2018 Aussie Millions

$10,600 Main Event
Day: 1b
Event Info

2018 Aussie Millions

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
q10
Prize
1,458,198 AUD
Event Info
Buy-in
10,600 AUD
Prize Pool
8,000,000 AUD
Entries
800
Level Info
Level
31
Blinds
80,000 / 160,000
Ante
20,000

Cole Swannack Bags Almost 200k After Aussie Millions Day 1b

Level 7 : 300/600, 100 ante
Cole Swannack
Cole Swannack

The 2018 Aussie Millions Main Event continued today with 196 entries in the second starting flight here at the Crown Casino in Melbourne. This brings the total number of entries to 408, with a bumper third straight flight tomorrow, and late registration open until the end of the first level on Day 2.

Just 97 players remain at the end of today’s seven 90-minute levels and they are lead by Cole Swannack who bagged an impressive 197,300, helped in part by winning a monster pot off of Australian bracelet-winner James Obst.

In the last level of the day Swannack called Obst's five-bet shove, with Swannack showing {a-Spades}{k-Spades} against the {k-Clubs}{k-Hearts} of Obst. There was an ace on an all-club flop, with Swannack dodging a club to double up and leave Obst perilously short. Obst was eliminated shortly thereafter, but the monster pot saw Swannack rocket to the top of the chip counts.

Other big stacks heading through to Day 2 include Tobias Hausen (156,800), Stephen Graner (145,800), Tony Tartaglia (141,700) and Jonathan Karamalikis (137,100).

2005 WSOP Main Event champion Joe Hachem (56,100) and 2015 WSOP APAC Main Event winner Scott Davies (107,800) will also be present in Day 2, along with Sam Grafton (118,000), Julius Colman (98,600), Alex Foxen (86,900), Jack Salter (68,300), Winfred Yu (56,900), Sam Panzica (43,000), Ana Marquez (36,000), Kahle Burns (28,600), Yevgeniy Timoshenko (25,500), Daiva Byrne (12,100), and Manig Loeser (10,100).

Day 1b recap

Early names in the field today were two-time WSOP final tablist Antoine Saout, and Australian bracelet-winner James Obst. Obst also has two Aussie Millions rings (2014 A$2,500 8-Game & 2016 A$2,500 H.O.R.S.E) and was in action early on, increasing his stack by over 10,000 by the end of the first level.

Another big name in the field was former international cricketer Shane Warne. Warne took over 1,000 international wickets (in Tests and One-Day Internationals) in an international career spanning 15 years. He also has just under USD$100,000 in lifetime cashes, the biggest of which coming here in Melbourne in a High Stakes A$10,000 event in 2010.

Warne was joined by his son Jackson in this year’s Main Event. The pair appeared to go in polar opposite directions, with Jackson hovering around the 50,000 mark while his father battled with a sub-20 big blind stack for most of the day. In the end, the pair were eliminated quite soon after one another with Jackson heading to the rail after doubling up Adriano Scagnetti and subsequently losing tens against ace-ten.

Shane and Jackson Warne
Shane Warne and, in the background, his son Jackson in the Main Event

His father Shane was more unfortunate. He got the last of his chips in having flopped a straight, and was called by an opponent with a flush draw. Unfortunately for Warne, the river completed his flush and sent one of Australia’s most famous sporting sons to the rail.

Also among the early casualties on Day 1b were Sosia Jiang, Niall Farrell, Daniel Strelitz, Joni Jouhkimainen, $25,000 Challenge winner Ben Lamb and Adam Owen.

Scott Davies
2014 WSOP APAC Main Event winner Scott Davies

Big names such as 2005 WSOP Main Event winner Joe Hachem and 2015 WSOP APAC Main Event winner Scott Davies were both in attendance, but it was German Tobias Hausen, who finished seventh in the $2,500 8-Game event, who held a strong chip lead at this point.

However it was Szymon Wysocki who was the first player over 100,000; joined shortly thereafter by Benjamin Benoit who eliminated Jack Sinclair. Sinclair had flopped two-pair on an {8-Clubs}{6-Hearts}{5-Hearts} flop with {8-Diamonds}{5-Diamonds} but was up against the {10-Hearts}{8-Hearts} of Benoit. The turn and river were both hearts {3-Hearts}{k-Hearts} and Sinclair was eliminated.

Jonathan Karamalikis, James Obst and Stephen Graner soon followed into the six-figure stack territory, but Hausen surged ahead once more to hold a stack in excess of the Day 1a chip leader when the dinner break got underway.

Kazuhiko Yotsushika, Michael O’Grady, David Steicke and Shane Howlett joined the Warne family on the rail before Obst suffered a huge cooler at the start of the final level of the day. His vanquisher was Swannack, who moved to the top of the chip counts, and he would end the day there, taking forward a healthy stack to Day 2.

Day 1c of the Aussie Millions Main Event gets underway tomorrow at 12:30 local time. It's expected to be a large one, so be sure to stay tuned to PokerNews.com for all the live updates from our team in Melbourne.

Tags: Adam OwenAdriano ScagnettiAnthony HachemAntoine SaoutBen LambBenjamin BenoitCole SwannackDaniel StrelitzDavid SteickeJack SinclairJackson WarneJames ObstJoe HachemJonathan KaramalikisJoni JouhkimainenMichael O'GradyNiall FarrellScott DaviesShane HowlettShane WarneSosia JiangStephen GranerSzymon WysockiTobias HausenTony Hachem