2018 Triton Super High Roller Series Jeju

HK$2,000,000 Main Event
Day: 3
Event Info

2018 Triton Super High Roller Series Jeju

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
aq
Prize
41,250,000 HKD
Event Info
Buy-in
2,000,000 HKD
Entries
55
Level Info
Level
20
Blinds
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
80,000

Mikita Badziakouski Wins 2018 Triton Jeju Main Event for HK$41,250,000 ($5,255,456)

Level 20 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Mikita Badziakouski - 2018 Triton Super High Roller Series Jeju HK$2,000,000 Main Event Winner
Mikita Badziakouski - 2018 Triton Super High Roller Series Jeju HK$2,000,000 Main Event Winner

Once more, Mikita Badziakouski reached out for perfection. After claiming the throne three months ago in Montenegro, Badziakouski returned to the Triton Super High Roller Series in Jeju, South Korea. He left the Main Event field behind again, topping the 55-entry competition for an astonishing payday of HK$41,250,000. The top-prize equals more than $5.2 million and comes down as the fourth-highest amount of money ever awarded in a tournament held outside of the World Series of Poker.

"I'm feeling great. Usually, you're really tired after a hard tournament so the most joy is coming in the next days," the champion said.

Badziakouski masterfully navigated his way to a back-to-back victory with his typical robotic approach which helped him to reach the pinnacle of the high stakes tournament poker. Badziakouski doesn't feel the pressure in big moments and that's a valuable tool when it comes to playing for millions of dollars.

"This is obviously the biggest score but, at the same time, there is nothing special about it. It's just about making good decisions, being a good player," Badziakouski said after claiming the title in Jeju.

PositionPlayerCountryPrize (HKD)Prize (USD)
1stMikita BadziakouskiBelarus41,250,0005,255,456
2ndChan Wai LeongMalaysia25,520,0003,251,376
3rdRichard YongMalaysia16,720,0002,130,212
4thSam GreenwoodCanada11,550,0001,471,528
5thJason KoonUnited States8,470,0001,079,120
6thSergio AidoSpain6,490,000826,858

Badziakouski certainly belongs to the group of the world's best players. Not only that he has won over $16 million in live tournaments, but he's built his strong reputation in the high roller circles for his outstanding expertise on no-limit hold'em technicalities.

"I think that has been the biggest motivation for me for a long time. Just to be trying to do my best and that's it," he said. There might be tons of players who chase higher rankings on various leaderboards including the all-time money list, but Badziakouski isn't one of them. His zeal doesn't come from that perspective. The bottom line for him is to play on the best possible level.

"Every time you face a decision, you just want to do the best decision the theory tells you and that's it," Badziakouski said.

Badziakouski knows that he needs to be doing everything in his power to maximize his success at the tables, but the results in poker don't always reflect the preparation. "You should try to get away from all emotions so it doesn't really matter. Big stack, short stack. You always work with what you've got."

Here in the Main Event, Badziakouski was on the better side of the spectrum for almost the whole part. He bagged one of the top stacks at the end of Day 1 and then kept increasing his piles on the second day to claim the chip lead ahead of the six-handed finale where he was able to close things out. "In the end, it's mostly about the luck. Last month, I've been really lucky and that's the reason why I'm winning," Badziakouski simplified his recent successful runs.

But the accomplishment matched his composure during the tournament. Badziakouski never stopped analyzing previous situations. He dedicated the breaks to studying previous hands, trying to get an extra edge over his rivals.

The Triton Series boasts a lot of players Badziakouski is used to battle on a monthly basis but Chan Wai Leong might be one of the wild cards. While Badziakouski had already played against him at previous Triton events, the sample of their common hand history is likely much smaller than those he has with the likes of Sergio Aido, Jason Koon or Sam Greenwood.

Chan was the only player who managed to trouble Badziakouski on the final table. Chan first found a lucky double with tens over Badziakouski's aces and then clipped the Belarussian again when he peeled pocket kings. Badziakouski wasn't able to get away from ace-queen with the nut flush draw on the turn and doubled Chan again while he dropped to a short stack himself.

