2010 PokerStars.com EPT Grand Final - Monte Carlo

High Roller
Day: 2
Event Info

2010 PokerStars.com EPT Grand Final - Monte Carlo

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
qq
Prize
€956,000
Event Info
Buy-in
€25,000
Prize Pool
€2,825,000
Entries
113
Level Info
Level
24
Blinds
20,000 / 40,000
Ante
0

Busquet Bumps Kaiser

It was three way to the flop with Chad Brown, Ronny Kaiser, and Olivier Busquet.

Flop: {6-Hearts}{k-Diamonds}{7-Clubs}

Kaiser bet 22,000 and only Busquet made the call.

Turn: {a-Diamonds}

Kaiser check-called Busquet's bet of 45,500.

When the {10-Diamonds} fell on the river, Kaiser checked and Busquet made it 120,000. Kaiser moved all in and Busquet made the call.

"You got it," said Kaiser.

Busquet turned over {4-Diamonds}{5-Diamonds} and raked in the pot, while Kaiser hit the rail. Busquet is now up to around 850,000.

Lyndaker Out

Javier Garcia made it 14,000 before Antoine Saout raised to 40,000. Richard Lyndaker moved all in for around 179,000 and Garcia also pushed his chips in the middle, covering Lyndaker.

Saout folded and Lyndaker tabled {k-Diamonds}{j-Clubs} and was trailing Garcia's {a-Hearts}{a-Spades}.

Board: {5-Spades}{6-Diamonds}{q-Spades}{j-Hearts}{10-Spades}

Garcia added Lyndaker's chips to his stack and Lyndaker hit the rail.

Getting There?

We're down to just 17 players, and it seems like things are progressing rather well towards an early finish. But the maths would argue.

The average stack is about 333,000 right now, and that gives players about 55 big blinds apiece at the current level. We're losing about 12% of the field per level, and projecting that out puts us well into Level 23 before we reach the final eight. It's always tough to speculate about tournament timing, but the math doesn't lie, and we expect to be in for a long night.

Level: 17

Blinds: 4,000/8,000

Ante: 1,000

Reinkemeier Miscalculates

In middle position, Tobias Reinkemeier opened to 13,000, and Tom Marchese wanted to play for more. In the blinds, he three-bet to 39,000. Back on Reinkemeier now, and he appeared to try and four-bet, but he failed to put enough raising chips into the pot. The floor was called, and Reinkemeier's play was ruled a call. Let's see a flop.

It came {9-Diamonds} {4-Diamonds} {Q-Clubs}. Marchese led out with 48,000 chips, and Reinkemeier tank-folded his hand away. It turned out to be nothing much, but our 'angle-shoot alarm' was buzzing after that preflop four-bet blunder. Ah well, no big deal in the end.

Tags: Tobias ReinkemeierTom Marchese

Aces for Berende

Ronny Kaiser made it 13,000 to go preflop before Paul Berende bumped it up to 31,500. Kaiser thought for a moment before shoving all-in and Berende snap-called, tabling {a-Diamonds}{a-Spades}. Kaiser showed {5-Diamonds}{5-Hearts}, but it was Berende who was at risk.

Flop: {a-Clubs}{k-Hearts}{7-Spades}
Turn: {5-Spades}
River: {7-Clubs}

Berende doubled to around 360,000 and Kaiser is sitting at around 275,000.

So Long, Salamzy

Ronny Kaiser opened to 13,000 under the gun, and the table folded all the way around to the big blind. Najibullah Salamzy was there with a very short stack of just 39,500, and he stuck them in there with {Q-Spades} {10-Spades}. Kaiser tidied up the call with {7-Clubs} {9-Clubs}, and Salamzy gave a slight shake of the head.

The board ran out {5-Diamonds} {6-Diamonds} {7-Diamonds} {K-Diamonds} {6-Spades}, and that's all she wrote for the big man. Salamzy was crippled a few hands prior when his {K-Spades} {J-Diamonds} fell to Chad Brown's lowly {Q-Clubs} {6-Diamonds}, and now his day is done.

Tags: Chad BrownNajibullah Salamzy

Get Outta Here

Proof that Al Krav owns a smile!
Proof that Al Krav owns a smile!
Team PokerStars Pro Alexander Kravchenko has been riding a relatively short stack for most of this event, and he has just finally been put out of his misery.

Also making a speedy exit was Matthew Woodward, last year's runner up in the Grand Final Main Event. There'll be no trophy this year for Mr. Woodward.

Tags: Alexander KravchenkoMatthew Woodward

Level: 16

Blinds: 3,000/6,000

Ante: 500

Garcia's Rags Work

Sorel Mizzi just shipped a double up over to Javier Garcia. We picked up the action on the flop as the dealer spread out {2-Spades} {7-Spades} {8-Diamonds}. Mizzi was apparently the preflop raiser, and he put out a bet of 16,500 on that flop before Garcia three-bet it up to 40,000. Mizzi decided to go ahead and put his opponent to the decision for his last ~110,000 chips, and Garcia quickly made the call to put himself at risk.

Showdown
Mizzi: {A-Spades} {3-Clubs}
Garcia: {5-Diamonds} {8-Spades}

The turn {8-Hearts} locked up the pot for Garcia before a meaningless {A-Diamonds} filled out the board. Mizzi drops down to about 390,000, pushing Garcia up close to 250,000

Tags: Javier GarciaSorel Mizzi