Bryn Kenney Wins Triton Poker $125K Monte Carlo Main Event

No matter what your opinion is about Bryn Kenney, few could ever argue about his dominance of live poker. At the Triton Poker $125K Monte Carlo Main Event, he showcased his incredible poker talent once again.

Kenney topped a field of 159 entries, defeating Wai Leong Chan heads-up, to win the $4,410,000 top prize. Kenney now takes his record career live tournament earnings to $71,425,920, becoming the first player to break $70M and further separating himself from Justin Bonomo at the very top.

“Never give up, that’s the secret,” Kenney said, speaking to Triton media after the victory. “Everyone has their roller coaster, their wave that they’re on… You just got to hang on for the ride. Give it your best, don’t let things get you down, and never stop fighting.”

Naturally, just like at any Triton event, Kenney needed to work past a stacked final table, which included the likes of Punnat Punsri, Jonathan Jaffe, Mario Mosbock, Danny Tang, and Jesse Lonis.

PlacePlayerPrizeCountry
1Bryn Kenney$4,410,000United States
2Wai Leong Chan$2,970,000Malaysia
3Punnat Punsri$2,045,000Thailand
4Haralabos Voulgaris$1,665,000Canada
5Jonathan Jaffe$1,330,000United States
6Mario Mosbock$1,020,000Austria
7Danny Tang$743,000Hong Kong
8Thomas Muehloecker$538,000Austria
9Jesse Lonis$445,000United States

Kenney’s first trick came in the form of a double-up with seven left, surviving with king-queen against the ace-nine of Jonathan Jaffe, much to the dismay of Danny Tang, who really wanted to secure a seven-figure score. Unfortunately, it would be Tang to bubble millionaire’s row, though he would collect a handsome figure of $743,000 after running his ace-queen into Jaffe’s ace-king. During the same hand, Mario Mosbock found a fold with pocket jacks that secured his payjump to sixth place.

Though Mosbock was short, he would chip up until running pocket kings into the pocket aces of the outspoken Haralabos Voulgaris, owner of Spanish football club CD Castellón, to go down to four big blinds. Kenney finished off Mosbock off a short time later.

With five left, Wai Leong Chan would put himself far out in front, doubling up through the then-chip leader Jaffe. Jaffe flopped top pair and a flush draw with king-queen suited but Chan’s ace-king held the lead. Chan would triple barrel as diamonds bricked out and he improved to top-two with an ace on the river. Jaffe was a non-believer and paid the price.

Despite this, Kenney would then get a big chunk of Chan’s chips and take most of Jaffe’s to put himself in the lead. Chan would finish Jaffe off before winning a huge flip against Voulgaris with tens against ace-queen to set up three-handed play. Punnat Punsri was short and Chan would take the Thailand native out to set up a heads-up showdown with Kenney, winning with king-four against the queen-ten of Punsri.

Though Chan entered heads-up play with a 57-43 big blind advantage, the two would trade the lead over the first nine hands. Almost all the money would get in on hand number 10, with Kenney four-bet jamming ace-jack into the pocket kings of Chan, who was three blinds in front.

The flop came J-7-2, giving Chan an 80% chance to close out the title. A blank three on the turn meant Kenney was drawing to just five outs (11%) going to the river. But somehow, in Bryn Kenney fashion, the jack of hearts smashed the river to leave Chan with crumbs.

Though Chan would double the next hand with ace-king against eight-three, it was just a mere consolation as Kenney would win two hands later, with his pocket sixes prevailing over ace-nine for his fourth Triton title and second Triton Main Event crown.

Stephen Song Proves Elite, Wins NAPT $25K Super High Roller

Stephen Song is no longer just a very good poker player, he’s up there with the best in the world. Early on Thursday morning, Stephen Song closed out a spectacular back-and-forth heads-up battle with Sean Winter to with the North American Poker Tour (NAPT) $25,000 Super High Roller.

Song emerged from the 60-entry field to claim the $439,400 top prize, about two months after winning another prolific PokerStars tournament – the EPT Barcelona Main Event for €1,290,386 (over $1.4M).

With his latest triumph, Song has secured his fifth six-figure score since July and has claimed a place in the top-200 on poker’s all-time money list, taking his career earnings to over $8.5M.

