Triton Poker Stats: Biggest Winners, Losers & Records

Ten years of Triton Poker . 2,033 players tracked. 5,939 cashes. $1.88 billion awarded. Those are the headline numbers – but they hide the real story. Because when you look past lifetime earnings and check who actually made money, the picture changes fast.
Most Triton regulars are losing. Some poker legends are losing big. And a handful of players turned buy-ins into seven figures.
We dug through the full 10-year dataset – every player, every cash, every buy-in – and ranked the field by what matters: net profit and ROI, not just gross earnings. Here is what a decade of the world’s toughest high roller series really looks like.
Triton Poker Stats – 10-Year History
- Years covered: 2016-2026
- Festivals: 30
- Events: 303
- Total entries: 37,115
- Players tracked: 2,033
- Total cashes: 5,939
- Total prize money awarded: $1.88 billion
- Rake collected: approximately $98.1 million
- Biggest single cash: $21.5M – Bryn Kenney, £1.05M Triton Million for Charity (2019)
- Biggest single event: £1.05M Triton Million for Charity (2019) – $68.9M prize pool
- Most cashes: Jason Koon – 81
- Most titles: Jason Koon – 12
Now let’s get to the part – who is actually winning, and who is paying for it.

The Biggest Winners in Triton Poker History – By Real Profit
Every Triton earnings list starts the same way: Bryn Kenney, Jason Koon, Stephen Chidwick. But gross earnings ignore the buy-ins. A player with $33M in cashes can still barely break even after a decade of six-figure entries. So we ranked the top 10 by net profit instead.
| # | Player | Net Profit | ROI | Entries | Cashes | Titles |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bryn Kenney | +$37.36M | +287% | 118 | 26 | 5 |
| 2 | Aaron Zang | +$18.21M | +482% | 28 | 3 | 2 |
| 3 | Aleks Poņakovs | +$13.73M | +86% | 210 | 40 | 2 |
| 4 | Dan Smith | +$13.27M | +102% | 154 | 38 | 2 |
| 5 | Jason Koon | +$12.28M | +43% | 365 | 81 | 12 |
| 6 | Punnat Punsri | +$11.45M | +64% | 275 | 53 | 6 |
| 7 | Alejandro Lococo | +$9.86M | +351% | 26 | 3 | 1 |
| 8 | Adrian Mateos | +$7.76M | +50% | 200 | 33 | 3 |
| 9 | Mario Mosböck | +$6.72M | +66% | 133 | 25 | 4 |
| 10 | Kayhan Mokri | +$6.65M | +75% | 110 | 16 | 3 |
The One-Score Effect
Look closer, and a pattern jumps out. Several of the biggest “winners” owe most of their profit to a single event:
- Bryn Kenney – $21.55M of his $50.37M came from one runner-up finish in the 2019 Triton Million. That single cash is bigger than the entire career earnings of all but 13 players in the database.
- Aaron Zang – three cashes in his entire Triton career. One of them was the winner of that same Triton Million for $17.58M. His +482% ROI is the best of any high-volume winner in Triton history.
- Alejandro Lococo, the Argentinian, took down the 2024 Triton Million for $12.07M. Also, three career cashes.
Compare that with Jason Koon: 81 cashes, 12 titles, more table time than anyone – and a +43% ROI. Grinding Triton works. But one deep run in a million changes a life faster.

The Biggest Losers in Triton Poker History
That $1.88 billion in prize money came from somewhere – and the data shows exactly who funded it. These are the 10 biggest net losers across ten years of Triton:
| # | Player | Net Loss | ROI | Entries | Cashes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Santhosh Suvarna | -$12.28M | -52% | 315 | 36 |
| 2 | Nick Petrangelo | -$9.17M | -52% | 198 | 26 |
| 3 | Isaac Haxton | -$7.72M | -25% | 434 | 76 |
| 4 | Ferdinand Putra | -$7.29M | -78% | 84 | 10 |
| 5 | Artur Martirosian | -$6.15M | -28% | 325 | 55 |
| 6 | Orpen Kisacikoglu | -$5.88M | -38% | 181 | 28 |
| 7 | Michael Soyza | -$5.47M | -27% | 258 | 36 |
| 8 | Chris Brewer | -$5.38M | -34% | 223 | 34 |
| 9 | Poseidon Ho | -$5.06M | -73% | 137 | 13 |
| 10 | Ding Biao / Rob Yong | -$5.04M each | -24% / -90% | 318 / 35 | 46 / 3 |
The shock isn’t the businessmen. VIP invitees like Santhosh Suvarna and Ferdinand Putra know exactly what they are paying for. The shock is the elite pros. Isaac Haxton has fired 434 entries – more than anyone in Triton history – collected $23.1M in cashes, and is still down $7.72M. Nick Petrangelo, one of the most respected tournament players alive, is -52%. Artur Martirosian, Michael Soyza, Chris Brewer – world-class regs, all seven figures underwater.
