Cole South recorded his ‘best day’ at the virtual felt on Wednesday when he finished his sessions with a whopping $1.1m profit leaving mainly Ziigmund and Patrik Antonius to foot the bill. Cole’s Fulltilt status is ‘on fire’ as his recent hot streak at the nosebleed PLO tables has bagged him over $2.8m since early December and is showing no signs of letting up.
He played 1249 hands of $300/$600 PLO heads up against Ziigmund on Wednesday which created some of the biggest pots we have seen online since the days of Isildur1. Ziigmund dominated the first few hours of the sessions and was quickly sitting with over $1.1m on the tables, but they turned on the Finnish pro and a few gigantic pots saw Cole take the lead and wrap up the game with a $760k win.
Cole took down the biggest pot of the sessions when he flopped the nut flush against Ziigmund’s top set. A raising war ensued which had all their chips in on the flop and Ziigmund praying for the board to pair. The turn and river drew blank sending Cole a mammoth $634k pot.
Cole flopped the world again as he caught bottom set with a flush draw against Ziigmund’s wrap straight draw. Cole managed to get the majority of his stack in on the flop and a golden turn improved his hand to a flush whilst completing Ziigmund’s straight. Cole had Ziigmund drawing dead and called his all in to win the $458k pot.
Cole squeezed in a 5bet with pocket aces which retained the lead on the flop against Ziigmund’s top pair with a gut shot. Ziigmund called all in on the flop but the board brought him no help and Cole scooped a massive $384k pot.
Ziigmund won his biggest pot of the sessions when he flopped bottom set against Cole’s pocket kings with a flush draw. The money all went in on the flop and Ziigmund turned a full house which held up to bag him a $360k pot.
Cole South has now completed 14 winning sessions in a row, which in itself is an achievement, but against the best poker players in the world, it’s phenomenal!
Tags: Cole South, Patrik Antonius, Ziigmund




K
T
I think Team CardRunners printed out a little more data on players then they admitted to.