Australia is under attack from mother nature.

Ten million acres of land burns, as more than 100 fires rage across New South Wales. The flames have forced hundreds of people to the beach as their homes turn to ash.

Heaven has turned into hell.

And, it’s in this newly created hell that we venture first in our round-up of January’s high stakes poker tournaments. With PokerStars putting their Carribean Adventure to sleep, the Aussie Millions takes centre stage.

Once again, the Crown Melbourne will welcome the maddening crowd.

Here are the highlights.

Aussie Millions (4-24 Jan)

Crown Melbourne

13-14 Jan: AUD 25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha (PLO)
15-16 Jan: AUD 25,000 NLHE Challenge
17-18 Jan: AUD 50,000 NLHE Challenge
22-23 Jan: AUD 100,000 NLHE Challenge

The Aussie Millions experienced a high roller renaissance in 2019. The last frothy bubbles of blood fell out of the corners of the AUD 250,000 Challenge in 2016, but the AUD 100,000 limped on after only 18-players competed in 2017, and 19 in 2018. Then in 2019, 42-entrants turned up, and Cary Katz secured the $1,074,908 first prize.

The star of the 2019 Aussie Millions was Toby Lewis. The UK-based pro doesn’t frequent the live scene too often these days, but when he does, players are typically left weeping into their bowls of rice.

Lewis won the 62-entrant AUD 50,000 Challenge for $587,054 after flipping with Manig Loeser and then finished runner-up to Rainer Kempe in the AUD 25,000 (Kempe conquered a field of 151-entrants to win $590,814, and Lewis collected $555,107).

Anton Morgenstern picked up a second title for Germany when he conquered the throbbing mass of 67-entrants in the AUD 25,000 PLO for $384,767.

Australian Poker Open (25 Jan-1 Feb)

High Rollers who love Australia have a reason to extend their trip in 2020 after Poker Central partnered with the World Poker Tour (WPT) and The Star Gold Coast to host the Australian Poker Open, and the Super High Roller (SHRB) Bowl Australia.

The Australian Poker Open extends Poker Central’s network of events that includes the US Poker Open and the British Poker Open. David Peters won the 2019 US Poker Open, and Sam Soverel took down the inaugural British Poker Open.

Here is the schedule.

25-26 Jan: AUD 10,000 NLHE
26-27 Jan: AUD 10,000 PLO
27-28 Jan: AUD 10,000 NLHE
28-29 Jan: AUD 25,000 PLO
29-30 Jan: AUD 25,000 NLHE
30-31 Jan: AUD 50,000 NLHE
31 Jan-1 Feb: AUD 100,000 NLHE

Although the 2 February is not in January, it makes sense to reference the SHRB Australia here. It’s the first time the AUD 250,000 buy-in event hits the land of the wallabies and continues the trend of SHRB migration with Justin Bonomo winning the 2018 SHRB China, and Daniel Dvoress winning the 2019 SHRB Bahamas.

2-4 Feb: AUD 250,000 NLHE.

WPT Gardens Poker Championship (14 Dec-15 Jan)

In a 2019 study by OnePoll, research of 2,000 Americans revealed that 40% had never left the country, and over half didn’t even have a passport. As a high roller, you have to take an oath to behave a tad differently, but if you missed that memo, there are a few crumbs of comfort in January.

The WPT Gardens Poker Championship in California is currently in full swing, and there are two $20k+ NLHE events pencilled into the calendar.

Here they are.

6-7 Jan: $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) High Roller
7 Jan: $20,000 NLHE High Roller Bounty

The WPT Gardens Poker Championship debuted in 2019, and there was only one $25,500 event. NLHE was the game, and the turn out was mediocre with Darren Elias topping a field of 11-entrants to win the $192,500 first prize.

WPT Lucky Hearts Poker Open (9-22 Jan)

Passportless Americans can then make the trip from California to Florida for the WPT Lucky Hearts Poker Open in the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino, Florida.

There is one $25k+ event on the schedule, and here it is.

20-21 Jan: $25,500 NLHE High Roller

The WPT first planted high rollers into the Lucky Hearts Poker Open in 2018. Retiree Stefan Schillhabel won the 25-entrant $50,000 NLHE event for $493,000, after beating Adrian Mateos heads-up. Justin Bonomo finished third in that event, before going on to win the 75-entrant $25,000 NLHE, with Mateos once again playing the role of the stubbled chinned bridesmaid.

Despite decent numbers, the high rollers vanished from the 2019 schedule, and only the $25,500 makes the cut in 2010.

partypoker MILLIONS UK (4-12 Jan)

With North America and Australasia covered, partypoker will set up camp in Europe, with partypoker MILLIONS UK coming live and direct from Dusk Till Dawn (DTD), Nottingham, England.

Rob Yong and co., first engraved the MILLIONS brand onto the DTD sigils in 2017, when Pascal Lefrancois defeated 14-entrants to win the £151,300 first prize in the £25,000 NLHE event. 2018 belonged to Steve O’Dwyer after beating 51-entrants to win the £25,500 NLHE event for £450,000, while also collecting the £314,000 first prize for winning the 105-entrant £10,300 NLHE event.

There was no MILLIONS UK in 2019, with the company preferring to hold a MILLIONS Europe at the King’s Resort, Rozvadov in August.

There is only one $25k+ event on this year’s calendar.

Here is it.

7 Jan: $25,500 NLHE Super High Roller

And that’s a wrap for January’s live tournament high roller schedule.

As 2019 draws to a close, and we reminisce on the leg wobbling poker we witnessed, and experienced, in the past 12-months, save a couple of those thoughts for the future – for the World Series of Poker (WSOP).

The 51st annual poker extravaganza returns May 26 – July 15, with the first gimmick being the number of days (51). More tricks to come, but for now, we’re aware of 15-events, thanks to a press release from our darlings at Caesars Interactive Entertainment (CIE). 

