Kahle Burns
2021年2月14日Register here: http://gg.gg/ob1aw
*Kahle Burns Wiki
*Kahle Burns Poker
*Kahle Burns - Somuchpoker
*The latest tweets from @KahleBurns.
*Kahle Burns Australia Total Winnings $3,260,330 Biggest Cash $1,300,035 While Kahle Burns likely doesn’t need an introduction, he may be an unknown quantity to some American viewers. The Australian has built up an impressive resume that includes over $3 million in live tournament cashes, but Burns has recorded zero cashes in the United States.
*Kahle Burns If I had to choose an assassin to infiltrate a poker game and end the night with a hand full of jewelled rings, and a necklace forged from the skull of a dragon, then I would send Kahle Burns. The Australian is on fire. Opponents hold their hands up, bathing in his glow, or else, get burned to a crisp.
*Australia’s Kahle Burns enjoyed a rapid ascent on every notable poker ranking last year. He burst into the Top 100 of the game’s all-time money list following a stellar 2019 campaign.Table Of Contents
Kahle Burns Tweets from other players 6 years ago Playing Sydney High Roller with @blattsmullet and Michael Kanaan. Grinding the shortstack enjoying the banter more than the tournament. Kahle Burns Tweets from other players 6 years ago Busted 6max and got in a 8K hole pretty fast in PLO.
It was only fitting for Australia’s preeminent high rolling player to take down the country’s preeminent high roller event.
Kahle Burns emerged as a most appropriate champion in the 2020 Aussie Millions A$100,000 Challenge, conquering a field of 54 entries — the second-biggest in event history — to win a prize of A$1,746,360 (~$1.2 million).
It’s just the latest, albeit greatest, win in an absolute tear Burns has been on since the start of 2019, racking up more than $6 million in cashes according to The Hendon Mob. In recognition of his abilities and accomplishments, he received induction into the Australian Poker Hall of Fame earlier in this festival, and this win provided the latest evidence for why he’s considered one of poker’s brightest stars.
’This is the first tournament I’ve won on the Aussie Millions circuit and obviously it’s a fantastic one to win,’ he said.2020 Aussie Millions A$100,000 Challenge Official Final Table ResultsPlacePlayerCountryPrize (AUD)Prize (USD)1Kahle BurnsAustraliaA$1,746,360$1,198,3002Alex FoxenUnited StatesA$1,111,590$762,7403Aaron van BlarcumUnited StatesA$740,880$508,3704Bryn KenneyUnited StatesA$582,120$399,4335Michael SoyzaMalaysiaA$423,360$290,4976Sam GraftonUnited KingdomA$370,440$254,1857Timothy AdamsCanadaA$317,250$217,687Large Min-Cash Results in Tense Bubble
Burns didn’t start Day 2 with a particularly imposing chip stack and actually slipped relative to the rest of the field by the time the nine-handed final table convened, starting in eighth place. There, Burns made his move up the counts during a four-hour stretch without eliminations as two of nine were scheduled to go home empty-handed.
Any bubble situation in a poker tournament typically brings an intense atmosphere, an A$100K event especially so. But what made this bubble particularly tense was a large minimum cash of A$317,250.
’It was a pretty gross spot on the bubble for everybody involved,’ Burns said.
Burns found a good spot to get his chips in the middle, shoving with ace-king over a raise from high roller newcomer Aaron van Blarcum and a call from Michael Zhang. When Van Blarcum called and Zhang back-shoved with jacks, it created a dream spot to flip as Burns got a juicy price and then found a king-high board to triple up.
’That sort of put me in an above-average stack spot and then I was able to accumulate some chips on the bubble,’ Burns said.
Indeed, by the time Zhang bubbled out in an unlucky hand to Bryn Kenney, Burns had secured a decent-sized lead thanks in no small part to a couple of timely bluffs made possible in part by his threatening stack.
After that, Burns’ lead was only at risk once. This time, his tens held against the ace-king of Kenney, who was trying to follow a 2019 Aussie Millions Main Event win with a $100K crown but fell in fourth, the second of four consecutive knockouts for Burns. Kahle Burns WikiOld Rivals Meet
He then made mincemeat of short-stacked Van Blarcum, setting up a heads-up match with old rivalAlex Foxen, who had been in danger a couple of times at the final table before being dealt timely aces.
A bit of a partisan crowd had gathered to cheer Burns on by then, friends and parents showing up despite the late hour. Burns didn’t disappoint them as he finished Foxen off quickly and without much drama, pairing his kicker with a dominating ace.
