Koray Aldemir has become a contender for the 2019 US Poker Open after taking down Event #9: $50,000 No-Limit Hold’em.
The young German star added a win to his runner-up finish in Event #3: $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em where he failed to get past Lauren Roberts in the final hurdle.
Aldemir has now won eight live tournaments, with the last three coming at the ARIA. All told, he has earned $11,246,093 in live tournament cashes.
41-entrants paid the $50,000 buy-in fee, and after 16-Levels, Day 1 ended with a final table that looked a little like this.
Final Table Seat Draw
Seat 1: Ryan Riess – 1,185,000
Seat 2: Sean Winter – 2,020,000
Seat 3: Alex Foxen – 1,005,000
Seat 4: Koray Aldemir – 1,185,000
Seat 5: Seth Davies – 270,000
Seat 6: David Peters – 535,000
Only Ryan Riess was making his first ITM finish of the series. Alex Foxen, David Peters and Aldemir were making a second appearance, Seth Davies a third, and Sean Winter an incredible fifth final table.
Here is how the action went down.
Seth Davies was the first casualty.
Davies moved all-in for 270,000 in late position, and Alex Foxen called in the big blind. Both players turned over ace-queen, with Davies holding a couple of diamonds and Foxen with a pair of clubs. The flop contained two clubs, and a third on the river sent Davies to the rail in a cooler and a half.
David Peters fell in fifth place.
With blinds at 15k/30k/30k, Peters raised to 60,000 from the cutoff, Foxen three-bet to 255,000 from the big blind, Peters moved all-in for 815,000, and Foxen called. The pair got on their spikes with Peters holding pocket eights, and the Global Poker Index (GPI) #1 holding AK. An ace appeared on the flop, the snowmen stayed in the deck, and Peters was out.
Foxen took the chip lead after that hand, but after a succession of hands where the tearaway doubled up most of the table he got it in a dominated position with A8 versus the A9 of Riess, and five community cards later he was out in fourth place.
Three-Handed Chip Counts
Ryan Riess – 2,600,000
Koray Aldemir – 2,540,000
Sean Winter – 1,010,000
Winter doubled through Riess when his JT beat K2 when all in blind on blind. A jack on flop sorting that one out. Riess then doubled through Winter K6 versus A4 – again in a battle of the blinds – and Riess flopped two pair, and turned a boat to win that one.
Then we lost the dangerous Winter.
Winter raised the button to 430,000, Riess moved all-in, and Winter called for the remainder of his stack. Winter turned over J9ss, and Riess was ahead with AK. Winter did flop an open-ended straight draw, but a pair of fours completed the turn and river action to send Winter out in third place.
Heads-Up
Koray Aldemir – 3,600,000
Ryan Riess – 2,600,000
Two hands of note happened during heads-up.
In the first hand, with blinds at 60k/120k/120k, Aldemir limped into the pot holding Js3c, Riess checked holding QcTh, and the pair were soon checking a Kc7d6s flop. On the Jh turn, Riess checked, Aldemir bet 180,000, and Riess called. The river was the Ks. Riess checked, and then folded to a 540,000 bet, leaving the German with a 2:1 chip lead.
Then came the final hand.
Riess open jammed for 1.17 million, and Aldemir made a quick call. Riess showed Kh7s, but Aldemir dominated him with KcQh. The flop, turn, and river was devoid of any computational lifesavers for Riess, and the former World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Event Champion was out.
Final Table Results
1. Koray Aldemir – $738,000 (200 pts)
2. Ryan Riess – $492,000 (140)
3. Sean Winter – $328,000 (100)
4. Alex Foxen – $205,000 (80)
5. David Peters – $164,000 (60)
6. Seth Davies – $123,000 (40)
The following players could still win the 2019 US Poker Open if they take down the $100,000 Main Event.
US Poker Open Overall Standings
1. Sean Winter – 540 pts
2. Stephen Chidwick – 540
3. Nick Schulman – 410
4. Brandon Adams – 365
5. Koray Aldemir – 340
6. Cary Katz – 340
7. Bryn Kenney – 240
8. Lauren Roberts – 240
9. Jordan Cristos – 240
10. Ali Imsirovic – 200
11. David Peters – 200
12. Ben Yu – 200
The 2019 US Poker Open is sprinting like a track and field star towards the finishing line, the defending champion Stephen Chidwick is ahead by a neck with a gaggle of stars ready to stamp all over his Achilles heel.
The last time we touched based with you, Chidwick began the defence of his title in sterling fashion, overcoming a field of 90-entrants to win Event #1: $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em. Jordan Cristos took down the 64-entrant Event #2: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha, and Lauren Roberts became the first female to win a US Poker Open title when she outlasted 91-entrants to win Event #3 $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em.
Sean Winter took the lead when he made his fourth successive final table taking down Event #4: $10,000 Short-Deck, with Chidwick nestled in second place after making three final tables.
2019 US Poker Open
The stakes increased for Event #5: $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em, and the reigning Poker Masters Champion, Ali Imsirovic, took down a 59-entrant field, including defeating Cary Katz, heads-up.
Katz would have another stellar run in Event #6: $25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha, once again finishing second, but still, the headlines belonged to Chidwick, who won his second title of the series, defeating 39-entrants to win his first PLO live title.
There was no sight of Chidwick, Winter or Katz at the final table of Event #7: $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em. A rare sight, indeed. Not that either of them would have made a difference, as a fresh and funky Aussie Millions Main Event Champion, Bryn Kenney, steamrollered the place in less than an hour to take maximum points.
The last winner’s photograph showed Nick Schulman sitting in front of a pile of chips and KTo. Schulman conquered a field of 20-entrants in Event #8: $25,000 Mixed Game Championship. Only three people made money, with Brandon Adams finishing second, and Chris Vitch taking third.
So who is in with a chance of winning this thing?
At the time of writing, Sean Winter has made the final table of Event #9: $50,000 No-Limit Hold’em as the chip leader. None of his rivals joins him. So should Winter finished third or higher he will take the lead going into the $100,000 No-Limit Hold’em Championship.
As it stands, there is a maximum of 550 points available for Winter and the people joining him at the final table of Event #9 (Ryan Riess, Koray Aldemir, Alex Foxen, Seth Davies and David Peters).
All of this means that our 2019 US Poker Open winner will come from this stock:
1. Stephen Chidwick (Defending Champion)
2. Sean Winter
3. Ryan Riess
4. Alex Foxen
5. David Peters
6. Seth Davies
7. Koray Aldemir
8. Nick Schulman
9. Cary Katz
10. Bryn Kenney
11. LaurenRoberts
12. Jordan Cristos
13. Ali Imsirovic
14. Ben Yu
15. Brandon Adams
Scoring System
Mixed Game Championship/Main Event
1. 350
2. 245
3. 175
4. 140
5. 105
6+. 70
All Other Events
1. 200
2. 140
3. 100
4. 80
5. 60
6+. 40
US Poker Open Standings (After 8-Events)
1. Stephen Chidwick – 540 pts ($705,950)
2. Sean Winter – 440 pts ($419,900)
3. Nick Schulman – 410 pts ($390,000)
4. Brandon Adams – 365 pts ($314,750)
5. Cary Katz – 340 pts ($580,200)
6. Bryn Kenney – 240 pts ($477,000)
7. LaurenRoberts – 240 pts ($263,400)
8. Jordan Cristos – 240 pts ($206,200)
9. Ali Imsirovic – 200 pts ($442,500)
10. Ben Yu – 200 pts ($262,800)
Remaining Events
Event #9: $50,000 No-Limit Hold’em (Feb 21)
Event #10: $100,000 No-LImit Hold’em Main Event (Feb 22)
Forget the predictable headlines of ‘Winter is Coming’. Winter is not coming. Winter is here; he’s been here since the beginning, and he’ll be here until the end.
