The definitive account of the Sunday Million (July 28).
They say the cream rises to the top.
Two weeks ago, long-time crusher Conor â1_conor_b_1â Beresford took down the $109 Sunday Million for a massive $112K score. This week another beast–Ole âwizowizoâ Schemion–came close, finishing in fifth for $31,874.
But while itâs always exciting to see big names like Schemion (almost) go the distance, the biggest weekly online tournament continues to provide life-changing scores for both pros and recreational players alike. Heck, even an âaverage Joeâ or a shrimp fisherman can make the final table and a five-figure payday–both of which happened this week, on July 28th.
We think thatâs pretty exciting, too.
The tournament saw an uptick to 11,300 entries, producing a $1.13 million prize pool and $114,934 reserved for the winner. However, the final three players made a deal to chop it up, and when Czech poker pro Jakub âOlli444â Oliva came out on top, he won $97,937 for his largest online score to date.
Hereâs how it all went down, with help from some of the final table players.
OLE OLE OLE
When the Sunday Million had just nine players remaining of the 11,300 who entered, all eyes were on Ole Schemion. Playing under his PokerStars screenname âwizowizoâ, Schemionâs presence at the table didnât go unnoticed by the others.
âI was aware it was Ole Schemion right next to me, my friends railing me made sure of that,â the eventual runner-upâFinlandâs âGoatseââtold PokerStars Blog. âI was fortunate to have position on him. I just happened to run better than him in this tournament, but it is always great to go up against the very best.â

Ole “wizowizo” Schemion: one of the best
It was Oliva who entered the final table with 45 big blinds and the chip lead, and he rated the German highly too. âI think only ‘wizowizo’ was among the best players, otherwise the rest were average players,â Oliva said a couple of days after his victory had sunk in.
Oliva started playing poker a few years back, and developed his game through what he called âintense studyingâ. Now a professional, he makes his living grinding both online and live in mid to high stakes tournaments.
âMy biggest result was in a World Series of Poker (WSOP) circuit event four months ago. I came third for $101K,â he said, just pipping the amount he won Sunday night. âFor the whole Sunday Million I was above the tournament average. It was only on the last two tables that the journey to the final table became complicated, and I found myself on a short stack. I won some pots again, though, and I entered the final table as a chip leader.â
âGoatse213â recognised that Oliva was a good player. âI think I had a bad spot having ‘Olli444’ on my direct left, he was playing really well and limited my options,â âGoatse213â said.
Meanwhile Schemionâs stack sat around the middle of the pack. He quickly found a big boost when he eliminated Uruguayâs âIlDepredatorâ in ninth ($8,840).
Schemion min-opened the button with AâŠ4â„, and âIlDepredatorâ defended his big blind with KâŁ6â to see a 3âŠ6âŠ5â flop fall. This gave Schemion an open-ender and he put in a c-bet when checked to. âIlDepredatorâ then shoved his 11-big-blind stack with top pair, and Schemion made the call. A deuce hit the turn to complete Schemionâs straight draw, and he then had a comfortable stack to play with.
Belgiumâs âmoneymach301â was the next to fall. His stack has dropped down just three big blinds when he picked up Kâ Kâ„ under the gun, and naturally all of it went in. Action folded around to âOlli444â in the small blind who made the call with Aâ„JâŁ, and he ended up rivering a straight to eliminate âmoneymach301â in eighth ($12,181).
Down to seven, the money jumps were already huge. âesbjerdrâ, a shrimp fisherman from Denmark, told us this was his best result to date.
âOne time I finished in the top 16, but that was maybe five or six years ago,â he said. âI lost most of that money in a cash game, but I learned from it and now I only play tournaments. I also play a lot of live tournaments where I live in Denmark.â
Another player enjoying his time at the final table was Finlandâs âGoatse213â.
âI started playing poker with a few friends back in 2005 or so,â he explained. “We played in home games and I got intrigued really quickly. I normally focus on live poker, mostly cash games, but from time to time I like to play some online tournaments.â
That decision proved particularly fruitful on July 28th. While it ended with nice scores, their journeys towards the final table were far from smooth.
âThroughout the Sunday Million I was near the top of the chip counts,â âesbjerdrâ remembered. âAt one point I had almost 21 million in chips, but then I doubled up a lot of small stacks and lost a lot.â
âGoatse213â had the opposite experience. âI lost a big flip with like 250 players left and was crippled down to about eight big blinds, but managed to claw my way back up.â
By the time he reached the final table, he had one of the biggest stacks. One nice pot which went âGoatse213â’s way at the final table happened during seven-handed play. Holding the chip lead, he opened with Jâ 9â from early position and picked up one callerââesbjerdrâ–who had 10âŁ10⊠in the small blind. The flop produced two nines giving âGoatse213â trips, and when âesbjerdrâ check-shoved and couldnât find another ten, his tournament came to an end ($16,786).
âGoatse213â continued the good all-in form when he won a huge flip to KO Belarusâ âDj_Sun_Rusmaâ in sixth ($23,131). The latter jammed for 16 big blinds under the gun with AâŠKâŁ, and âGoatse213â called with 7âŠ7â„ in the cutoff. The pocket pair held up.
âObviously you need to have your good hands hold up on the final table,â âGoatse213â said. âI donât remember a specific hand which helped me get that far, but obviously I won all of the big all-ins when I needed to.â
The same canât be said for Schemion. He went out in fifth.
Schemion min-opened the cutoff with 16 big blinds left holding Aâ„9âŠ, and Russiaâs âIIewxaâ defended his big blind with Jâ„10â„. On a KâŠ6â„3⣠flop, Schemion c-bet when it checked to him. âIIewxaâ floated and picked up an open-ender on the Qâ turn, which he checked again. Schemion didnât slow down, firing again and leaving himself nine big blinds behind. Call.
The Aâ hit the river, giving Schemion top pair but âIIewxaâ the nut straight. âIIewxaâ now led with a shove, putting Schemion to the test for it all.