Lamentably, the highest buy-in of those 15-events is the $10,000 that more than eight-thousand people will put down in the hope of banking something in the region of $8 – 10 million bucks. That means our high roller brethren will have to wait to see what the most iconic brand in poker has in store for them. 

There’s not too much to shout about from the initial press release except for the announcement that late registration for the $10,000 WSOP Main Event stretches even further into the distance. In 2019, players were able to register as late as the start of Day 2. In 2020, players can register throughout Level 6, which is on Day 2 – meaning players can skip Day 1 in its entirety, a decision that’s drawn a divisive response from the poker community.

In response to an op-ed written on PokerNewsDaily by Earl Burton carrying the title “ANOTHER Ludicrous Decision From The WSOP With Late Registration,” CIE’s Vice-President of Corporate Communications, Seth Palansky, stating that the decision makes the WSOP Main Event more consistent with other events, “in fact, 2-6 shorter than most $10,000 buy-in events.”

The WSOP Main Event

If you want to compete in the $10,000 WSOP Main Event, then the starting flights are Wednesday, July 1, Thursday, July 2, and Friday, July 3. Players who compete in the first two flights, return on July 4 to compete in Day 2. Those who start on July 3, take July 4 off and return to play Day 2 on Sunday, July 5. Fields merge on Monday, July 6 for Day 3. The play ends, Friday, July 10, when the final table comes into view. July 11 is a day off. ESPN/ESPN2 will air the final table live: July 12-14.

Incredible numbers turned out for the 2019 WSOP Main Event. Hossein Ensan conquering a field of 8,569-entrants to win the $10m first prize, the second-highest attendance of all time (2006: Jamie Gold – 8,773), and if you work for CIE one imagines that taste of record-breaking success, will lead to a push to break that record this year. 

Outside of the WSOP Main Event’s close shave on that record, the 2019 WSOP as a whole was a record-breaking year for CIE, with more than $293m in prize money distributed to more than 187,000 entrants from 118 different countries.

Opening Weekend

It’s become blasphemy not to have an opening weekend gimmick that drags people into Las Vegas in their droves, and in 2020, the series copies the celebrated success of the 2019 Big 50. 

Once again, on Wednesday, May 27, 2020, players can compete in the Big 50 for a $500 buy-in; receiving 50,000 chips, and playing 50-minute levels. There are four starting flights: Thursday, May 28, Friday, May 29, Saturday, May 30 and Sunday, May 31. Last year, Femi Fashakin overcame the largest attendance in poker history (28,371), to pick up the $1,147,449 win in its inaugural year. 

The WSOP has released details on 15 ‘anchor’ events.

Here they are.

Rio Sale

Despite CIE selling the Rio to Dreamscape Companies for $516.3m at the beginning of December, and rumours that the gaff is heading for rubble, Palansky has confirmed that the WSOP will remain at its current home until at least 2021. 

A press release from Dreamscape and CIE backed up Palansky’s confirmation, stating that Caesars will continue to run the Rio for the next two years, paying $45m per year rent, with a $7m option to extend into the third year. 

The Rio first felt the buzz of WSOP events in 2005, with every single one of them moving to the new location from downtown Binions in 2006. 

Alex Foxen

The number crunchers at the Global Poker Index (GPI) have plunged their fingertips into a nice ice bath, and confirmation is through. Not only is Alex Foxen, sitting atop the Global Poker Index (GPI) 2019 Player of the Year (PoY) rankings, but he’s also shifted Stephen Chidwick from the throne that sits on the summit of the GPI, proper.

Coming into the final stretch, results at the European Poker Tour (EPT) in Prague, and the World Poker Tour (WPT) Five Diamond World Poker Classic in Las Vegas were always going to critical in what GPI President, Eric Danis, referred to as the tightest PoY race in history.

Kahle Burns led the way, but as many as 12 people could win. Sitting in that 12th position with the unlikeliest shot of them all was Alex Foxen, the man who won the title in 2018.

From There to Here: The Prague Story

Since April 2018, Stephen Chidwick and Alex Foxen have swapped the GPI World #1 status like a hot chicken nugget. The person to hold it before these two rose to the top of the GPI pass the parcel food chain was Adrian Mateos. While the Spaniard was never in the running to be the 2019 GPI PoY, he was pushing hard to reclaim the GPI World #1 he held for 20-weeks before Chidwick and Foxen took over.

Mateos flew to Prague after winning a $25,500 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) event, and the $10,300 NLHE Main Event at the partypoker MILLIONS World in the Bahamas. More than $1.4m flew down the maze of wires en route to the Spaniard’s bank account, along with more than 1.1k GPI points. Another 500+ came in Prague where Mateos won a €10,300 NLHE event and finished third in a €50,000. These results see Mateos move into #3 in the GPI World Rankings.

Next, the imposing presence of Bryn Kenney came into view with a 4th place finish in the €25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha (PLO), before running deep in the €5,300 Main Event securing a 42nd place finish. Kenney picked up close to 400 GPI points, enough to replace Burns as the new GPI PoY leader.

Then Chidwick reminded everyone why he was the boss, winning the €50,000 NLHE for €725,710, and 314.10 GPI pts. It wasn’t enough for him to catch Kenney in the PoY race, but it did extend his lead at the top of the GPI World Rankings.

From There to Here: The Vegas Story

Next came Las Vegas, and the Bellagio where Alex Foxen came from nowhere to finish in the money (ITM) in six events, gathering more than 1.1k GPI Pts, and banking more than $2m.

Here is his wrap sheet.

$10k NLHE – 5th for $35k
$10k NLHE – 3rd for $43k
$10k NLHE – 2nd for $120k
$5k NLHE – 5th for $42k
$25k NLHE – 3rd for $185k
$10k NLHE Main Event – 1st for $1.6m

In response, Chidwick finished 5th in a $25k NLHE event, but the finish didn’t carry GPI points. The man leading the GPI PoY race before Prague and the Five Diamond, Kahle Burns, picked up zero points in both but did snag 242.74 PoY points for his 12th place finish in the $5,300 NLHE Championship at the Wynn Winter Classic. It wasn’t enough. The other front-runner was Sean Winter, and the Floridian picked up a further 297.76 points for winning a $25k NLHE, and that also failed to trip up Foxen as he clambered back to the top of the rankings.

