Jason Koon Wins Triton Poker Montenegro Short Deck Event ($3,579,914)
The final event of the 2018 Triton Super High Roller Series Montenegro at the Maestral Resort & Casino in Budva, Montenegro came to an end with an extraordinary turnout for the HKD1,000,000 ($127,000) Short Deck Ante-Only Event to create a stunning field of 103 entries.
A massive prize pool of HKD96,902,400 (~$12,344,397) emerged to obliterate the field of No Limit Hold'em Main Event and create the biggest ever Triton event in terms of entries and prize pool since the high stakes tournament series was founded by Richard Yong and Paul Phua in 2015.
"It was a challenge for me, physically and mentally."
It took until the late morning hours as the final hand between Jason Koon and China's Xuan Tan took place just before 5.30 a.m. local time. By then, the players had grinded for more than 14 hours, and Koon was delighted, albeit pretty exhausted at that time of the day in his interview after the victory.
“I am so tired; my body, it's been tired for four days. I mean, it's good stress, but these stakes take a toll on you. Especially being on a final table like this. It was a challenge for me, physically and mentally. I probably won't be able to sleep for another five hours, you know how that is, so wound up on adrenaline, but once I fall asleep, I don't know when I am gonna wake up. I am really happy we got that done.”
It is the biggest score of Koon's career thus far, who, despite having cashed for more than $13 million on the live circuit prior to the high stakes festival in Montenegro, more than doubled his previous best cash to take home the first-place prize of HKD28,102,000 ($3,579,914).
Result Final Table Short Deck Ante-Only Event #4
Place | Winner | Country | Prize (in HKD) | Prize (in USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Jason Koon | United States | 28,102,000 | $3,579,914 |
2 | Xuan Tan | China | 18,121,000 | $2,308,434 |
3 | Phil Ivey | United States | 13,082,000 | $1,666,516 |
4 | Winfred Yu | Hong Kong | 9,206,000 | $1,172,752 |
5 | Rui Cao | France | 6,299,000 | $802,430 |
6 | Peter Jetten | Canada | 5,039,000 | $641,918 |
“It is kinda hard to have a bigger cash than that one in a poker tournament. What was it, like three and a half million or something? Yeah, that's pretty sweet.”
Koon faced a tough opponent in Chinese high stakes cash game grinder Xuan Tan, who is rumored to be among the big winners on the side action.
"he was trying to play small pots, as he should, I definitely think he had an edge on me."
“I was playing a player that was much better than I am, at least short-handed, much more experienced, and really talented in cash games. I just coolered him to win the tournament, and I am glad it worked out that way because it could have been a really long night. I know he was in for the long haul, he was trying to play small pots, as he should, I definitely think he had an edge on me.”
Ultimately, Short Deck poker is still to be discovered by the vast majority of players outside of Asia, and the mathematical aspect plays a vital role. Even after such a grueling fight until the end, Koon had the percentage at hand at the end of the interview.
"I won that flip against Winfred [Yu], I don't know what my equity is in the jack ten versus jacks, but it can't be more than like 38%, and to beat Phil [Ivey], one of the best players in the world or top three strip deck [short deck] players in the world... There is a lot of rungood in these final tables, and I ran good from the first hand in this tournament. I doubled in the first hand I played, and here we are.”
Koon will be heading home before the $300,000 Super High Roller Bowl in Las Vegas, and the World Series of Poker is also around the corner. Among the 12 players to take home a portion of the prize pool were such big names as superstar Phil Ivey, Winfred Yu, Rui Cao, Peter Jetten, Triton co-founder Paul Phua, and Day 1 chip leader Devan Tang, while Tom Dwan was eliminated by Koon on the money bubble.
Action of the final day
The registration remained open for another two levels and with just 13 players out of a 50-entry strong field at that point, a rather quick day may have been expected. Instead, the fireworks just got started, and the chips were flying left and right. When the dust had settled, the screens confirmed that the field size had more than doubled in a matter of two hours and several entries at the last minute such as Main Event champion Mikita Badziakouski, Patrik Antonius, and Bryn Kenney barely survived an orbit.
