daniel Dvoress now found themselves the shortest. Chidwick clung on a bit longer, but Dvoress perished at Ivey’s hands too. Dvoress was in the big blind after Ivey open-pushed the small blind. Dvoress found Ad2c and called all in. Ivey had pocket fives, however, and held.

Dvoress, who won his first Triton title to end the recent Triton Cyprus festival, banked $149,000 for this sixth-place finish.

Daniel Dvoress fell short of a second title

Three hands later and there was another elimination. But this one was a pretty gross cooler, which accounted for Wasserson. Wasserson has only one tournament cash on his resume outside of the United States (in the Bahamas, in 2012), but he has been tempted to London by the Luxon Invitational taking place later this week.

He had enjoyed his time in this tournament though, particularly during that bubble period where he was central to all those fun and games. Back then, Wasserson had pocket kings, the very same hand he now found at this six-handed final table. It was plenty good enough to get his chips in again. The problem this time was that Straver had aces and there was no getting away from it. (They were in the blinds too, to make it even more gross.)

Wasserson couldn’t hit the two-outer and so headed to the payouts desk to pick up $190,000. He can come back tomorrow and cash his bounties, of course.

Kings accounted for Eric Wasserson

The last four headed to a quick dinner break, with Straver’s 69 BBs in front of Ivey (35), Jorstad (19) and Chidwick (10). It didn’t take very long after the resumption for the shortest of those stacks to go in, but Chidwick’s AhQd won a race against Jorstad’s pocket jacks for them to swap places on the leader board.

Never mind. Jorstad doubled back up through Straver on the next hand, with Ac4d turning a four to beat Straver’s Ad9c. That brought the stacks pretty even again.

The formidable Phil Ivey

The first two final tables so far in this festival have been characterised by topsy-turvy late stages, where double ups were far more common than bustouts. This one began to follow the same pattern. Jorstad doubled up through Ivey, with AhTh beating Ad5s. But then Ivey doubled through Straver, getting pocket fours to hold against KsQs.

The Straver v Ivey sub-plot had been compelling, with the less known Dutchman putting Ivey into the tank for numerous, extended periods, Ivey invariably emerging having made the correct laydown. (Ivey had also made an incredible laydown of trip kings on the bubble, faced with river aggression from Dvoress.) But Ivey went on to double Straver right back again, when pocket kings stayed good against Ivey’s KhQh.

That put Ivey on a downward tick, and he lost a race to Chidwick soon after — Chidwick’s AsTd besting Ivey’s pocket sixes — for the two to swap positions again. Ivey was down but he wasn’t out, and one final skirmish with Straver got him relatively healthy again.

Straver’s pocket nines lost to Ivey’s pocket jacks, and it was terminal this time for the Dutchman. He won a stack of bounty tokens that he’ll cash in tomorrow, but his own bounty went to Ivey. Straver, for the time being, wins $236,500.

Johannes Straver tangled frequently with Phil Ivey at his first Triton final

The average stack was now only 30 big blinds, but this was a mouthwatering final three. Ivey, by most estimation the best player the world has seen, up against Chidwick, a man whose name always appears on the “best of” lists, and Jorstad, who has done something neither of his opponents has done in winning the WSOP Main Event.

Chidwick was the first to apply serious pressure on Ivey, assuming the chip lead in a huge pot against Jorstad. Chidwick had aces and bet all the way, finding calls at every street from Jorstad’s KhQc, which flopped a flush draw and turned top pair. It left Jorstad with only a couple of big blinds, but true to form he doubled up almost immediately, with Kh4s beating Chidwick’s 2c3c.

He then did it again, also through Chidwick, with Ah8s beating JcTh. And even Ivey struggled to collect the bounty when Jorstad hit a flush with Ad2h and beat Ivey’s AsQc.

That meant that when Jorstad found aces soon after, he had enough to put a serious dent in Chidwick’s stack, especially because Chidwick had AcKh and the money went in. Jorstad was now back in the lead.

The players took a break and pushed into Level 28, further than the pre-published structure sheet had planned. But all Jorstad’s good work was undone in one hand after the break when his Ad9c lost to Chidwick’s AhKc. “We’re back to where we were about an hour ago,” Chidwick said, looking at his own chip lead and Jorstad’s micro-stack.

Jorstad moved his last 3 BBs in on the next hand, and Ivey called. And it looked like Jorstad might be mounting another comeback when his Kc9d stayed better than Ivey’s Kh6c. It got better for Jorstad on the next hand, when Chidwick shoved, Ivey folded pocket fives and Jorstad called with AcTh to Chidwick’s Kh5c. “Wish I’d have called now,” Ivey said when the board ran completely dry.

A sheepish Espen Jorstad on the comeback trail

This wasn’t done yet. Ivey, now the short stack, picked up red pocket aces and doubled through Chidwick’s 9s6s. He did it again soon after with Ac4h through Chidwick’s ThQh. Chidwick had now taken the journey from leader to short stack.

But he started his own move back into contention with a couple of blind steals and then a come-from-behind double, finding a five with Ah5s to beat Jorstad’s AcTd. No matter for Jorstad. He got the chips back on the next hand with As4d against Chidwick’s Jd4c. They were trapped in the never-ending story.

Jorstad nosed ahead of Chidwick, as Ivey started applying big stack pressure. And the dam wall finally crumbled when Chidwick was simply forced to defend his big blind to a shove from Jorstad, even though he was sitting with only Ts5d. Jorstad’s Qc3s was ahead all the way — particularly as three more threes appeared to give him quads.

Chidwick won $287,000 for this third place, but a second title still eludes him.

Stephen Chidwick had to settle for third

After that titanic three-handed battle, Ivey sat down behind 28 BBs to take on Jorstad’s 17. However, tables quickly turned as Jorstad moved into the lead without showdown and left Ivey on the ropes. The American great got out of jail when he was all in and called with Qs5s to Jorstad’s Qh8c but they chopped it up.

However, he couldn’t wriggle free a couple of hands later when Kh2h went up against KdJs and nothing changed on flop, turn or river.

“Playing heads up against Ivey, the biggest legend of the game in my opinion, just makes it even more special,” Jorstad said, adding, “I’m extremely grateful for all the run good I’ve had on the last three years. It’s insane.”

It certainly was.

MYSTERY BOUNTY DRAW

As is now customary, the draw for the Mystery Bounties took place the day after the main tournament concluded and, with $2.66 million wedged inside those bounty envelopes, it was worth waiting for.

Johannes Straver pulls the biggest bounty prize

The top prize was $400,000, while the smallest bounty prize was $40,000. There were numerous prizes in between. There were also a couple of bonus prizes/red herrings. One was a trip on a luxury yacht, courtesy of Triton’s partner Bombay. That was a brilliant prize. The other was cruel: a bounty worth nothing, but which would have looked like the $400,000 prize when it was squeezed out of its envelope.

Ali Nejad hosted the bounty draw during the dinner break of Event 5. It quickly became the Johannes Straver show. The Dutchman had nine bounty tokens and snagged the $400K prize on his first pull. He added a further $500,000 through the next eight and boosted his overall haul by $900K. It meant he finished this event with $1,136,500, more than anybody else.

Kate Badurek pulled a $180K bounty on behalf of Dan Shak

The title winner Espen Jorstad added $260,000 from his five bounties. Meanwhile, the runner up Phil Ivey will be Bombay’s guest for its amazing luxury experience. Ivey’s three bounties earned him $140,000, plus that wonderful package.

The results below now reflect the additional prizes.

