
Champion Alex Foxen!
Five years separated Alex Foxen's first and second cashes on the Triton Super High Roller Poker Series. But having claimed a maiden title in Monte Carlo in November, it's taken only a month for Foxen to land another.
The 33-year-old American pro vowed to play all the Triton stops as he collected his first trophy last month, and he kept his promise by returning to the series here at the Atlantis Resort, Paradise Island, in the Bahamas. And tonight Foxen overpowered a characteristically difficult $100K Main Event field to pick up the incredible $3.85 million first prize, which also comes with a World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet.
It's a second Triton win, and a third bracelet, and comes only days after he picked up a $2.8 million score in the Triton Invitational. This was truly a masterclass from one of tournament poker's finest exponents. Foxen stayed in the hunt in the middle of the pack for all of three days of competition, saving his most devastating play for today's final.
He rose from seventh in chips as the final got under way, and did not put a foot wrong. After winning a massive, tournament-defining flip against Sam Mullur, Foxen goaded Fedor Holz into paying him off when only three players remained, and he then pulled off one of the all-time most heroic hero-calls against his heads-up opponent Joao Vieira to seal the deal.

Relief for Alex Foxen at the end of another night of high drama
Foxen had bottom pair and was facing three barrels of betting from Vieira. But Foxen sniffed it out and took the whole thing down moments later. Foxen was irresistible when it mattered the most, and he richly deserves this most famous of victories.
"It's pretty surreal to get a second Triton win, third bracelet, all these things," Foxen said in his post-game interview. "I ran really good. I feel like I played almost as well as I could. Just super happy with the moment."
He added: "It's nice to get a couple of these, especially after spending so long away from Triton. It feels like Triton has become the pinnacle of the high stakes poker scene and having been away from that I definitely feel like I came back a maybe a little bit forgotten and potentially underestimated. So it's exciting to get a couple right away."
He won't be underestimated any longer, that's for certain.

Joao Vieira ran into Foxen in unforgiving form
TOURNAMENT ACTION
This three-day event began on Tuesday, just as the dust was still settling on Alejandro Lococo's victory in the Triton Invitational. The $12 million man was among the Triton newcomers who took advantage of a location closer to home to sample Main Event action for the first time, and to build a field of 182 entries.
That put more than $18 million in the prize pool and ensured 31 places would pay.
Day 2 was about consolidation for those fortunate enough to have comfortable stacks, although getting past the bubble was the most important factor for most. Even the Day 1 chip leader David Yan couldn't guarantee a profit (he bust in 36th) and Bryn Kenney and boss-man Paul Phua also headed out without a cash.

David Yan couldn't make his Day 1 chip lead stick

Paul Phua narrowly missed a cash in Paradise
Wayne Heung was among those existing purely on fumes as the bubble approached, and his stack got shorter and shorter and shorter until he was forced all-in in the big blind. As if the situation wasn't bleak enough already, he only had 72. It wasn't enough at the start of the hand, and it definitely wasn't enough by the end of it. Dimitar Danchev had two pair, and Heung was out.

Wayne Heung was forced all in with the worst hand in Texas hold'em
The rest were guaranteed $160,000, and the remainder of a long Day 2 took the field down to 14. The chip-leader was one of Triton Monte Carlo's breakout stars, Ossi Ketola, who had one again coasted through the megastars with the ease of someone supping a cocktail on sands of the Caribbean. Ketola had masses, though a chasing pack including the likes of Fedor Holz, Alex Foxen and Seth Davies wasn't going to allow him to have it all his own way.
FINAL DAY PLAY
All eyes were on Ketola as the tournament resumed on Day 3. He was certainly untroubled at the comfortable end of the leaderboard as Mario Mosböck, Tom Fuchs, Stephen Chidwick, and Mikita Badziakouski fell in 14th through 11th, respectively. (In case you were in any doubt as to the quality of the field, just look at that quartet who narrowly missed the final.)
Austria's Thomas Muhlocker had 19 big blinds when the tournament was 10-handed, and he was sitting in the small blind when action folded to him. With only Holz behind him, he jammed with 810. Unfortunately for Muhlocker, Holz's random hand was one of the best: AQwas a snap call. Five blanks later and Muhlocker was out.

