2024 PokerStars EPT Barcelona

€100,000 EPT Super High Roller
Day: 3
Event Info

2024 PokerStars EPT Barcelona

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
55
Prize
€1,372,420
Event Info
Buy-in
€100,000
Prize Pool
€3,977,820
Entries
41
Level Info
Level
22
Blinds
60,000 / 120,000
Ante
120,000
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
6
Players Left
1

Historic Win as Kayhan Mokri Claims Back-to-Back €100,000 EPT Super High Rollers Titles in Barcelona

Level 22 : Blinds 60,000/120,000, 120,000 ante
Kayhan Mokri
Kayhan Mokri

The 20th anniversary of the 2024 PokerStars European Poker Tour Barcelona saw the ever-historic €100,000 EPT Super High Roller conclude in electric fashion as Kayhan Mokri emerged the victor for the second year in a row. Among the crowds at Casino Barcelona, Mokri extended his legacy, lifting another EPT Super High Roller trophy on Spanish soil, this time to the tune of €1,372,420, nearly doubling the first place prize money he claimed just a year prior.

Winners Reaction:

"I'm playing a game that I love," said Mokri. "And once you do something you love, you often get very good at it, and you enjoy the moments. So it's super easy for me.”

"The people I play with are super friendly and great people. It's easy to have fun at the same time."

Kayhan Mokri
Kayhan Mokri

€100,000 EPT Super High Roller Final Table Results

RankPlayerCountryPrize
1Kayhan MokriNorway€1,372,420
2Seth DaviesUnited States€895,000
3Sean WinterUnited States€616,600
4Jesse LonisUnited States€457,400
5Santhosh SuvarnaIndia€358,000
6Patrik AntoniusFinland€278,400

Tournament Action:

Twenty-eight unique players coughed up the eye-watering price of €100,000 to sit down and compete against the best and brightest stars in the game. However, once wasn’t enough for some, resulting in a total of 13 reentries, generating a final field size of 41 players and a mammoth prize pool of €3,977,820.

With six spots paid and a minimum cash worth a massive €278,400, Day 2 expectedly saw a lengthy bubble between the final seven that went long into the early hours of Monday morning. The misfortune of this seismic money jump fell on the shoulders of Frenchman Thomas Santerne who crashed out in seventh place.

Santerne is best known for winning the €50,000 Super High Roller at the 2024 PokerStars European Poker Tour in Paris. However, on this occasion, the young professional failed to collect an additional PokerStars shard for his trophy cabinet.

Thomas Santerne
Thomas Santerne

Final Table Action:

Just ten hours after the conclusion of Day 2, the final six were back under the bright lights of the feature table as the race to a champion began.

Having won the €100,000 Super High Roller at EPT Monte Carlo just four months ago, the dream of back-to-back glory quickly came to an end for Patrik Antonius as he was the first departure of this final table. Antonius wisely invested a fraction of his €1,967,440 win in Monaco as his finish today added another €278,400 to his ever-growing bankroll.

Patrik Antonius
Patrik Antonius

Following closely behind was Santhosh Suvarna’s departure in fifth place. Although the only player on the final table not to play poker professionally, Suvarna has firmly solidified himself among the sharks of the high-stakes scene. With an already impressive resume of results in six-figure buy-ins across the globe, this finish will make for yet another major final table in his poker career, including his second EPT final table of 2024, having won the €25,000 No-Limit Hold'em in Paris.

A dry spell of eliminations was ended when Seth Davies sent Jesse Lonis to the rail in fourth place. Lonis has had an explosive year on the felt and is currently ranked first on the Global Poker Index. With this final table, Lonis has solidified 2024 as his meteoric rise to stardom in the poker community.

Winter’s hot run quickly turned cold in Level 22 as his triple-barrel bluff was sniffed out by the hero call of Davies. With just two big blinds left behind the line, Winter’s departure was imminent, his last chips falling into the hands of the man who decimated his stack just one hand prior.

Sean Winter
Sean Winter

Davies failed to put his newly-acquired chips to work as he’d hoped with the heads-up battle swiftly ended by the now two-time champion on the second hand of play. Davies found himself on the wrong side of a cooler as his flopped two pair fell behind the turned set of Mokri, ending his run in second place.

Although Davies couldn’t convert his Day 1 chip lead into an outright win, he certainly carried the momentum from his $300,000 Super High Roller Bowl win in Cyprus for $3,206,000, just two weeks ago, into another world-class display.

Mokri’s turbulent run at the final table saw him turn the shortest stack among the final four into a chip lead, aided by back-to-back double-ups and the biggest bluff of the tournament. Mokri seamlessly converted his masterclass of a final table performance into an all-important win on one of the world's biggest stages.

This concludes the PokerNews coverage €100,000 EPT Super High Roller. Stay tuned for more action on the felt to come at future events.

Tags: Jesse LonisKayhan MokriPatrik AntoniusSanthosh SuvarnaSean WinterSeth DaviesThomas Santerne