RESULTS

Event #3 – $40,000 7-HANDED MYSTERY BOUNTY
Dates: July 29-30, 2023
Entries: 133 (inc. 43 re-entries)
Prize pool: $2,660,000

1 – Espen Jorstad, Norway – $639,000 (plus $260,000 in bounties)
2 – Phil Ivey, USA – $434,900 (plus $140,000)
3 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – $287,000 (plus $40,000)
4 – Johannes Straver, Netherlands – $236,500 (plus $900,000)
5 – Eric Wasserson, USA – $190,000 (plus $40,000)
6 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada – $149,000 (plus $380,000)
7 – Alek Boika, Belarus – $111,500 (plus $40,000)
8 – Keat Liu Chun, Malaysia – $82,500 (plus $80,000)

9 – Ignacio Moron, Spain – $63,800 (plus $280,000)
10 – Antoine Saout, France – $53,200
11 – Thai Thinh Chu, Vietnam – $53,200 (plus $80,000)
12 – Ben Heath, UK – $46,600
13 – Christoph Vogelsang, Germany – $46,600 (plus $120,000)
14 – Dan Shak, USA – $42,600 (plus $180,000)
15 – Elton Tsang, Hong Kong – $42,600 (plus $80,000)
16 – Nacho Barbero, Argentina – $38,600
17 – Jonathan Pardy, Canada – $38,600
18 – Brian Kim, USA – $34,600
19 – Henrik Hecklen, Denmark – $34,600
20 – Roberto Perez, Spain – $34,600

Patrik Antonius, Finland – $40,000 in bounties

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

HOLZ IS BACK! GERMAN RETURNS TO TRITON WINNER’S CIRCLE SIX YEARS SINCE LAST TRIUMPH

Three-time Triton champion Fedor Holz!

It’s been six years since the last victory on the Triton Series for Fedor Holz, an eternity by the standards of the young German phenom who used to win a title pretty much every week. But after a tenacious display in the $25,000 7-Handed No Limit Hold’em event here at Triton London, Holz is back in the winner’s circle, claiming a third career Triton title and banking $609,853.

Holz completed his triumph over a field of 120 entries by downing the in-form Chris Brewer heads-up and after the pair agreed an ICM deal. Brewer himself has two Triton titles, both won in the past year, and he added two World Series bracelets this summer to underline his sensational pedigree.

It’s crazy that we consider Holz to be a veteran. He turned 30 only last week. But he has reigned so powerfully over poker for so long that this seemed like a blast from the past, a victory for the old guard over the relative newcomer Brewer — actually six months Holz’s senior. But Holz is still stoked to be playing high level poker, as he explained to Ali Nejad.

“It’s really the competition and the love for the game,” Holz said when asked what keeps him motivated. “These moments! I’m sad when I bust out, not necessarily because I’m missing out on the money but because I can’t continue playing. When it ends, there’s a little moment where you realise it’s over and you switch to real life again.”

Brewer had a small chip lead when the two of them looked at the numbers, and secured himself $600K plus change. But a topsy-turvey, shallow-stacked final shootout eventually went to Holz and he adds this Triton London title to those he won in Manila and Montenegro back when he was in his early 20s.

The tournament provided another feast for poker fans, with the tremendously hard-fought final stages featuring players from four continents. It ended with that transatlantic battle and another famous victory for Holz — setting him up nicely for the festival to come.

“I think it gives a lot of confidence if you win a tournament,” he said. “I think you just believe more in your decision-making, so I’m super excited for the rest of the week. I think I’ll have a lot of fun.”

Fedor Holz celebrates another success

FINAL DAY ACTION

The returning field of 27 (from 120 total entries) was led by Seth Davies, a Triton stalwart with 13 cashes on the tour but no title. However, even someone as steady as Davies couldn’t survive a turbulent opening few levels and he crashed out in 22nd place, two spots off the money.

Davies lost a ton of chips with pocket sevens to Brian Kim’s pocket deuces after Kim turned a full house. He then ran into Ben Heath’s aces. Davies’ demise underlined how volatile the game can be when the tournament enters its business stages.

Seth Davies’ chip lead evaporated

The stone bubble was an especially protracted affair, with numerous short stacks and two micro-stacks finding new ways to cling on. Dan Smith had only one big blind when he doubled with KsTs against Ad3d. Then Johannes Straver managed a triple, when his pocket eights made a four-flush and beat Yuri Dzivielevski and Fedor Holz out of one.

Michael Soyza won a flip, rivering an ace, to beat Bruno Volkmann, and with the clock continuing to tick on, nearly half the field had less than 15 big blinds.

Smith had never quite managed to pull himself completely out of trouble, but he found a pretty good spot to get the last of his chips in again. He had KdQs versus the chip-leading Kai Bong Lo’s QhJc. The flop was fairly benign: 3c2c8d. And although the Kc turn hit Smith, it also gave possibilities to Lo.

The Tc river filled the flush and Smith’s long vigil came to a close. Everyone else was in the money and guaranteed a payout of at least $39,000.

Dan Smith watches the last of his chips head elsewhere on the bubble

RACE TO THE FINAL

With bubble pressure now alleviated, things loosened up a touch. All of the short stacks now found reason to try to accumulate, with the obvious associated risks. Straver hit the rail, as did his neighbour Jason Koon. Soyza couldn’t survive past 14th, but even Lo tumbled down from the top of the counts and hit the rail in 11th.

After David Yan went out in ninth (a day after a 13th-place finish in the opening event here), they had a final table of eight. Fedor Holz sat at the top, having prospered the most from the tetchy session leading into the final. He was the only player at this stage with a bigger-than-average stack, and had put it to good use.

FINAL TABLE STARTING STACKS

Fedor Holz – 65 BBs
Brian Kim – 30 BBs
Roman Hrabec – 24 BBs
Renat Bohdanov – 23 BBs
Bruno Volkmann – 17 BBs
Chris Brewer – 15 BBs
Danilo Velasevic – 9 BBs
Tobias Schwecht – 7 BBs

Event 2 final table players (l-r): Bruno Volkmann, Fedor Holz, Renat Bohdanov, Chris Brewer, Danilo Velasevic, Roman Hrabec, Tobias Schwecht and Brian Kim

As is increasingly common, players had what in other formats would be considered shove/fold stacks, but in Super High Roller events, where every pay jump is enormous, there is no longer any such thing. Players dug in and prepared to wait for their spots. The shortest stack, Tobias Schwecht, soon found one and got pocket nines to hold up for double.

On the very next hand, Schwecht picked up pocket jacks and must have thought his time for climbing the leader board had come. However, Chris Brewer had KdQc, called Schwecht’s three-bet shove, and watched the dealer put four diamonds on the board.

Schwecht was out in eighth for $93,000.

Tobias Schwecht was first out from the final

Bruno Volkmann took over short-stack duties, but after three consecutive shoves — resulting in one double, with jacks through eights, and two folds all around — he was up into fourth in the counts, leaving Danilo Velasevic and Roman Hrabec with six and seven blinds, respectively.

Hrabec had been the player with the eights when Volkmann doubled, and he never recovered from that one. The leading Czech player on the Triton Series banked a runner-up finish in his first ever event in Vietnam, and here he was at his third final table.

However, Volkmann wasn’t done with Hrabec and three-bet shoved with KsQs after Hrabec opened with Ad3h. Hrabec called off but lost after Volkmann flopped a queen.

Hrabec added $126,000 to his ledger for seventh.

Roman Hrabec added another final table appearance to his resume

Velasevic was still critically short-stacked, so surely looked on with glee as Renat Bohdanov moved all in from the button and Chris Brewer looked him up from the small blind. Brewer’s AsQd stayed best against Bohdanov’s Kd6d and Bohdanov was out.

The Ukrainian is visiting the Triton Series for the first time here in London and put himself in the black with a $168,000 score for sixth.

Velasevic, another Triton newcomer, had laddered four spots despite coming to the final with a tiny stack. However, his resurgence couldn’t take him past fifth and he became Brewer’s second victim in consecutive hands. Brewer open-shoved his button with two shorties to his left, but Velasevic’s Ac3c was plenty good enough for a call.

Brewer had only Th8h but drilled a ten on the flop and that was that for Velasevic. He takes $214,500 back to Serbia, a new career best.