Mikita Badziakouski facing all-in raise from Chan Wai Leong
Mikita Badziakouski facing all-in raise from Chan Wai Leong

Badziakouski, however, would eventually get his revenge. Another major encounter against Chan would soon determine the whole narrative. They tangled in a battle of the blinds which started with Badziakouski limping with ace-queen. Chan checked and the board rolled out ace-high, pairing an eight on the river.

Badziakouski got raised on the turn and called before firing a blocking bet on the river. Chan pulled off a massive bluff with air, shoving on Badziakouski who used all of his time extensions to figure out the pivotal decision of his tournament. Ultimately, he was able to call and double up.

"Result is not necessarily proving that the decision was correct. I felt like it was a spot where he could be bluffing and I had not that many chips so... just gamble," Badziakouski said.

He expanded on what was his thought-process when he was facing the all-in bet. "On the rivers, it's usually very simple. Your opponent is either bluffing or value-betting. It's like one or two and there's no middle option. I was jumping between both of them and, in the end, decided to call. I was right and got lucky."

After that crucial hand, it was a one-sided affair. Badziakouski dispatched Koon in fifth, Greenwood in fourth and then he took care of the Triton founder Richard Yong who bowed out in third place. He stormed to the heads-up with a 5-1 chip lead, taking on Chan again. Badziakouski didn't give him an ounce of space and the duel escalated when Badziakouski won a preflop coin flip.

Chan settled for the silver medal and Badziakouski took home the largest prize of his career, scooping the second Triton Main Event in a row.

"I'm really excited about it," Badziakouski said. Now with two remarkable titles under his belt, Badziakouski will surely pursue an unprecedented back-to-back-to-back victory so stay tuned to PokerNews to find out more about the future stops of Triton Super High Roller Series.

Mikita Badziakouski - 2018 Triton Super High Roller Series Jeju HK$2,000,000 Mai
Mikita Badziakouski - 2018 Triton Super High Roller Series Jeju HK$2,000,000 Mai

Tags: Chan Wai LeongJason KoonMikita BadziakouskiRichard YongSam GreenwoodSergio Aido

Chan Wai Leong Eliminated in 2nd Place (HK$25,520,000)

Level 20 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Mikita Badziakouski - Wai Leong Chan
Mikita Badziakouski - Wai Leong Chan

Mikita Badziakouski raised on the button to 175,000 and Chan Wai Leong moved all in from the big blind for 1,885,000. Badziakouski called and the hands were turned on their backs.

Chan Wai Leong: {6-Clubs}{6-Hearts}
Mikita Badziakouski: {A-Hearts}{Q-Clubs}

The flop of {A-Diamonds}{7-Diamonds}{10-Hearts} would give Badziakouski the lead and he would retain it on the {5-Spades} turn as well as the {2-Spades} river. With that, Chan would be eliminated from the tournament in 2nd place. For his run, Chan will collect HK$25,520,000 or roughly USD $3,251,184.

Player Chips Progress
Mikita Badziakouski by
Mikita Badziakouski
WSOP 1X Winner
13,750,000 2,150,000
Chan Wai Leong my
Chan Wai Leong
Busted

Tags: Chan Wai LeongMikita Badziakouski

Richard Yong Eliminated in 3rd Place (HK$16,720,000)

Level 20 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Richard Yong
Richard Yong

Richard Yong raised to 165,000 in the small blind and Mikita Badziakouski three-bet to 500,000. Yong moved all in for 1,945,000 and Badziakouski quickly called.

Yong: {A-Spades}{Q-Clubs}
Badziakouski: {A-Clubs}{K-Diamonds}

Badizakouski was ahead and Yong wasn't able to pull ahead on the {3-Clubs}{7-Clubs}{A-Hearts} flop. The {8-Hearts} turn left him drawing to a queen but he wasn't able to spike any of his three outs as the river fell {10-Hearts}.

Richard Yong was eliminated in third place, taking home HK$16,720,000 ($2.13 million) for his efforts.

Badziakouski and Chan Wai Leong took a short break before the heads-up match.