’I actually didn’t tell any of my friends I made the final table,’ Burns said. ’They were nice enough to come down and support me so, yeah, it’s a great feeling to do well in front of them and give them something to watch and enjoy.’
Burns credited his cash game experience with guiding through the early portions of the tournament, giving him the ammo he needed to survive the later, higher-variance stages. Where other players seemed to often find themselves down to a few big blinds and in desperate need of a double, Burns was usually the one with enough chips to set others at risk.
’My style is...I can run up a big stack early in tournaments,’ he said. ’And if you have a big stack on the bubble or around the money, you can push that towards not dwindling at the final table.’
Burns has proven he does anything but dwindle at final tables, with three six-figure victories including two bracelets plus this seven-figure win just since October. He’s already second on Australia’s all-time money list to national legend Joe Hachem. That Hall of Fame induction looks sharper by the day, and at the rate Burns is shredding the scene, plenty more accolades may lie in his future.
With the A$100,000 wrapped up, all eyes dart back to the Main Event where the final table will kick off on Friday, January 24 at 12:30 p.m. Melbourne time. Don’t miss a beat and make sure to return to PokerNews for the climax of the 2020 Aussie Millions!
*TagsAussie MillionsKahle Burns
*Related TournamentsAussie Millions
*Related PlayersKahle BurnsGeorgios SimopoulosYori EpskampTable Of Contents
Kahle Burns managed to become a member of the elite club of two WSOP gold bracelet holders, and he did it in just one week. On a very-long second day of Event #13: €2,500 Short Deck at the 2019 World Series of Poker Europe in King’s Resort, Burns conquered a total field of 179 entries to win his second WSOP gold bracelet along with €101,843 in prize money. It was his second ship of the series after winning the €25,500 Platinum High Roller for €596,883 earlier.
’This feels like one of those days where I’ve avoided all the coolers and all the post flop coolers. Obviously, I won a few all-ins on the way, just ran super good, no complaints,’ Burns said to PokerNews after joining the multiple bracelet-winners club.
Burns admitted that he lacks experience in this specific format. ’The first time I played Short Deck was a few months ago, here actually. I played a little bit online but I probably played five or six hours online but I certainly wouldn’t say I’m an experienced Short Deck player or very good Short Deck player by any means. Pretty new to the game still,’ he said about the 36-card game that’s been taking the poker world by storm.Kahle Burns Poker
’It’s been like a whirlwind week. Two bracelets in a week. It’s crazy.’
For those looking to dabble in Short Deck, the entry fee usually starts at a steep five-figure point. The relatively affordable €2,500 price tag of this event made the game accessible for mid-stakers as well. While Burns is accustomed to higher buy-in, a lot of players in the field got their first taste of Short Deck in a competitive setting like this. The Aussie had the following to say about it:
’I think a lot of the people in the field, myself included, were sort of trying to figure it out as it goes. A lot of people were in it for a lot of bullets because of the format, everyone was in there and just having fun and figuring it out. The field was certainly not afraid to gamble. Let’s put it that way,’ Burns touched on the subject.
’It’s been like a whirlwind week. Two bracelets in a week. It’s crazy. Lucky enough to win one live tournament in a week, now I’ve won two in a week, it’s quite fortunate,’ a delighted Burns concluded.Event #13: €2,500 Short Deck No-Limit Hold’em Final Table ResultsPlacePlayerCountryPrize (in EUR)Prize (in USD)1Kahle BurnsAustralia€101,834$112,8352Manig LoeserGermany€62,929$69,7273Felix SchulzeGermany€42,233$46,7954Federico AnselmiItaly€29,027$32,1635Vladimir PeckUnited States€20,444$22,6526Oshri LahmaniIsrael€14,764$16,3597Pierre NeuvilleBelgium€10,939$12,121A Flurry of Eliminations
Day 2 started at 3 p.m. local time and players had one level of late registration to try and accumulate as big a stack as they could. After 147 entries were made on Day 1, 32 more entries were added during Day 2, for the total number of entries to reach 179. Burns started Day 2 with the second biggest stack and he managed to turn it into a dominant final table performance and eventually a gold bracelet.
’The field was certainly not afraid to gamble. Let’s put it that way.’
The second day of the event started at an insanely fast pace, due to the nature of the game and available re-entries. When the first level ended, there were 43 players remaining in the field ready to take a shot at the 27 paid places of the tournament.