Once the electric pace of the re-entry period had slowed down, the field was quickly whittled down to the last three tables. Dan “Jungleman” Cates, who finished runner-up to Ivey in the first-ever Short Deck Ante-Only event earlier in the festival, busted in a three-way all-in with ace-queen versus aces and the king-jack suited of Hau Lim Chan. The next double elimination included Elton Tsang and Romain Arnaud, as Tom Dwan flopped two pair with queen-ten.
The bubble period was all about Jason Koon. He turned the nut straight and flush draw against the two pair of Thomas Goldstein to take a commanding lead and let the bubble burst by sending Tom Dwan to the rail empty-handed. Koon jammed pocket aces on a king-high flop, and Dwan called it off with king-queen to leave without anything to show for.
"I ran good from the first hand in this tournament. I doubled in the first hand I played, and here we are."
Koon continued to collect chips left and right, and a straight-over-straight setup against Hau Lim Chan vaulted his stack to 11 million, more than one-third of the chips in play with 11 hopefuls remaining. Marius Torbergsen had his kings cracked by the ace-king of Phil Ivey and further notables to miss out on the unofficial final table were Wai Leong Chan (who cashed in three of the four events), Devan Tang, and Paul Phua.
What followed was an eight-hour marathon to determine a champion, as hundreds of antes were at disposal for the seven finalists. Sean Dempsey was the first to fall. The bracelet winner got his short stack in with queen-jack and Xuan Tan called with aces, Dempsey was drawing dead on the turn.
Peter Jetten, who finished third in the Main Event, finished in 6th place. "I was very short in chips and knew I needed to get very lucky to move up and win the tournament," Jetten said. Ultimately, it was a flip with queens against ace-king and Jason Koon turned a second king for a full house to leave Jetten drawing dead.
Ivey: "This casino is wonderful, and I'm gonna come every year hopefully."
The Canadian admitted that he had gotten only brief practice in Short Deck heading into the festival. “Very very little, weeks, a couple months maybe. Yeah, definitely, I love the game. There is a ton of entries, a lot of money to be played for in this tournament and it's very exciting. Any game is very exciting when that's the case."
Down to the last five, Main Event runner-up Rui Cao was the most active player, and his stack went on a roller coaster ride. The Frenchman eventually flopped trips with ace-seven only for Phil Ivey to turn over pocket sixes for a full house to dispatch Cao.
The stalemate of the final four lasted all but two hours and back-to-back hands in favor of Jason Koon set up the heads-up. First Koon bested the pocket queens of Winfred Yu with king-jack suited before turning the nut straight with jack-ten against Phil Ivey's pocket jacks. Despite this beat, Ivey has had quite a return to the live poker tournament scene with a win and a third-place finish.
“Yeah I enjoyed it, I think the structure was great, I love Montenegro. This casino is wonderful, and I'm gonna come every year hopefully,” Ivey said. Asked about the next stop in Jeju, South Korea, Ivey replied “Yeah, I plan on it, unless plans change last minute,” and also confirmed the same for the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas.
Xuan Tan went into the duel for the title as 1-2 chip underdog but slowly clawed his way back in. A few big pots in a row for Koon established a 4-1 lead, and the American closed it out with yet another setup hand. Koon turned a full house with king-queen and the very same card gave Tan a straight with jack-ten to wrap things up.
The 2018 Triton Super High Roller Series Montenegro at a Glance
Event | Buy-In (in USD) | Entries | Prize Pool (in USD) | Winner | Top Prize (in USD) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Short Deck Ante Only | $31,850 | 61 | $1,827,546 | Phil Ivey | $604,977 |
No Limit Hold'em 6-Max | $31,850 | 35 | $1,048,674 | Richard Yong | $388,030 |
No Limit Hold'em Main Event | $127,000 | 63 | $7,550,129 | Mikita Badziakouski | $2,499,090 |
Short Deck Ante Only | $127,000 | 103 | $12,344,397 | Jason Koon | $3,579,914 |
This wraps up the PokerNews live reporting from Montenegro. The Triton Super High Roller Series will be heading to Jeju in South Korea next at the end of July.