The end of the day for Danilo Velasevic

Despite his big lead coming into the final, Holz had mainly stayed away from the action as the shortest stacks perished. Then when he did get involved in his first significant pot, he lost a big one to Volkmann, doubling the Brazilian again. Holz opened with Ad7d from under the gun and Volkmann defended his big blind with what viewers on the Triton live stream knew was Ks4s.

The flop of 4h4c6c therefore probably looked pretty safe for Holz, but was anything but. Holz bet, Volkmann called, taking them to the Qs on the turn. The pattern repeated with another bet and a call. The Ah on the river was enough for Holz to move in, and Volkmann called off for the double up.

That put Holz at the bottom of the standings, but he built himself back into contention with two doubles through Brewer. On the first, he got Kc2d to hold against Qs8c. And then Holz hit a five when he got it in with Ac5h against Brewer’s AdQc.

Fedor Holz’s prayers are answered

It was anyone’s game once more.

After players agreed to truncate their dinner break to 10 minutes (they had only around 55 big blinds between them) Kim was now the short stack. He duly got it in very quickly after players returned from their repast, and he was very quickly out. Kim was in the big blind with Ks9c and called Volkmann’s shove.

However, Volkmann had AcJd and flopped a full house. That was the end of the road for Kim, who banked $267,000 for fourth.

Brian Kim was out in fourth

The average stack was now 20 big blinds and we were into a three-handed end-game. Holz secured another big double when he looked down at QcJc in the big blind and watched Volkmann shove from the small.

Holz called and Volkmann only had 7s4s which didn’t catch up. That left Volkmann under the most extreme pressure and he was out a couple of hands later, losing with 9s8s to Brewer’s Qc9h.

Volkmann’s short Triton career has already bagged him more than $1 million in earnings, and he is now two cashes from two tournaments here in London as well. His third place in this one was for $324,000.

Bruno Volkmann is getting ever closer to a first Triton title

Holz versus Brewer was a mouthwatering heads-up duel. The form player of this year squared off against the man who redefined what a hot streak could be only a few years ago. They both already had two Triton wins and were therefore gunning for a third.

Brewer had the lead when they reached heads-up — 35 BBs to 25 BBs — but they decided to eliminate some variance and quickly came to a deal. Brewer locked up $600,647 to Holz’s $569,853, leaving $40,000 to play for, plus the trophy.

Deal negotiations at the end of the tournament

For the second night in succession, viewers were treated to an intriguing heads-up match, albeit with shorter stacks and for much less money. (Manuel Zapf and Luc Greenwood did not do a deal in yesterday’s encounter.) Holz took the lead after a succession of small pots, but Brewer wrestled it back.

They then remained all but even as the levels ticked ever upward.

Holz, however, then won what seemed to be a pivotal pot. They got all their chips in preflop in a straight flip: Holz’s Ad6s against Brewer’s pocket fours. Holz hit his six on the flop and took a huge lead.

Chris Brewer played his part in another fun heads-up duel

Brewer did manage to find two double ups of his own, but he never pulled back into the lead. Eventually, with both players sitting with sub 15 BB stacks, all the money went in for one last time. On this occasion, Holz had QcTc and flopped all kinds of opportunities when the 9c2dJc appeared.

But Brewer’s KsJd was actually still ahead, and stayed there after the 3h turn. The 8h on the river was one of Holz’s myriad outs, however, and Brewer seemed ready for it. “Good game,” he said immediately.

And so it is that Fedor Holz pushes his Triton earnings closer to $11 million, and puts a third Triton trophy on his shelf.

Event #2 – $25,000 NLH 7-Handed
Dates: July 28-29, 2023
Entries: 120 (inc. 37 re-entries)
Prize pool: $3,000,000

1 – Fedor Holz, Germany – $609,853*
2 – Chris Brewer, USA – $600,647*
3 – Bruno Volkmann, Brazil – $324,000
4 – Brian Kim, USA – $267,000
5 – Danilo Velasevic, Serbia – $214,500
6 – Renat Bohdanov, Ukraine – $168,000
7 – Roman Hrabec, Czech Republic – $126,000
8 – Tobias Schwecht, Germany – $93,000

9 – David Yan, New Zealand – $72,000
10 – Yuri Dzivielevski, Brazil – $60,000
11 – Kai Bong Lo, Hong Kong – $60,000
12 – Ben Heath, UK – $52,500
13 – Samuel Ju, Germany – $52,500
14 – Michael Soyza, Malaysia – $48,000
15 – Thai Thinh Chu, Vietnam – $48,000
16 – Choon Tong Siow, Malaysia – $43,500
17 – Michael Rossi, USA – $43,500
18 – Jason Koon, USA – $39,000
19 – Johannes Straver, Netherlands – $39,000
20 – Seth Gottlieb, USA – $39,000

*denotes heads-up deal

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

OH BROTHER! LUC GREENWOOD MATCHES BROTHER SAM WITH LONDON TRITON TITLE

Champion Luc Greenwood!

The Triton Super High Roller Series’ second trip to London kicked off with a bang tonight, crowning Luc Greenwood as the festival’s first champion and awarding the Canadian $897,000. He is the winner of the $25,000 buy-in GG Million$ Live event, which started a two-week festival at the JW Marriott Grosvenor House.

Poker fans around the world have grown accustomed to seeing the name “Greenwood” etched on major trophies, but it’s more commonly preceded with a “Sam”. However tonight Luc added his name to the roll-call of Triton champions, matching Sam’s achievement, and the pair become the first brothers to claim titles on this exceptional series.

More than that: Sam and Luc, 34, are identical twins, and their images side-by-side on the Triton winners’ banners is going to leave many observers very confused indeed. But Luc tonight proves that not all the poker talent belongs on his brother’s side of the divide.

It was an emotional moment for Luc, who described a difficult few years since he last appeared on the Triton Series, here in London in 2019. The Greenwoods’ father passed away in 2020 and Luc paid tribute to the people who had kept him going.

“There are some things that are more important than poker, and obviously I miss my dad a lot,” Greenwood said. “But I’m very grateful to have so many friends and family cheering me on. My mum and my brother at home. And my brother Sam and my girlfriend. I’ve had a very blessed life and the blessings continue here in London.”

Luc Greenwood is joined by brother Sam and girlfriend Montana Skuoka

He added that he had not been expecting this superb triumph.

“It feels amazing,” he said. “I remember when I walked in here with my girlfriend and I saw all the faces on the wall, I thought, ‘I’m not up there yet.’ I didn’t think it would happen this fast. But obviously it’s amazing. Normally I feel that these things don’t happen to me. But it actually happened. It’s pretty amazing.”

Luc has returned in some style and claims a victory that sets him up for the long festival to come.

Greenwood prevailed from a record-setting field of 162 entries in this tournament, defeating Germany’s Manuel Zapf heads up. Zapf won his way into this event as part of a $100K package offered to online streamers by the online cardroom ACR Poker.

After Mark Rubbathan won a tournament in Vietnam after earning his trip as an ACR Stormer, Zapf was in great shape to follow his lead. Zapf was the dominant force through almost all of the second and final day here, but lost a titanic heads up duel against Greenwood.

The final hand came when both Greenwood and Zapf flopped top pair on a board of 6s4c9h. Greenwood had 9s5s and his kicker played against Zapf’s 9c3c. Money went in on both the flop and then after the 2d turn. And the 9d river only sealed it in Greenwood’s favour.

Zapf still took $605,500, which is the biggest score of his life. That said, Greenwood’s haul was the biggest of his career as well. The Triton Series tends to offer that.

Manuel Zapf became another ACR Stormer to win big

FINAL DAY’S ACTION

After 15 levels of play on Day 1, there were 33 players remaining when play resumed today, with only 27 players due to be paid.

It meant the first bubble of the festival came around 90 minutes into the day. With a handful of shorter stacks scattered around the room, Jonathan Jaffe wasn’t under the most extreme pressure with his 10 big binds. However, when he found AhQd it was plenty good enough to get his chips in. The only problem was that the larger-stacked Manuel Zapf had AdKd and made the call behind him.