2019 US Poker Open
The man for all seasons has taken down Event #4: $10,000 Short-Deck, beating a 42-entrant field for his first US Poker Open title, and now holds a 100-point lead over the defending champion, Stephen Chidwick.
Judging by the fall in numbers from the vanilla flavoured Pot-Limit Omaha (64) and No-Limit Hold’em events (90 & 91), many are afraid of testing the new format, but Winter wasn’t amongst them.
“I was trying to figure it out on the fly,” Winter told Maria Ho after his win. “Everything is just flowing well. I’m focused, feeling mentally strong and I’m getting lucky in the right spots and getting away with things in others,”
The Action
Day 1 consisted of 14-Levels, and David Peters, Seth Davies, Ben Yu and Ben Lamb made their first final tables of the series. Winter was making his fourth appearance, and Chidwick was making his third.
Final Table Seat Draw
Seat 1: David Peters – 5,450,000
Seat 2: Seth Davies – 3,250,000
Seat 3: Ben Yu – 1,795,000
Seat 4: Sean Winter – 1,135,000
Seat 5: Ben Lamb – 325,000
Seat 6: Stephen Chidwick – 645,000
Day 2 began with Ben Lamb doubling through David Peters after rivering a straight holding 9c7d against the AKdd of the chip leader and then got lucky again to double through Ben Yu when AJ beat AQ, rivering a jack.
Then the two favourites for the US Poker Open title clashed with devastating effects for the reigning champion. The action folded around to Chidwick who moved all-in for 725,000 holding AsQc and Winter moved all-in to isolate him holding pocket kings, and they stuck to send Chidwick out in sixth place.
Yu must have been stroking Lamb’s head for luck because he doubled through Peters after getting it in on KhJdTh holding AhTs for a pair of tens with a redraw, and Peters holding Qd9c for a straight. The 7h on the turn gave Yu a flush draw, and the 9h on the river was the perfect card to keep Yu in the competition.
Yu’s new lease of life didn’t last long.
After losing a critical hand against Lamb, Yu once again ended up short and shipped it holding KQcc. Seth Davies called with Ac8h and ace-high was enough to send Yu out in the fifth spot.
David Peters still had the lead, heading into the first break of the final table.
1. David Peters – 5,190,000
2. Seth Davies – 4,090,000
3. Ben Lamb – 1,840,000
4. Sean Winter – 1,480,000
Winter doubled through Davies when his pocket queens dodged a gutshot on the flop against the AdTs of Davies, and then we lost Ben Lamb.
Winter limped into the pot holding pocket kings and called when Lamb moved all-in with QhJc. A third king arrived on the fourth street to confirm Lamb’s elimination and hand Winter the chip lead with three remaining.
Davies doubled through Peters AJ>A7, but he couldn’t repeat that feat in a fatal hand against Winter. The pair got it in pre-flop with Davies holding the lead with AJdd versus J9cc, but Winter flopped a two pair hand to send Davies to the cash desk to pick up his $67,200 third place prize.
Heads-Up
Winter – 9,090,000
Peters – 3,510,000
Peters struck first blood when his Q9dd cracked the pocket aces of Winter, rivering a flush. Winter then won back-to-back pots to extend his chip lead before finishing off the job.
Winter moved all-in holding K9cc, and Peters called holding Jd9s. The couple both hit a piece of the AcKs9d flop, but neither would improve on the turn or river leaving Winter with the best hand, a title, and the overall lead at the top of the US Poker Open rankings.
Final Table Results
1. Sean Winter – $151,200 (200 pts)
2. David Peters – $100,800 (140 pts)
3. Seth Davies – $67,200 (100 pts)
4. Ben Lamb – $42,000 (80 pts)
5. Ben Yu – $33,600 (60 pts)
6. Stephen Chidwick – $25,200 (40 pts)
2019 US Poker Open Standings
1. Sean Winter – 440 points
2. Stephen Chidwick – 340 points
2. Jordan Cristos – 240 points
4. Lauren Roberts – 200 points
5. Manig Loeser – 180 points
The second event of the 2019 US Poker Open is in the books, and a World Poker Tour (WPT) Champions Club member leads the way after taking down Event #2: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha (PLO).
At the end of 20-levels of fiery four card action, Jordan Cristos fought through a field of 64-entrants to earn the right to start Day 2 with the chip lead, and what a lineup the former WPT Champion led.
2019 US Poker Open
Final Table Seat Draw
Seat 1: Sean Winter – 760,000
Seat 2: Manig Loeser – 1,295,000
Seat 3: Cary Katz – 1,525,000
Seat 4: Adam Hendrix – 900,000
Seat 5: Jordan Cristos – 2,445,000
Seat 6: Martin Zamani – 1,180,000
Sean Winter and Martin Zamani enjoyed a beautiful January in The Bahamas with both players collecting wins in $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em events at the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure (PCA).
Manig Loeser and Cary Katz had prosperous times at the Aussie Millions with Loeser losing an all-in blind hand to finish runner-up to Toby Lewis in the AUD 50,000 Challenge, and Katz won the AUD 100,000 Challenge.
At the top of Day 2, two players could replace Stephen Chidwick at the top of the series standings. Winter had finished runner-up to Chidwick in the opening event, and Cristos finished 11th.
As it turned out the experiences of Winter and Cristos were the polar opposite.
Winter was the first to fall, and it was Cristos who pushed him. With blinds at 30k/60k/60k, Cristos opened to 200,000 on the button, holding KcTs8d7s, and Winter called with KhJcTd7h. The flop fell AsJsTc, Winter bet 275,000 and then called for 375,000 after Cristos put him all-in. The Qc gave both players Broadway, but the Qs on the river gave Cristos a flush, and Winter was out.
Cristos eliminated Katz in fifth place.
With blinds at 40k/80k/80k, Katz opened the button to 280,000 holding AsAdKcTc, and Cristos defended the big blind with Th6c5h3s. The flop of Kd6s5c gave Cristos the lead with a two pair hand. Cristos put Katz all-in, and the call came. The turn was the 6d, giving Cristos a boat, and Katz aces and sixes. Katz needed an ace on the river, but it never came, and the Poker Central founder was out.