Foxen was living in dreamland; his competitors were like birds nesting in old chimney tops ignored by Dick Van Dyk.

Today, it’s Dec 26, so there are still five days left of tournament poker for someone to deny Foxen the defence of his title, and for Chidwick, Mateos and co., to replace him at the head of the GPI World Rankings. Given the upmarket flagstones, these guys tread on and looking at the remaining competitions; you have to assume that nothing will change this side of 2019, and Foxen will once again be the top dog.

GPI POY 2019 Leaderboard

  1. Alex Foxen – 3,806.09
  2. Sean Winter – 3,679.19
  3. Bryn Kenney – 3,647.81
  4. Kahle Burns – 3,641.63
  5. Stephen Chidwick – 3,637.94
  6. Rainer Kempe – 3,499.77
  7. Sam Greenwood – 3,487.10
  8. Manig Loeser – 3,434.91
  9. Timothy Adams – 3,377.88
  10. Ali Imsirovic – 3,377.59

GPI Leaderboard

  1. Alex Foxen – 4,017.12
  2. Stephen Chidwick – 3,679.39
  3. Adrian Mateos – 3,457.51
  4. Anthony Zinno – 3,430.10
  5. Sean Winter – 3,356.05
  6. Manig Loeser – 3,332.12
  7. Rainer Kempe – 3,311.60
  8. Jeremy Ausmus – 3,311.50
  9. Joseph Cheong – 3,296.35
  10. Dario Sammartino – 3,259.98
Image by Joe Giron & WPT

Heading into the World Poker Tour (WPT) Five Diamond World Poker Classic, players would have had visions of grandeur; thoughts of hearts tumbling around rib cages; priceless poker preserved like Polaroid pictures.

Only a few of those visions came true.

Let’s check out for whom dreams and reality merged into one with a short round-up of the $10,000 action at one of the WPT’s most iconic festivals.

Two people stood out as salt of the $10,000 Bellagio earth, and we’ll begin with Alex Foxen.

Coming into the series, Foxen sat in 12th place in the 2019 Global Poker Index (GPI) Player of the Year (PoY) race, a title he had in a locket engraved ‘2018’. At the end of the 29-event marathon, he sat on the throne, and it will take a miracle to oust him.

Foxen finished in the money (ITM) of six Five Diamond events, including winning the Main Event for $1,694,995, picking up 1,155.96 GPI PoY points. Amongst that bag of goodies were three ITM finishes in the $10,000 events (2nd, 3rd and 5th).

If Foxen is a lock to defend the GPI PoY, then the same can be said of Sam Soverel, who will almost certainly retain his Poker Central High Roller of the Year title, after also cashing in three of the five $10,000 events. The Poker Central team hasn’t updated the rankings since Nov 14, at which time, Soverel held an 820 point lead over Cary Katz. Katz has had 3 ITM finishes during that time, including a one and two, but Soverel has finished ITM in six events.

So Foxen and Soverel were the stars of the $10,000 events, but this batch of ruffians didn’t do too badly for themselves.

Dan Shak won his first tournament since taking down the €25,000 NLHE Super High Roller at the World Series of Poker Europe (WSOPE) in 2017. It’s the first time PLO title for Shak, although he did finish runner-up to Chris Bell in the 2010 $5,000 PLO Hi/Lo 8 at the WSOP – the closest Shak has come to winning a WSOP bracelet.

James Carroll took down his first tournament since winning his second WPT title in April after imprisoning the 1,360-entrant field in the WPT Seminole Hard Rock Poker Showdown on his way to locking up a $715,175 payday. Carroll’s first WPT title came in 2014 when he beat 718-entrants on his way to a lifetime best score of $1,256,550 in the WPT Bay 101 Shooting Stars.

Anthony Zinno kept the light glowing on his faint hopes of winning the 2019 Global Poker Index (GPI) Player of the Year (PoY) award, picking up 211.97 points for his runner-up finish to Carroll. The triple WPT Champ is ranked #4 in the GPI and sat in 9th place in the GPI PoY rankings as of Wednesday, Dec 17.

Chance Kornuth followed up his Poker Masters workshop with another sterling display in the Bellagio. Kornuth finished second in three Poker Masters events before finishing 10/122 in the $10,300 NLHE High Roller at MILLIONS World in the Bahamas, before making two $10,000 final tables at the Five Diamond, finishing second and sixth.

The person who drilled Kornuth into the second position in that $10,000 was Cary Katz. The Poker Central founder proved he could switch his ARIA form to the Bellagio with his fourth victory of what’s been the most accomplished annual return of his career. All told, Katz earned $8.7m playing tournaments in 2019 and had the most significant piece of Bryn Kenney’s action during his $20.5m display at the Triton Million – not bad for someone who calls poker his hobby.

Zachary Clark won his second $10,000 NLHE event of the year after overcoming a field of 60-entrants, including Alex Foxen, heads-up. Clark took down a 32-entrant $10,000 NLHE event at the ARIA in May – the only other time Clark has won a game with a 5-figure buy-in.

Christopher Vitch continued to prove that he’s one of the best card-for-card poker players in the world with a victory in the 8-Game Mix event. It’s the third win of his career, all in different disciplines, and his Bellagio bump was his first outside of the WSOP.

Other poker farmers who have been turning poker tables into arable land all year, and made the final table of at least one $10,000 event include Jonathan Depa (3rd in the PLO), Joseph Cheong (7th in the NLHE), Shaun Deeb (2nd in the 8-Game Mix), Jeremy Ausmus (5th in the NLHE), and Justin Bonomo (9th in the NLHE)

Here are the results in full.

