David Peters Wins 2015 EPT Malta €10,300 High Roller for Largest Score of His Career

Remko Rinkema
Contributor
3 min read
David Peters

Three long days of high-stakes tournament poker action in the PokerStars.com European Poker Tour Malta €10,300 High Roller culminated following an epic heads-up battle between David Peters and Ivan Luca for the trophy, the coveted SLYDE watch, and a €597,000 first-place prize. In the end it was Peters, the American pro, who took the event down for the biggest score of his live poker career.

Final Table Results

PlaceNameCountryPayout
1David PetersUnited States€597,000
2Ivan LucaArgentina€397,000
3Viacheslav GoryachevRussia€290,500
4Artem MetalidiUkraine€234,500
5Charles CarrelUnited Kingdom€183,800
6Nick PetrangeloUnited States€139,000
7Igor YaroshevskyyUkraine€102,000
8Sylvain LoosliFrance€75,000
9Nicola D'AnselmoItaly€62,200

The final day of the event started with 18 players, all of which were guaranteed €32,300. Sam Greenwood was the first player to collect that amount when his ace-ten fell to Viacheslav Goryachev's ace-jack. Shortly after that, former EPT Grand Final champion Steve O'Dwyer got knocked out when his pocket tens fell to Daniel Ghionoiu's ace-king.

The field was then down to two tables of eight, and the final table came in sight after Sardor Gaziev, Davidi Kitai, Simon Higgins, and Ludovic Geilich were eliminated in a short span. Ghionoiu was knocked out in 12th by Artem Metalidi when his ace-jack got no help against ace-queen, and moments later Mike McDonald hit the rail in 11th place for €52,100.

With 10 players remaining, five on each table, it was Luca who held the chip lead over Metalidi. Nicola D'Anselmo was the short stack with 18 big blinds, but it was Marc Etienne McLaughlin who busted out on the final table bubble. McLaughlin lost a flip with ace-four against Goryachev's deuces and the final table was set.

Nick Petrangelo, who finished fourth earlier in the €25,500 High Roller, became a strong force at the final table and held the chip lead for quite some time. After D'Anselmo (9th - €62,200) got knocked out and Sylvain Loosli hit the rail (8th - €75,000), it seemed like Luca and Petrangelo would battle it out for all the money. This trend continued when Luca busted Ukrainian Igor Yaroshevskyy in seventh place (€102,000) with ace-five versus ten-nine.

The only player that really had a short at putting a stop at Luca and Petrangelo's dominance was Peters, who played back at the two bullies on occasion. On the last hand before the dinner break, Peters tried making a stand again, but his four-bet shove almost ended in disaster when Petrangelo called with pocket queens. Peters showed two tens, but a ten on the flop gave him a surprising chip lead with six players left.

Soon after the dinner break, Petrangelo busted in sixth (€139,000), followed by Charles Carrel in fifth (€183,800).

After the tournament got down to four players, the action slowed down considerably. Peters and Luca played most of the hands, while Metalidi and Goryachev patiently waited for good spots. In the end it was Metalidi who busted in fourth place for €234,500 when he shoved six-seven off suit into Goryachev's ace-eight of clubs.

For just a few hands, Luca became the short stack, as Goryachev chipped up to 3.5 million versus Luca's 3.4 million. But Peters put an end to that trend. Goryachev got his money in good with a pair of eights on a six-seven-three flop versus Peters' jack-seven, but the river brought another seven to give Peters a big lead going into heads-up play. Goryachev cashed for €290,500, and the final two players were guaranteed at least €397,000.

After talking about a deal for close to 30 minutes, neither player gave in to the other's requests and play continued with €200,000 on the line. Peters started with 10.6 million versus Luca's 4.55 million, and he never looked back.

On the final hand, Luca shoved from the button for 2.62 million and Peters called with pocket fours. His small pocket pair held up against ace-eight and Peters celebrated with his friends Shannon Shorr and Jonathan Little, who were intensely following the action from the rail.

Want to stay atop all the latest in the poker world? If so, make sure to get PokerNews updates on your social media outlets. Follow us on Twitter and find us on both Facebook and Google+!

Share this article
Remko Rinkema
Contributor

More Stories

Other Stories