Adam Hendrix quickly followed Katz to the rail, and once again Cristos took the role of hatchet man. The action folded to Hendrix in the small blind, and with blinds at 40k/80k/80k, he opened to 240,000 and then called when Cristos put him all-in from the big blind.
Cristos: 8d7s3s3c
Hendrix: AcJdTc6s
Board: Kh9h3d6hAd
Cristos flopped a fatal set of treys, and Hendrix was out.
We entered heads-up play with Cristos holding a 100% final table knockout record after eliminating Zamani in third place. The pair got it in during a blind on blind battle.
Cristos: Ts7c5c5d
Zamani: 9s4s3h2c
Board: Jc7h7dJd6h
Once again Cristos flopped a huge hand, this time with trip sevens, and Zamani was drawing dead.
Cristos entered the heads-up fight with Loeser with a 3:1 chip lead, but Loeser doubled into the lead when his turned two pair cracked Cristos’s aces. The couple would exchange the lead twice more before the final hand played out.
With blinds at 150k/300k/300k, Cristos opened to 750,000, holding Kc9s6h5c, and Loeser called holding QdTc7d4c. The flop was Qc7c5d giving Loeser two pairs, and a whole bunch of draws for Cristos. The couple got it in with Cristos the mathematical favourite and eventually won with a stronger two pair hand when the K2 hit the turn.
“There were 50 players in the field, and I was probably the 44th best player, honestly.” Said Cristos after his win.
It’s the seventh time Cristos has won a live tournament, the second at ARIA, and the first win since taking down a 3,755-entrant WSOPC side event at the Bike in 2016. He has earned $2.5m in lifetime earnings and takes the early lead in the US Poker Open race, but I doubt you will see him competing in the big buy-in events.
Final Table Results
1. Jordan Cristos – $179,200 (200 points)
2. Manig Loeser – $128,000 (140 points)
3. Martin Zamani – $83,200 (100 points)
4. Adam Hendrix – $64,000 (80 points)
5. Cary Katz – $51,200 (60 points)
6. Sean Winter – $38,400 (40 points)
Here are the other ITM finishes: Brent Roberts (7th), Dan Shak (8th), Ben Yu (9th) and Anthony Alberto (10th).
2019 US Poker Open Championship Standings
1. Jordan Cristos – 240 points
2. Stephen Chidwick – 200 points
3. Sean Winter – 180 points
4. Manig Loeser – 140 points
5. Joseph Cheong – 100 points
To win something once is a beautiful thing indeed. To win it again, now you’re talking some next level nonsense, right there.
Take the English Premier League (EPL) for example. Not since 2008/9 has a team defended the title.
Poker is even more complicated given the enormous fields that the giants of the live tournament genre seem to churn out these days. Even in the higher echelons of poker power, with smaller fields, you’re still more likely to see Daniel Negreanu staying at the Holiday Inn than a successful title defence.
Take the US Poker Open, for example.
Stephen Chidwick won the inaugural series back in 2018, making five final tables and winning two events. If the man leading the All-Time Money Earned list in the UK wants to repeat that feat, then he has to collect more money than anyone else throughout the ten series follow-up.
2019 US Poker Open
When you consider how much his opponents would have improved in the past 12-months, the hunger of those players, and the possibility that personal motivation levels may have dropped a tad after becoming the 2018 champion – it’s a Jack and the Beanstalk tall order.
No-one has told Chidwick.
The US Poker Open Champion has taken down Event #1: $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em. The man from Deal in the UK who loves the cadence of the PokerGo Studios, calling it the ‘best place to play poker anywhere in the world,’ surmounted a field of 90-entrants to collect the $216,000 first prize, including beating an in-form Sean Winter in the process.
Let’s see how it went down.
Day 1 consisted of 20-levels, and by the time the players were reaching for their toothbrushes, Joseph Cheong was barking and howling at the top of the chip counts with only six players remaining.
It was a final table rammed with talent from the USA, with only Chidwick spoiling the perfect picture, and it also contained more Joseph’s than the manuscript of the Technicoloured Dreamcoat.
Final Table Seat Draw
1. Stephen Chidwick – 1,950,000 (200 points)
2. Sean Winter – 1,190,000 (140 points)
3. Joseph Cheong – 2,885,000 (100 points)
4. Joseph Cappello – 1,380,000 (80 points)
5. Lazaro Hernandez – 2,195,000 (60 points)
6. Joseph Orsino – 1,635,000 (40 points)
The first player to leave without donning his final photo bow tie was Joseph Orsino. With blinds at 30k/60k/60k, Joseph Cheong opened to 175,000 with AcTh from the cutoff, and Orsino defended the big blind holding QdTc. When Orsino saw the AdQsTs flop, we imagine he was a tad excited. Such a shame then, that Cheong had flopped a stronger two pairs. The pair got it in, and the Floridian was first out, albeit with a personal best ITM finish of $54,000 decorating his Hendon Mob page.
Sean Winter looked likely to fall next when Lazaro Hernandez took chunks, leaving him with six big blinds, but he was able to double up through Stephen Chidwick A6dd>T7o. Hernandez wasn’t as fortunate. Soon after giving Winter a hangover, he ran into a champion in inspired mood.
With blinds at 40k/80k/80k Hernandez limped from the button holding A9dd, Chidwick raised to 325,000 from the small blind holding T9hh, the big blind folded, Hernandez raised to 650,000, and Chidwick called. The dealer cut 8h7c6c out of the deck to give Chidwick the nuts, and Hernandez ace high with an open-ended straight draw. The pair got it in, and after a worthless turn and river, Hernandez fell to 9 big blinds, which Chidwick gobbled up several hands later when AJ beat AT all-in pre-flop. Like Orsino before him, the $72,000 that Hernandez banked for his fifth-place finish was also a personal best.
Winter continued his Lazarus impression by doubling through Chidwick a second time when pocket tens beat the pretty looking 54dd, but at the end of Level 23, Chidwick still held a big lead.
Chip Counts
1. Stephen Chidwick – 6,765,000
2. Joseph Cappello – 1,570,000
3. Joseph Cheong – 1,570,000
4. Sean Winter – 1,350,000
After a brief break, Winter doubled through Cheong KQ>KT, and Cheong doubled through Cappello AQ>77 after flopping an ace and a queen to leave Cappello with two big blinds. Cappello survived his first all-in when he found pocket tens to double through the KJo of Chidwick, but he wasn’t so lucky when he moved all-in holding A2, only for Chidwick to wake up with A4 and a call. The split pot possibilities evaporated on the flop when Chidwick picked up a pair of fours. The former World Series of Poker Circuit (WSOPC) Main Event Champion was out in fourth.
Winter maintained his miraculous run of evading the razor blade after hitting a miracle river card in a chaotic hand against Chidwick. Winter was in beautiful shape when he got it in with pocket kings against the Q9hh of Chidwick only for the defending champion to turn a two pair hand; then with one card to go, the board paired to give Winter a stronger two pair hand, and a great chance of winning the event.
Cheong then doubled through Chidwick when moving all-in on the flop with a flush draw versus a pair of sevens, and the draw got there on the turn, only for Chidwick to claw them all back and more when his AK beat the A2hh of Cheong when all-in pre-flop.