Jaffe wasn’t stone dead on the QcTdJd flop, but he wasn’t far off. The 3d turn made it certain and Jaffe was flushed away. The remaining 27 were in the money and the race began to reach the final table.

Jonathan Jaffe burst the first bubble of Triton London 2023

Zapf was now in pole position, and he remained there pretty much without contest for the next seven or eight hours. That was the period during which the field shrank quickly and luminaries including Webster Lim, Dan Smith, Danny Tang, Matthias Eibinger, Nick Petrangelo and Christoph Vogelsang hit the rail.

Poker’s form player Chris Brewer departed in 11th, followed swiftly by Bruno Volkmann in 10th. It meant the assortment of players around the final table mirrored the complexion of the field as a whole: some Triton stalwarts and multiple champions alongside some first-timers.

Nick Petrangelo was among those to hit the rail before the final

Zapf, firmly in the latter category, led the way.

FINAL TABLE LINE-UP

Manuel Zapf – 90 BBs
Luc Greenwood – 48 BBs
Sam Grafton – 44 BBs
Pablo Brito – 31 BBs
Henrik Hecklen – 25 BBs
Oliver Bithell – 24 BBs
Kiat Lee – 23 BBs
Aleks Ponakovs – 21 BBs
Juan Pardo – 20 BBs

Event 1 final table (clockwise from top left): Juan Pardo, Manuel Zapf, Oliver Bithell, Henrik Hecklen, Luc Greenwood, Sam Grafton, Pablo Brito, Aleks Ponakovs, Kiat Lee.

By Triton standards, 20 big blinds is absolutely plenty, and so there was no furious rush to the door. Zapf and Luc Greenwood remained ahead, while the other seven players exchanged chips and the prospect of a nine-handed table for the dinner break became a reality. However, Sam Grafton’s food would have tasted more bitter than the others’ thanks to the final hand before the break. Grafton lost a huge flip with pocket jacks to Henrik Hecklen’s AhQh, doubling Hecklen and leaving Grafton short.

When they returned from dinner, Grafton became the first player out from the final table. He couldn’t get pocket fours to hold against Zapf’s AdJh. Grafton left with $91,000 for ninth.

Sam Grafton couldn’t recover from losing a flip to Hecklen

Juan Pardo had all but tripled up on the hand that sent Volkmann to the rail in tenth, when his pocket aces beat his countryman Volkmann, as well as Zapf’s pocket sixes, in a significant pot for him. He then also scored two relatively early doubles at the final table, first through Kiat Lee and then out-racing Hecklen’s over-cards with pocket sevens.

However the Spanish player could only tread water from thereon, and never built what could be called a dominant stack. He found himself in trouble and got his chips in with As5s. Zapf was lurking with pocket jacks, however, and Pardo’s day was done. He took $109,800.

Juan Pardo’s run ended in eighth

There is a strong Brazilian contingent here in London, and even though Volkmann departed before the final, Pablo Brito was still involved deep into the night. He was another player who largely kept out of danger in the early stages of the final table, but then found his first significant pot to be his last.

He was yet another victim of Zapf, getting his chips in with AsKd but failing to out-run Zapf’s pocket eights. Brito, who first appeared on the Triton Series in Vietnam earlier this year, improved on his two small cashes there with a $151,500 score for seventh.

Pablo Brito was the last Brazilian in the field

Aleks Ponakovs had already picked up five Triton Series cashes since his debut in Madrid last year, but has not yet got deeper than fourth place despite four final tables. Although Ponakovs’ day will surely come, this was to be another frustrating finish for the Latvian, who perished in sixth from this one.

It all looked very rosy for Ponakovs when he picked up pocket aces and doubled through Hecklen, whose jacks were dominated. But on the very next hand, Ponakovs open-shoved from the small blind, hoping to pinch Greenwood’s big blind. However Greenwood found a hand — pocket tens — and beat Ponakovs’ KdTd.

Ponakovs won $208,200 for sixth.

Aleksejs Ponakovs still looking for a first title

The skirmish with Ponakovs had put Hecklen on the ropes and the two-time champion couldn’t recover. Only a few minutes after his previous nemesis departed, Hecklen followed Ponakovs out the door. And it was Greenwood again who did the damage.

This time, Greenwood had AhKh and it was an easy four-bet shove over Hecklen’s three-bet. Hecklen had pocket sixes but lost this race. There was a king on the flop and another on the turn. Hecklen departed in fifth for $271,000.

No three-time for Henrik Hecklen

Greenwood was now on a roll and Kiat Lee became the next person under the steamroller. Lee was Player of the Series in Vietnam after six cashes from eight events, but he is another player still looking for a maiden title. He kicked off here in London with yet another deep run, but had to settle for fourth and $339,800.

Lee’s chip stack remained healthy for long periods of the final, but he was eventually caught up by the blinds. He got his final nine bigs in with Ac6d, but Greenwood snapped him off with AhTd. (Lee found a six on the flop, but the ten on the river crushed him.)

Kiat Lee

Although a relative unknown on the live circuit, the UK’s Oliver Bithell has already known the joy of a six-figure score. He picked that up in 2019, when a great run in the World Series Main Event notched him $324,650 for 27th. This was a step up, however: a first appearance on the Triton Series.

Bithell was absolutely loving it, and was near the top of the counts through almost all of the first day and a half. It was only when play got short handed that he found himself under pressure — and he too hit the rail when he first made a real stand.

On the hand immediately after Lee’s bust-out, Bithell, with 16 big blinds, open pushed Ah5h. Zapf called with As8c and hit an eight. Bithell’s brilliant run earned him a career best $416,700.

Bad news for Oliver Bithell

That brought them down to the final two, Greenwood versus Zapf. Between them, they had knocked out all others at the final and they both had decent stacks. Zapf’s 82 BBs was ahead of Greenwood’s 53. But there was every reason to expect a long one.

There seemed to be some kind of discussion about potentially looking at the numbers, but the idea never took hold. They sat down and prepared to play for all of it.

Heads up between Manuel Zapf and Luc Greenwood

As ever, the best way to learn all the twists and turns of a tumultuous heads-up is to seek out the replay of the live stream on the Triton Poker Plus app. But the general gist is that Greenwood surged into the lead, Zapf hauled it back, but then Greenwood’s later charge was unstoppable. Greenwood also made an exceptionally disciplined fold, letting top pair go when Zapf went big and had him beaten.

Greenwood rebuilt from there and he was in a dominant position when that heads-up cooler came. It was the last hand for both of them.

Hats off then to the Greenwoods. The family mantlepiece is now symmetrical at last.

Champion Luc Greenwood and girlfriend Montana Skuoka

Event #1 – $25,000 GG Million$ Live
Dates: July 27-28, 2023
Entries: 162 (inc 55 re-entries)
Prize pool: $4,050,000

1 – Luc Greenwood, Canada – $897,000
2 – Manuel Zapf, Germany – $605,500
3 – Oliver Bithell, UK – $416,700
4 – Kiat Lee, Malaysia – $339,800
5 – Henrik Hecklen, Denmark – $271,000
6 – Aleks Ponakovs, Latvia – $208,200
7 – Pablo Brito, Brazil – $151,500
8 – Juan Pardo, Spain – $109,800
9 – Sam Grafton, UK – $91,000

10 – Bruno Volkmann, Brazil – $77,000
11 – Chris Brewer, USA – $77,000
12 – Jean Noel Thorel, France – $66,800
13 – David Yan, New Zealand – $66,800
14 – Kannapong Thanarattrakul, Thailand – $60,700
15 – Drew Gonzalez, USA – $60,700
16 – Thai Thinh Chu, Vietnam – $54,600
17 – Christoph Vogelsang, Germany – $54,600
18 – Nick Petrangelo, USA – $48,600
19 – Roberto Gomez, Spain – $48,600
20 – Matthias Eibinger, Austria – $48,600
21 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – $44,500
22 – Alex Peffly, UK – $44,500
23 – Dan Smith, USA – $44,500
24 – Jack Germaine, UK – $40,500
25 – Alexandre Pruneau, Canada – $40,500
26 – Webster Lim, Malaysia – $40,500
27 – Andriy Lyubovetskiy, Ukraine – $40,500

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

CHAPPE-GATIEN CLAIMS MAIDEN TITLE IN FIRST EVER SHORT DECK TOURNAMENT

Champion Karl Chappe-Gatien, at his first event

There’s an old adage in poker about the game taking a moment to learn but a lifetime to master. If we try to map that on to the world of short deck, we find ourselves looking at Karl Chappe-Gatien.

