PokerNews Staff
In 2019, 27 amateurs and 27 of the world’s best pros competed in the biggest buy-in event in history. Now, the Triton Million – A Helping Hand for Charity poker tournament is being released as a 10-episode series on Triton Poker’s YouTube Channel.
A total of 54 players stumped up the seven-figure entry fee with £50,000 of each buy-in going to benefit 15 different charities. As a result, this saw £2.7 million going to a plethora of good causes as well as generating a staggering £54 million ($73,993,800) pound prize pool.
Here’s a look at five of either the biggest or most interesting hands from the eighth episode, which can be viewed in full below.
Hand #1: Petrangelo Pipped
With blinds at 50,000/100,000/100,000, Nick Petrangelo opened to 200,000 from a stack of 2,500,000, with the in early position, and received two callers in the shape of Vivek Rajkumar holding the chip lead and the in the cutoff, and Chin Wei Lim with the , and 2,400,000 in the big blind.
The deck kept it low with a flop of , but it handed Rajkumar a flush draw. Wei Lim checked, Petrangelo bet 250,000, and Rajkumar raised to 650,000. Wei Lim folded and Petrangelo moved all in for his tournament life, which Rajkumar called.
Petrangelo needed to avoid a diamond or an ace but failed when the hit the turn at the first hurdle. The completed the action, and Petrangelo departed a few places shy of the money.
Hand #2: The Bubble Hand(s)
With blinds still at 50,000/100,000/100,000, Igor Kurganov found the in the hijack and moved all in for 1,300,000. Bill Perkins called for 1,200,000 with the in the cutoff, and after everyone folded,it was down to the first bubble hand of the event.
The entire room crowded around the table as the dealer fanned the on the flop to give Perkins a middle set. Kurganov’s odds rose from 7% to 25% picking up flush and straight outs on a turn, but the on the river enabled Perkins to float on a pink cloud to the final table and leave Kurganov with chip dust.
A few hands later, and Kurganov earned the unwanted tag of losing the biggest bubble hand in poker history after his lost out to the of Rajkumar.
Hand #3: Toodle-oo Winfred Yu
With blinds at 60,000/120,000/120,000, Winfred Yu moved all in for 600,000 in the cutoff holding the and received a call from the big stack, Rajkumar, who had the in the big blind.
Yu maintained his lead on the flop, but Rajkumar overtook him with the top pair after the hit the turn.
Yu left the tournament in 11th place for £1,100,000 after the completed the action on the river.
Hand #4: Chin Wei Lim Eliminated
With blinds at 60,000/120,000/120,000, Chin Wei Lim moved all in for 1,650,000 from the hijack with the , and Bryn Kenney called with the in the big blind.
Kenney needed to flop something to oust the dangerous Lim from the contest, and the gave him everything with a Broadway straight. Lim needed the board to pair on the turn to give him any chance of survival, which happened when the appeared.
Lim needed either a five or a ten to pip Kenney and stave off elimination, but instead, the hit the river to send Lim out in 10th place, receiving £1,100,000 in winnings.
Hand #5: The Final Table is Set
With blinds at 60,000/120,000/120,000, Chan Wai Leong moved all in for 2,600,000 in the small blind holding the , and after some deliberation, Timothy Adams made the call with the covering stack in the big blind holding the dominating . The board ran out , Adams won the hand, and the Triton Million had its final eight players.
Place | Player | Count |
---|---|---|
1 | Vivek Rajkumar | 18,000,000 |
2 | Stephen Chidwick | 9,790,000 |
3 | Timothy Adams | 5,735,000 |
4 | Bryn Kenney | 5,540,000 |
5 | Alfred DeCarolis | 5,455,000 |
6 | Aaron Zang | 5,060,000 |
7 | Dan Smith | 2,350,000 |
8 | Bill Perkins | 2,000,000 |
Final Table Payouts
Place | Prize |
---|---|
1 | £19,000,000 |
2 | £11,670,000 |
3 | £7,200,000 |
4 | £4,410,000 |
5 | £3,000,000 |
6 | £2,200,000 |
7 | £1,720,000 |
8 | £1,400,000 |
Coverage of the £50,000 Triton Million Charity event continues at – million.triton-series.com.
*Images courtesy of Triton Poker/Joe Giron