The heads-up encounter between Chidwick and Winter began with Chidwick holding a 2:1 chip lead, and it lasted as long as a politician telling the truth. Chidwick limped with 75dd and then called after Winter raised to 650,000 holding pocket eights. The dealer placed Ks9s6c onto the flop to give Chidwick a gutshot, and he called after Winter c-bet to 375,000. Then the card to end all competitions arrived on the turn in the shape of the 8s. Winter had a set, and Chidwick had a straight. The pair got it in, and the defending champion had begun the defence of his title with the exuberance of a poor man looking forward to his Christmas bonus.
Final Table Results
1. Stephen Chidwick – $216,000
2. Sean Winter – $157,500
3. Joseph Cheong – $112,500
4. Joseph Cappello – $90,000
5. Lazaro Hernandez – $72,000
6. Joseph Orsino – $54,000
Other veterans of the high roller scene that made money include Jake Schindler (9th), Bryn Kenney (10th) and Erik Seidel (13th).
Image by Neil Stoddart & PokerStars
Meeting Igor Kurganov is like peeling the label off a bottle of kombucha that’s spent the last hour soaked in ice. He’s not a ‘quick shot’ type of guy, more chilled; a slow burn; a lie in the bathtub, a towel wrapped around your head, candles burning, incense rising kind of guy.
If you are the average of the five people you spend the most time with, then it’s not a bad idea to clone the guy, five times, and sit with the quintet, daily.
Poker.
People.
Presence.
We get into all three, and much more, during this interview, taken during the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure (PCA) where Kurganov made four final tables in the toughest tournaments on the planet.
We start by discussing the $25,000 PokerStars Player’s No-Limit Hold’em Championship (PSPC). I ask Kurganov where he would take this extraordinarily valuable event?
“This will be something that the Stars people need to figure out,” says Kurganov. “Given that it was a great success, I would be surprised if it was completely eradicated from the future.
“I would make it a little bit smaller, and try and do it yearly. I think giving away 320-Platinum Passes was insane. I think 100 would be enough, and you could add a whole lot of perks to the experience. Something needs to happen though because the experience was great.”
Kurganov is known for sticking a plastic gun in the backs of the greatest players in the live high roller scene, but there was a time when he had to grind it out online with every other dreamer. In the past few months, Kurganov has returned to his old stomping ground to compete in the PokerStars High Roller Club games.
When I picture Kurganov preparing for an online session I have this image of him sitting in a Herman Miller Aeron with 20 massage therapists rubbing each digit; a Buddhist monk in the corner banging a gong, and Tom Cruise creating a cocktail of kale, ginger and dragon fruit.
“I used to prepare as you describe during my two years of grinding up the stakes while going to university,” says Kurganov. “I would wake up, play all day, watch, read, do some poker content, eat a ton of frozen pizza, go to bed and wake up and do it again.”
I hope the frozen pizza had cauliflower crust.
“These days it’s a little bit different,” says Kurganov. “I Like what the High Roller Club provides, which is a few tables within a short amount of time. I live in the UK. I can start at 7 pm including the early 1k, or 9.30/10 pm. If I start later, with 4-5 tables of $500/$1000, I have an average play time of 1.5/2 hours. So it’s a short session, and even if you win it’s like four hours, so it’s neat. I enjoy jumping in, trying some stuff that I have studied, and playing against good players who consistently grind those.
“I don’t have rituals. I don’t touch my little cactus or stroke my monitor, but I like a clean workspace. I don’t want to have distractions within my visual field. My tables are very black, for example, so the information is the only thing that jumps out at me. I want to have had a good sleep, have coffee in me, close all the tabs, and make my workspace distraction-free.”
Talking about playing ‘distraction free’ poker, Kurganov has begun streaming his action on Twitch, which seems as ‘distraction free’, as trying to play as someone repeatedly presses the car cigarette lighter into your forearm, so I ask him how it’s affected his game?
Image by Neil Stoddard and PokerStars
“There hasn’t been an improvement in my game from streaming myself,” says Kurganov. “It’s true that if you teach or talk about your game over time, it will improve it, but I am not smooth enough on Twitch where I can focus on speaking, and that be valuable for me.
“I like the audience interaction, so it’s less about the game because we talk about life, science, Liv. It’s a lot about life and Liv. I talk about the game, but given the audience, it’s low-level explanations. I explain simple things first. I try to add complexity to it, like the PKO’s, I think quite a lot of people make a bunch of avoidable mistakes in those. I enjoy that part of it. I like the idea that there is a set of people interested in poker that make a lot of avoidable mistakes if they just had ten x two-minute sentences that could help them quite a bit, I think it evens out the field a little bit, and I think that would be better.
“By itself, it’s a live stream of ‘whatever’ with the ability to interact with the audience. That allows for pretty much anything. It would be even better if the audience interaction could be better. I was seeking to have more interpretable feedback for me along the lines of putting out a poll so people can vote, and I can adjust what I am talking about to suit. You could have thousands of people watching you, and a large percentage of people could answer those polls.”
I ask Kurganov if he had the chance to watch two players throwing bricks at each other during a heads-up duel, who would he like to see and why?
“For me, as long as I can see the cards, and it’s mostly about poker, Iwant to look at the best in the world playing against each other. All of my opponents play live or stream games, so I get to see how they are thinking about the game. It’s a great learning tool for anyone who wants to improve.
“If it’s about other stuff then Elon Musk playing against the Dalai Lamai. I would want them to play very slowly, and have lots of conversation.”
Next up, meditation.
What does Kurganov’s meditative practice look like?
“I used to do it more {meditation}, and more yoga, but then I fell out of the habit. It hadn’t built up strongly I guess,” says Kurganov. “The thing that stuck was general mindfulness when doing things, which is relatable. Trying not to have too many thoughts of the past and future when walking, and while eating food that’s pleasurable. It’s a nice way to receive happy experiences because you are there. You could be worrying about things, but instead, you are choosing to focus on the beauty of the moment.
“Another thing I do is s 30-60 second resets, where I try to calm my mind. It could be at a poker table, or during a break. Liv meditates more frequently than me. I’ve tried the Calm and Headspace apps. They are nice. I do like guided meditation. It’s easier when you have something to focus on.”
From meditation to podcasts.
Who is inside Kurganov’s ear daily?
“I listen to Sam Harris,” says Kurganov. “I used to listen to Tim Ferriss but stopped because I care about other things these days. With Sam, it depends on who is guests are. Listening to Sam’s voice is nice. It’s pleasing. I met him at TED and had dinner with him. Many people are against some of the points he is making and put bad ethics into his mind, and I think that’s ill-founded. He’s clearly a good human at heart.
“My favourite podcast is 80,000 hours with Rob Wiblin. They are closer to the EA community, and they frequently talk about far future thinking, existential risks, ethics, technology. They get top professors within their fields frequently, and other amazing guests. Rob is very smart and has good conversations with people. He had one with Hilary Graves that Iliked, one with Amanda Askell, and they recently republished the one with Toby Ord, and Toby is fantastic. I also love Julia Galef’s ‘Rationally Speaking’ and Daniel Schmachtenberger’s ‘Future Thinkers’.