Shortly before Event #11, a $40K short deck tournament at the Triton Super High Roller Series in Cyprus began, Chappe-Gatien had never played a hand of short deck in his life. But Danny Tang, his partner at the Coin Rivet Invitational last week, gave him a crash course and persuaded him to play a short deck cash-game session, and then to enter the tournament.

Chappe-Gatien bust his first bullet within a couple of levels. That’s the equivalent of the minute to learn. But flash forward another day and a half (essentially a short deck lifetime) and he’s the champion, winning $565,000 and a first Triton trophy.

Even without this success, Chappe-Gatien had stamped his mark on this Triton Cyprus festival with a buccaneering performance in the Coin Rivet Invitational, where he finished third (and also played some sensational speech games with Jungleman). But now, he is an incredibly fitting Triton champion, giving his thanks to the whole tournament room during his awards ceremony, and receiving a warm round of applause in return.

“I was feeling good but I didn’t expect anything,” Chappe-Gatien said of his decision to enter the tournament. “I wanted to have fun.”

He has, without question, been one of the undoubted stars of this festival at the Merit Resort in Kyrenia, and he now has that trophy, and the Shamballa winner’s bracelet, to remember it forever.

Paul Phua was among those to congratulate Karl Chappe-Gatien

Chappe-Gatien defeated Malaysia’s Kiat Lee heads up, who was earning back-to-back short deck cashes. Lee finished third in the first short deck event of the festival yesterday, for $171,000, and immediately hopped into this one and went one place better. There are three more short deck events on the schedule, so maybe there will be a title for Lee yet.

In the meantime, it’s all about Chappe-Gatien, a day-trader initially from Paris, now based in Dubai. He told us ahead of the $200K event that he likes to gamble and he likes to take risks, both in poker and in his trading career. Short deck should suit him just fine.

FINAL DAY ACTION

In this tournament, it had been dangerous to be a chip leader. Stephen Chidwick rode the huge stack for much of day one but was eliminated before the bubble. And then Rui Cao, a man with no gear other than the fastest, had been happy pushing everyone for most of Friday, before he found himself pushed to the rail to burst the bubble.

Rui Cao heads out in eighth, bursting the bubble

Cao’s implosion came mostly in one massive pot against Michael Zhang in the kind of hand that looks like a cooler until you remember that it’s short deck, and this kind of thing happens all the time. After a single raise pre-flop the two players saw the dealer put down the JhKhQd flop. Cao liked it. He had KcQc, but Zhang liked it more. He had AhTc.

Cao tried to muscle Zhang out of it, but it was impossible to do to a player with the nuts, and Cao was left with a handful of antes as a result. Jason Koon took those on the next hand, with aces to Cao’s JhKs.

Event 11 final table players (l-r): Jason Koon, Elton Tsang, Webster Lim, Karl Chappe-Gatien, Michael Zhang, Kiat Lee, Winfred Yu.

Winfred Yu must have been absolutely ecstatic. A proud short-stack ninja, Yu sees no problem with clinging on for dear life as everyone around him goes slightly insane. He folded 25 hands in a row in the bubble period, but made the money with 10 antes.

The first time he was all-in and called, he doubled up. His kings flopped a set and then faded flush outs against Zhang’s Ad9d. The second time he was all in and called, he had kings again. But this time Chappe-Gatien had aces and Yu’s race was finally run — albeit run at a very slow pace. He took $95,000 for this latest show of obduracy.

Winfred Yu’s short-stack vigil came to an end in seventh

It’s still quite difficult to know what represents a short stack’s danger zone in short deck — what’s the equivalent of hold’em’s sub-15 big blind stack? By most estimations, it’s around about 60 antes, and that being the case, three players were up against it after Yu’s departure. Elton Tsang, Koon and Kiat Lee had between 50 and 60 antes each.

Although there were some double ups and a few jagged lines on the chip-tracking graphs, there was some short-stack cannibalism among them. Koon took a chunk of Tsang’s chips, doubling with pocket tens against queens, with a ten on the river. That left Tsang short enough to have to get his chips in with As9s.

This time it was Webster Lim with pocket kings in his hand, and he made the call. There was a king on the flop, and Tsang couldn’t hit his straight outs. Tsang nonetheless recorded his first tournament cash of this trip and banked $120,000.

Elton Tsang was knocked out in sixth

Despite that double up, Koon was next to depart. He couldn’t find a hand worth to get involved with and dwindled back down again. And then he got involved in a pot against Chappe-Gatien where Koon’s Ad7d flopped an ace, but Chappe-Gatien’s pocket jacks flopped a set.

Although the board ended with two aces on it, that was a boat for Chappe-Gatien and Koon hit the rail in fifth for $155,000. He has made the money four times here in Cyprus, and 23 times now in his Triton career. But his title haul remains at four.

Not this time, Jason Koon

Zhang was another of those who had been chip leader, specifically after that huge pre-bubble hand against Cao. But he’d been on a steady downhill trajectory at the final table and took one last dip against Chappe-Gatien. It was a very similar pattern to the hand that eliminated Koon. Zhang had an ace — AcJd, to be precise — and flopped another. But Chappe-Gatien had flopped a set with his pocket nines.

That was the end of Zhang, who earned $200,000 for fourth.

Handshakes come in for fourth-placed Michael Zhang

At this point, the pace of eliminations — and the pace of play itself — slowed dramatically. Chips moved one way and then the other, either side of an extended dinner break, with all of Chappe-Gatien, Lim and Lee moving into the lead and out of it.

But in the postprandial exchanges, Chappe-Gatien seized control once more in a big collision with Lim that played all through the streets. Lim opened pre-flop and Chappe-Gatien called, which took them to a flop of KdQd8c. Lim bet, Chappe-Gatien raised and Lim called. The turn was the Qs.

A third place this time for Webster Lim

Lim checked now and Chappe-Gatien moved all-in for 2.7 million. Lim called off and we saw the hands. Lim had Ad7d and Chappe-Gatien KhQc. In other words, Chappe-Gatien was way ahead but Lim still had outs. However, the 9c river was not one of them, and Chappe-Gatien scored a massive double.

Chappe-Gatien now had about 120 antes, about twice the others combined. But when Lim’s last hand came in a pot against Lee, the businessman was at least made to work for his victory in a heads-up duel. Lim ran AsJs into Lee’s AhAd, losing his last 30 antes and picking up $264,000. But it left a heads-up battle in which Chappe-Gatien started with 82 antes and Lee had 62.

Kiat Lee: A third and then a second

The first significant pot went to Lee, and it drew him close behind Chappe-Gatien. But there then followed a huge confrontation that underlined everything we like best about short deck.

Both players found a hand they liked — Chappe-Gatien had JdJc and Lee had 9h8s — on a board of 8h7s9d. Then there was an outdraw, when the Th came on the river (following the 6h) turn. That was a straight for both players, but the jacks were better.

With that, Lee was defeated and banked $401,000. But the new star Chappe-Gatien could begin to celebrate.

“For sure I will come back,” Chappe-Gatien said. “When is the next one?”

