2009 Aussie Millions

$1 Million Cash Game
Day: 1
Event Info

2009 Aussie Millions

Event Info
Buy-in
1,000,000 AUD

Financial Inducements

Finally some table talk. Antonius and Dwan are discussing what it might take to get someone else to come play with them. Dwan suggested going down to one of the super high roller pits and offering people $20,000 to come play 100 hands. Antonius said maybe he should offer to backstop 20 percent of the losses of anyone who plays.

All Antonius

Every major pot so far has gone to Patrik Antonius. I wouldn't say he's running over Dwan but he definitely has the upper hand right now in terms of aggression.

With the game back to hold'em, Tom Dwan bet $68,000 on the river of a board that showed {6-Diamonds} {8-Spades} {5-Clubs} {7-Clubs} {8-Hearts} after the action checked through on the turn. It was a strange bet as there was only $40,000 in the pot.

Antonius, who is notoriously hard to read, just sat at the table without moving a muscle in his face, slowly blinking his eyes. After about a minute, he raised to $168,000. Dwan quickly mucked.

Dwan Picks Off a Bluff

The board was {9-Clubs} {8-Clubs} {Q-Spades} {7-Spades}. The flop checked through. On the turn, Dwan bet $12,000. Antonius raised him to $38,000. Dwan thought it over and ultimately fired a call into the pot. Antonius immediately shut down, checking behind after Dwan checked the river {9-Hearts}. Dwan tabled {10-Spades} {8-Diamonds} for two pair, eights and nines. It was the winner.

Now We're Getting Somewhere

Antonius turned up the pressure on Dwan during the last two PLO hands. After Dwan checked, Antonius bet $76,000 on a board of {8-Diamonds} {5-Diamonds} {4-Diamonds} {10-Spades} {4-Hearts}. Dwan sighed and craned his neck before mucking.

The next hand was raised preflop to $6,000. Dwan check-called $12,000 on a flop of {K-Diamonds} {9-Diamonds} {8-Clubs}, then led into Antonius for $31,000 when the turn came {Q-Clubs}. Antonius responded by raising pot, a total of $98,000 more to Dwan. He smiled, sighed and said, "Such a cool hand," before giving up the ghost.

They're back to hold'em. If the game were to end right now, Antonius would have the best of it by a couple hundred thousand.

Inside the Studio

It's a different atmosphere in the back side of the studio today. Yesterday, there was an army of crew here doing all sorts of different tasks. Today there are fewer people, and several of them are standing just behind my desk, enraptured by the monitors. There really is something captivating about watching people play poker for these amounts of money.

A couple of times I've heard production staff ask if the players are playing two hands simultaneously, since each is being dealt four cards during the PLO round.

Pot, Re-Pot

"Re-pot" hasn't worked out so well for Dwan so far. Twice he has re-potted to $18,000 from the big blind after Antonius potted to $6,000 from the button. Each time Dwan folded to a bet from Antonius on the flop.

Ten hands into PLO. Despite the reputation of the game as being for true degenerate gamblers, there hasn't been much PLO action so far. But we're only ten hands in.

Game Change

Here's where it really gets fun. Dwan and Antonius are now playing pot-limit Omaha. I'd love to see how Fox produces this for television. One thing ESPN learned during the 2004 WSOP is that producing games other than hold'em for television is very, very difficult.

First Pressure Bet

Tom Dwan adds another notch to his belt here today. He's the first guy to make a bet of more than $50,000. He bet $30,000 on the turn and then $83,000 on the river of a {3-Diamonds} {5-Clubs} {9-Hearts} {2-Diamonds} {3-Hearts} board. Antonius called the turn bet but mucked on the river.

Another 50K for Antonius

There's not much table talk right now. The two men are focused almost entirely on the cards. Dwan took a few small pots off of Antonius to level the match, but just lost $50,000 when Antonius rivered his second pair on a board of {2-Hearts} {8-Diamonds} {j-Spades} {9-Clubs} {6-Clubs}. He showed down {8-Spades} {6-Diamonds} after snap-calling Dwan's $31,000 river bet; Dwan had top pair with {J-Clubs} {10-Spades}.

Patrik has a plate of bananas and grapes on the table next to him. And since we're in Australia, you'd better pronounce that "ba-nahhhh-nahhhs."

Every Twenty Hands

The players have requested that they be notified after every 20th hand so that they can switch the game. I guess we'll get twenty hands of no-limit hold'em followed by twenty hands of pot-limit Omaha.

I can't imagine that's going to sell well for television, but these guys don't have to be here. It's their game. They're going to dictate the rules or go home.