“Even if you don’t care about effective altruism and the other topics; they challenge your thinking. They think through topics they are discussing and are trying to be very careful about the statements they are making, and it’s a great exercise in how to think about problems, and to listen to people who are geniuses within their fields.”
Another excellent podcast to listen to is Seth Godin’s Akimbo Podcast, and recently Godin spent a few episodes, talking about the world’s broken education system.
Image by Neil Stoddard and PokerStars
I ask Kurganov for his thoughts on the subject?
“I haven’t dived too deeply into the topic,” says Kurganov. “It seems that we have an ill-devised system for the jobs that will exist in the future. You can educate yourself a lot online these days. Maybe the suboptimal education system might not be that bad as long as the social aspect is still at the forefront for the students. They can learn any course online, and read or watch whatever you want. Lectures can be interactive, where you can pause and answer multi-choice questions. It’s amazing. I am curious where it’s going to go.”
I ask Kurganov to describe some of the milestone moments in his life where he has changed?
“I got into effective altruism 5-6 years ago, and I have constantly been growing my interest in it. Therefore, I am doing more of the things I am interested in, and am very fortunate to be in this position. I thought I would have been more involved in classical business, or a start-up, and it might still be the case. I am releasing an app for bad accounting in poker — things like double confirmation from both sides, securing swaps into a legally binding contract. We will release a beta in a few days and have a full version out in a month or so.
“I’ve noticed some weaknesses in myself that have sustained over the years. I have flakiness. I get distracted by a topic, and I leave things behind. I couldn’t be in the founder or CEO type role. I need people who are more consistent, and I can sometimes jump in, and advise on something I have knowledge in.”
Kurganov has faced and conquered some of the best players in the world, but what about fear? What is the fear that Kurganov has overcome?
“I did a guided meditation in 2014 that exposed some of those with Shay Matthews in Australia,” says Kurganov. “He helped me find the state that I am the happiest and unhappiest, and noticing the fears that were present. I don’t believe there is one true self; I think there are many versions of me and it depends on the environment, etc.
“What came out, was there is not enough time, and that I am not good enough. So my fears are around sending out a blog post that’s not perfect, unfinished, non-perfect texts or messages, and it costs me too much time. It also relates to an ego that wants to appear smart or something.”
Continuing along the same theme, I ask Kurganov what’s been his toughest transition?
“I’ve been lucky,” says Kurganov. “I haven’t had any hard transitions. Poker allowed me to do the things I wanted to do. There has been no hard thing I have had to stick with. Hard things excite me. Maybe it’s a mindset thing, but mostly it’s because I don’t have to do hard things.”
I know that Kurganov has a strong network of friends, but I wonder if there was ever a time that he was lonely, and what his thoughts are on loneliness both in poker and life?
“Fortunately, it’s something we are talking about more. It’s not often noticeable from the outside, and it can eat away at you for years. I suffered loneliness during the first year at university because I didn’t connect as I came in later. Other periods of isolation I’ve experienced was when I had a huge downswing – won my first million and lost it. I didn’t do the things I wanted to do back then, but that’s still quite weak in comparison to what loneliness can be. Losing your whole community, that’s rough.
“When I was in school in Germany I worked at a soup kitchen. Germany has a great welfare system, and anyone who lives on the street can get a home, and are helped with work and a minimal amount of money.We still had a few homeless people. I learned the reason was that these people had a community, and if you give them shelter or a home they are no longer a part of this community, and they become lonely.“It seems it’s worthwhile to not have a home rather than be lonely.””
Moving on from loneliness, I ask Kurganov for his views and advice on building a strong network.
“Different things work for different people,” says Kurganov. “There are some who are methodically getting connected to people, and that’s all fine, but I like a different approach. If you incrementally work on oneself, then things fall into place. If you do interesting things, you will meet interesting people. You might not meet someone directly, but you will meet someone if you go Bouldering for example. It’s a great sport where everyone is super helpful and kind, or maybe a yoga class.
“Loneliness is often connected to depression, and it’s harder then to connect. A friend of mine went through it where everything went bad. What he did was grind away at every aspect of it. He started on the meaning, interests and mental fortitude. He read more interesting things rather than watch Netflix. He became interested in the world. On relationships, he tried harder to make the first connection. And for the wealth he was trying to grind lower stakes, study the game. I think it’s about incremental improvements. If there were one thing, it would probably be falling in love with the ideal partner, but you’re less likely to have an interesting relationship with your partner if you haven’t worked on your self. Yoga, mindfulness, meditation, thinking about interesting problems, learning a new language, coding – it applies to everything.”
Kurganov is the founder of Raising for Effective Giving (REG), a non-profit that helps reduce suffering in the world. I ask him how it makes him feel to serve others?
“When I was at the soup kitchen, I could see the people I was helping. My charity is more removed from the empathetic aspect, but I believe in the numbers that it works, and the numbers make me happy. I am redefining it because of the word ‘serve’. I am not there to give the thing at the end, but you don’t need to be to feel that you’re contributing or are actually contributing. Overall, the thing that helped me the most was at different times going through a downswing, not being sure about poker, at least I know some good comes out of the experience. Something scary happens on a plane journey, at least my life wasn’t for nothing. It helps me be happier, calmer, and it’s recommended if you feel bad about yourself to go and have a walk in nature, work on your long term project, and call your grandmother and have a five-second conversation to make her happy. You see your value then. It’s good to feel good about yourself doing good things.”
I hope someone from Hasbro was watching the Aussie Millions Main Event livestream because it produced a cracking Trivial Pursuit question for when Santa’s little elves start chucking them into his sledge come December.
Question: “Name the person who won the Aussie Millions Main Event without eliminating a single player.”
Answer: “Bryn Kenney.”
822 LAGS, TAGS and WAGS competed in the AUD 10,000 Main Event smashing its attendance record for the second successive year. Kenney started the final table with the shortest stack of the lot (18 bb) but doubled up twice to put him amongst the favourites to land his first Main Event title.
The chip lead didn’t arrive until he was three-handed, and it was during his fist fight with Andrew Hinrichsen and Mike Del Vecchio (who was making the final table for the second successive year) that the action stopped. The trio stepped away to cut a deal, and Kenney returned as the champion in a damp squib of a final scene. Final Table Results
1. Bryn Kenney – $923,269*
2. Mike Del Vecchio – $922,953*
3. Andrew Hinrichsen – $796,410*
4. Clinton Taylor – $350,417
5. Mathew Wakeman – $275,908
6. Gyeong Byeong Lee – $224,180
7. Hamish Crawshaw – $175,571
*Indicates a three-way deal
Kenney jumped straight into the AUD 100,000 Challenge but wasn’t so lucky. The event pulled in a 42-entrant field, the third highest in the event’s 14-year history, and Cary Katz won the $1,066,867 first prize after beating Johannes Becker, heads-up.
