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Phil Ivey Wins Third Aussie Millions $250,000 Challenge Title for AU$2,205,000

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Phil Ivey

Back in 2012, Phil Ivey topped a field of 16 entries to win the LK Boutique $250,000 Challenge for AU$2 million, and two years after that he'd win it again by outlasting a field of 46 entries to capture the AU$4 million first-place prize.

Those were impressive feats, but now Ivey has done the unthinkable by defending his title to win the prestigious event for the third time in four years, not to mention the AU$2.205 million top prize. That means the three largest cashes of Ivey's career have all come from the Aussie Millions $250,000 Challenge.

This year, Ivey conquered a field of 25 total entries, which climbed from Day 1's 23 thanks to one late registrant, Brian Rast, and a reentry from Isaac Haxton. That created a prize pool of AU$6.105 million that was distributed to the top five finishers.

$250,000 Challenge Payouts

PlacePlayerCountryPrize (AU$)
1Phil IveyUnited States$2,205,000
2Mike McDonaldCanada$1,592,500
3Doug PolkUnited States$1,041,500
4Scott SeiverUnited States$735,000
5Erik SeidelUnited States$551,000

The day began with a flurry of action at Table 10. In fact, the first three hands of the day resulted in three eliminations. The first to go was the short-stacked Ole Schemion, who shoved with the K?6? and failed to overcome the 9?9? of Doug "WCGRider" Polk. On the next hand, Igor Kurganov got it in with sixes only to run into Polk's pocket sevens, and one hand after that Rast shoved with the A?10? and lost to the A?Q? of Haxton. That meant Rast, who finished fifth in the Aussie Millions Main Event the day before, got to play three hands for his AU$250,000 buy-in.

After Jason Mo ran the K?Q? into the A?A? of Scott Seiver to bust in ninth, the final table of eight was set. From there, Dan Smith fell when his 4?4? failed to crack the K?K? of Ivey, and then Ivey got lucky with the A?K? to eliminate Isaac Haxton, who held the K?K?, in seventh place.

Not long after, the bubble burst in Level 11 (12,000/24,000/3,000) when Richard Yong, who two days prior topped a field of 70 entries to win the $100,000 Challenge for AU$1.87 million, three-bet all in for 307,000 over the top of Ivey's open to 55,000. A call was made, and the cards were tabled.

Yong: A?2?
Ivey: Q?J?

Yong was ahead, but Ivey was drawing to two live cards. The K?8?3? flop kept Yong in the lead, but then the dealer burned and turned the Q? to pair Ivey. Yong needed an ace on the river to survive, but it wasn't meant to be as the 5? bricked. Yong left empty-handed in sixth place while the remaining five players were guaranteed at least AU$551,000.

Former $250,000 Challenge champ Erik Seidel was the first in-the-money elimination after getting his short stack in with the A?3? only to run into the K?K? of Polk. The board ran out a clean 8?7?6?J?J?, and Seidel was out in fifth.

It took a little while for the next elimination to occur, but it happened when Mike "Timex" McDonald made a flush on the turn to knock out Seiver, who had fired three bullets into the event. That means with the AU$735,000 prize Seiver received for his fourth-place finish, he only lost AU$15,000.

In the first hand back from the dinner break, Polk three-bet all in with the A?5? only to have McDonald four-bet all in over the top with the A?Q?. Ivey, the initial raiser, got out of the way, and the flop came down 5?Q?8?. Even though McDonald flopped top pair, Polk picked up a flush draw and a pair of his own. Polk had two pulls to get there, but ultimately he was left wanting as the 3? blanked on the turn followed by the 9? on the river.

Heads-up play began with Ivey holding 3.61 million in chips to McDonald's 2.64 million, but the defending champ was able to whittle away his opponent before getting lucky to finish the job, which Ivey acknowledged in his winner's interview. The final hand happened when McDonald raised to 100,000 and then snap-called off for approximately 1.3 million when Ivey moved all in.

Ivey: K?Q?
McDonald: A?Q?

McDonald was in a great spot to double, but then the flop came down 10?10?K?. Ivey paired his king, and suddenly McDonald was in need of either an ace, jack, or some other lucky runout of the cards. The 8? turn wasn't what he was looking for, and neither was the 9? river. With that, McDonald finished as runner-up for just under AU$1.6 million, while Ivey successfully defended his LK Boutique $250,000 Challenge title. It also moved Ivey into third place ahead of Dan Colman on the all-time money list.

That does it for PokerNews' coverage of the 2015 Aussie Millions, but our PokerNews Live Reporting team is currently in France covering the European Poker Tour Deauville, which you can follow by clicking here.

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PR & Media Manager for PokerNews, Podcast host & 2013 WSOP Bracelet Winner.

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