
| Rank | Player | Triton Earnings | Titles | Cashes | Total Earnings |
| 1 | Bryn Kenney | $48,218,135 | 5 | 19 | $76,792,663 |
| 2 | Jason Koon | $29,521,785 | 10 | 57 | $59,930,520 |
| 3 | Mikita Badziakouski | $27,208,867 | 5 | 41 | $64,299,146 |
| 4 | Dan Smith | $25,239,316 | 2 | 34 | $62,619,943 |
| 5 | Stephen Chidwick | $24,809,418 | 2 | 55 | $65,043,407 |
| 6 | Aaron Zang | $21,091,429 | 2 | 3 | $21,896,250 |
| 7 | Fedor Holz | $20,390,037 | 4 | 30 | $51,307,251 |
| 8 | Daniel Dvoress | $20,333,482 | 2 | 45 | $43,979,902 |
| 9 | Paul Phua | $19,967,382 | 1 | 45 | $31,642,477 |
| 10 | Punnat Punsri | $19,924,455 | 3 | 26 | $23,644,889 |
We last checked in on the Triton Poker all-time earnings leaderboard in May of 2024. At that time, Sam Greenwood sat in 10th place with $13.2 million in cashes on the high-stakes-centric tour. Nearly 10 months later, that total would not even get someone inside the top 20.
There have been three completed Triton stops since then: Monte Carlo last fall, the inaugural crossover with the World Series of Poker Paradise festival in December, and the recently wrapped series in Jeju. Over $333.2 million in combined prize money was paid out across 34 total events, making a huge impact on the tour’s lifetime money list.
While the list has changed dramatically, one thing remains the same. Bryn Kenney is the runaway leader. The American now has more than $48.2 million in earnings on the tour across just 19 cashes. That means he has averaged more than $2.5 million per in-the-money finish in Triton events.
Kenney is the overall top money earner in poker history, but even his Triton scores alone would be enough to put him in 15th place on the all-time money list if all of his other cashes were somehow excluded. Kenney’s incredible total is bolstered in a major way by the record-setting $20,606,421 payout he secured via a heads-up deal in the 2019 Triton Millions Charity Invitational.
The five-time Triton champion has four other multi-million-dollar scores on the tour, as well. Last November he took down a $125,000 event in Monte Carlo for $4.4 million, the third-largest score of his career. He also cashed for more than $2.7 million at the latest stop in Jeju, including a win in a $50,000 bounty event.
10-time Triton champion Jason Koon leads the tour in both titles won (with twice as many as the nearest competitors) and total cashes (with 57 in-the-money finishes). Koon is ranked second in total earnings behind Kenney, though, with $29.5 million. Four of his top five scores have come from wins in Triton events, including three multi-million-dollar victories. Koon’s largest win on tour came back in 2018, when he won a $1,000,000 HKD ($127,000) short deck event for more than $3.6 million.
Five-time Triton champion Mikita Badziakouski ($27.2 million) and two-time winner Dan Smith ($25.2 million) are the only other players to surpass $25 million. Badziakouski had four cashes in Jeju for more than $2.2 million, bringing his overall career totals to $64.3 million. That puts the Belarusian in fourth place on the all-time money list.
Smith fared similarly in Jeju, cashing five times for a combined $2.3 million. The American pro sits right behind Badziakouski on both this list and the all-time money list, with $63.4 million in cashes overall. Both are slightly ahead of Koon, however, who is fifth on the all-time list with $61.7 million. ♠