It’s the second time Katz has won a $100k event after winning the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure (PCA) version in 2018. Rainer Kempe continued his excellent run of form finishing fourth to take the early lead in the Global Poker Index (GPI) 2019 Player of the Year race, and it was fantastic to see the GPI Ladies #1, Kristen Bicknell, firing multiple AUD 100k bullets on her way to a sixth-place finish. Final Table Results
1. Cary Katz – $1,066,867
2. Johannes Becker – $681,610
3. Abraham Passet – $444,528
4. Rainer Kempe – $325,987
5. Jack Salter – $329,280
6. Kristen Bicknell – $207,446
And there was an AUD 25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha event for the first time. 67-players gave it a shot, and Anton Morgenstern beat the lot to win the $382,061 first prize after beating Farid Jattin, heads-up. It was another excellent performance for Jattin, who made the final table of the $25,000 buy-in PokerStars Player’s No-Limit Hold’em Championship (PSPC) finishing seventh for $746,000.
Poker Central Power Rankings; Run It Once Launch; And More
Bryn Kenney’s victory in Melbourne ensured the top berth in the Poker Central Power Rankings this week.
Sitting in second place is Phil Galfond, who finally launched Run It Once (RIO) Poker in public beta mode, and Chris Kruk was one of the first players to live stream RIO Poker action on Twitch, and the former partypoker MILLIONS $25k High Roller winner agreed to hand all donations and subs to Dan Smith’s next Charity Drive.
Daniel Negreanu made the number three spot without doing anything (perhaps they gave it to him for NOT creating a war on Twitter?) Cary Katz picked up a fourth place spot for his performance Down Under, and I assume Phil Hellmuth made the top five because of this:
And then this happened!! One shot, no practice, cold, in the dark, college three pointer…$7,000-to-$1,000. BUT banks didn’t count!! #BadNegotiationpic.twitter.com/azH3DdgAK8
1. Bryn Kenney
2. Phil Galfond
3. Daniel Negreanu
4. Cary Katz
5. Phil Hellmuth
Eli Elezra Successful But Painful, Book Launch; Bill Perkins Celebrates 50-Years on the Planet and Joins Vegan Debate
With Negreanu having a quiet time on social media, the baton in the race to piss people off fell to the unlikeliest of poker players.
Eli Elezra hopped onto 2+2 to host an Ask Me Anything (AMA) in a bid to market his new biography ‘Pulling The Trigger,’ and what a disaster it turned out to be.
Quick heads up, if you owe a lot of people money probably don’t publish a book with your story, and then promote the book answering peoples questions where you say you always pay your debts.
I know it looks good on paper but its not worth the hassle.
— Doug Polk (@DougPolkPoker) February 5, 2019
Here are the cliffs:
Someone asks Ezra where he got his money from to play high stakes, and during his response, Ezra comments that he always has 100% of himself, and always pays his debts – cue Cole South.
South comes onto 2+2 and states that Ezra owes him $40,000 of a $100,000 loan given to Ezra in 2010. It then emerges that Ezra also owes Shaun Deeb some money. Then Abe Mosseri breaks radio silence and tells all and sundry that Ezra owes him $853,000 and that Ezra had threatened his family.
Ezra eventually makes a statement on 2+2; talks to PokerNews and the ChipRace Podcast to confirm that he does owe South the money and they have since come to a satisfactory arrangement. Ezra admits that he does owe Mosseri that obscene amount of money and that his safety has been threatened, pointing the finger at Mosseri’s partner.
During the statements, Ezra also said that he is on good terms with Deeb despite owing him some money, but I wonder if that’s still the case after Ezra appeared on Poker Central’s Dolly’s Game where each man pays $50,000 to take a seat.
So nice to see @elielezra1 can find a buyin for this @PokerGO game yet not pay me back in full yet #magic
Bill Perkins is celebrating his 50th birthday in style this week. Most people book a room in a pub for a birthday party; Perkins rented the entire Necker Island from Richard Branson.
It takes time to blow out 50-candles, so Perkins decided to hop onto Twitter and get involved in the vegan debate started by this tweet from Doug Polk.
Vegans – If you dont want to eat any animal products, that’s fine. You have a right to choose what you eat and if it makes your life better thats great. But please spare everyone else the misery of being talked down to, we have always eaten meat and dont care you prefer tomatoes.
The tweet got the effective altruist community in a headspin with the likes of Liv Boeree and Justin Bonomo duelling with the outspoken carnivore. Somewhere along the way broadcaster, David Tuchman, suggested a vegan prop bet, asking how much people would need to go vegan for a year. Dan Smith was briefly in the running at $200,000, but eventually, Jamie Kerstetter fell into the crosshairs saying she would give it a bash for $10,000. Perkins took the bet. Should Kerstetter fail then she has to do 100 hours community service at Perkins’ pleasure.
And we will end with a vegan high roller as Andrew “LuckyChewy” Lichtenberger took a timeout from producing YouTube videos on emotional intelligence to stream a few online poker sessions on twitch, and won a tournament playing on WSOP.com on only his second night.
And that’s this week’s Pinnacle.
William Wordsworth penned a poem called ‘The Happy Warrior’, and a stanza that feels apt this morning.
Forever, and to noble deeds give birth, Or, he must fall, to sleep without his fame, And leave a dead unprofitable name – Finds comfort in himself and his cause; And, while the mortal mist of gathering, draws His breath in confidence of Heaven’s applause: This is the happy Warrior; this is He That every man in arms should wish to be.
Bryn Kenney has won the AUD 10,600 Aussie Millions Main Event. Kenney, who vowed never to leave a dead unprofitable name. Kenney, who finds comfort in himself and his cause – to sit upon the throne reserved for the person who wins the most money playing live tournaments.
This is the happy Warrior; this is He.
That every man in arms should wish to be.
It was hardly phonebooth poker, but the period between 2012 – 2015 saw the attendance in the Aussie Millions Main Event drop below the 700-mark. The once mighty redwood of poker in the Southern hemisphere had turned into a weeping willow.
But the Aussie Millions has strong roots.
Who doesn’t have the image of Gus Hansen beating Jimmy Fricke, heads-up, to win the title in 2007 seared into our minds?
Last year, the worm turned, with Toby Lewis returning to the South of England with close to $1.5m in his back pocket after outlasting a record 800-entrants, and this year they beat that number by a further 22.
Here is how the final table shaped up.
Final Table Chip Counts
Seat 1: Mike Del Vecchio – 5,465,000 (109 bb)
Seat 2: Andrew Hinrichsen – 5,300,000 (106 bb)
Seat 3: Hamish Crawshaw – 3,640,000 (73 bb)
Seat 4: Gyeong Byeong Lee – 1,540,000 (31 bb)
Seat 5: Matthew Wakeman – 4,010,000 (80 bb)
Seat 6: Bryn Kenney – 920,000 (18 bb)
Seat 7: Clinton Taylor – 3,845,000 (77 bb)
Bryn Kenney was the most experienced player, but he was also the favourite to hit the rail first with a shove or fold 18 big blinds. If you had asked his seven opponents to seal one request to the Poker Gods in an envelope, they would have all read the same.