Chappe-Gatien is already planning a return to Triton

Event #11 – $40K Short Deck – Ante Only (PL PF)
Dates: September 15-16, 2022
Entries: 45 (inc. 21 re-entries)
Prize pool: $1,800,000

1 – Karl Chappe-Gatien, France – $565,000
2 – Kiat Lee, Malaysia – $401,000
3 – Webster Lim, Malaysia – $264,000
4 – Michael Zhang, UK – $200,000
5 – Jason Koon, USA – $155,000
6 – Elton Tsang, UK – $120,000
7 – Winfred Yu, Hong Kong – $95,000

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

TRITON CYPRUS — ALL THE REPORTS, PHOTOS AND NEWS

Welcome to the coverage hub for the Triton Super High Roller Series in Cyprus. The event, which runs from September 2-19, 2022, featured 13 tournaments in no limit hold’em, short-deck and pot-limit Omaha, with buy-ins from €25,000 through €200,000, including the Coin Rivet Invitational. You’ll find all you need to know about the event below, including links to completed tournaments and results.

EVENT 1 – $25,000 NLH 8-HANDED

A first for the Finn Patrik Antonius
CYPRUS OFF TO A FLYER WITH FIRST WIN FOR ANTONIUS

One of poker’s undisputed poster boys was one of the only members of the elite without his picture hanging in the gallery of champions. But Finland’s Patrik Antonius remedied the situation in the first event of the Triton Cyprus festival.

Top five finishers:
1 – Patrik Antonius, Finland – $825,000
2 – Fahredin Mustafov, Bulgaria – $557,000
3 – Steve O’Dwyer, Ireland – $362,000
4 – Danny Tang, Hong Kong – $300,000
5 – Ebony Kenny, USA – $240,500

131 entries | $3,275,000 prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS


EVENT 2 – $30,000 NLH 6-HANDED

A worthwhile trip for Ben Tollerene
TOLLERENE MARKS RETURN TO POKER WITH DEBUT TRITON VICTORY
Triton Ambassador Jason Koon had repeatedly invited his friend Ben Tollerene to play on the Triton Series, but the trip never worked out. However, Tollerene was finally able to travel for the festival in Cyprus, and hit the ground running with an $808K score, after a deal with Yuri Dzivelevski.

Top five finishers:
1 – Ben Tollerene, USA – $807,927*
2 – Yuri Dzivelevski, Brazil – $749,073*
3 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – $408,000
4 – Alex Keating, USA – $337,500
5 – Fedor Holz, Germany – $272,300

123 entries | $3,698,100 prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS


EVENT 3 – $50,000 NLH 6-HANDED

Pieter Aerts bounced back to claim the win
SWEET REDEMPTION FOR AERTS, BUBBLE BOY TURNED CHAMP
The Belgian debutant Pieter Aerts was knocked out on the bubble in his first Triton tournament, but bounced back from disappointment in the very best way, regrouping to beat Sam Grafton heads-up, claim his first title and a $1.47 million payday.

Top five finishers:
1 – Pieter Aerts, Belgium – $1,472,000
2 – Sam Grafton, UK – $994,500
3 – Kannapong Thanarattrakul, Thailand – $646,500
4 – Ben Tollerene, USA – $535,000
5 – Matthias Eibinger, Austria – $431,800

117 entries | $3,698,100 prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS


EVENT 5 – $75,000 NLH 8-HANDED

Kahle Burns returned in fine form
BURNS IS BACK! AUSTRALIAN ENDS EXILE WITH $1.7M WIN
As Michael Addamo went on his heater, the world maybe forgot about the other high-stakes crusher from Australia. But after ending a self-enforced exile, Kahle Burns returned to the scene with a dominant display in the $75K, worth $1.7 million.

Top five finishers:
1 – Kahle Burns, Australia – $1,730,000
2 – Sam Greenwood, Canada – $1,210,000
3 – Seth Davies, UK – $815,000
4 – Yuri Dzivielevski, Brazil – $630,000
5 – Talal Shakerchi, UK – $510,000

88 entries | $6,600,000 prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS


EVENT 6 – $200,000 NLH COIN RIVET INVITATIONAL

An epic $5.5m payday for Sam Grafton
GRAFTON BEATS THE BUSINESSMEN FOR ENORMOUS $5.5M PRIZE

After the charge of the aggressive Frenchman Karl Chappe-Gatien was halted in third, Sam Grafton was able to defeat the heads-up titan Linus Loeliger to win the enormous $5.5 million first prize — the climax of the unique invitational tournament that pitted the pros against the recreational players on a level playing field.

Top five finishers:
1 – Sam Grafton, UK – $5,500,000
2 – Linus Loeliger, Switzerland – $3,900,000
3 – Karl Chappe-Gatien, France – $2,600,000
4 – Fedor Holz, Germany – $2,100,000
5 – Ebony Kenney, USA – $1,700,000

115 entries | $23,000,000 prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS


EVENT 7 – $25,000 POT LIMIT OMAHA

Mark one up for Cyprus thanks to Christopher Philippou
HOME-FIELD ADVANTAGE PAYS AS PHILIPPOU WINS PLO FOR CYPRUS

It was a small and quiet affair, but the schedule’s only PLO tournament drew the stars nonetheless. But local player Christopher Philippou was able to put Seidel, Chidwick and Shakerchi in their place and win his first Triton title in his first Triton tournament.

1 – Christopher Philippou, Cyprus – $270,000
2 – Talal Shakerchi, UK – $190,000
3 – Iurii Anisimov, Russia – $120,000
4 – Stephen Chidwick, UK – $92,000
5 – Gregoire Auzoux, France – $72,000
6 – Erik Seidel, USA – $56,000

32 entries | $800,000 prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS


EVENT 8 – $100,000 NLH MAIN EVENT

Could Punnat Punsri ignite a poker boom in Thailand?
FIRST FOR THAILAND PUNSRI BLAZES TO MAIN EVENT GLORY

The growing poker boom in Thailand received an enormous boost when Punnat Punsri, a breakout star at the World Series last year, announced his presence on the Triton Series and clinched victory in the Main Event. The first Thai winner claimed $2.6 million.

Top five finishers:
1 – Punnat Punsri, Thailand – $2,600,000
2 – Wayne Heung, Hong Kong – $1,825,000
3 – Wiktor Malinowski, Poland – $1,210,000
4 – Henrik Hecklen, Denmark – $946,000
5 – Jason Koon, USA – $762,000

99 entries | $9,900,000 prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS


EVENT 9 – $50,000 NLH 8-HANDED TURBO

The turbo wizard Matthias Eibinger
EIBINGER CLAIMS TURBO DOUBLE WITH LATEST $50K WIN

Austria’s Matthias Eibinger made his name as a player of hyper-turbos online, where stacks get short quickly and you have to know when to push or fold. His skills earned him a first Triton title in a Turbo in Cyprus in March, and he won his second in the same format five months later.

Results:
1 – Matthias Eibinger, Austria – $545,000
2 – Jonathan Jaffe, USA – $375,000
3 – Mikita Badziakouski, Belarus – $245,000
4 – Phil Nagy, USA – $185,000
5 – Aleksejs Ponakovs, Latvia – $140,000
6 – Danny Tang, UK – $110,000

32 entries | $1,600,000 prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS


EVENT 10 – $30,000 SHORT DECK ANTE ONLY

Three short deck titles now for Phil Ivey
IVEY COMPLETES SHORT DECK HAT-TRICK
Phil Ivey didn’t cash even once during the long deck portion of the trip to Cyprus, but he immediately underlined his dominance of the short-deck game, winning the first short deck event in the festival. It was his third Triton title, all in this form of the game.

Results:
1 – Phil Ivey, USA – $387,000
2 – Sam Greenwood, Canada – $268,000
3 – Kiat Lee, Malaysia$171,000
4 – Mikita Badziakouski, Belarus – $131,000
5 – Tom Dwan, USA – $103,000
6 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada – $80,000

38 entries | $1,140,000 prize pool
FULL REPORT AND RESULTS

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

IVEY COMPLETES SHORT-DECK HAT-TRICK WITH LATEST TRIUMPH IN CYPRUS

Phil Ivey makes it three

Phil Ivey is now a three-time champion on the Triton Super High Roller Series after the American great proved once again that no poker variant is beyond him. Ivey’s Triton titles have all come in short-deck tournaments — from Montenegro, in 2018, and one here in Cyprus back in April. The man who has become the dominant force in just about every other poker variant over the past two decades is now the standout star in its newest game.

