August 04 2011, Marc Convey

Day 2 of the PokerStars.com European Poker Tour Tallinn has come to an end. The remaining 198 players returned to the Swiss Hotel on Thursday and after six levels of action that number was whittled down to 63. At the top of the chip leaderboard is Swedish player, Nikolas Liakos who bagged up 460,200.
Liakos began play with 86,000, and after a couple of levels, he had turned that into more than 250,000 chips. That is where his stack hovered for most of the day, until the last level that is. He went on a charge and surged into a lead that sits at more than 60,000 chips ahead of second.
A lot of those last-level chips came from local player, Katri Kasper, who was happy to get the last of his chips in the middle preflop on the second to last hand of the day. Why? He was holding pocket aces. His aces were powerless to the Swede’s force and his flopped set of fours however. Liakos seemed genuinely apologetic, but Kasper looked as pale as a ghost as he wandered off.
The chasing pack includes Lari Sihvo (400,100), PokerStars qualifiers Michael Graydon (349,800) and Liutauras Armanavicius (337,600) and Jani Sointula (333,300). All of these players had or threatened to take the lead throughout the closing two levels, but the really interesting stories of the day came from two players a little further down the list.
Lauri Meidla finished in 14th place with 204,800 chips. When half of Day 1a was completed, Meidla had accumulated a stack of 50,000. That’s when he decided to buy in to the “5000 Omaha Turbo event and after a couple of hours of multi-tabling he finished in third place for “17,812. He was eliminated from the Omaha tournament just after he had bagged his 37,250 chips in the Main Event. That didn’t stop him performing admirably on Thursday, and he’s now freerolling!
The other great story belongs to Johan van Til. This online phenomenon, who plays under the handle “busto_soon”, came to play on Day 2 as the short stack with only 5,300 in chips. He somehow managed to turn that into 199,000, way ahead of the end-of-day average of 132,000. To add more grandeur to his feat, he managed to do this despite being drawn alongside the likes of Praz Bansi, Jani Sointula, Matt Frankland and Team PokerStars Pro Ville Wahlbeck on the “Table of death.”
Other notables who made it through the day included the already mentioned Bansi (120,200), along with Sami Kelopuro (224,800), Jeff Sarwer (102,900), Fernando Brito (46,600), John O’Shea (44,800), Joe Ebanks (41,600) and Anton Ionel (32,900).
We also cannot forget the two remaining EPT champions. Roberto Romanello (80,800) and Arnaud Mattern (58,200) will be trying to make history as the first double EPT champion. Mattern is yet again the last remaining Team PokerStars Pro in Tallinn. Last year he went on to take the third spot for “160,000.
Play for Day 3 begins at 1200 EEST (0200 PDT) on Friday and the field will be reduced to 24 players. This is expected to take around five 75-minute levels. Please come and join the PokerNews Live Reporting Team as they bring you all the action, through the bubble and beyond.
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Wed, 08/03/2011 – 20:59 – PokerPages Staff
As a beginner poker player you don’t only have the choice of which variety you’d like to play but also how you’d like to play. The following poker information will look at both kinds of poker betting to give you a better understanding.
Live poker benefits
The main benefit of playing poker live is the additional information you can get from your opponents. This can seriously affect the way you play your hands and the bets you make.
Live poker also makes you more aware of the money you’re betting. By having the physical marker representing your cash on the table, you’re reminded of how real it is instead of simply a bankroll number when playing online.
Online poker benefits
A major benefit of online poker betting is the huge variety of games you can choose from. Compared to 10 to 100 tables of the usual types, you can enjoy thousands of games, ranging from the standard games to those you wouldn’t find in many Casions.
Online you can see that the range of stakes offered is very large, starting from as little as $0.01/$0.02. The main reason you can’t find this in a live casino is due to the overhead associated with the physical table, including the cost of the dealer.
Lastly, there are thousands of online poker tournaments played all day, every day, compared to one or two daily in a live casino. The variety of poker rules is also wider, with stakes ranging from $0.10 to $10,000.
To have a go at playing online visit PokerStars. Alternatively, you can learn much more about poker betting at PokerSchoolOnline.