“Don’t double up Bryn Kenney.”
Those envelopes never reached the Gods.
Kenney laddered into a seventh-place score by default after Hamish Crawshaw became the first person to slip, fatally, in the bathtub. Andrew Hinrichsen picked up AJ; Crawshaw QQ and the two went at it, tooth and nail, with AJ surviving the five card dust-up.
Then Kenney got moving, doubling up through Mike Del Vecchio AJ>A2, and then through Gyeong Byeong Lee AK>JJ. Lee tried to put a bandaid on that wound, but it wouldn’t stick. Lee picked up AK and drove his stake deep into the ground. Hinrichsen’s JT picked up a shovel, dug up that stake, and pushed it through Lee’s heart.
Mathew Wakeman was next to exit the competition when he ran pocket queens into the pocket aces of Clinton Taylor, and here’s how the final quartet shaped up.
1. Hinrichsen – 11,325,000
2. Taylor – 6,435,000
3. Kenney – 4,800,000
4. Del Vecchio- 2,025,000
Taylor fell first when his AK failed to find the support it needed to batter the pocket nines of Hinrichsen, and the pub grinder who qualified via a $130 satellite moonwalked to the cash desk to pick up his$350,417 prize.
With three players remaining, Kenney needed to apply some elbow grease.
1. Hinrichsen – 15,365,000
2. Kenney – 4,870,000
3. Del Vecchio – 4,830,000
The first player to make a run for the title was Mike Del Vecchio who picked up quad sixes in a hand that saw Hinrichsen double him up after rivering a straight. Next, it was Kenney who took control, winning a series of sizeable pots to move into the lead. And that’s the way it went for a hundred hands – the lead changing hands like a game of passing the parcel.
Then the game paused.
The three sat down to negotiate a deal.
Kenney wanted the title.
Hinrichsen and Del Vecchio gave it to him.
The tournament ended.
Not exactly ’The Sixth Sense’ ending the fans would have liked, but its one that Kenney knew in his heart was always going to be the eventual outcome because he is the happy warrior.
But could he sleep without his fame?
For one night?
“I’m just going to be the champion, and not think about poker!” Kenney told PokerNews.
I guess so.
Final Table Results
1. Bryn Kenney – $923,269*
2. Mike Del Vecchio – $922,953*
3. Andrew Hinrichsen – $796,410*
4. Clinton Taylor – $350,417
5. Mathew Wakeman – $275,908
6. Gyeong Byeong Lee – $224,180
7. Hamish Crawshaw – $175,571
*Indicates a three-way deal
Anton Morgenstern Wins the AUD 25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha
Anton Morgenstern has won the first-ever AUD 25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha (PLO) event at the Aussie Millions.
The German star defeated 67-entrants to win a career-high $382,061 after climbing the steep steps of a 4:1 chip deficit, heads-up against Farid Jattin.
Jattin was a tour de force during the final table, eliminating half of the field; true to form, after flying into Melbourne on the back of a 7/1039 finish in the $25,000 PokerStars Player’s No-Limit Hold’em Championship in the Bahamas for $746,000.
Morgenstern began heads-up with a 715,000 v2,600,000 chip deficit, but quickly evened the score with two critical double-ups. It was at this time that Jattin suggested the pair chat about a deal.
“No.”
Morgenstern refused because he had the heat, and in the next hand he flopped a full house and doubled into a 3,100,000 v 250,000 chip lead. Jattin doubled once but finally hit the rail when the pair both flopped two pair hands, with Morgenstern’s that little bit better.
The victory is Morgenstern’s second of his career, and both came in PLO events after winning a 35-entrant €1,100 PLO side event at the PokerStars Championship in Monte Carlo in April 2017.
Morgenstern’s two big scores before this win came in the 2013 and 2015 World Series of Poker (WSOP) Main Events winning $285,408 and $262,574. The German star also made the final table of the Marathon last year finishing 7/1637 for $86,631.
ITM Results
1. Anton Morgenstern – $382,061
2. Farid Jattin – $243,130
3. Tobias Ziegler – $162,086
4. Daniel Demicki – $127,354
5. Jarryd Godena – $92,621
6. Max Lehamnski – $81,043
7. Alex Foxen – $69,466
The 2019 High Roller scene began with a straight flush.
The PokerStars Caribbean Adventure (PCA) in The Bahamas attracted top brass from every nation, in part due to the phenomenally successful PokerStars’ Player’s No-Limit Hold’em Championship (PSPC), where Ramon Colillas topped a field of 1,039-entrants to win the $5.1m first prize in the largest $25,000 buy-in tournament ever created.
Sam Greenwood, Igor Kurganov, Rainer Kempe and Stephen Chidwick were in splendid form, and Jesus Cortes made his mark, cashing in several tournaments, and collecting more than a million in prize money.
Once the Bahamanian action ended, the high rollers headed to Melbourne, Australia to compete in the Aussie Millions AUD 25,000 No-Limit Hold’em and Pot-Limit Omaha Events, AUD 50,000 No-Limit Hold’em and AUD 100,000 No-Limit Hold’em.
The undoubted star of the show has been Toby Lewis, collecting $1m+ from a runner-up finish in the AUD 25,000 event, and winning the AUD 50,000 event. Rainer Kempe continued his stunning form by winning the AD 25,000.
And that’s where most of them remain as we creep into February.
February High Stakes Action
Aussie Millions
Two high roller events remain on the Aussie Millions roster.
– AUD 100,000 Challenge
– AUD 25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha
To the best of my knowledge, it’s the first time the Aussie Millions has organised a Pot-Limit Omaha (PLO) event at this steep price point. The Crown Casino has experienced somewhat of a renaissance in high roller fortunes this year, hence the risk. The AUD 25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha is a two-day event taking place Sunday 3 Feb and Monday 4 Feb.
The AUD 100,000 Challenge is also a two-day event taking place Friday 1 Feb and Saturday 2 Feb, and here are the previous winners of that event.
2006 – John Juanda AUD 1,000,000 (10-entrants)
2007 – Erick Lindgren AUD 1,000,000 (18-entrants)
2008 – Howard Lederer AUD 1,250,000 (25-entrants)
2009 – David Steicke AUD 1,200,000 (23-entrants)
2010 – Dan Shak AUD 1,200,000 (24-entrants)
2011 – Sam Trickett AUD 1,525,000 (38-entrants)
2012 – Dan Smith AUD 1,012,000 (22-entrants)
2013 – Andrew Robl AUD 1,000,000 (22-entrants)
2014 – Yevgeniy Timoshenko AUD 2,000,000 (47-entrants)*
2015 – Richard Yong AUD 1,870,000 (70-entrants)
2016 – Fabian Quoss AUD 1,446,480 (41-entrants)
2017 – Nick Petrangelo AUD 882,000 (18-entrants)
2018 – Michael Lim AUD 931,000 (19-entrants)
*Indicates the first year of re-entries.