Among those that departed empty-handed were Daniel Negreanu, Paul Phua, Rainer Kempe, Danny Tang, Phil Hellmuth, Shaun Deeb, Chris Ferguson, Anthony Zinno, and Robert Campbell. Tony G and Ismael Bojang simultaneously busted during hand-for-hand, causing both of them to get paid half the money of 27th place each.
After the field got in the money, it was a quick affair until the final table and eliminations in the money included Julien Martini (26th; €3,682), Ryan Riess (21st; €4,323), Phil Ivey (18th; €5,228), John Cynn (11th; €6,505), and Benny Glaser (9th; €8,322). The last player to bust to send the field to the unofficial final table was Hokyiu Lee (8th; €10,939) who saw his flopped two pair being in the losing end of the hand, against Burns’ turned straight.Dramatic Change of Pace
The fast pace of the first part of the day gave birth to a slow-paced final table, which needed six levels in order to crown a winner. Burns’ appearance was dominant during those six levels, as the Aussie managed to turn a chip lead at the beginning of the final table into a second gold WSOP bracelet win.
Burns didn’t relinquish the chip lead at any point on the final table and managed to always come back whenever he happened to lose chips from his opponents. Out of his six opponents, he eliminated Vladimir Peck (5th place; €20,444) with jacks against nine-eight, and after sending Felix Schulze (3rd; €42,233) to the rail with ten-eight versus nine-eight, the heads-up began with a 3-to-1 chip lead over Manig Loeser. In between, Pierre Neuville (7th; €10,939), Oshri Lahmani (6th; €14,764), and Federico Anselmi (4th; €29,027) were the other players that entered the final table but busted during the course of it.Kahle Burns - Somuchpoker
Despite the fact that three-handed play lasted almost two hours, the heads-up was a short affair, with Burns needing just two hands to capture the gold. In the last hand of the day, Loeser open-shoved from the button with king-jack and Burns called with ace-jack to send his last opponent to the rail.
While Burns has already won two WSOP gold bracelets along with €698,717 ($774,179) in total prize money, he’s not done yet. Tune right back in to the WSOPE Main Event where he grabbed the chip lead on Day 1b.
.
*TagsWSOPWSOPEKing’s ResortKahle Burns
*Related Roompartypoker
*Related TournamentsWorld Series of PokerWorld Series of Poker Europe
*Related PlayersKahle Burns
Register here: http://gg.gg/ob1aw
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
*Kahle Burns Wiki
*Kahle Burns Poker
*Kahle Burns - Somuchpoker
*The latest tweets from @KahleBurns.
*Kahle Burns Australia Total Winnings $3,260,330 Biggest Cash $1,300,035 While Kahle Burns likely doesn’t need an introduction, he may be an unknown quantity to some American viewers. The Australian has built up an impressive resume that includes over $3 million in live tournament cashes, but Burns has recorded zero cashes in the United States.
*Kahle Burns If I had to choose an assassin to infiltrate a poker game and end the night with a hand full of jewelled rings, and a necklace forged from the skull of a dragon, then I would send Kahle Burns. The Australian is on fire. Opponents hold their hands up, bathing in his glow, or else, get burned to a crisp.
*Australia’s Kahle Burns enjoyed a rapid ascent on every notable poker ranking last year. He burst into the Top 100 of the game’s all-time money list following a stellar 2019 campaign.Table Of Contents
Kahle Burns Tweets from other players 6 years ago Playing Sydney High Roller with @blattsmullet and Michael Kanaan. Grinding the shortstack enjoying the banter more than the tournament. Kahle Burns Tweets from other players 6 years ago Busted 6max and got in a 8K hole pretty fast in PLO.
It was only fitting for Australia’s preeminent high rolling player to take down the country’s preeminent high roller event.
Kahle Burns emerged as a most appropriate champion in the 2020 Aussie Millions A$100,000 Challenge, conquering a field of 54 entries — the second-biggest in event history — to win a prize of A$1,746,360 (~$1.2 million).
It’s just the latest, albeit greatest, win in an absolute tear Burns has been on since the start of 2019, racking up more than $6 million in cashes according to The Hendon Mob. In recognition of his abilities and accomplishments, he received induction into the Australian Poker Hall of Fame earlier in this festival, and this win provided the latest evidence for why he’s considered one of poker’s brightest stars.