Despite not competing in many prolific events with $25,000+ buy-ins such as Triton and the PokerGO Tour, Song in the thick of the GPI Player of the Year race, currently in 5th place, according to the latest update on The Hendon Mob.

After his exciting heads-up duel, Song was both relieved and thrilled to take home the famous Spade.

“I mean, it feels really good to win a tournament,” Song told PokerNews. “It’s a tough field, too. I had to battle some of the best players in the country or even the world, so yeah, it felt really good.”

“Sean’s super tough and that heads-up was grueling, it swung back-and-forth.

“It really all came down to that king-eight ballsy call I made. It’s a tournament, so anything can happen, I’m just grateful that it worked out perfectly.”

PlacePlayerPrizeCountry
1Stephen Song$439,400United States
2Sean Winter$288,100United States
3Edward Sebesta$208,900United States
4James Collopy$158,500United States
5Elias Gutierrez$122,500Spain
6Thomas Eychenne$93,600France
7Brock Wilson$72,000United States
8Paul Jager$57,600United States

Song entered the third and final day with a massive chip-lead four-handed, holding well over 50% of the chips in play.  He quickly dispatched James Collopy thanks to some good fortune, turning a four with ace-four against Collopy’s ace-queen.

Sean Winter would find himself down to just two bigs during three-handed play but won a pair of all ins to get back into it. Eventually, Winter would overtake Edward Sebesta for second place before Song went back to work.

Song would get in pocket tens against Sebesta’s ace-king and win the flip to take a two-to-one chip lead going into heads-up play.

While Winter would battle back to take a two-to-one chip lead himself, Song would make a giant hero call to take hold of 80% of the chips in play.

In a limped pot on a J106 flop, Winter would bet 400,000 (2bbs), only to be met by a Song check-raise to 1,300,000. Winter called.

The 9 caused both players to check before the K river saw winter fire out a huge bet of 2,400,000. With four to a straight out there, Song used a large number of time banks before correctly calling off with K8, triumphing over Winter’s J5.

Winter would make yet another comeback and double up before finding himself back down to 2,475,000, just under 10 big blinds. Song jammed his A9 and was called off by the Q5 of Winter.

Winter would be dead on the turn as the board ran out 10A97J to give Song the victory.

Simone Andrian Wins the 2024 WSOP Europe Main Event

Italian pro Simone Andrian didn’t even play live poker until 2021. Since then, he has taken the poker world by storm and is now the owner of his third WSOP gold bracelet, this being the most prestigious of them all.

After five days and outlasting 767 fellow competitors, Andrian earned the lion’s share of the €7,219,200, winning €1,300,000, which more than doubled his previous career live tournament earnings. Andrian topped Estonian Urmo Velvelt after well over three hours of a rollercoaster of heads-up play to become WSOP Europe’s 15th Main Event winner.

After the exhausting duel in Rozvadov, Andrian shared his joy with PokerNews.

“It’s amazing. By far the biggest score of my career. I couldn’t be more happy” he said after the win. “I’ve been playing here (at King’s Casino) a lot and to have that kind of score here feels special.”

Usually, heads-up play starts with stacks around 20-60 big blinds deep. However, Andrian and Velvelt both had piles before their duel and the two knew they’d have to battle for several hours.

“It was very, very tough. We were super deep. Playing heads-up super deep, with 100 big blinds each, it’s tough. Usually, you don’t get to play super big pots.”

PlacePlayerPrize (EUR)Prize (USD)Country
1Simone Andrian€1,300,000$1,423,827Italy
2Urmo Velvelt€854,000$935,378Estonia
3Ran Ilani€590,000$646,221Israel
4Mariusz Golinski€415,000$454,545Poland
5David Hochheim€297,000$325,301Germany
6Enrico Camosci€217,000$237,677Italy
7Robin Berggren€161,000$176,341Sweden
8Luka Bojovic€122,000$133,625Serbia

Velvet started heads-up play with a slight 40.4 million to 36.4 million chip lead, with both players expecting a very long, drawn-out dogfight. Andrian took the early lead but Velvelt pulled back to even after turning a straight against the Italian’s top pair.

Velvelt then went on a rampage, taking down a two-street pot before five-bet shoving pocket eights against Andrian’s ace-eight. While having pulled away, he bluffed off kings high into Andrian’s two pair to see the gap close. However, the Estonian found a way to battle back and take a 3:1 chip lead.