Thomas Muhlocker's elimination in 10th set the final
That set a final table at which Ketola still led, but where Holz had closed the gap.
Final table chip counts
Ossi Ketola - 10,375,000 (83 BBs)
Fedor Holz - 9,075,000 (73 BBs)
David Coleman - 5,800,000 (46 BBs)
Joao Vieira - 5,100,000 (41 BBs)
Samuel Mullur - 4,400,000 (35 BBs)
Aleksandr Zubov - 3,575,000 (29 BBs)
Alex Foxen - 3,450,000 (28 BBs)
Dimitar Danchev - 2,900,000 (23 BBs)
Seth Davies - 825,000 (7 BBs)

Triton Paradise Main Event final table players (clockwise from back left): Joao Vieira, Fedor Holz, Ossi Ketola, Samuel Mullur, Alex Foxen, David Coleman, Aleksandr Zubov, Dimitar Danchev, Seth Davies.
True to form at Triton final tables, there was plenty of big blinds to go around at the start of play, but things rapidly shallowed out as these GTO wizards played it by the book. Ketola was the wild card, but he lost a big pot to Holz when a massive flopped combo draw missed (Holz had two pair), and then ran pocket jacks into Alex Foxen’s queens. It drew the Finn back into the pack.
Seth Davies has had the best few months of his poker career towards the end of 2024, and here he was again at another final table. But seven big blinds wasn’t quite enough for the American crusher to run his good form into a maiden Triton title — although he got unlucky to lose his final hand. Holz opened the button with J6 and Davies picked up AJin the small blind.
Davies’ last chips went in as an under-call, but Holz hit both his six and jack to do the job against Davies. Davies’ 32nd career Triton cash was for $393,000.

Ninth for Seth Davies this time
They played eight-handed for a good long while, during which Ketola dipped and then blazed back into action, winning a decent pot with queens against Joao Vieira, then going on a relentless raising run that took him back to the top of the counts.
Amid this flurry of action, Dimitar Danchev played his final pot, losing a flip with AKagainst Samuel Muller's pocket sevens. It was in the same location in 2013 that Danchev broke through as a poker player, taking down the annual PCA. But he left the stage this time unable to add to his Triton title haul, instead earning $475,000 for eighth.

Dimitar Danchev hit the rail in eighth
Mullur did not have much time for celebration, however, as he quickly found himself following Danchev out of the door. He found a great squeeze spot with AK after Holz had opened and Foxen had called in the hijack. But though Holz folded to Mullur's 30 big blind jam, Foxen had pocket jacks and called.
This was a pot that would decide the tournament chip lead, and Foxen won it. He flopped a jack to leave Mullur drawing dead by the turn. Mullur won another $650,500 as this young player continues to build his reputation and bankroll.

Sam Mullur loses a flip to bust
After the long, tetchy period, the handbrake was now off. The average stack was now 30 big blinds, and only two players, Foxen and Ketola, had more than that. When Foxen beat Ketola out of another one, he put some distance between him and the rest.
However, Foxen too now found it tough at the top. He lost a flip to double up Aleksandr Zubov's short stack (fours against AQ), and everything bunched up once more.
Time for another bad beat. This time, Joao Vieira and David Coleman got their stacks in pre-flop, with Coleman raise/four-bet jamming over Vieira's three-bet. Coleman had the dominant hand with AK against Vieira's A10. With nothing to help him on flop or turn, Vieira seemed destined for the sidelines.
However, the 10 appeared on the river to score a mighty double for Triton's leading Portuguese talent. Coleman found himself with fewer than five big blinds and in grave danger. He played every pot after that, losing a small amount, chopping one with a straight, but then losing back-to-back against Foxen and then Holz to bust.
Coleman won $890,000 for sixth, cursing that ten on the river for denying him the seven-figure score the remaining five now locked up.

