Tony G Triumphs in the $10,400 MPP High Roller ($257,500)

Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor
2 min read
Tony G

Tony G is the Mediterranean Poker Party (MPP) $10,400 High Roller champion after the Lithuanian star came out on top of a lightning-fast six-handed final table. The tournament was due to play down to a winner on September 4, but the decision was made to pause the event in the early hours of September 5 once Matthias Lipp had busted in seventh place.

Tony G banked $257,500 after a heads-up deal with Alex Peffly, with this score being the 24th six-figure or better prize Tony G has reeled in during his long and illustrious career.

$10,400 MPP High Roller Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Tony GLithuania$257,500*
2Alex PefflyUnited States$247,500*
3Andrea RicciItaly$140,800
4Stephen ChidwickUnited Kingdom$100,000
5Danny TangHong Kong$80,000
6Kahle BurnsAustralia$65,000

*denotes a heads-up deal

Arsenii Karmatckii Crushes $2,200 Warm Up at Luxon Pay Mediterranean Poker Party ($310,000)

The $10,400 buy-in tournament drew in a field of 149 players, made up of 96 unique players and 53 re-entries. That crowd created a $1,490,000 prize pool which the top 22 finishers shared.

Each of the six returning, well-rested players, locked in at least $65,000 for their efforts. Australian grinder Kahle Burns was the first casualty on Day 3. Burns sat down as the shortest stack, with a meagre seven big blinds at his disposal, and he never managed to turn matters around.

Danny Tang was the odds-on favorite going into the final day's action courtesy of being armed with 41 big blinds, almost twice as many chips as his nearest rival. However, poker can be a funny old game, and Tang crashed out in fifth place despite his envious starting position; fifth place came with the High Roller's final five-figure prize, $80,000.

Fourth place and $100,000 went to Stephen Chidwick before Italy's Andrea Ricci reeled in the $140,800 third-place prize, the fourth-largest score of his live poker tournament career. Ricci's untimely demise left Tony G heads-up with Peffly of the United States.

Hannes Jeschka Denies Arsenii Karmatckii Another Trophy in the MPP Main Event

With shallow stacks, rising blinds, and a $105,000 difference between first and second place, Tony G and Peffly struck a deal to lessen the blow of busting in second. The deal worked perfectly for Peffly because he could not get past Tony G, and he captured a $247,500 prize, leaving Tony G to claim yet another victory and $257,500 in prize money.

Tony G took to Facebook shortly after his victory to inform his legion of fans about his accomplishment.

"Nice victory this time. Champagne for the casino. Cyprus is a lucky place. Managed to knock out five Russians along the path to victory. In the final table knocked out the great Australian K Burns. Chidwick and Danny Tang were tough opponents. Ultimately it's a confidence builder that I can still compete after so many years away from the circuit."

This is definitely not the last time we will see Tony G strutting his stuff on a live poker tour.

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Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor

Matthew Pitt hails from Leeds, West Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom, and has worked in the poker industry since 2008, and worked for PokerNews since 2010. In September 2010, he became the editor of PokerNews. Matthew stepped away from live reporting duties in 2015, and now concentrates on his role of Senior Editor for the PokerNews.

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