Ole Schemion (aka “wizowizo”) goes deep in the tank for his tournament life
Deep into his time bank, Schemion made the call and saw the bad news. He banked $31,874 for his efforts, and they were down to four.
“THIS JUST DOESN’T HAPPEN TO PEOPLE LIKE ME”
With Oliva, âGoatse213â and âIIewxaâ all above 30 million at the 400K/800K blind level, the player who found himself in the most trouble was the UKâs Robert âUSARtistâ Gough. He had 16 big blinds, but at this point, he was just amazed to be in such a great position.
âIâve played poker for years, as far back as before the Moneymaker Effect. I never had much to shout about prize wise; before last Sunday my biggest win was $1,800,â he said.
Gough usually only plays $11 tournaments, but always tries to satellite in to the Sunday Million when he can.
(Speaking of satellites, this weekâs best ROI belonged to the UKâs âx1267bbâ, who qualified for just $0.50 and won $937 after finishing in 131st place. Canadian player âPERCOSETâ managed to get 13th place, good for $6,415.23 after qualifying for just $11).
Goughâs previous best milly run was somewhere around 250th, but things started to click this week and he found himself running super deep.
âIt started slowly as I struggled for hands early on, but I got into a rhythm after a few double ups,â he said. âFrom there I just grinded my way through. I hit a royal flush at a good time with the Jâ 10â and doubled up nicely.â
Still, he was in tricky spot versus three similar big stacks. At this stage, though, he had nothing to lose.

Robert “USARtist” Gough
An hour of four-handed play went by, in which time Gough really found nothing to play with. His chips dwindled down to just four big blinds, and when âIIewxaâ set him all in from the small blind holding 7âŠ7â„, he called it off with a hopeful 8â 4â . He found no help on the board, but with $43,922 now sitting in his account, he had no complaints.
âI never thought I would win an amount like this, it just doesn’t happen to people like me,â he said jubilantly. âItâs an unbelievable feeling. Iâve never had anything like this happen to me, Iâm just an âaverage Joeâ poker player, nothing special. But itâs the best feeling after more than 14 hours of playing. Iâm going to celebrate by taking a nice holiday, but first I plan to win next weekâs Sunday Million!â
Having built his stack up and delivered the fourth-place KO, âIIewxaâ now held a dominating chip lead. Three-handed began with stacks at 63 million (âIIewxaâ), 34 million (Oliva), and 16 million (âGoatse213â).
A few hands in and play stopped to look at numbers. âThere were no negotiations, we all just agreed to ICM numbers immediately. I was so tired that it felt good to strike the deal at that point,â said âGoatse213â.
âIIewxaâ locked up $83,566, Oliva secured $77,937, and âGoatse213â banked $77,365. There was still $20,000 to play for though, and after seeing his chip stack fall to the shortest position, âIIewxaâ exited in third.
Oliva min-opened to 4 million on the button with AâŠJâ , and when âIIewxaâ found QâŠJ⊠in the small blind he jammed 11 bigs for 22M. Oliva made the call, and as you can see below, it took a pretty sick runout to eliminate him.

“IIewxa” flopped the world, but still couldn’t survive
With that they were heads-up, but the duel didn’t take long. Oliva created a 2:1 chip lead, and when âGoatse213â opened 7â 7â„ only to be shoved on by Oliva holding AâŁKâ„, all the money went in. An ace hit the turn, and that was all she wrote for âGoatse213â.
âIt feels great obviously, but I have not celebrated yet,â he said. âMaybe Iâll take my other half for a great dinner. Pokerwise, Iâll now be participating in a few live tournament series, though I havenât decided which ones and where. Maybe somewhere warm during the winter so I could combine a tournament series and a holiday.â
As for Oliva, who now plans to play EPT Barcelona followed by a full WCOOP schedule, he had just three words to sum his win up:
âA nice feeling.â

Ready to sign up for PokerStars and make the Sunday Million final table yourself? Click here to get an account.
Back to Top