My wife is a ‘should of’ person.
I should have had what you ordered.
I should have bought the other pair.
I should have chosen the other guy.
“I’m selling action to the $1,000,000 buy-in 1 Drop tournament at 1.05 markup. I will be donating all the money from the 5% markup to charities meeting the tenets of Effective Altruism. Contact me for 5%.”
That’s Justin Bonomo’s pinned tweet.
I should have…
In many ways, Justin Bonomo’s assault on the Big One for One Drop felt a little like England’s World Cup campaign.
Before the Big One, the two most significant buy-in events of the year have been the $300,000 buy-in Super High Roller Bowl (SHRB) in Las Vegas, and the $267,000 buy-in SHRB in China, and Justin Bonomo had won them both for a combined $9.8m.
He couldn’t win all three, could he?
Like England facing an ageing Croatian side, was this one tournament too many for the ultimate End Boss?
Let’s find out.
David Einhorn Bubbles The One Drop
27 players found $1m to compete in the most massive buy-in event ever created, raising $2,160,000 for charity.
After two days of incredible action here was the final table.
Final Table
- Justin Bonomo – 48,950,000
- Fedor Holz – 22,125,000
- Dan Smith – 21,450,000
- Rick Salomon – 19,650,000
- David Einhorn – 12,300,000
- Byron Kaverman – 10,525,000
$2.6m was the starting point from a charitable angle. There would be more donated, for sure. Justin Bonomo was a Raising For Effective Giving (REG) Ambassador, so you knew some of his profits had been set aside to help ease suffering in the world. Dan Smith is a known philanthropist, and Fedor Holz is also recognised to donate a bob or two.
But none of them raises money for charity with the girth of David Einhorn, the man who donated his entire $4.3m prize when finishing third in 2012.
So, it was a topsy-turvy feeling when Einhorn’s involvement ended on the bubble. Had he won the $10m, he would have saved many lives, but the poker community as a whole would have been staring at a large chunk of change missing from the fabric of its structure.
“I almost feel guilty for knocking out David Einhorn,” Bonomo told PokerNews.
I’m sure it was only a fleeting thought, Justin.
Einhorn raised to 1.1m on the button, and Bonomo called from the big blind. The dealer spread the 7c5c5h across the felt. Bonomo checked, and Einhorn bet 1.6m before Bonomo check-raised to 7.5m. It was enough to cover Einhorn, and after some deliberation, he made the call.
Bonomo: 74o
Einhorn: AQo
Bonomo had connected with a big blind special and was two cards away from guaranteeing everyone at the table a $1m profit. The 2h and Kc changed nothing. Einhorn was out.
Fedor Holz Eliminates Byron Kaverman & Rick Salomon
When you’re playing in a $1m buy-in event, the last person you want to see peering over a chip stack the size of the Burj Khalifa is Fedot Holz, and that’s the sight that befell both Bonomo and Dan Smith, after an incredible double knockout.
Byron Kaverman moved all-in for around 8 million in the first position. Holz made the call from the next DXRacer, and Rick Salomon moved all-in for 26.9m out of the big blind.
Pain.
Agony.
Anguish.
Or was he figuring shit out?
I don’t know, but Holz went into the tank, using four-time extension chips before making the call.
Holz: TcTs
Kaverman: Ac5c
Salomon: AhKh
Kaverman wanted clubs, Salomon wanted hearts, and Holz wished to close his eyes, press ‘teleport’ and open them five cards later.
The dealer faced the AdKs2c onto the flop, and the Iris’s of Salomon flexed as he realised he had flopped the top two pairs. And then we had the most incredible turn card.
Turn: Qc
Salomon remained in the lead, but now, everyone had a piece of the pie. And it was a lovely pie. The type of pie that gets stuck in your moustache, and you’re licking it all day.
Kaverman had a flush draw, and Holz added Broadway outs to his tens.
River: Td
Holz had done it again.
