The curtain came down on a massively successful GG Spring Festival on April 27 when the $10,300 Super MILLIONS concluded under the watchful eyes of the PokerNews Live Reporting team. Markus Leikkonen of Finland was the last man standing from the 347 entrants. His reward? A cool $651,821.
GGSF Event H-108: $10,300 Super MILLION$
Place | Winner | Country | Prize (in USD) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Markus Leikkonen | Finland | $651,821 |
2 | David Coleman | United States | $502,622 |
3 | Yuri Dzivielevski | Brazil | $387,575 |
4 | Christian Jeppsson | Sweden | $298,861 |
5 | Daniel Dvoress | Canada | $230,453 |
6 | Timothy Adams | Canada | $177,704 |
7 | George Wolff | United States | $137,028 |
8 | xyzpoker | Austria | $105,663 |
9 | Konstantin Maslak | Russia | $81,478 |
Brazilian superstar Yuri Dzivielevski was the chip leader going into the nine-handed final table, closely followed by Daniel Dvoress. Neither was able to build on their impressive start and become the final champion of the GG Spring Festival.
The final table lost a player when Konstantin Maslak shoved for 9.5 big blinds with a♠️
Cooler Hand Claims Tournament Life of xyzpoker
Dzivielevski was the executioner against in a cooler hand that saw “xyzpoker” hit the rail in eighth-place. xyzpoker must have been rubbing his hands together in delight after looking down at k♥️
Leikkonen went on the hunt and snared himself George Wolff, who he sent to the rail in seventh place, a finish good for $137,028. Leikkonen’s a♠️k♦️ prevailed against the dominated a♥️q♣️ in Wolff’s hand.
Timothy Adams lost a key coinflip with queen-jack against Christian Jeppsson’s pocket sixes to leave him with only five big blinds. Adams pinned his tiny stack’s hopes on ♦️a8♣️ but ran into Dvoress’ a♥️k♠️.
Dangerous Dvoress Destroyed
The final five became four when Dvoress busted. Dvoress lost the majority of his stack to David Coleman when the latter’s ♦️ak♣️ spiked an ace on the flop to crack Dvoress’ red kings. Coleman got his hands on the rest of Dvoress’ chips, his ♦️a10♣️ prevailing against the k♠️10♦️ of Dvoress.
Coleman’s march towards the top of the chip counts continued at Jeppsson’s expense. The talented pair got their chips into the middle, Jeppsson holding 6♦️6♠️, and Coleman the j♥️10♥️. Coleman flopped a gutshot straight draw and a flush draw in addition to his two overcards. The turn bricked and it was starting to look like Coleman had too many outs. Jeppsson improved to a set on the river, but the six was of hearts, which completed Coleman’s flush.
Heads-up was set soon after when Dzivielevski open-shoved for 14 big blind with 3♣️3♥️ and Leikkonen called out of the small blind with a♣️k♦️. You need to win your coinflips to take down tournaments, which is what Leikkonen did courtesy of an ace on the river.
Advantage Coleman, But Not For Long
Coleman held the advantage going into heads-up, his 19,303,914 stack up against Leikkonen’s 15,396,086. Coleman pushed further ahead, but Leikkonen pulled level before forging a lead for himself.
The final hand occurred during the 200,000/400,000/50,000a level, and saw Coleman min-raise to 800,000. Leikkonen called before check-calling an 860,000 bet on the 6♦️4♦️2♠️ flop. It was a similar story on the 2♥️ turn, Leikkonen checking before calling Coleman’s 400,000 bet. The 6♥️ river saw Leikkonen check for a third time. Coleman took the bait and jammed all-in for almost twice the size of the pot. Leikkonen instantly called having set a trap with his k♠️6♣️, which was now a full house. Coleman could only muster the 9♦️7♠️.
Leikkonen, a high-stakes cash game specialist, walked away with $651,821, leaving Coleman to lick his wounds with $502,622 to show for his efforts.
Next Up At GGPoker
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