Tough one to swallow for David Coleman
After some more small-ball jousting, the tournament went on a break, and the blinds went up. The average stack was now down to 23 blinds, and Vieira was Foxen's closest challenger. Ketola was in fifth place with 10 big blinds, but only six blinds separated the next three. ICM pressure was getting extreme.
Foxen alleviated some of it by busting Ketola. Ever since he arrived on the scene in Monte Carlo, the Patrik Antonius protege has shown all the skills required of a high-stakes tournament player, most notably an utterly fearless approach and a keen instinct for applying maximum pressure. That strategy won't always pay dividends, but it only started to go wrong in this tournament once he was already deep in the money.
With 10 big blinds, he jammed over a Foxen open holding K10. Foxen had the dominating A10, and there was no drama. Ketola, wearing a fur hat and coat in the Caribbean, was now duly frozen out. He won $1,172,000 for fifth.

The snowman Ossi Ketola freed to explore the Caribbean
Not long before that, Aleksander Zubov had been odds-on to occupy that place. But the Russian won that flip against Foxen and kept himself ticking along nicely enough for him to outlast Ketola. But then another flip ended things. This time, Zubov opened AK, saw Vieira three-bet, and decided he had plenty good to rip it in.
Vieira had pocket fives, and the pair held through flop, turn, and river. That was the end of the final Russian challenge. Zubov took $1,482,000 for fourth. Vieira, meanwhile, now became the fourth person at this final table to hold the chip lead, sitting with 52 blinds to Foxen's 36 and Holz's 26.

Aleksandr Zubov gets everything over the line
This was far from done, though. Holz now took centre stage. He lost one to Foxen, but then took six on the spin as Level 27 yielded to 28. It pushed him back to the top, with Vieira suddenly back in third and Foxen into second place. Holz did not take his foot off the gas. Looking down at A5, he called Foxen's button raise from the big blind and happily flopped an ace. The three cards to appear were A48.
Holz check-called Foxen's continuation bet, taking them to the K on the turn. Holz check-called once more. When the 6 came on the river, the pattern went through one more iteration. Holz checked for a third time and Foxen bet once again. This time it was all in, with the two players' stacks all-but even.
Holz was up against it. He still had top pair, but Foxen's bet, according to Randy Lew in the commentary booth, was polarizing. Holz had only a bluff catcher. However, Holz decided to go with it and flicked in the call. But he had now run into it: Foxen's K8 was a flopped pair and a turned two pair. It was best, and Holz was now on the rail. His incredible late cameo had taken him from the bottom of the counts to the top, but now he was out of there. Third place paid him $1,830,000.

Fedor Holz's hero call went wrong
The remaining duo took a breather as the stage was reset for heads up. Foxen had 33.05m (66 big blinds) to Vieira's 12.45m (25 BBs). There was enough play to last another hour or so, but equally, it might get done within minutes. It was far closer to the latter.
A handful of heads-up pots sent chips this way and that. But then a monster developed. Foxen completed the small blind with 83and Vieira opted to raise with 108. Foxen called to see a flop of 63A. Foxen had moved ahead, but Vieira continued with the betting lead. Foxen called the quarter-pot continuation bet.
The turn was the 9 and Vieira sized up significantly. He now bet two-thirds pot, but Foxen was undeterred. He called again.

Alex Foxen and Joao Vieira heads up for the win
The river was the K and Vieira went for it again. He had nothing, but stabbed for all but half a blind. Foxen only had bottom pair, but somehow figured it out. He stuck in the call and took down a huge one, leaving Vieira hanging by the most perilous thread.
"Soul-owned," was how Randy Lew, in the commentary booth, described it. He added later, "I’ve got to say that might be the best call I’ve ever seen."
Foxen snipped him loose from that thread just two hands later to end this clinic.
Vieira won $2.59 million for second, but Foxen's breathtaking display put him top of the charts once more. He now has two Triton titles, and one suspects number three won't be too long coming either.

Alex Foxen accepts his prizes from Marianela Pereyra, left, and Luca Vivaldi
"It was never easy to skip many of those stops, but I'm really happy to be playing them now," Foxen said. Good to have you back, Alex.