Pot-Limit Omaha

26-entrants

ITM Results

  1. Dan Shak – $119,600
  2. Sam Soverel – $72,800
  3. Jonathan Depa – $41,600
  4. Armando Collado – $26,000

No-Limit Hold’em

43-entrants

ITM Results

  1. James Carroll – $113,704
  2. Anthony Zinno – $100,816
  3. Martin Zamani – $90,780
  4. Sam Soverel – $43,000
  5. Alex Foxen – $34,400
  6. Chance Kornuth – $25,800
  7. Joseph Cheong – $21,500

No-Limit Hold’em

27-entrants

  1. Cary Katz – $124,200
  2. Chance Kornuth – $75,600
  3. Alex Foxen – $43,200
  4. Ben Yu – $27,000

8-Game Mix

33-entrants

  1. Christopher Vitch – $116,600
  2. Shaun Deeb – $101,200
  3. Denis Strebkov – $52,800
  4. Adam Friedman – $33,000
  5. Matt Glantz – $26,400

No-Limit Hold’em

60-entrants

  1. Zachary Clark – $180,000
  2. Alex Foxen – $120,000
  3. Sam Soverel – $84,000
  4. Ralph Wong – $60,000
  5. Jeremy Ausmus – $48,000
  6. Sean Winter – $36,000
  7. Barry Hutter – $30,000
  8. Byron Kaverman – $24,000
  9. Justin Bonomo – $18,000

At the end of the $10,000 World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event, a 43-year-old cash game grinder from Dallas, Texas, named Aaron Van Blarcum, collected his $50,855 prize for finishing 212/8569, and said to himself, “I’m going to give this tournament thing a shot.”

Van Blarcum planned to play in six World Poker Tour (WPT) events. He had never competed in one before, and when he entered the first one – the 520-entrant $5,000, $2m GTD NLHE WPT Legends of Poker – he walked away with the first prize of $474,390.

What a rush.

November rolled into town.

Van Blarcum followed the parade to the Bahamas for partypoker’s MILLIONS World, and finished runner-up to Adrian Mateos in the $10,000, $10m GTD MILLIONS World Main Event, earning $970,000, after cutting a three-way deal with Chris Hunichen, and the eventual winner, Adrian Mateos.

By the time Van Blarcum had entered the 37-entrant, $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) High Roller, at the WPT Five Diamond World Poker Classic in the Bellagio, Van Blarcum wasn’t merely a cash game; he was a tournament player on fire.

Van Blarcum would make his way to the final table.

Joining him would be five of the best NLHE tournament specialists in the business.

Igor Yaroshevskyy came into the final on the back of a final table appearance in a $10,000 NLHE High Roller at the Merit Poker Retro in Kyrenia. The Ukranian finished 8/107 in that event, and he would be the first to eke into the money in this one, finishing in the sixth position.

It’s not been the best year for Nick Petrangelo.

The Massachusetts man has only finished in the money (ITM) in seven events throughout 2019, meaning he has been spending more time in the market, or his purple patch went on vacation, leaving only his skill to face the full uproar of the high stakes scene. Of those seven ITM finishes, six of them were final table appearances, including finishing 5th in a $25,000 at the Five Diamond Series. The same catch landed in this one.

Amongst the mighty Englishmen, only Stephen Chidwick ($33,358,121), Sam Trickett ($21,337,841), and Charlie Carrel ($9,571,776) have won more live tournament dollars than Jack Salter. Today, his earnings register in at $8,303,273 after picking up a 4th place finish in this one. Salter has been ruling the roost of late, winning a WPTDeepStacks title in Montreal, and a $1,200 NLHE Turbo event at the WPT Seminole Rock & Roll Poker Open in Hollywood.

Like Van Blarcum, the man who finished in third is a relatively new proponent of the NLHE tournament scene. Wolff had finished ITM 22 times in 2019, after barely a whimper since 2012. Amongst those finishes sit 13 final table appearances, including 7 top 3 finishes.

Heads-up fell between Van Blarcum and Jake Schindler.

It’s been Schindler’s lowest annual haul ($1,427,309) since 2015, but he still has the game to make anyone blush and blabber. Given his 47 heads-up matches, opposite the 3 of Van Blarcum, all of the experience, and arguably the skill, sat on the Top Trumps card with the name ‘Schindler’ emblazoned on the front.

It didn’t matter.

Van Blarcum erased the pain of finishing runner-up to Gediminas Uselis and Adrian Mateos in the World Series of Poker Circuit (WSOPC) High Roller in Choctaw and the MILLIONS World Main Event in the Bahamas, by taking this one down. It was Schindler’s 6th heads-up defeat of the year.

ITM Results

  1. Aaron Van Blarcum – $333,000
  2. Jake Schindler – $222,000
  3. George Wolff – $148,000
  4. Jack Salter – $92,500
  5. Nick Petrangelo – $74,000
  6. Igor Yaroshevskyy – $55,500

That’s a wrap for $25,000 NLHE events at the WPT Five Diamond World Poker Classic.

Here is the summary of winners.

Seth Davies – 53 entrants – $424,000
Sean Winter – 38 entrants – $342,000
Aaron Van Blarcum – 37 entrants – $333,000

Word on the street is the final two-day, $100,000 Super-Duper High Roller will become a one day $50,000 Not-So-Super-Duper High Roller, rounding off the series.

Image from WPT

The $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) High Roller at the World Poker Tour (WPT) Five Diamond World Poker Classic inside the salubrious surroundings of The Bellagio feels the bite of Winter.

In the wake of the Main Event, Winter placed 38-entrants into the crucible and ground away until there was nothing left. The win, his 10th of his career, and 4th of 2019 edge him over the $15m in live tournament winnings mark, once again proving that the cash game ace is much more than a dab hand at this art.

Aside from the $342,000, which now goes into the Winter children trust fund, the Floridian also picks up 297.76 Global Poker Index (GPI) Player of the Year (PoY) points. Winter was in the run-in coming into December. Still, his latest bounty won’t be enough given the incredible Five Diamond performances of Alex Foxen, who is sure to be unveiled as the new number one when the results tot up on Wednesday.