’This is the first tournament I’ve won on the Aussie Millions circuit and obviously it’s a fantastic one to win,’ he said.2020 Aussie Millions A$100,000 Challenge Official Final Table ResultsPlacePlayerCountryPrize (AUD)Prize (USD)1Kahle BurnsAustraliaA$1,746,360$1,198,3002Alex FoxenUnited StatesA$1,111,590$762,7403Aaron van BlarcumUnited StatesA$740,880$508,3704Bryn KenneyUnited StatesA$582,120$399,4335Michael SoyzaMalaysiaA$423,360$290,4976Sam GraftonUnited KingdomA$370,440$254,1857Timothy AdamsCanadaA$317,250$217,687Large Min-Cash Results in Tense Bubble
Burns didn’t start Day 2 with a particularly imposing chip stack and actually slipped relative to the rest of the field by the time the nine-handed final table convened, starting in eighth place. There, Burns made his move up the counts during a four-hour stretch without eliminations as two of nine were scheduled to go home empty-handed.
Any bubble situation in a poker tournament typically brings an intense atmosphere, an A$100K event especially so. But what made this bubble particularly tense was a large minimum cash of A$317,250.
’It was a pretty gross spot on the bubble for everybody involved,’ Burns said.
Burns found a good spot to get his chips in the middle, shoving with ace-king over a raise from high roller newcomer Aaron van Blarcum and a call from Michael Zhang. When Van Blarcum called and Zhang back-shoved with jacks, it created a dream spot to flip as Burns got a juicy price and then found a king-high board to triple up.
’That sort of put me in an above-average stack spot and then I was able to accumulate some chips on the bubble,’ Burns said.
Indeed, by the time Zhang bubbled out in an unlucky hand to Bryn Kenney, Burns had secured a decent-sized lead thanks in no small part to a couple of timely bluffs made possible in part by his threatening stack.
After that, Burns’ lead was only at risk once. This time, his tens held against the ace-king of Kenney, who was trying to follow a 2019 Aussie Millions Main Event win with a $100K crown but fell in fourth, the second of four consecutive knockouts for Burns. Kahle Burns WikiOld Rivals Meet
He then made mincemeat of short-stacked Van Blarcum, setting up a heads-up match with old rivalAlex Foxen, who had been in danger a couple of times at the final table before being dealt timely aces.
A bit of a partisan crowd had gathered to cheer Burns on by then, friends and parents showing up despite the late hour. Burns didn’t disappoint them as he finished Foxen off quickly and without much drama, pairing his kicker with a dominating ace.
’I actually didn’t tell any of my friends I made the final table,’ Burns said. ’They were nice enough to come down and support me so, yeah, it’s a great feeling to do well in front of them and give them something to watch and enjoy.’
Burns credited his cash game experience with guiding through the early portions of the tournament, giving him the ammo he needed to survive the later, higher-variance stages. Where other players seemed to often find themselves down to a few big blinds and in desperate need of a double, Burns was usually the one with enough chips to set others at risk.
’My style is...I can run up a big stack early in tournaments,’ he said. ’And if you have a big stack on the bubble or around the money, you can push that towards not dwindling at the final table.’
Burns has proven he does anything but dwindle at final tables, with three six-figure victories including two bracelets plus this seven-figure win just since October. He’s already second on Australia’s all-time money list to national legend Joe Hachem. That Hall of Fame induction looks sharper by the day, and at the rate Burns is shredding the scene, plenty more accolades may lie in his future.
With the A$100,000 wrapped up, all eyes dart back to the Main Event where the final table will kick off on Friday, January 24 at 12:30 p.m. Melbourne time. Don’t miss a beat and make sure to return to PokerNews for the climax of the 2020 Aussie Millions!
*TagsAussie MillionsKahle Burns
*Related TournamentsAussie Millions
*Related PlayersKahle BurnsGeorgios SimopoulosYori EpskampTable Of Contents
Kahle Burns managed to become a member of the elite club of two WSOP gold bracelet holders, and he did it in just one week. On a very-long second day of Event #13: €2,500 Short Deck at the 2019 World Series of Poker Europe in King’s Resort, Burns conquered a total field of 179 entries to win his second WSOP gold bracelet along with €101,843 in prize money. It was his second ship of the series after winning the €25,500 Platinum High Roller for €596,883 earlier.
’This feels like one of those days where I’ve avoided all the coolers and all the post flop coolers. Obviously, I won a few all-ins on the way, just ran super good, no complaints,’ Burns said to PokerNews after joining the multiple bracelet-winners club.
Burns admitted that he lacks experience in this specific format. ’The first time I played Short Deck was a few months ago, here actually. I played a little bit online but I probably played five or six hours online but I certainly wouldn’t say I’m an experienced Short Deck player or very good Short Deck player by any means. Pretty new to the game still,’ he said about the 36-card game that’s been taking the poker world by storm.Kahle Burns Poker
’It’s been like a whirlwind week. Two bracelets in a week. It’s crazy.’