By Triton’s standards, this was a fairly subdued start to the short-deck portion of proceedings — a mere $30,000 to buy in, and 38 entries creating a $1.14 million prize pool. But with Ivey’s name now on the trophy, and the $387,000 first prize padding his bankroll, it’ll be a tournament that will be long be remembered — and he put on a clinic to take it down.

He managed to outlast his old online sparring partner Tom Dwan, who went from chip leader to bust in dramatic fashion, and he then managed to grind out a heads-up victory over Sam Greenwood, denying the Canadian high roller regular a first title.

Phil Ivey, the short-deck master

“I love playing short deck,” Ivey, 45, said. “It’s a great game so I’m very happy.”

Ivey now joins a very small club of players with three Triton titles, and will hold realistic hopes of claiming more. There are still four more short deck events on the Triton Cyprus schedule, and few players in such an obvious groove as Ivey while playing this game.

He finished it off with an appropriate flourish, flopping trips and rivering quads to end Greenwood’s resistance. “He’s a tough player, plays back at you a lot,” Ivey said of Greenwood. But by that point, the vanquished Canadian was out in the hall, claiming his $268,000 runner-up prize.

Second place for Sam Greenwood

FINAL DAY ACTION

There were nine players left at the beginning of the final day, but that quickly became seven as Webster Lim and Wei Yeu departed within the first level. That brought them around only one table, although everyone knew that they weren’t yet in the money. One of the players posing for a photograph would soon also be snapped heading for the door with nothing. Tom Dwan, with the big stack, did what you have to do in the situation and pummelled everyone else, forcing folds from players who really didn’t want to bubble.

Paul Phua: “Bubble!”

There was one exception. Nobody enjoys being that bubble boy, but you wouldn’t actually know it when it’s Paul Phua, as turned out to be the case this time. Phua, who got his last chips in with AhQs against Kiat Lee’s KdKs was sent to the rail in seventh. “Bubble!” he bellowed — apparently entirely untroubled by this fact. Everyone should aspire to play with the devil-may-care attitude of Paul Phua.

That left six then, all guaranteed at least $80,000. Dwan was a comfortable leader, while Phil Ivey, Daniel Dvoress and Mikita Badziakouski brought up the rear.

The first short-deck final table players (l-r): Paul Phua, Daniel Dvoress, Tom Dwan, Sam Greenwood, Kiat Lee, Mikita Badziakouski, Phil Ivey.

Not long later, Dvoress, with a 38-ante stack, open shoved from the cutoff with the short-deck nuts, i.e., JsTs. Dwan made an easy call with AsKc, and although Dvoress ended the hand with a straight, the board of AdQhAh6cKd was also a full house for Dwan. Dvoress won $80,000.

Daniel Dvoress sends his stack over to Tom Dwan

Dwan was cruising. He was crushing. He had absolutely heaps while all the others had barely a fraction. And yet, somehow, Dwan was also the next man out.

We have seen some hero-to-zero nosedives before on the Triton Series. Just yesterday, Wiktor Malinowski somehow finished third in the hold’em Main Event when he had about half the chips in play three-handed. But Dwan’s dip was precipitous: he doubled up Ivey, then Lee in consecutive hands, and then Ivey again in what proved to be terminal. (Ivey won a race with AdKs to Dwan’s pocket jacks.) He was left with crumbs, which Ivey took as well.

Dwan, playing his first event of this trip to Cyprus, banked $103,000, but had surely been thinking a third Triton title was his.

Tom Dwan: From chip leader to fifth-placed finisher

Ivey, now in the chip lead, was not in a forgiving mood, and the deck helped him more than it has assisted Dwan. Badziakouski got his last chips in with AcKc against Ivey’s AhQd. But a queen on the flop put Ivey into the lead and Badziakouski on the rail. It could have been five (titles) for Badziakouski, but instead it was fourth (place) for $131,000.

Mikita Badziakouski, made to wait for title No 5

Although Lee managed to crack Greenwood’s aces with Ad9h and double up, he lost it all back on the next hand of significance, with KhTh to Greenwood’s AdJd and departed in third for $171,000.

Kiat Lee and the red danger light

That left a heads-up battle between two North Americans. Ivey, aiming for that third victory, and Greenwood, looking for a first. Ivey had the chip advantage, with 140 antes to 80 antes, but neither of them was going to roll over without a fight.

Greenwood battled back to near parity, particularly after one pot where he flopped a straight and extracted maximum value with a big bet on the end, which Ivey called. But Ivey then asserted his dominance once more and chipped away at Greenwood’s stack. They then got it all in, with Ivey covering Greenwood, when Greenwood had JdJh to Ivey’s KcQh.

Heads up between Sam Greenwood and Phil Ivey

The dealer put the QsQd8c flop down, to leave Greenwood drawing thin. And the ThQd turn and river was overkill.

All in a day’s work for Ivey, who had whiffed every tournament through the NLHE side of the schedule, but is now up and running with short-deck back.

Event #10 – $30K Short Deck – Ante Only
Dates: September 14-15, 2022
Entries: 38 (inc. 15 re-entries)
Prize pool: $1,140,000

1 – Phil Ivey, USA – $387,000
2 – Sam Greenwood, Canada – $268,000
3 – Kiat Lee, Malaysia$171,000
4 – Mikita Badziakouski, Belarus – $131,000
5 – Tom Dwan, USA – $103,000
6 – Daniel Dvoress, Canada – $80,000

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive

PUNSRI LAYS DOWN THE PUNISHMENT TO BLAZE TO TRITON CYPRUS MAIN EVENT GLORY

Cyprus Main Event champion Punnat Punsri

An explosive end to the Triton Series Cyprus No Limit Hold’em Main Event resulted in a first Triton title for a Thai player, as the Asian game’s breakout star Punnat Punsri destroyed a final table of established wizards to bank a career best $2.6 million score.

Punsri, who says he has a cash game background, was all but unknown when he made the final table of a $50,000 High Roller event at the World Series of Poker this summer, finishing third for a near $600K prize. Punsri re-invested some of that money on a first trip to the Triton Series here in Cyprus, including a buy-in to this $100K Main Event, and emphatically proved he is here to stay.

As is commonplace on this prestigious series, the tournament featured the very greatest in world poker, and the final table featured not only the defending champion, but also Triton’s most decorated ambassador. However, even Henrik Hecklen and Jason Koon were powerless to stop Punsri’s incredible surge, which ended when he defeated Hong Kong’s Wayne Heung heads up.

Heung, for his part, earned $1.825 million, but his role was largely one of a support actor only as Punsri dominated proceedings. Punsri somehow also managed to lay waste to Wiktor Malinowski, best known as the online superstar “Iimitless”, who had come to the final with an enormous lead.

Punsri was happy to play big pots, often, and surged up the leader board from the middle of the pack overnight. And once he had a chip lead, nobody could lay a glove on him. He’s a puncher and a punisher. He’s Punnat Punsri, Triton Main Event champion.

Danny Tang celebrates with the new champion

TOURNAMENT ACTION

At the end of the second day of play, which had been interrupted and delayed owing to an issue with the air conditioner, players faced the daunting prospect of bursting the bubble in the early hours. There were a handful of short stacks, but both Laszlo Bujtas and Horace Wei doubled up, leaving the bubble hovering most menacingly over Stephen Chidwick.

The 33-year-old from the UK is leading the Triton Player of the Year race after his stellar performance in Madrid, but tournament bubbles pay no heed to reputations, and it was Chidwick’s turn to take the unluckiest walk. He got his last five big blinds in with a suited jack-ten but Artur Martirosian had pocket jacks, and there was nothing on the board for Chidwick.