Winter has been like a spear through the heart of the winter months, cashing nine times since November 4, including in the money (ITM) finishes at The Poker Masters, MILLIONS World and the WPT Five Diamond. It doesn’t take much coaxing to get Winter to the Bellagio for a tournament. In 2015, he defeated 301-entrants to win the $10,400 NLHE Bellagio Cup XI for $562,772, a personal best at that time, and at this series, he finished 6/60 in a $10,000 NLHE side event.

The win also keeps him in contention for the Poker Central High Roller Player of the Year. Winter was sitting in the fifth position at the last tally (November 14). Still, the leader and defending champion, Sam Soverel, has been as consistent as ever, cashing in six qualifying events since then, and that might wrap it up for the British Poker Open (BPO) and Poker Masters champion.

As you would expect in a $25,000 buy-in event, it wasn’t all wagon wheels and hot chocolate for Winter.

Paul Volpe finished second to David Jackson in a 511-entrant, $2,700, $1m GTD NLHE Borgata Fall Poker Open Championship in November, earning $197,215, so his sixth-place finish wasn’t a surprise.

Stephen Chidwick, the current GPI World #1, flew into Las Vegas after winning the €50,000 NLHE Super High Roller at the European Poker Tour (EPT) in Prague, earning €725,710. Chidwick is another player vying for the 2019 GPI PoY award but didn’t pick up any qualifying points despite his fifth-place finish.

Like Winter, Elio Fox is also a former Bellagio Cup winner. Fox won the 224-entrant, $10,080 Main Event in 2011 for $669,692, and his assault on this title ended in fourth place. The third-place finisher was the WPT Champions Club member, Matas Cimbolas. The Lithuanian won his title in the UK back in 2014.

That left Cary Katz, the most consistent non-pro in the business, to take on Winter for the title. Every day must seem like a wedding day for the Poker Central founder, who moves over the $26m in live tournament earnings mark after this latest cash, 15th in the All-Time Money List. Katz cashed in the Main Event in 44th place and won a 27-entrant $10,000 NLHE at the same series. He also won the inaugural Super High Roller Bowl London in September for $2.6m.

Neither player would have had the confidence of the only round wheel in a square wheel shop going into heads-up. Katz lost 50% of his previous 46 heads-up battles, and Winter had lost 15 of his 24.

In the end, the pro defeated the non-pro with Winter taking the $342,000 first prize, and Katz picking up $228,000 for his second-place finish.

ITM Results

  1. Sean Winter – $342,000
  2. Cary Katz – $228,000
  3. Matas Cimbolas – $152,000
  4. Elio Fox – $95,000
  5. Stephen Chidwick – $76,000
  6. Paul Volpe – $57,000
Image from WPT

Seth Davies warmed up for the World Poker Tour (WPT) Five Diamond World Poker Classic Main Event at the Bellagio by successfully defending his $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) Bellagio High Roller title.

This time last year Davies defeated 50-entrants to win the $341,920 first prize after defeating Isaac Haxton, heads-up. Fast-forward 12-months and Davies was at it again, this time beating a 53-entrant field to take the woolly mammoth share of the $1,325,000 prize pool.

Coming into the final table, four players arrived with the taste of iron underneath their tongues. The world of poker is full of hammerheads, tigers and bulls, but in 2018 there was only one great white. Justin Bonomo won $25.4m in an all-conquering year, and he’s followed it up with the second-best annual haul of his career: $5.6m.

Amongst Bonomo’s recent results is the 8th place finish in the $250,000 Super High Roller Bowl Bahamas for $510,000, and two wins on the Triton Super High Roller Series tour, winning an HKD 250,000 NLHE Short-Deck event in Jeju for $586,114, and a £100,000 NLHE in London for $3.2m. The former One Drop winner came into this one on the back of a 9/60 finish in the $10,000 NLHE event, and won this event in 2017, beating 27-entrants to capture the $310,500 first prize.

Then you had Julien Martini.

The Frenchman is fast becoming known as one of the top tournament players in Europe with his $3.7m 2019 haul a personal best. Martini, who finished runner-up to Ramón Colilas in the $25,000 NLHE PokerStars Player’s Championship in January for $2.9m, came into this one on the back of a 7/541 finish in the €10,350 NLHE World Series of Poker Europe (WSOPE) Main Event for €132,017, and a victory in the Poker Masters, taking down the $10,000 Big Bet Mix for $166,400.

Alex Foxen waltzed into the Bellagio knowing that only a superhuman effort would give him a gnat’s thong chance of retaining the Global Poker Index (GPI) Player of the Year (PoY) title he won in 2018. He’s still got a long way to go (ranked #10), but what a shift he has put in finishing 5/43, 3/27 and 2/60 in $10,000 NLHE events, and 5/127 in a $5,200 NLHE event. Foxen finished third in this event last year.

If anyone was going to be holding the hound’s leash in pursuit of the fabulous Foxen, then the smart money was on Seth Davies. The Oregon All Time-Money #1, followed up his $25,000 NLHE win at the 2018 Five Diamond with a win in a $10,000 NLHE at the Bellagio (Foxen finished fifth). He strolled into this one in fine fettle, after finishing 5/34 in the $50,000 NLHE Poker Masters Main Event for $136,000, and 5/51 in the $250,000 NLHE Super High Roller Bahamas for $1,020,000.

Bonomo would finish in eighth, Martini in fifth, and Foxen would pick up a further 226.42 GPI PoY points for his third place finish. Davies would use all of his skills, savvy and subterfuge to defeat Giuseppe Iadisernia, heads-up, for the title and $424,000 in prize money, erasing the heartache of losing to Juan Dominguez in the heads-up phase of the €50,000 NLHE event at the European Poker Tour (EPT) in Barcelona in August.

Here is the final in the money results (ITM).

ITM Results

  1. Seth Davies – $424,000
  2. Giuseppe Iadisernia – $278,250
  3. Alex Foxen – $185,500
  4. Julien Martini – $132,500
  5. Nick Petrangelo – $106,000
  6. Freddy Deeb – $79,500
  7. Joseph Orsino – $66,250
  8. Justin Bonomo – $53,000
Image from WPT

Most humans are born with between 2 to 4 million sweat glands; ducts that allow for the process of perspiration.