The momentum completely shifted when Andrian made a huge hero call with a pair of fives after Velvelt triple-barreled an ace-high board with just seven-deuce. Shortly after, Andrian hero-called on a wet jack-high board on the turn with top pair against Velvelt’s bottom pair and gutshot straight draw. The Italian held to take a commanding 4.5:1 chip lead.

Andrian would seal the title after a pair of strong hands collided. Velvet five-bet jammed his ace-ten into Andrian’s pocket tens. The tens would hold and give the poker pro bracelet number three.

With that, WSOP Europe has officially come to an end, with 15 bracelets being awarded to 15 players from nine different countries. The Italians reigned supreme, with four bracelets (Christopher Campisano, Ermanno Di Nicola, Alessandro Pichierri, Andrian) while the Germans won three bracelets. Home country Czechia won two bracelets, including Martin Kabrhel, who won the prestigious €50,000 NLH Diamond High Roller.

EventChampionEarningsEntries
Event #1: The €350 NLH OpenerPrzemyslaw Szymanski€115,3503,509
Event #2: €550 Pot-Limit OmahaVolodymyr Kokoulin€56,100642
Event #3: €1,350 Mini Main EventChristopher Campisano€213,3501,286
Event #4: €2,000 Pot Limit OmahaVivian Saliba€91,400229
Event #5: €550 NLHE ColossusMichal Schuh€171,3502,799
Event #6: €5,000 Pot Limit OmahaDennis Weiss€159,897141
Event #7: €1,650 NLH 6-maxErmanno Di Nicola €111,250351
Event #8: €25,000 NLH GGMillion€Alessandro Pichierri€335,90038
Event #9: €1,100 NLH Mystery BountyAmir Mozaffarian€69,050515
Event #10 €2,000 8-Game MixPatrick Bueno€43,40090
Event #11: €1,100 NLH Turbo Bounty HunterDarius Neagoe€63,650458
Event 12: €50,000 NLH Diamond High RollerMartin Kabrhel€529,00030
Event #13: €10,350 Main Event NLH European ChampionshipSimone Andrian€1,300,000768
Event #14: €1,000 NLH Turbo FreezeoutZewei Ding€35,351152
Event #15: €550 NLH CloserMarius Schneider€44,000473

Second-Largest Bad Beat Jackpot in Poker History Hits for $1.7M

On September 28th, 2024, the second-biggest bad beat jackpot in poker history hit at the Playground Poker Club in Kahnawake, Quebec, Canada, just outside of Montreal.

The Playground is known worldwide for their insanely-big bad beat jackpots, including the world record which hit in August 2023 in a $1/$2 no-limit hold’em cash game for CAD $2,590,185 (approximately $1.9 million USD).

This past week, the huge jackpot was cracked to the tune of CAD $2,275,388. At the time of the jackpot, this was converted to roughly $1.7 million USD.

The “losing player”, Elie, won the lion’s share of the jackpot when his quad nines were cracked by the “winning player”, Yann, who had quad aces. This took place in a $2/$5 no-limit hold’em cash game.

According to the Playground’s rules, the “losing” player receives a 40% share of the jackpot while the “winning” player receives a 20% share. The seven remaining players at the table split 20% of the jackpot while all the other players playing in the poker room when the jackpot hit split the remaining 20% of the pot.

This meant Elie received CAD $864,000 (USD $640,004), Yann received CAD $455,077 (USD $337,096), while each of the other seven players seated at their table all won CAD $65,011 (USD $48,156). That’s certainly worth a celebration.

There’s no telling how many players were in the room at the time of the jackpot, but getting a share of the remaining 20% of the jackpot (CAD $455,077 / USD $337,096) would be enough to send the majority of the players home with a smile on their face. The Playground is home to over 60 poker tables in their poker room.

With the jackpot being claimed, the Playground has reseeded the jackpot back to about CAD $664,000, roughly $500,000 USD. The jackpot is much more difficult to hit than other poker rooms around the world, which translates into wildly-huge bad beat jackpots.

Players must have their quad aces beaten during the first four weeks of the jackpot in order to trigger it. Every four weeks, the bad beat jackpot difficulty relaxes by one hand rank. For instance, from weeks 5-8, having quad kings cracked will set off the jackpot, while a minimum of quad queens will do the job in weeks 9-12 (and so on).