That is the brutal math of super high rollers: even great players lose when the field is this strong, and the rake on variance never stops.

How Poker’s Legends Perform at Triton
The famous names don’t escape the math either:
- Daniel Negreanu – down $709K at -53% ROI
- Erik Seidel – down $2.87M at -58%
- Tom Dwan – down $803K at -16%
- Andrew Robl – down $3.22M at -88%
- Nick Schulman – down $1.81M at -74%
- Phil Ivey – the escape artist: $18.23M in cashes, 5 titles, and a razor-thin +1% ROI. Ten years of Triton, basically break-even.
- Chris Moneymaker – the surprise of the entire dataset: +$2.93M profit at +518% ROI from just 4 cashes, headlined by his $2.03M Luxon Invitational score in 2023. The Moneymaker effect is still running.
The Craziest ROIs in Triton History
Then there are the lottery tickets. Triton’s new low buy-in events – the $8K Triton One Main Events and $3K QQPK Genesis tournaments – opened the door for players with normal bankrolls. Some of them walked straight through it:
| Player | ROI | Earnings | How |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zhao Wenjie | +7,064% | $1.18M | Won the $8K Triton One Main Event (2026) |
| Wang Po Sen | +6,283% | $171K | One cash – $3K QQPK Genesis (2025) |
| Issey Maeda | +3,736% | $279K | One cash – $8K Triton One Main Event (2026) |
| Daiki Shingae | +2,646% | $573K | One cash – $8K Main Event (2025) |
| Tobias Duthweiler | +1,291% | $3.61M | One cash – $200K Luxon Invitational (2023) |
| Gabriel Andrade | +1,033% | $5.24M | One cash – $250K NLH Invitational (2025) |
Zhao Wenjie is the poster story: one $8K-tier entry, one title, over $1.1M – a 7,064% return. Numbers like that simply did not exist at Triton before the Triton One format arrived. The series isn’t just for billionaires anymore.
What Is ROI in Poker?
If you are not familiar with ROI, here is a short summary. It is a fundamental financial metric used to measure the profitability and efficiency of a project or investment relative to its cost. It shows how much profit a player makes relative to their buy-ins.
The formula is simple: ROI = (winnings – buy-ins) / buy-ins x 100.
Say you enter tournaments for $100K total and cash for $150K. Your profit is $50K, and your ROI is +50%. Spend $100K and cash for $80K? You’re at -20% – a losing player, even with money on the scoreboard.
That’s exactly why ROI matters here. Lifetime earnings only show one side of the ledger. A player with $20M in cashes might have spent $25M getting there. ROI exposes the truth – and at Triton, the truth gets ugly fast.
Triton’s Growth Year by Year
The series didn’t grow – it exploded. Look at the trajectory:
| Year | Festivals | Events | Entries | Prize Pool |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | 1 | 4 | 188 | $11.3M |
| 2017 | 3 | 6 | 345 | $3.4M |
| 2018 | 3 | 11 | 597 | $55.3M |
| 2019 | 4 | 30 | 1,974 | $230.0M |
| 2022 | 3 | 29 | 1,966 | $125.0M |
| 2023 | 4 | 55 | 5,318 | $305.6M |
| 2024 | 4 | 47 | 6,069 | $395.8M |
| 2025 | 5 | 67 | 11,330 | $512.9M |
| 2026 | 3 | 54 | 9,328 | $239.7M |
Three things stand out:
- 2025 was the biggest year in high-stakes poker history – $512.9M awarded across 11,330 entries. That’s more prize money in one year than Triton’s first seven years combined.