The purpose of sweat is to keep you cool.

It’s rare, but there are people in the world suffering from hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia – they don’t have any sweat glands, and they have a low mortality rate because of the risk of overheating.

In even rarer cases, there are people, who, when exposed to situations that make them nervous and anxious, don’t produce a drop of sweat, and don’t suffer from that long-named condition I don’t feel like retyping.

You may call them superheroes, and in the poker world, one of them goes by the name of Alex Foxen.

On December 7, I reached out to the President of the Global Poker Index (GPI) and The Hendon Mob (THM) to ask him who he thought would win the 2019 GPI Player of the Year (PoY).

In his response, Danis told said it was the tightest race in the history of the award, and ended his statement with, “and even someone ranked as low as #12, like the defending champion, Alex Foxen, could win it.”

As that guy got a crystal ball?

Foxen leads the GPI PoY race with a little over a week left before the moonlight dims on 2019 after an incredible two-month spurt of form in November and December culminated in his first World Poker Tour (WPT) title.

The 2018 GPI PoY winner, topped a record field of 1,035 (429 re-entries) entrants, in the $10,400 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) WPT Five Diamond World Poker Classic, to capture the $1,694,000 first prize, and overtake Bryn Kenney at the top of the 2019 GPI PoY rankings, after starting the day in tenth place.

The win was Foxen’s 12th in the money (ITM) finish in Nov & Dec. Included in his haul: two final tables at the Poker Masters, three ITM finishes at MILLIONS World, and six final tables at the WPT Five Diamond, an incredible feat of consistency from one of the best NLHE tournament players in the world.

As the final table came into view, four players looked as hard as cured leather. Foxen, of course; joined by two WPT Champions Club members and a World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet winner.

Jonathan Jaffe won the CAD 3,850 NLHE WPT Montreal in 2014 for $409,657, Daniel Park won a 2,452-entrant $1,000 NLHE Super Turbo Bounty event at the World Series of Poker (WSOP) in the summer, and then you had Seth Davies.

Davies, who won the CAD 3,500 WPT Candian Spring Championships in 2016 for $203,992, also won the $25,000 NLHE High Roller on the day the WPT Five Diamond Main Event began, beating a field of 53-entrants to the $424,000 first prize. Davies won the same event in 2018, beating Isaac Haxton heads-up on his way to the $341,920 first prize. It’s been the best year of his life, with $4.1m in live tournament earnings, while also finding the time to slip a ring on his partner’s finger.

Let’s see how Foxen managed to lock these three in the vault on his way to a fantastic victory.

The Nutshell Action

Seat 1: Alex Foxen – 9,750,000
Seat 2: Peter Neff – 2,075,000
Seat 3: Seth Davies – 4,825,000
Seat 4: Jonathan Jaffe – 9,075,000
Seat 5: Toby Joyce – 4,575,000
Seat 6: Daniel Park – 11,100,000

Peter Neff doubled through Jonathan Jaffe twice, first when pocket fours beat AcQc, and then when AcQC beat pocket tens.

Alex Foxen then took the chip lead from Danny Park. He would never relinquish it. Park raises to 275,000 from the small blind, and Foxen called in the big blind. The flop of QsJc6h slithered onto the flop like a snake, Park bet 325,000, and Foxen called. A club draw hit the turn when the 8c appeared, and the same action ensued, this time for 475,000. That club flush materialised on the river when the 2c landed on the felt with a thump, Park bet 775,000, Foxen raised to 3,175,000, and Park called. Foxen showed Qc3c for the flush, and Park mucked his hand.

Then we lost Jonathan Jaffe.

Park opened to 275,000 from the hijack, Foxen called from the cutoff, and Jaffe moved all-in for 2,250,000 from the big blind. Park grabbed his blanket and nestled back into his chair. Foxen called, and all the tumblers fell into place to unlock the fifth-place money for everyone but Jaffe when pocket nines beat KcQs.

Toby Joyce doubled through Park when AhKc turned and rivered trip kings to beat pocket treys, but Park doubled back when pocket nines beat KcJs, before also doubling through Neff when KsTs hit AsJc for six thanks to a ten on the flop and another on the river to give him trips versus top pair.

Toby’s double-up run good ended when he moved all-in holding pocket tens versus a Joyce three-bet with AhQd. Joyce called, and a queen on the river bit like a blade. Tang was out.

Peter Neff secured fourth-place when Seth Davies treated him like a candle in the wind. Neff moved all-in for 3,875,000 from the under the gun holding KdQc, and Davies licked his Ac and Js before placing them over the wick dousing Neff’s flame for good.

Alex Foxen – 25,700,000
Toby Joyce – 8,625,000
Seth Davies – 7,075,000

Davies doubled through Foxen when Ac5s beat KhTc.

Joyce doubled through Foxen when Ac9d beat Ad6d.

Davies did it again when KsJc beat Ah9c.

He didn’t do it a third time.

Davies moved all-in from the button for 3,600,000, and Foxen called from the big blind. Davies showed Ac5c, and Foxen had him dominated with AhQh. The board changed nothing; Davies was out in third.

Heads-Up Chip Counts

Alex Foxen – 29,500,000
Toby Joyce – 11,900,000

Joyce never managed to intrude on Foxen’s chip stack. The final hand came when Foxen limped the button with AcJs and called when Joyce moved all-in holding Jh9c. The jack-high flop paired both players, but ultimately, Foxen’s ace kicker would prove to be the crucial factor, sending the Irishman to the rail without his cigar.

Foxen’s win means he’s now earned $6,346,433 in 2019, beating the $6,632,556 he made in 2018 when finishing the year as the GPI PoY, a feat he is a shoo-in to repeat.