Hoan Truong
Image: Playground Poker Club

Back on August 2nd, 2023, the world-record CAD $2,590,185 (approximately $1.9 million USD) jackpot was won by Hoan Truong at the Playground when his flopped quad tens were cracked by Marc Andre Ouellon’s straight flush in a $1/$2 game.

Truong won CAD $984,270 (roughly $722,000 USD) with Ouellon taking home CAD $492,135 (roughly $361,000 USD) while the table share was CAD $82,003 (roughly $31,000 USD).

Moritz Dietrich Wins WSOP Online International Main Event, Over $4M

The largest prize in online history, an incredible $4,021,012, was won by Moritz Dietrich after he took down the WSOP Online International Main Event on GGPoker.

The $5,000 buy-in event smashed the $25,000,000 guarantee by attracting a whopping 6,146 entries across 17 starting flights, with the prize pool reaching $29,193,500 when all was said and done.

The German-born Dietrich, now based in Austria, was forced to overcome a stacked final table, which included WSOP bracelet winners Rui Ferreira (3rd – $2,390,418), Isaac Baron (4th – $1,843,337), 2024 WSOP Main Event 10th-place finisher Diogo Coelho (5th – $1,421,478), and famous poker coach Benjamin ‘bencb’ Rolle (8th – $651,921).

2024 WSOP Online International Main Event Final Table Results

PlacePlayerNationalityPrize (USD)
1Moritz DietrichGermany$4,021,012
2Evgenii AkimovRussia$3,099,896
3Rui FerreiraPortugal$2,390,418
4Isaac BaronUSA$1,843,337
5Diogo CoelhoPortugal$1,421,478
6Ilya AnatskiBelarus$1,096,180
7Hai PanChina$845,342
8Benjamin RolleGermany$651,921
9Audrius StakelisLithuania$502,771

While Moritz’s score is now the largest in the history of online poker, this version of the WSOP Online International Main Event will be particularly remembered for one of the most brutal beats we’ve ever seen. In fact, in terms of raw equity, it’s surely the most cruel and most expensive in online poker history.

With just four players left, chip leader Evgenii Akimov jammed his 41 big blind stack (about 25 big blinds effective) from the button with 6-4 offsuit. This kind of move isn’t exactly unusual since the blinds each had a far bigger stack than Rui Ferreira, in the cutoff, who was sitting on less than six big blinds.

However, Isaac Baron woke up in the small blind with pocket kings and had an easy decision to get his 20 big blinds in there and go after the overall chip lead. Preflop, Baron was nearly an 84% favorite to win and it only got better as the flop ran out K-J-7 to give Baron top set and a 96.97% edge to win the hand.

While Baron looked more than set to trade stacks with Akimov, the five of clubs gave the Russian six outs with an open-ended straight draw, though Baron had the better club flush draw.

In an absolutely disgusting turn of events, the river brought the eight of spades to give Akimov the dream runner-runner straight to crush Baron’s dream and gave the Russian an insane lead of 62 big blinds to Dietrich’s 23.5 and Rui Ferreira’s 5.5.

Akimov would use the power of the 6-4 offsuit a second time a short time later to crack Rui Ferreira’s ace-king in similarly dramatic fashion. While Ferreira flopped top-two pair, Akimov would find running spades to make a highly-unlikely runner-runner flush and set up a heads-up showdown with Dietrich.

Unfortunately for Akimov, his magic run would end there. Despite going into heads-up play with a 6:1 chip lead, he would not close it out to win his first-career bracelet.

Instead, Dietrich would win a pair of massive all ins, holding on with pocket fives against ace king and making the nut straight on the river vs. a rivered top-two pair.

The German would close it out with Akimov limping 9-5 offsuit and Dietrich checking back 8-2 offsuit. The flop came K-8-6, giving Akimov a gutshot straight draw and a backdoor flush draw while Dietrich made second pair. Akimov would bet one big blind and Dietrich called.

On the offsuit 3 turn, Akimov shoved his final five blinds. With just 15 seconds in his time bank and a massive chip lead, Dietrich didn’t have long to make a decision and would flick in the call. He just needed to avoid a 9 and a 7 to win it all.