Player Chips Progress
Mikita Badziakouski by
Mikita Badziakouski
WSOP 1X Winner
11,600,000 1,900,000
Chan Wai Leong my
Chan Wai Leong
2,150,000 50,000
Richard Yong my
Richard Yong
Busted

Tags: Mikita BadziakouskiRichard Yong

Sam Greenwood Eliminated in 4th Place (HK$11,550,000)

Level 20 : 40,000/80,000, 80,000 ante
Sam Greenwood
Sam Greenwood

Mikita Badziakouski opened to 160,000 under the gun and called off when Sam Greenwood jammed his last 525,000 out of the small blind.

Greenwood: {K-Spades}{9-Hearts}
Badziakouski: {A-Spades}{8-Hearts}

Greenwood had two live cards but he couldn't catch a piece of the {5-Hearts}{Q-Diamonds}{Q-Clubs}{10-Spades}{8-Clubs} and he walked away with a fourth-place prize of HK$11,550,000 (just under $1.5 million).

Player Chips Progress
Mikita Badziakouski by
Mikita Badziakouski
WSOP 1X Winner
9,000,000 675,000
Sam Greenwood ca
Sam Greenwood
WSOP 1X Winner
Busted

Tags: Mikita BadziakouskiSam Greenwood

Greenwood Survives Despite Running into Huge Cooler

Level 19 : 30,000/60,000, 60,000 ante
Sam Greenwood
Sam Greenwood

Sam Greenwood raised to 150,000 with {A-Hearts}{Q-Diamonds} on the button and Mikita Badziakouski called in the big blind with {5-Clubs}{5-Diamonds}.

The {A-Clubs}{10-Clubs}{5-Spades} flop looked to be absolutely horrifying for Greenwood but he checked back.

Greenwood improved on the {Q-Spades} turn but he was drawing to just four cards to finish with the best hand. Badziakouski overbet the pot, firing 500,000 and Greenwood called.

The {2-Hearts} river was a blank and Badziakouski slid in a pot-sized bet. Greenwood called to see the bad news and Badziakouski increased his huge lead, vaulting to 8.4 million. Greenwood's stack dwindled to 870,000.

Player Chips Progress
Mikita Badziakouski by
Mikita Badziakouski
WSOP 1X Winner
8,400,000 2,000,000
Sam Greenwood ca
Sam Greenwood
WSOP 1X Winner
870,000 -1,830,000

Tags: Mikita BadziakouskiSam Greenwood

Jason Koon Eliminated in 5th Place (HK$8,470,000)

Level 19 : 30,000/60,000, 60,000 ante
Jason Koon
Jason Koon

Mikita Badziakouski raised to 120,000 from under the gun with {A-Clubs}{7-Clubs} and Jason Koon three-bet to 410,000 from the small blind holding {A-Diamonds}{6-Diamonds}. Badziakouski called.

The flop was {5-Spades}{4-Clubs}{3-Clubs} and Koon led out for 230,000. Badziakouski moved all in with a covering stack for about 1,845,000 effective. Koon thought for a bit then called.

The turn was the {Q-Diamonds} changing nothing and the river was the {5-Hearts}. That meant that Badziakouski would take down the pot with his seven kicker and Koon would be eliminated in 5th place. For his run, Koon will take down HK$8,470,000 or about USD $1,080,000.

Player Chips Progress
Mikita Badziakouski by
Mikita Badziakouski
WSOP 1X Winner
6,400,000 2,600,000
Jason Koon us
Jason Koon
Busted

Tags: Jason KoonMikita Badziakouski

Badziakouski Uses All Extensions to Pick Off Chan's Massive Bluff

Level 19 : 30,000/60,000, 60,000 ante
Mikita Badziakouski
Mikita Badziakouski

Mikita Badziakouski completed with {A-Hearts}{Q-Hearts} and Chan Wai Leong checked his options with {Q-Diamonds}{7-Hearts}.

Badziakouski had his opponent crushed on the {8-Spades}{A-Spades}{2-Clubs} flop and he bet 60,000. Chan, however, floated and they went to the {4-Diamonds} turn where Badziakouski barrelled for 175,000. Chan raised to 525,000 and Badziakouski used full 30 seconds before making the call.

