Mikalai Pobal Makes History; Becomes Second EPT Two-Time Champion

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Live Reporter
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Mikalai Pobal

A champion has been crowned in the 2019 PokerStars European Poker Tour (EPT) Prague €5,300 EPT Main Event and history has been made, as Mikalai Pobal became the second two-time champion in the history of the EPT. Pobal becomes only the second player after Victoria Coren Mitchell to win two European Poker Tour Main Events after winning his first title seven and a half years ago.

Out of a field of 1,154 entries, Pobal defeated Hungary's Norbert Szecsi heads up to claim the lion's share of the €5,596,900 prize pool. For his triumph, the Belarusian claimed a top prize of €1,005,600 while Szecsi had to settle for €598,880.

2019 PokerStars European Poker Tour Prague Main Event Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize (in EUR)Prize (in USD)
1Mikalai PobalBelarus€1,005,600$1,118,277
2Norbert SzecsiHungary€598,880$665,985
3Ricardo Da RochaBrazil€421,450$468,673
4Gaby LivshitzIsrael€316,780$352,275
5Tomas PaivaPortugal€241,230$268,260
6Luke MarshUnited Kingdom€177,420$197,300
7Laurent MichotFrance€134,610$149,693
8Dietrich FastGermany€96,100$106,868
9Gab Yong KimSouth Korea€74,770$83,148

Pobal, a former International Economic Relations student topped a field of 1,082 players for €1,007,550 to win the 2012 EPT Barcelona Main Event, and the amount he claims for his victory in Prague is nearly identical. With this victory, he'll jump to fourth place on the Belarussian all-time money list.

As for Szecsi, he was denied his first EPT win for his home country, as was Ricardo Da Rocha from Brazil. Da Rocha finished in third place for €421,450, with Israel's Gaby Livshitz ending up in fourth (€316,780) and Portugal's Tomas Paiva rounding out the final five.

PokerStars European Poker Tour Prague Final Table

Final Day Action

Prague always attracts a very international field for the last big poker festival of the year and the 2019 edition was no different. The top 13 finishers all hailed from different countries and among the top 24, a total of 20 different countries were in the mix.

After Luke Marsh came up short in the final hand of the previous evening, only five players returned to their seats on the feature table and an average stack of more than 70 big blinds provided plenty of space to maneuver.

The five finalists all showcased their talents in a multifaceted way, and especially chip leader Gaby Livshitz and Norbert Szecsi took over control to trade the lead back and forth. Portugal's Tomas Paiva became the first casualty when his top pair failed to hold up against the gutshot and flush draw of Gaby Livshitz.

Pobal Dismantles Livshitz, Goes From Short Stack to Chip Leader

The third level of the day kicked off with four players remaining and former champion Pobal was in a distant last place with a mere 12 big blinds. He won a first vital all-in against Livshitz in a standard flip as ace-king beat pocket queens. Little did Livshitz know that half an hour later all his chips would belong to new-found nemesis Pobal.

They got it in again with queens versus tens and Pobal had the best of it once more. A few minutes later he would river a set of tens against top pair and moved ahead of Livshitz in the counts.

What followed was the most pivotal hand in the comeback story of Pobal when he glanced at pocket aces in a battle of the blinds and Livshitz flopped top pair and top kicker with ace-queen in a three-bet pot. There was no escape for Livshitz and he went from chip leader to fourth-place finisher.

Gaby Livshitz
Gaby Livshitz

No First EPT Main Event Title for Brazil

Ricardo Da Rocha maintained a stack in the middle of the pack for nearly the entire duration of the final table over two days and never dropped into the danger zone. The 26-year-old from Rio Pardo, who can usually be found on the online tables, exercised a lot of discipline on the live stream and scored his breakthrough result on the live poker circuit.

Da Rocha's stack was cut very short when Szecsi made quads and was paid off, and soon after the Brazilian had to settle for third place on his first trip to Europe. Down to fewer than ten big blinds, Da Rocha got it in with ace-jack and Szecsi finished off the job with ace-queen when neither player connected with the board.

Short-Lived Heads-Up Duel Dominated by Pobal

Brief deal discussions before the heads-up came to no conclusion and both players started heads-up with more than 100 big blinds each. If any spectators were expecting the match to go on late into the night, they would end up disappointed, as Pobal stormed into a commanding lead right away.

A gutsy triple barrel bluff with eight-high by Szecsi turned the tide towards Pobal, who check-called three streets with two pair and was rewarded with a more than four-to-one lead. Pobal then had the best of it with kings versus eights and completed an astonishing comeback from 10 big blinds in four-handed play to victory a few hours later.

Mikalai Pobal wins the 2019 EPT Prague Main Event

That marks the conclusion of the PokerNews live reporting of the final EPT Main Event of the decade! The EPT will be heading next to Casino Sochi in Russia in March 2020. In the meanwhile, Europe's prime poker tour is also gearing up for the 2020 PokerStars Players Championship (PSPC) with multiple live events announced where poker enthusiasts from all over the world can win a Platinum Pass for one of the biggest poker festivals of the upcoming year.

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