Daniel Dvoress Is Second in Chips at Triton's $100K PLO Final Four
The Canadian multi-game crusher has $23 million in career earnings and four opponents left between him and another Triton title.

Daniel Dvoress has $23 million in career tournament earnings, more Triton final tables than most players have Triton buy-ins, and right now he's sitting on 4,575,000 chips at the $100K PLO Main Event in Montenegro.
Four players remain from a field of 76 entries. Dvoress is second in chips. The $100K buy-in PLO Main Event at the 2026 Triton Montenegro festival is down to its final table, and the 31-year-old Canadian is in a position to add another six-figure (or seven-figure) result to a résumé that already reads like a high-roller hall-of-fame application.
Daniel Dvoress has $23 million in career tournament earnings, more Triton final tables than most players have Triton buy-ins, and right now he's sitting on 4,575,000 chips.
The Stack Situation
Austria's Manuel Stojanovic leads the final four with 9,775,000 in chips. Dvoress sits second at 4,575,000. Denmark's Martin Granhoej Dam holds 3,525,000. And Patrik Antonius, the Finnish legend who needs no introduction to anyone who has watched high-stakes poker in the last two decades, is short-stacked at 1,125,000.
That's a combined 19,000,000 chips across four players, with Stojanovic controlling over half the total. Dvoress holds roughly 24% of the chips in play. He's not in the driver's seat, but he's got more than enough to maneuver in PLO, where pots inflate fast and a single hand can redraw the leaderboard entirely.
Why Dvoress Keeps Showing Up
The broader story here isn't one final table. It's the pattern.
Dvoress doesn't specialize. He doesn't grind one format and skip the rest. He enters No-Limit Hold'em super high rollers and makes final tables. He enters Short Deck events and makes final tables. He enters $100K PLO Main Events and makes final tables. The format almost doesn't matter. He adjusts, he shows up deep, and the results compound.
That $23 million in career tournament earnings puts him in a tier of players who have sustained elite performance across years and across game types. This isn't a hot streak or a single massive score inflating the number. It's a body of work built at Triton stops, WSOP bracelet events, and super high rollers around the world.
What makes Dvoress unusual among the high-roller regulars is the lack of noise. He doesn't generate controversy. He doesn't produce viral hand clips. He doesn't tweet hot takes about solver accuracy. He just keeps cashing, keeps final-tabling, and keeps climbing the all-time earnings list while the poker media focuses on louder names.
What's Next at This Table
The final four in Montenegro is stacked with experience. Antonius alone has decades of high-stakes PLO pedigree, even short-stacked. Stojanovic's chip lead is commanding. And Dam, though less well-known internationally, earned his seat by surviving 76 entries in a $100K buy-in field.
But Dvoress has been here before, at the business end of a Triton event with serious money on the line. With 4,575,000 chips and three opponents between him and the title, the math favors patience and selective aggression. In PLO, that's a combination Dvoress knows how to deploy.
If he wins, it's another line on an already stacked résumé. If he doesn't, he'll be at the next Triton stop doing exactly this again.
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