The river brought a second three, giving the Upswing Poker coach his first-career WSOP bracelet, having fallen just short at WSOP Europe last year in the €1,000 NLH Turbo Freezeout (3rd, €20,650).

WSOP Announces US-Only WSOP Online Bracelet Series

This Sunday, the US-only WSOP Online bracelet series will kick off on WSOP.com. Between September 29th and November 12th, players in Michigan, New Jersey, and Nevada will compete for a total of 33 WSOP bracelets, with buy-ins ranging from $250 to $5,300.

For players in Pennsylvania, they will not receive their typical allotment of bracelet events. Instead, they will compete for just four bracelets, with dates and event details yet to be announced.

For those in the three-state domestic network, the WSOP Online Main Event will cost $1,000 and begin on November 10th. In addition, five of the 33 online bracelet events will be Mystery Bounty tournaments, with prize pools boasting guarantees ranging from $200,000 to $500,000. The standout $1,000 buy-in $500,000 GTD Mystery Bounty event will take place on opening day, September 29th, along with a $500 No-Limit Hold’em Deepstack tournament.

Omaha poker players will be massively disappointed with the schedule, as 29 of the 33 online bracelet events will be of the No-Limit Hold’em variety. All four PLO events will take place on Sundays. The major Omaha event isn’t even a standard PLO tournament either. In fact, on October 20th, the big PLO event is a 6-Max Mystery Bounty, which will boast a $200,000 guarantee.

“Grab your chargers and get ready,” said Ty Stewart, WSOP Senior Vice President and Executive Director. “With legal jurisdictions on both coasts and now in the Midwest with Michigan, most U.S. players should be within a reasonable distance to log onto our network and get in on the action. The WSOP Online 2024 domestic schedule should feature the largest online prize pools of the year that players will not want to miss.”

2024 WSOP Online Bracelet Event Schedule

EventDateTime (PST)Buy-In
#1 NLHE DeepstackSeptember 29th3:30pm$500
#2 NLHE Mystery Bounty ($500K GTD)September 29th4:30pm$1,000
#3 NLHE Lucky 7’sOctober 1st4:00pm$777
#4 NLHEOctober 3rd4:00pm$400
#5 NLHE 6-MaxOctober 5th3:30pm$600
#6 NLHE Ultra DeepstackOctober 6th3:30pm$500
#7 NLHE Big PKOOctober 6th4:30pm$2,000
#8 NLHE High Roller 6-MaxOctober 8th4:00pm$3,200
#9 PLO 6-MaxOctober 10th4:00pm$500
#10 NLHE MonsterStackOctober 12th3:30pm$600
#11 NLHE Mystery Bounty ($300K GTD)October 13th3:30pm$500
#12 NLHE Fall Crazy 8’sOctober 13th4:30pm$888
#13 NLHE High RollerOctober 15th4:00pm$5,300
#14 NLHE FreezeoutOctober 17th4:00pm$500
#15 NLHE PKOOctober 19th3:30pm$500
#16 NLHEOctober 20th3:30pm$1,000
#17 PLO Mystery Bounty 6-Max ($200K GTD)October 20th4:30pm$500
#18 NLHE Triple 3’s Tip OffOctober 22nd4:00pm$333
#19 NLHE 6-MaxOctober 24th4:00pm$1,000
#20 PLOssus PKO 6-MaxOctober 26th3:30pm$400
#21 NLHE Deepstack ChampionshipOctober 27th3:30pm$600
#22 NLHE Fall Crazy 8’sOctober 27th4:30pm$888
#23 NLHE 6-MaxOctober 29th4:00pm$1,000
#24 NLHE Spooky MonsterStackOctober 31st4:00pm$666
#25 NLHENovember 2nd3:30pm$500
#26 NLHE High Roller ChampionshipNovember 3rd4:30pm$3,200
#27 NLHE Mystery Bounty ($300K GTD, 2-Day)November 4th6:00pm$250
#28 PLO 6-Max ChampionshipNovember 5th4:00pm$1,000
#29 NLHE TurboNovember 7th4:00pm$400
#30 NLHE DeepstackNovember 9th3:30pm$1,000
#31 NLHE Mystery Bounty ($300K GTD)November 10th3:30pm$400
#32 NLHE Online ChampionshipNovember 10th4:30pm$1,000
#33 NLHE Fall SaverNovember 12th4:00pm$500

WSOP have promised plenty of satellites and have told players to log into the WSOP.com client for up-to-date information on the upcoming WSOP Online bracelet series.