Madrid winner turned bubble boy, Stephen Chidwick

He scurried away, tailed by a TV camera, with nothing to show for his performance in this one.

Thirteen players bagged and tagged, all now in the money, and all hoping for a good night’s sleep ahead of the final day. The remaining field was an appealing combination of Triton veterans and newcomers, both pros and recreational players, as well as the defending Main Event champion, Hecklen. There were some very short stacks, so there was every chance of a speedy race to the final table on Day 3.

So it proved, as none of the short stacks were able to rally. Isaac Haxton and Bujtas fell in short order, and then Paul Phua, the all-time leader in number of cashes on the series he founded, perished in 11th. It was an incredible 25th in-the-money finish for Phua, but he will have to wait for his second title.

Seth Davies, the player next out, is surely now getting impatient waiting for even his first. Davies has been the standout performer here in Cyprus, with three final table appearances already. But he had also been on the wrong side of a number of bad beats or coolers, leaving him on the rail before the trophy was close to being handed out. The same story continued, with Davies losing a chunk of his chips in a race against Punnat Punsri, and the rest going to Malinowski. Davies’ departure, which earned him $225,000, set our final table.

1 – Punnat Punsri, 2.235 million
2 – Wiktor Malinowski, 7.415 million
3 – Wayne Heung, 4.245 million
5 – Jason Koon, 1.15 million
6 – Artem Vezhenkov, 960,000
7 – Gregorie Auzoux, 1.075 million
8 – Henrik Hecklen, 5.27 million
9 – Artur Martirosian, 1.66 million
10 – Horace Wei, 740,000

Final table players (clockwise from top left): Punnat Punsri, Wiktor Malinowski, Horace Wei, Artur Martirosian, Henrik Hecklen, Gregoire Auzoux, Artem Vezhenkov, Jason Koon, Wayne Heung.

Horace Wei was one of the relative unknowns who signed up to play the Coin Rivet invitational during this festival, partnering with Dan Cates. He not only outlasted Cates in that tournament, but he also secured a first Triton cash, earning $400K for 14th place.

Wei was keen to show that was not a flash in the pan, and immediately secured a second cash. His Main Event ended in ninth, when his Kd9c lost a race to Punsri’s 6s6h, but there was $280,000 waiting for him at the cash desk.

Horace Wei

This year’s Triton Series events have seen an influx of Russian players, including two of the online game’s most distinguished talents, Artem Vezhenkov and Artur Martirosian. Both had made it to the final table here, and both seemed to be making an easy transition to the high stakes live tournament game, after making their names online.

Vezhenkov in particular seems to have been enjoying his trip to Cyprus, and his partner had been going around on previous days collecting autographs from the Triton superstars on a branded T-shirt. Vezhenkov was now proudly wearing it at the final, bringing names to the final of many players who had already been knocked out.

Vezhenkov battled to eighth, before he received the baddest beat yet on the final table. He had pocket nines to Hecklen’s pocket eights, and for seven blinds it was always going in. Hecklen spiked an eight on the river, and that was the end of that. Vezhenkov took $366,000.

Artem Vezhenkov

Martirosian wasn’t far behind, and Hecklen again applied the finishing touches. Martirosian hadn’t managed to get much going during the final, where he was card dead and strangled by the bigger stacks. He took a stand from the small blind after Hecklen’s button open, and then called off when Hecklen fought back with a four-bet shove.

Hecklen’s Ad5d was unthreatened by Martirosian’s Ks8s and the final Russian was out in fourth for $470,000.

Artur Martirosyan

There was an enormous division between stacks now, with Hecklen and Malinowski comfortable at the top and all of Gregoire Auzoux, Punnat Punsri, Jason Koon, and Wayne Heung in trouble. Auzoux lost a big pot to Punsri, which put the former in danger and gave the latter some wiggle room, and then Auzoux became Malinowski’s first victim of the final.

Auzoux was only at this event to see his friend and colleague Kent Staahle, who had played the Coin Rivet Invitational. But the pair had struck up a bet over who could first win a Triton title, and that had inspired Auzoux to enter the PLO event a few days ago. He finished fifth in that, for a debut cash.

He hopped in the Main Event and ended up extending his 100 percent Triton cashing record — although the bet against Staahle is not won yet. Auzoux’s Ah4h couldn’t come from behind to beat Malinowski’s AdQd and so the Frenchman’s run ended in sixth and a $595,000 payout.

Gregoire Auzoux

It was around this point that the first really enormous pot occurred, clipping the wings of the flying Hecklen. Until now, the big stacks had mainly kept out of one another’s way as the shorties were knocked out. But Punsri had kings when Hecklen had queens and it went raise, three-bet, four-bet, five-bet shove, call.

Punri’s hand held for an 11 million chip pot, and now Hecklen joined Koon and Heung in the doldrums.

Each of those three knew that they were in double-or-bust mode, and even Koon’s sensational skills couldn’t get him out of his hole. He lost a race with pocket fours to Punsri’s AsQs and was eliminated in fifth, failing in his bid for a record-setting fifth title. There was $762,000 heading to his bank account though.

Jason Koon

Next out: Hecklen. No one has ever successfully defended a Main Event title on the Triton Series, and that may well be true for many years yet. But Hecklen certainly came close, riding the big stack all the way to a second consecutive final, only a couple of months after that famous win in Madrid.

However that pot against Punsri had left him with a near-impossible task to get back into it, and Punsri wasn’t even done with the punishment. Hecklen got his last chips in with AcQh and Punsri called with AdTh. There was a ten on the flop and the back-to-back dream died.

Hecklen took $946,000, but won’t be strapping another Jacob & Co timepiece to his wrist.

Henrik Hecklen

With Hecklen out of the way, this was now expected to be a cakewalk for Malinowski. He had all the experience of short-handed play and, more importantly, still had all the chips. But occasionally we need a reminder of how devastatingly quick fortunes can change in no limit poker, and this was one of those days.

Punsri got involved in another enormous pre-flop confrontation, this time with Malinowski. Punsri opened his button with a standard raise, Malinowski three bet from the small blind, and then Punsri jammed for 60 big blinds. Malinowski, with AsKh called and was up against pocket tens. Punsri won the race again, leaving Malinowski with fumes.

His last chips went in with 5c7d, which didn’t beat Punsri’s Kc9d. Malinowski won $1,210,000 for third.

“I didn’t want to four-bet small and then have to call it off,” Punsri explained later about the enormous shove.

Heung then squared off against Punsri and, with around 28 big blinds, was not necessarily out of it. But all the momentum was with the Thai player, and they were all in very quickly after heads-up play began.

Heung had a dominant ace — it was Ah9c versus Ac8h — but there was an eight in the window. And Heung never caught up.

Wayne Heung: A lucrative second place

It was a sensationally swift end to this tournament, done by 6.30pm local time. But Punsri was just unstoppable, and now has the $2.6 million prize to prove it. After an incredible summer, he is clearly one to watch. And one suspects the Triton Series will be seeing a lot of him in the coming stops.

Triton Cyprus $100,000 NLH – Main Event
Dates: September 12-14, 2022
Entries: 99 (inc. 34 re-entries)
Prize pool: $9,900,000

1 – Punnat Punsri, Thailand – $2,600,000
2 – Wayne Heung, Hong Kong – $1,825,000
3 – Wiktor Malinowski, Poland – $1,210,000
4 – Henrik Hecklen, Denmark – $946,000
5 – Jason Koon, USA – $762,000
6 – Gregoire Auzoux, France – $595,000
7 – Artur Martirosian, Russia – $470,000
8 – Artem Vezhenkov, Russia – $366,000
9 – Horace Wei, Hong Kong – $280,000
10 – Seth Davies, USA – $225,000
11 – Paul Phua, Malaysia – $225,000
12 – Laszlo Bujtas, Hungary – $198,000
13 – Isaac Haxton, USA – $198,000

Photography by Joe Giron/Poker Photo Archive