Final Table Results

  1. Alex Foxen – $1,694,995
  2. Toby Joyce – $1,120,040
  3. Seth Davies – $827,285
  4. Peter Neff – $617,480
  5. Danny Park – $465,780
  6. Jonathan Jaffe – $355,125

Four other high rollers who produced a little sweat in this one were Darren Elias (14th), Ali Imsirovic (16th), Cary Katz (44th), and Daniel Negreanu (62nd).

Bryn Kenney

There comes a moment in poker where the money stops the blinking and the winking.

Legacy.

When you dedicate yourself piously to poker; when every last chip leaves the table – it’s essential that the best of the best leave something behind, and as we head into the screaming depths of December, that something is the Global Poker Index (GPI) Player of the Year accolade.

Two events, occurring nine thousand miles apart, will determine who was the most perfect of poker professionals in 2019. The European Poker Tour (EPT) in Prague, and the World Poker Tour (WPT) Five Diamond World Poker Classic in Las Vegas.

Coming into those two events, Kahle Burns led the GPI PoY leaderboard. Still, as Eric Danis, President of the GPI and The Hendon Mob (THM), explained, anyone within a 15-space radius had the opportunity to overtake him.

“Mathematically, the race for GPI PoY is as wide open as it’s ever been this late into the season,” Danis told me via email. “Anyone in the Top six can easily take over the #1 spot with a solid result. A major victory at EPT Prague or the WPT Five Diamond could see someone ranked as low as 12th jump up to #1. A strong end to the season, with multiple results, could see players currently ranked in the Top 25 make a move, it’s that open.”

One of those players is Bryn Kenney. The winner of the biggest prize in poker history ($20.5m at Triton Million, London), and the current THM All-Time Money Leader sat in ninth place coming into this hotbed of action, and Danis had an inkling he may be the jack in the box.

Writing in the November GPI review, Danis had this to say of Kenney:

“Currently sitting ninth in the PoY, Bryn Kenney has a serious advantage over his opponents in the race. Kenney is the only player ranked in the PoY Top 20 that hasn’t scored in 13 qualifying events this season. In other words, whenever Kenney scores next, he’s going to receive full points in the race… a big score and Kenney could be in the pole position.

“The only issue remains Bryn’s schedule. The former American Player of the Year has played a limited schedule so far in 2019 – we’ll have to see if he decides to put in a full effort down the stretch, or if he decides to continue to live life to the fullest, off the felt.”

The effort is being applied.

Bryn Kenney Leads the GPI PoY

After doing whatever Bryn Kenney does after pocketing his share of $20.5m, the lone wolf of poker headed to the WPT Seminole Hard Rock & Roll Open in Florida where he took down the $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) High Roller for $354,565, and, more crucially, 316.67 GPI points.

Kenney then flew to Prague, and after a sterling display, overtook, Burns, to lead the GPI PoY race. Kenney collected a further 386.32 GPI points for finishing fourth in a €25,000 NLHE event (180.66), and 42/1154 in the Main Event (205.66).

Burns didn’t stand idly by while Kenney mopped up. Burns also added 213.83 points to his schedule, after finishing runner-up to Tsugunari Toma in a 41-entrant €10,200 NLHE event, leaving him a mere 0.47 points behind Kenney.

“Burns’ rise to #1 is quite amazing,” said Danis. “His first registered result of 2019 came in May – and his second result didn’t come until late June at the WSOP! He’s picked up the pace in the second half of the season. I can say the same for players like Bryn Kenney (3rd) and Stephen Chidwick (4th), who have both played reduced schedules in 2019 and yet are still very much in the thick of things in the race.”

On Chidwick, the current GPI World #1 also had a terrific time in Prague, earning 314.10 points thanks to his victory in the €50,000 NLHE Super High Roller.

News From The Bellagio

So, what’s the right play here?

If you’re gunning for GPI PoY gold, do you head to Prague or Las Vegas?

Danis thinks you should attend both.

“Both series are going to offer plenty of opportunities to earn a lot of points, both have full schedules so players will be able to jump into events all the time,” said Danis. “There is a way to play both, and many players will do just that. Players who start at EPT Prague should see larger fields, which allows players to accumulate more points.

“The Prague Main Event starts on December 11 and ends on the 17th. If players make a super deep run in the Main, they fight for as many points as possible, if the Prague dream ends early, a quick trip to Vegas will have the players registered on time for the Five Diamond Main, which should have a ton of entries again this year.”

And there is a swathe of chunky side events at The Bellagio to whet PoY front-runner appetites.

One man who has a fantastic chance of winning the GPI PoY award, despite smudging the name ‘Prague’ off his itinerary is Sean Winter. Given that Winter’s partner is expecting a baby, forcing him to put in less volume, it’s been another impressive year for the man with the ice-cold stare.

Winter finished 6/60 in a $10,000 NLHE High Roller at the Bellagio during the WPT Five Diamond. THM shows his 165.33 points haul as ‘excluded’, but they’ve been added to his GPI score, keeping him close to the heels of Kenney and Burns. I’ve reached out to Danis for a double-check on that one.

Anthony Zinno is another player who could snatch it at the death. Zinno finished runner-up to James Carroll in a 43-entrant $10,000 NLHE High Roller for 211.97 points and remains in with a shout.

So who would Danis put his money in as we start to run out of runway?

“It’s impossible to place a bet on just one player at this point,” said Danis. “Kahle Burns is the leader at the moment {prior to EPT Prague}, so placing a bet on him makes obvious senses. That said, I don’t believe he can win if he doesn’t score any more points; there are too many threats behind him.

“It’s hard to overlook players that are willing to travel from one end of the world to the other. That’s why if I get better odds since they’re ranked 5th, 6th and 7th at the moment, the trio of Manig Loeser, Rainer Kempe and Anthony Zinno is pretty intriguing; the winner could very well come out of that group.”

Loeser and Kempe are yet to score in either Prague or The Bellagio, but the gate remains open in both.

Who will sit at the top after the final stampede?

We’ll find out soon.

Sam Greenwood

The ending may have been more Game of Thrones than Breaking Bad, but Sam Greenwood doesn’t care how he wins his titles as long as he wins them.

