Jude Ainsworth and Rino Mathis were seen leaving the casino, one after the other, due to a failure in day 2 chip accumulation.
No such problem for....
AngelGuillen25 Angel Guillen PeredaDoubled up to 135k after value betting big (my whole stack) on the river with AJ on JT684ss, got called by KT.August 21 2012
Theo_Jorgensen Theo JorgensenThe AC is working today so not melting, had my 2 cops of coffee the stack is at 160K and most importantly of all,... http://t.co/K4pbBxhfAugust 21 2012
Kent Lundmark is one of three former EPT Barcelona winners in the field. If you recall, the Swede overcame a field of 758 back in Season 7 to win the €825,000 top prize.
The 2012 PokerStars.com EPT Barcelona Main Event has officially drawn 1,082, making it the largest event in the event's history. That created a €5,247,700 that will be distributed to the top 160 players as follows:
Former EPT London champion David Vamplew raised to 1,600 from middle position before action folded to Marc-Andre Ladouceur in the cutoff seat. He reraised to 3,800 and play folded back to Vamplew. He took his time, then four-bet to 8,100. Ladouceur folded and Vamplew won the pot.
Back in 2010, Vamplew won EPT London for a massive £900,000 after defeating a field of 848 players. After this pot, he's moved up to 36,000 in chips.
Clement Bonin opened from middle position for 1,600 and received a call from Darko Stojanovic in the cutoff. PokerStars Team Pro Theo Jorgensen was on the button and opted for a three-bet to 4,600, which only Bonin called.
The flop saw Stojanovic check-call a bet of 5,500, and then both players checked the turn. The river saw Stojanovic check for a third time, but instead of checking behind, Jorgensen fired out 16,000. Stojanovic thought for a long time before making the call only to muck when Jorgensen rolled over for a rivered pair of kings.
Terje "Terken89" Augdal, who is a fixture at the high-stakes cash games on PokerStars and regularly featured in PokerNews' Online Railbird Report, was all in preflop for around 12,500 and at risk against Ibrahim Ghassan.
Showdown
Ghassan
Augdal
It was a flip, but Augdal needed to improve to stay alive. The flop wasn't what he had in mind, but the turn was just what the doctor ordered. The river was of no consequence and Augdal received a much-needed double.
We're not sure of the details, but we can confirm that Gaelle Baumann, who bubbled the final table of this year's World Series of Poker Main Event, has been eliminated from the tournament. Baumann began the day on a short stack of just 13,200.