For those looking to dabble in Short Deck, the entry fee usually starts at a steep five-figure point. The relatively affordable €2,500 price tag of this event made the game accessible for mid-stakers as well. While Burns is accustomed to higher buy-in, a lot of players in the field got their first taste of Short Deck in a competitive setting like this. The Aussie had the following to say about it:
’I think a lot of the people in the field, myself included, were sort of trying to figure it out as it goes. A lot of people were in it for a lot of bullets because of the format, everyone was in there and just having fun and figuring it out. The field was certainly not afraid to gamble. Let’s put it that way,’ Burns touched on the subject.
’It’s been like a whirlwind week. Two bracelets in a week. It’s crazy. Lucky enough to win one live tournament in a week, now I’ve won two in a week, it’s quite fortunate,’ a delighted Burns concluded.Event #13: €2,500 Short Deck No-Limit Hold’em Final Table ResultsPlacePlayerCountryPrize (in EUR)Prize (in USD)1Kahle BurnsAustralia€101,834$112,8352Manig LoeserGermany€62,929$69,7273Felix SchulzeGermany€42,233$46,7954Federico AnselmiItaly€29,027$32,1635Vladimir PeckUnited States€20,444$22,6526Oshri LahmaniIsrael€14,764$16,3597Pierre NeuvilleBelgium€10,939$12,121A Flurry of Eliminations
Day 2 started at 3 p.m. local time and players had one level of late registration to try and accumulate as big a stack as they could. After 147 entries were made on Day 1, 32 more entries were added during Day 2, for the total number of entries to reach 179. Burns started Day 2 with the second biggest stack and he managed to turn it into a dominant final table performance and eventually a gold bracelet.
’The field was certainly not afraid to gamble. Let’s put it that way.’
The second day of the event started at an insanely fast pace, due to the nature of the game and available re-entries. When the first level ended, there were 43 players remaining in the field ready to take a shot at the 27 paid places of the tournament.
Among those that departed empty-handed were Daniel Negreanu, Paul Phua, Rainer Kempe, Danny Tang, Phil Hellmuth, Shaun Deeb, Chris Ferguson, Anthony Zinno, and Robert Campbell. Tony G and Ismael Bojang simultaneously busted during hand-for-hand, causing both of them to get paid half the money of 27th place each.
After the field got in the money, it was a quick affair until the final table and eliminations in the money included Julien Martini (26th; €3,682), Ryan Riess (21st; €4,323), Phil Ivey (18th; €5,228), John Cynn (11th; €6,505), and Benny Glaser (9th; €8,322). The last player to bust to send the field to the unofficial final table was Hokyiu Lee (8th; €10,939) who saw his flopped two pair being in the losing end of the hand, against Burns’ turned straight.Dramatic Change of Pace
The fast pace of the first part of the day gave birth to a slow-paced final table, which needed six levels in order to crown a winner. Burns’ appearance was dominant during those six levels, as the Aussie managed to turn a chip lead at the beginning of the final table into a second gold WSOP bracelet win.
Burns didn’t relinquish the chip lead at any point on the final table and managed to always come back whenever he happened to lose chips from his opponents. Out of his six opponents, he eliminated Vladimir Peck (5th place; €20,444) with jacks against nine-eight, and after sending Felix Schulze (3rd; €42,233) to the rail with ten-eight versus nine-eight, the heads-up began with a 3-to-1 chip lead over Manig Loeser. In between, Pierre Neuville (7th; €10,939), Oshri Lahmani (6th; €14,764), and Federico Anselmi (4th; €29,027) were the other players that entered the final table but busted during the course of it.Kahle Burns - Somuchpoker
Despite the fact that three-handed play lasted almost two hours, the heads-up was a short affair, with Burns needing just two hands to capture the gold. In the last hand of the day, Loeser open-shoved from the button with king-jack and Burns called with ace-jack to send his last opponent to the rail.
While Burns has already won two WSOP gold bracelets along with €698,717 ($774,179) in total prize money, he’s not done yet. Tune right back in to the WSOPE Main Event where he grabbed the chip lead on Day 1b.
.
*TagsWSOPWSOPEKing’s ResortKahle Burns
*Related Roompartypoker
*Related TournamentsWorld Series of PokerWorld Series of Poker Europe
*Related PlayersKahle Burns
Register here: http://gg.gg/ob1aw
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
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