Some of poker’s top pros have complained about “bracelet inflation”, with GGPoker offering 33 bracelets between August 18th to September 30th while WSOP Europe in Rozvadov, Czech Republic, are giving away 15 bracelets from September 18th to October 9th.

Furthermore, WSOP Paradise is returning to the Bahamas from December 6th to December 19th, with players competing for 15 bracelets in Atlantis. Most notably, WSOP Paradise is hosting the $25,000 WSOP Super Main Event, with an unprecedented $50,000,000 guaranteed – the largest guarantee in the history of live poker.

PokerStars Announce Groundbreaking Women’s Winter Festival

Just before the €550 Women’s event at Casino Barcelona, PokerStars made a groundbreaking announcement that could potentially change the future of women’s poker.

At a special Ladies Day Breakfast meet and greet, PokerStars revealed an all-new Women’s Winter Festival, which will be held in London at the Hippodrome Casino from November 21-24, 2024.

The four-day festival will include five events, including a £400 Main Event that features a £100,000 guarantee and an £1,100 High Roller, thought to be the largest-ever Women’s-only High Roller ever.

As for the Main Event, there will be three starting flights as well as live satellites both in London and around the globe for just £40.

Hippodrome Director of Poker Kerryjane Craigie, who was named PokerStars’ Ambassador for Women in Poker in June, is the driving force behind this historic series.

“I am so excited about this event; honing in on the schedule and finalizing the details truly gave me goosebumps,” Craigie said. “Opportunities for women to access more inspirational poker events drive all that I do.

“The attention to every detail of this four-day festival has been amazing to be part of, and I believe we have hit the mark. We’ve built an event around the audience—now I am hoping they will come.”

In addition to the Womens Only Main Event, there will be a unique £220 one-day 50/50 No-Limit Hold’em Freezeout event on November 23rd. While this is not a tag team tournament, there will be additional prizes awarded to the top male-and-female duo who accumulate the most points during the event, based on their overall standings.

On November 24th, there will be a pair of closing tournaments for those who aren’t fortunate to reach the final day of the Main Event.

At 1pm, there will be a £220 single-reentry one-day event. At 6pm BST, there will be a Womens Closer Freeroll, which will award a €1,600 Women’s EPT Prague package which includes:

  • One €550 Women’s Event buy-in
  • €300 in expenses
  • Three nights accommodation at Hilton Prague

There will also be a number of additional prizes for those lucky enough to reach the final table.

For those hoping to satellite into the event, there are women-only online satellites on PokerStars for players in the .COM market beginning on September 22nd while those in France, Spain, and Portugal can redeem a Silver Power Pass for an event package.

PokerStars will host satellites in the United States while the £40 rake-free Main Event satellite at the Hippodrome on November 21st will guarantee a minimum of five Main Event seats.

2024 Women’s Winter Festival Full Schedule

DateEventTime (BST)
Thursday, Nov 21, 2024£1,100 WOMENS WINTER FESTIVAL HIGH ROLLER (Single Re-Entry)12pm
Thursday, Nov 21, 2024£400 WOMENS WINTER FESTIVAL MAIN EVENT DAY 1A Single Re-Entry per Flight (£100K Gtd)1pm
Thursday, Nov 21, 2024£40 Qualifier to Main Event7pm
Friday, Nov 22, 2024£400 WOMENS WINTER FESTIVAL MAIN EVENT DAY 1B Single Re-Entry per Flight (£100K Gtd)12pm
Friday, Nov 22, 2024£400 WOMENS WINTER FESTIVAL MAIN EVENT DAY 1C Single Re-Entry per Flight (£100K Gtd)6pm
Saturday, Nov 23, 2024£400 WOMENS WINTER FESTIVAL MAIN EVENT DAY 2 Single Re-Entry per Flight (£100K Gtd)12pm
Saturday, Nov 23, 2024£220 NLH 50/50 Freezeout (Capped at 162 / 81 Duo's)4pm
Sunday, Nov 24, 2024£400 WOMENS WINTER FESTIVAL MAIN EVENT DAY 3 Single Re-Entry per Flight (£100K Gtd)12pm
Sunday, Nov 24, 2024£220 NLH - Single Re-Entry1pm
Sunday, Nov 24, 2024Women's Closer Freeroll - EPT Prague Women's Event Package added6pm