When it mattered, the young man from Germany, got precisely what he ordered from the Poker Gods.
A few handshakes later, and Holz was able to relax.
Three-Handed Chip Counts
Fedor Holz – 66,500,000
Justin Bonomo – 50,100,000
Dan Smith – 18,400,000
A relaxed Holz put his pedal to the metal.
Fedor Holz – 91,100,000
Dan Smith – 26,100,000
Justin Bonomo – 17,800,000
There could be only one.
Dan Smith Eliminated in 3rd Place for $4m.
Bonomo picked up a couple of pots to pick up some slack on Holz, but you felt if the American was to win, he needed to eliminate Smith, and that’s what happened.
The action folded to Bonomo who moved all-in, and Smith made what would be the final call of his tournament.
Bonomo: KTo
Smith: QTs
The dealer laid the Ad9s6s in the middle of the Thunderdome. Not bad. Things became more interesting when the Js provided Smith with flush and straight outs, but the Qh disappointed every Smith fan in the building. The man with the ten-gallon hat was out. Bonomo would face Holz for all the marbles.
Bonomo v Holz
No two players have won more money playing live tournaments in the past three-years than Fedor Holz and Justin Bonomo. The pair are incredible in many ways, and the audience was fortunate to see two of the very best going at it for the top prize of $10m.
Chip Counts
Fedor Holz – 84,300,000
Justin Bonomo – 50,700,000
Holz began the brightest, winning a plethora of pots to extend his lead to 54m chips. But then Bonomo started buzzing, doubling through the German when his A8 turned an ace to beat the pocket fours of Holz who was two cards away from victory.
Then came the moment of the tournament for both players.
Holz opened to 2.8m, Bonomo raised to 9.5m, and Holz called. Qc4c3s flew out of the deck, and Bonomo bet 5m; Holz called. The 8h arrived on fourth-street; Bonomo checked, Holz bet 11.5m, and Bonomo called. The river card was the 6d. Bonomo tapped felt; Holz moved all-in, and Bonomo made a quick call.
You could tell by the look on Holz’s face that all was not good in that corner of the world. The German showed KJo for the middle of a doughnut, and Bonomo took a 110.4m v 24.6m chip lead after showing 84s, for eights-up.
It was time to see if Holz had the stamina, grit and luck to turn things around.
Early doors, the prognosis was excellent.
After Bonomo ground him down to ten bigs, Holz doubled with QTo versus K5o after turning a lady, and then he pulled things back to a 3:1 deficit when his J4 found a twin on the flop to beat the pocket tens of Bonomo.
Bonomo – 101,000,000
Holz – 34,000,000
And then Bonomo had a Gandalf moment; you know, the, you shall not pass bridge moment, only unlike the grey-bearded wonder, Bonomo didn’t fall into the abyss, his opponent did.
Bonomo called from the button; Holz James for 23.6m and Bonomo called.
Bonomo: AJo
Holz: A4o
Bonomo had Holz in a dominated position.
You could sense this was it.
The final hand of a fantastic tournament.
It was the perfect moment to play some Hans Zimmer.
The dealer placed K832Q on the board with minimal fuss, and Bonomo had won the trifecta of SHRB, SHRB China and the Big One for One Drop all in a single year.
And they don’t even have an accolade for it.
It’s time they made one.
Final Table Results
- Justin Bonomo – $10,000,000
- Fedor Holz – $6,000,000
- Dan Smith – $4,000,000
- Rick Salomon – $2,840,000
- Byron Kaverman – $2,000,000
It was an incredible moment for Bonomo.
Not only did he had another $10m to his vault. But in doing so, he overtook Dan Colman’s record annual haul, with $24,945,435 earned with five months of the year remaining.
Most significantly, Bonomo now stands on the very top of the Live Tournament All-Time Money Earned Leaderboard, replacing longtime throne holder, Daniel Negreanu with $42,979,591 taken from poker tables around the globe.
Man, I should have…