Greenwood’s incredible year ($8.1m and rising) continues to cartwheel after the Canadian was the last man seated at the end of a 67 entrant (23 re-entries) €25,000 No-Limit Hold’em (NLHE) at the European Poker Tour (EPT) in Prague. Greenwood beat his good buddy, Steve O’Dwyer, in heads-up play, after a final table that never seemed to end.

O’Dwyer was making his second final table of the series after finishing fourth in the €50,000. Matthias Eibinger was also making his second final table after finishing third in an earlier €25,000, Danny Tang was making his fourth final table after finishing third in the first €25,000 event, and catching a second and s sixth in €10k games.

Let’s see how Greenwood mowed people of that ilk down.

Final Table Seat Draw

Seat 1: Steve O’Dwyer – 1,950,000
Seat 2: George Wolff – 245,000
Seat 3: Sam Greenwood – 410,000
Seat 4: Matthias Eibinger – 260,000
Seat 5: Jans Arends – 640,000
Seat 6: Sam Grafton – 1,780,000
Seat 7: Mustafa jukovic – 530,000
Seat 8: Danny Tang – 400,000

The blinds were at 10k/20k/20k when most people watching from the rail assumed that Sam Greenwood’s long day at come to an end. Steve O’Dwyer opened the hijack with a 40,000 bet, and then called after Greenwood had three-bet to 200,000 from the button. The dealer placed Kd6d6s onto the felt as gently as a father places a sliver of gold onto his daughter’s tiny ankle, and O’Dwyer check-called a 60,000 Greenwood c-bet. The 7d hit the turn, and O’Dwyer put Greenwood all-in. The Canadian folded, leaving him behind a stack of six big blinds.

A spot of Dutch on Dutch action saw Joris Ruijs exit in the ninth place. Ruijs got it in holding AcKd against the pocket queens of Jans Arends, and the queens held. The queens then made their way to the whorls of Greenwood who shoved for 142,000 on the hijack seat, and Arends called and lost with AcJd.

Matthias Eibinger then doubled through Sam Grafton when pocket aces operated on AsKs removing all of the vital organs with typical precision. Danny Tang joined the double-up fun when AdQd beat the KcTs of Mustafa Jukovic. And Jukovic got some back when he doubled through O’Dwyer when AhJs rivered Broadway to beat pocket aces.

George Wolff then doubled through O’Dwyer Kc7c>As8d, and Eibinger did likewise when AcQh cracked the kings of Tang, and kings were useless for Grafton as they doubled up Jukovic who hit a wheel with AsKc.

Wolff doubled when Qd8d beat Eibinger’s Ad7s.

“The short stack always wins,” came a cry from the final table.

You can call it a hoodoo.

Grafton got it in holding 7s5s, and Jukovic called and lost with KsQc after Grafton flopped a two-pair hand.

Arends then took the chip lead when his pocket aces doubled through the pocket kings of O’Dwyer, and the Dutchman gave some of those chips to Tang when Jd4d failed to beat pocket eights when all-in, pre.

Wolff continued to double-up, this time KhQh beating Grafton’s AsKs, and Greenwood followed suit when QhJh hammered the pocket sixes of Arends.

Then after more double-ups than massage workshops in Bali, we had an elimination when Tang’s pocket sevens dismantled the Ad5d of Eibinger. The Austrian flopped a second ace to take the lead, but Tang turned a set to send Eibinger packing.

Grafton doubled through O’Dwyer when pocket jacks beat QsJs, and so did Wolff when AdTc slapped pocket fives – but O’Dwyer still held onto the chip lead with six remaining after enacting revenge on Wolff when 9d8d out flopped AhKc to send his compatriot to the rail in the sixth place.

Tang went next, and when he did, it was a humdinger.

With blinds at 40k/80k/80k, Tang opened to 500,000 from the hijack, O’Dwyer moved all-in, Greenwood followed, and Tang made it three to the flop.

Tang: KdQd
Greenwood: AcJc
O’Dwyer: AhTd

Tang flopped a king to potentially triple up, but Greenwood rivered a flush, to actually triple up, eliminate Tang, and bring him neck-and-neck with O’Dwyer.

Greenwood was on fire, and the next player turned to ash was Jans Arends. It was a flip with Greenwood’s pocket tens beat AhKh.

Grafton pissed on Greenwood’s flames when Qc2s doubled through Ac6s before Grafton hit the bottom of the chip stack leaderboard when O’Dwyer doubled with Kc9d versus Qh7c.

Grafton doubled back when JsTh beat the Ks3s of O’Dwyer but ran sixes into aces, leaving O’Dwyer with the chip lead going into heads-up with Greenwood.

Heads-Up Tale of the Tape

Steve O’Dwyer – 3,965,000
Sam Greenwood – 2,635,000

O’Dwyer was by far the most experienced heads-up player of the two in this format with 24 wins and 16 losses but had lost his last three battles including most recently the Master Classic of Poker in Amsterdam.

Greenwood had won ten of his eighteen previous heads-up encounters, winning his last bout against Robert Flink during the British Poker Open (BPO). That win followed two bitter pills in Triton events this year, losing to Mikita Badziakouski in an HKD 750,000 Short-Deck No-Limit Hold’em event in Montenegro, and to Michael Soyza in an HKD 500,000 No-Limit Hold’em event in Jeju.

All of which is irrelevant, after the pair agreed to an ICM chop. O’Dwyer took the most money, and Greenwood flipped his way to the title.

Amen to that.

Final Table Results

  1. Sam Greenwood – €384,968*
  2. Steve O’Dwyer – €411,311*
  3. Sam Grafton – €216,310
  4. Jans Arends – €163,220
  5. Danny Tang – €126,770
  6. George Wolff – €98,250
  7. Matthias Eibinger – €77,650
  8. Mustafa Jukovic – €60,220
  9. Joris Ruijs – €45,960
    *Indicates a heads-up ICM deal for all the marbles.