The PokerStars Women’s Winter Festival won’t be the only women’s poker series coming up. Season III of the Women in Poker Winter Festival is set to come to Resorts World in Las Vegas this December and will feature at least four high-profile events:

  • Warm Up Tournament

  • Mystery Bounty Tournament

  • Championship Tournament

  • High Roller Tournament

Seth Davies Wins Super High Roller Bowl IX, $4.2M in 10 days

It was an incredible week-and-a-half for Seth Davies as he won over $4.2M in a matter of just 10 days.

His phenomenal run saw Davies eclipse $30,000,000 in career live tournament earnings to move into 25th on the all-time money list. In doing so, he has leapfrogged the likes of Phil Hellmuth, Michael Watson, Daniel Colman, Antonio Esfandiari, Brian Rast, and Scott Seiver.

At the Merit Royal Diamond Hotel & Spa in North Cyprus, Seth Davies tripled his career-high score by winning the ninth edition of the prestigious Super High Roller Bowl, taking home an incredible $3,206,000.

The $300,000 tournament brought in a total of 24 entries, which attracted some of the best players in the world.

The field was cut down to just 14 players after Day 1, which saw the likes of Phil Ivey, Adrian Mateos, Daniel Dvoress, Artur Martirosyan, Nick Petrangelo, and Mikita Badziakouski go bust.

With just four players making the money, it was always going to be an incredibly intense final table. Late on Day 2, the field was finally cut to just seven players, with Davies going in fourth in chips.

Seat Player Country Chip Count
1 Patrick Antonius Finland 457,000
2 Juan Pardo Dominguez Spain 830,000
3 Thomas Santerne France 310,000
4 Jeremy Ausmus United States 1,205,000
5 Seth Davies United States 1,128,000
6 Dejan Kaladjurdjevic Montenegro 1,751,000
7 Leonard Maue Germany 1,519,000

Juan Pardo absolutely dominated the final table and had little trouble using his wit and his card distribution to become a commanding chip leader.

The final table went on for several hours until Dejan Kaladjurdjevic jammed with ace-deuce from the small blind and Leonard Maue woke up with pocket fives in the big blind.

Maue’s fives would hold to burst the bubble and guarantee the final four a minimum of $750,000 each.

Seat Player Country Chip Count
1 Juan Pardo Dominguez Spain 3,500,000
2 Jeremy Ausmus United States 690,000
3 Seth Davies United States 2,025,000
4 Leonard Maue Germany 995,000

On Day 3, Davies eliminated Maue when the German jammed 11 bigs with ace-jack into the pocket jacks of Davies, which won after the board ran out ten-high.

From there, Davies made a spectacular play against Pardo to take the overall chip lead, three-betting the turn with a straight draw to grab hold of over half the chips in play.

Davies would later call off Pardo’s king-high bluff with second pair to chip up to well over 4.2 million of the 6.8 million chips in play.

On the next hand, Pardo and Jeremy Ausmus got in preflop with Ausmus calling off 14 bigs with king-nine from the big blind against the ace-six of Pardo.

Ausmus couldn’t improve and went home with $1.2 million, good enough for the third-largest score of his career.

Heads-up play would only last two hands, with Davies going straight-over-straight with eight-seven against the four-three of Pardo.

The Spaniard, understandably, couldn’t find a fold and took home a career-best $1,900,000 to launch himself into third on Spain’s all-time money list (Adrian Mateos, Sergio Aido) and 94th overall with $13.3 million in career live tournament earnings.

For Davies, it was just his second-career SHRB cash, having finished 5th at Super High Roller Bowl Bahamas in 2019 for $1.02 million.

Less than a week later, Davies would finish second in the €100,000 EPT Barcelona Super High Roller for €895,000, suffering a brutal bad beat in heads-up play against Kayhan Mokri, who won the event for a second-straight time.

Despite Davies flopping top-two pair with jack-nine on a jack-nine-eight flop, Mokri hit a set of fives with a five on the turn, which saw all the money go in.

Though Davies couldn’t do the business, few will complain about making over $4 million in the span of a week and a half.