Day 1 of the 2019 AUD 100,000 Challenge ended with 33-entrants taking the felt during the first day, and with registration open until the end of the first level of Day 2, it could grow considerably.
US Poker Open
2019 US Poker Open
After Melbourne, the place to be is in Las Vegas for the second-ever US Poker Open. The Poker Central event takes place at the PokerGO studios at the ARIA and here is the schedule.
Event #1: $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em (13-14 Feb)
Event #2: $10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha (14-15 Feb)
Event #3: $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em (15-16 Feb)
Event #4: $10,000 No-Limit Hold’em Short-Deck (16-17 Feb)
Event #5: $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em (17-18 Feb)
Event #6: $25,000 Pot-Limit Omaha (18-19 Feb)
Event #7: $25,000 No-Limit Hold’em (19-20 Feb)
Event #8: $25,000 Mixed Game (20-21 Feb)
Event #9: $50,000 No-Limit Hold’em (21-22 Feb)
Event #10: $100,000 No-Limit Hold’em Main Event (22-23 Feb)
The reigning champion is Stephen Chidwick, who earned $1,256,650 in the inaugural year after cashing in five events and winning a brace. This year Poker Central will award the winner with an additional $100,000. It’s the first of three High Roller Triple Crown events that Poker Central host every year – the other two being the Poker Masters and the Super High Roller Bowl.
Long before the ARIA, European Poker Tour (EPT) or the Triton Poker Super High Roller Series controlled the live tournament scene for the most affluent echelon in the game, the Aussie Millions had it by the scruff of the neck.
Then in 2016, the organisers opened up a vein and squirted sodium pentathol leading to the axing of the AUD 250,000 Challenge. The pancuronium bromide arrived the following year when the AUD 100,000 Challenge only attracted 18-entrants, and after last year’s AUD 50,000 only inspired four people to take a pew, most people were expecting the potassium chloride to stop the show altogether.
Today, the heart still beats, and the muscles spasm; the Aussie Millions High Roller scene is conscious again.
The AUD 100,000 Challenge attracted 42-entrants making it the third most attended event of that ilk in history. Day 1 pulled in 33-entrants, and 14 players advanced to Day 2 with Cary Katz leading the charge.
One notable absence from Day 2 was the AUD 50,000 Challenge winner, Toby Lewis, who exited after moving all-in on Jc6h3hTc holding AcKc in a three-bet pot against Koray Aldemir who had flopped top pair and improved to a two pair hand on the turn, holding JThh. The man from the UK was down to five big blinds after that hand, and Aymon Hata snaffled them up with A9>Q6.
The AUD 25,000 winner, Rainer Kempe, did make it through, bagging 107,000 chips. Chip Counts
1. Cary Katz – 1,108,000
2. Alex Foxen – 999,000
3. Manig Loeser – 872,000
4. Abraham Passet – 751,000
5. Johannes Becker – 730,000
6. Tsugunari Toma – 713,000
7. Thomas Muehloecker – 528,000
8. Michael Zhang – 496,000
9. Huang Shan – 489,000
10. Mustapha Kanit – 419,000
11. Michael Soyza – 399,000
12. Dominik Nitsche – 390,000
13. Andras Nemeth – 242,000
14. Rainer Kempe – 107,000
The Day 2 Action
Registration remained open for a full level. Kristen Bicknell entered for her third bullet, Koray Aldemir reloaded, and Michael Addamo took a pew after finishing 17th in the Main Event.
Andras Nemeth busted quickly and re-entered, Sam Higgs joined the fun before falling to Bicknell within the level A6<QQ, Becker busted Kempe, who then re-entered, and at the end of the level, Jack Salter and the new Aussie Millions Main Event Champ, Bryn Kenney, had made it 42-entrants. The final table came into view after Rainer Kempe eliminated Huang Shan.
Final Table Starting Lineup
1. Johannes Becker – 3,065,000
2. Kristen Bicknell – 1,360,000
3. Alex Foxen – 1,288,000
4. Cart Katz – 1,055,000
5. Abraham Passet – 1,013,000
6. Rainer Kempe – 770,000
7. Manig Loeser – 710,000
8. Jack Salter – 697,000
9. Michael Soyza – 585,000
The first big pot of the final table saw Alex Foxen open to 65,000 from early position, and Salter called in position. The pair checked through to the turn on Td7h3hKd; Foxen checked, Salter, bet 95,000, and Foxen made the call, The river was the 5s; Foxen checked again, and Salter moved all-in for 366,000 sending Foxen into deep thought. The Global Poker Index (GPI) #1 ranked player burned through several timebank chips before calling with pocket sixes, and Salter turned over pocket aces for the winning hand.
Next Cary Katz got lucky to take the chip lead from Becker when the pair got it in with Katz way behind with kings versus aces only for a third king to hit the flop.
Manig Loeser was the first player to hit the rail in another cooler. With blinds at 15k/30k/30k Passet opened to 60,000 from early position and Loeser defended his big blind. The flop was Ad6h3c; Loeser checked, Passet bet 50,000, Loeser check-raised to 195,000, and Passet called. The turn was the 2c, and Loeser moved all-in for a smidgen over 70,000, and Passet made the call. Loeser showed As3h for the two-pair hand, and Passet showed pocket sixes for the set. The 8c completed the action, and Loeser was out in ninth place.
Michael Soyza fell in eighth place when he moved in for 475,000 at blinds of 20k/40k/40k holding AJcc, and Cary Katz called with pocket queens. The ladies held to send the final seven players onto the bubble, and it was Foxen who would be the last person to leave without any change when his A2o lost to the pocket eights of Becker.
If Foxen was hoping to catch up on a little Netflix time before his partner joined him in his hotel room, he was out of luck. Kristen Bicknell fell in sixth when her A2dd failed to beat the KQo of Rainer Kempe after the AUD 25,000 Challenge winner turned a king.
Jack Salter hit the rail in fifth when his pocket eights lost a flip against the AQo of Katz, and Kempe joined him soon after when he ran AQdd into the pocket kings of Abraham Passet.
Abraham Passet – 5,590,000
Johannes Becker – 3,285,000
Cary Katz – 1,625,000
Katz doubled into the chip lead through Passet when he found aces at a time the German felt like partying with pocket sixes, and he never surrendered it from that point onward. Fortunately for Becker, he was able to make a fist of heads-up after eliminating Passet QQ>ATo to set up a 6,605,000 v 3,895,000 heads-up encounter with Katz holding the lead.
Becker closed the gap temporarily but never created enough sustained momentum to overtake the American. The final hand played out with blinds at 50k/100k/100k when Katz moved all-in from the button holding pocket nines, and Becker called and lost holding K2cc.
It’s the third $100,000 buy-in victory for Katz with his other two coming in the ARIA High Roller Series, and the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure, and it’s his first-ever cash on Australian soil. Here are the final table results:
ITM Results
1. Cary Katz – $1,066,867
2. Johannes Becker – $681,610
3. Abraham Passet – $444,528
4. Rainer Kempe – $325,987
5. Jack Salter – $329,280
6. Kristen Bicknell – $207,446