- The COVID gap is real – no festivals ran in 2020 or 2021. The series came back in 2022 and tripled within two years.
- Entries grew faster than prize money – 1,966 entries in 2022 vs 11,330 in 2025. That’s the Triton One effect: lower buy-ins, bigger fields, and a series no longer reserved for the ultra-rich.
And one number nobody talks about: Triton has collected roughly $98.1M in rake over ten years. Running the world’s most exclusive poker series is a very good business.
Triton Record Holders After 10 Years
Beyond the money, the volume records show who has truly lived at these tables:
- Most entries: Isaac Haxton – 434. Jason Koon follows with 365, then Artur Martirosian with 325.
- Most cashes: Jason Koon – 81. Nobody else has 80. Chidwick sits second with 77, then Haxton and Dvoress with 76 each.
- Most titles: Jason Koon – 12. Matthias Eibinger and Michael Watson follow with 7 apiece – and here is the twist: despite 7 titles each, Eibinger is only +6% ROI, and Watson is actually down $1.46M. Titles don’t guarantee profit.
- Most final tables: Dan Dvoress and Isaac Haxton – 45 each. Haxton’s 434 entries, 45 final tables, and -$7.72M net result might be the single most brutal stat line in the whole database.
- Fastest fortune: Aleksa Pavićević – 18 entries, 3 cashes, 2 titles, +$6.18M profit, all in 2025. A +473% ROI in a single year.
How Are the Founders Doing?
Triton was built by businessmen who love the game – so how does the house perform at its own tables? Paul Phua has $26.25M in cash and sits at +$458K, a wafer-thin +2% over ten years. Co-founder Richard Yong is down $2.11M. Winfred Yu is down $540K. Between them, the three men who created the series are roughly break-even – which, against the toughest fields in poker, is no small feat.
The New Generation Is Taking Over
Split the winners list by debut year, and a clear changing of the guard appears. Players who made their Triton debut in 2022 or later already dominate the profit rankings:
- Aleks Poņakovs (debut 2022) – +$13.73M, the #3 profit of all time in just four years
- Punnat Punsri (2022) – +$11.45M and 6 titles
- Kayhan Mokri (2023) – +$6.65M at +75% ROI
- Mario Mosböck (2023) – +$6.72M, the former professional footballer turned crusher
- Jesse Lonis (2024) – 4 titles and +$3.57M in barely two years
Meanwhile, several long-serving elites from the 2017-2019 era are treading water or bleeding. The lesson: Triton’s fields evolve fast, and the newest wave of pros arrived ready.
What the Numbers Really Tell You
- Winning at Triton is rare. The large majority of tracked regulars are net losers – including some of the best players in the world.
- Volume alone doesn’t save you. Haxton’s 76 cashes and Koon’s 81 produced opposite results. Skill matters, but so does running hot in the right event.
- One score changes everything. Kenney, Zang, Lococo, Andrade – a single deep run built entire fortunes.
- The Triton One era is rewriting the record book. The most extreme ROIs in series history all came from 2025-2026 low buy-in events.
If you want to try your skills and knowledge in tournament poker, check out the best online poker sites .
A note on the data: the underlying figures come from MTTDB.com‘s public database and reflect only official tournament payouts and entries. High rollers routinely sell action, swap percentages, and play on backers’ money – so a player’s real personal result can look very different from their tournament line. Re-entry records before 2020 are also incomplete in places, which makes early-era ROI figure estimates rather than exact values.
I fell in love with poker during the poker boom when I was 14 years old. My friends and I immediately started playing No Limit Texas Hold 'em sit-and-gos. When I turned 18, I began playing live cash games. Later, I dived into online multi-table tournaments, and following some success there, I ventured into live tournaments as well. Here at Somuchpoker, I write about my favourite game (the world’s most popular card game), including best poker moments, news, and the best online poker sites and deals.







