The river came down {8-Diamonds} and Badziakouski tossed in a blocking bet of 200,000. Chan burned a timebank and then finished his bluff, moving all in to cover Badziakouski's remaining 1,000,000.

Badziakouski took off his sunglasses and started processing his decision. He grabbed his timebanks chips and shuffled them a few times. Then he double-checked his hand. He took the maximum time he could, burning all of his extensions. But it paid off as he finally convinced himself to pull off a big call for his tournament life.

Chan wanted to muck his hand but both hands had to be tabled to accommodate the all-in showdown rule. Badziakouski scored a big double to move to 3.8 million while Chan dropped to 2.8 million.

Player Chips Progress
Mikita Badziakouski by
Mikita Badziakouski
WSOP 1X Winner
3,800,000 2,105,000
Chan Wai Leong my
Chan Wai Leong
2,800,000 -2,480,000

Tags: Mikita BadziakouskiChan Wai Leong

Badziakouski Doubles After a Weird Preflop Action

Level 18 : 25,000/50,000, 50,000 ante
Mikita Badziakouski
Mikita Badziakouski

Sam Greenwood opened the action with a raise to 125,000 and Jason Koon three-bet to 385,000 in the cutoff. Short-stacked Mikita Badziakouski found a premium hand in the small blind and he cold four-bet the minimum, making it 645,000. Koon just called and they went to the flop with Badziakouski having fewer than two big blinds left.

The remaining shrapnel went in on the {A-Spades}{J-Diamonds}{K-Hearts} flop as Koon called the 90,000-shove.

Badziakouski: {K-Diamonds}{K-Clubs}
Koon: {A-Hearts}{J-Spades}

The {6-Spades} turn and {2-Hearts} river held Badziakouski who doubled to 1.7 million while Koon was left with 3.1 million.

Player Chips Progress
Jason Koon us
Jason Koon
3,100,000 -855,000
Mikita Badziakouski by
Mikita Badziakouski
WSOP 1X Winner
1,695,000 735,000

Tags: Mikita BadziakouskiJason Koon

Koon Blasts Big Bets With Flopped Set

Level 18 : 25,000/50,000, 50,000 ante
Jason Koon
Jason Koon

Jason Koon raised to 115,000 in the first position, holding {2-Clubs}{2-Spades}. He earned a call from Sam Greenwood who defended {9-Hearts}{8-Hearts} in the big blind. Koon flopped a set on {2-Hearts}{K-Spades}{8-Diamonds} and Greenwood check-called a bet of 80,000.

Greenwood picked up a flush draw on the {J-Hearts} turn and he checked again. Koon opted to fire an overbet, making it 515,000. Greenwood matched the bid.

They saw the {J-Diamonds} hit the fell and Koon finished with deuces full. Greenwood checked to him and Koon used a time extension before making his turn. He slid in a huge bet of 1,250,000. Greenwood faced a tough decision as a call would cost him about two-thirds of his remaining stack. He was able to escape, sending his cards into the muck.

Player Chips Progress
Jason Koon us
Jason Koon
4,000,000 800,000
Sam Greenwood ca
Sam Greenwood
WSOP 1X Winner
1,900,000 -800,000

Tags: Jason KoonSam Greenwood

Sergio Aido Eliminated in 6th Place (HK$6,490,000)

Level 18 : 25,000/50,000, 50,000 ante
Sergio Aido
Sergio Aido

Sergio Aido had {A-Hearts}{Q-Clubs} in the cutoff and he limped. Sam Greenwood overlimped in the small blind with {Q-Spades}{9-Spades} and Jason Koon peeled the {A-Clubs}{K-Hearts} in the big. Koon raised to 300,000 and Aido ran into disaster, shoving for 1,375,000. Koon looked him up and Aido was at risk with a dominated hand.

Aido was drawing almost dead when the {7-Diamonds}{K-Clubs}{8-Clubs} flop appeared and the {3-Spades} turn sealed his fate. The {6-Spades} completed the board and Aido left the final table in sixth place for a HK$6,490,000 payday ($826,858).

Player Chips Progress
Jason Koon us
Jason Koon
3,600,000 1,500,000
Sergio Aido es
Sergio Aido
Busted

Tags: Sergio AidoJason Koon