December 10 2011, Eric Ramsey
Saturday was the final day of the PokerStars.com European Poker Tour Prague, and the requisite eight players returned to the felt to play down to a champion. What looked like a short day turned into a bit of a long one, but in the end, Martin Finger was the man left standing alone with all the chips in play, the Shamballa bracelet, and the shiny EPT trophy.
The first order of business on Day 5 was to knock out the last 31 minutes of the previous level left over from the night before. During those opening orbits, Mads Wissing was sent to the rail as the first elimination of the day. Wissing was very short on chips entering the final table, and he made a late-position shove with . He couldn’t sneak the raise through. Guillem Usero woke up with
right next door, and Wissing could not catch up on the
board. He was sent off in eighth place with a consolation prize of “66,700.
Andreas Wiese lost most of his stack in the second level of the day after losing a race against Usero. Wiese was unable to fully recover after his run in with Usero. After doubling his short stack once, Wiese got his money in with against Martin Finger’s
with a chance at another double. It didn’t go well for him, though, and the dealer ran out a
board to eliminate the Wiese in seventh place (“90,000).
When the table was reduced to six, Ari “BodogAri” Engel was riding the shortest stack, and he was the next to fall. Like Wiese before him, Engel did manage one crucial double before dropping down to zero just a few minutes later. It was that was responsible for his demise, and Finger’s
was never in trouble on the
board. Engel, who’s made more than $2.5 million online, notched his largest live cash (“125,000) in his first EPT event.
Denys Drobyna made it through the next break before being relieved of his last 15 big blinds. The ace-rags were going around for the short stacks, and looked plenty good enough for Drobyna to go with. Unfortunately for him, David Boyaciyan woke up with
right next to him, and Drobyna never had a chance. The board ran
, and Drobyna was forced to settle for “160,000 and a fifth-place finish.
Usero had an up-and-down day, but he was mostly trending in the right direction until his elimination in fourth place. He had been stagnant around 20 big blinds when he pushed in with . Ace-rag strikes again. Finger woke up with
. Usero managed to find a flush draw on a suited flop, but the turn and river bricked to seal his fate. Fourth place was worth “205,000, though, the first career six-figure score for the 21-year-old.
France’s Nicolas Levi might have been the odds-on favorite heading into the day with his second-place stack. During the first partial level of the day, though, Levi was crippled in a massive cooler against David Boyaciyan. On a flop, the two men got it all-in with more than a third of the chips in play. Levi had flopped bottom two with
, but he was drawing practically dead when Boyaciyan snapped him off with
.
Levi’s stack was reduced by about two-thirds, and he did well to keep his head above water until three-handed play. That’s as far as his run went. He shoved with on his final hand, and he even managed to hit a pair on the
flop. Finger’s
had a ton of outs, however, and the
on the turn was enough to send Levi on his way with a “270,000 consolation prize.
That left Finger and Boyaciyan heads up for the trophy, and the latter was facing more than a 2:1 chip deficit. They decided to chop it up with Finger taking “620,000 and Boyaciyan “535,000, and they left the remaining “100,000 on the table for the champ. Usually a chop tends to hasten the conclusion of a tournament, but that was not the case for the two finalists.
Boyaciyan chipped away at his opponent with methodical timing, and Finger began to struggle to win pots. After hours of battling, the Boyaciyan actually pipped into the chip lead, but his advantage lasted only a few hands. In one of the biggest hands of the day, Finger made a big shove on the turn to fold his opponent and regain a commanding chip lead, and the war was over just as short time later.
On the last hand, Boyaciyan got his money in with pocket tens flipping against , and a pair of cowboys on the flop put the trophy in Finger’s hand. It’s the third victory for the Germans in this eighth season of the EPT, and it’s Martin Finger that they’re toasting to tonight.
2011 EPT Prague Results
1 | Martin Finger | “720,000 |
2 | David Boyaciyan | “535,000 |
3 | Nicolas Levi | “270,000 |
4 | Guillem Usero | “205,000 |
5 | Denys Drobyna | “160,000 |
6 | Ari Engel | “125,000 |
7 | Andreas Wiese | “90,000 |
8 | Mads Wissing | “66,700 |
That wraps up the coverage from Prague and the first half of the EPT8 Season. Next stop: Paradise. The tour is headed to the Bahamas for the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure, and we’ll be forced to escape winter’s grasp and head down to the islands for ten days in the tropics. In the meantime, you should follow us on Twitter to keep up with bits of poker news from all the world around.
Follow Eric Ramsey on Twitter – @Eric_Ramsey
March 23 2011, Dana Immanuel
When Day 3 of the PokerStars.net European Poker Tour Snowfest got under way, 81 players filled the room and Philip Meulyzer from Belgium had a convincing chip lead – 623,500. His nearest rival, Giacomo Maisto, was more than 100,000 chips behind him. By the end of the day however, Maisto had snatched the lead, bagging 1,548,000, and will go into Day 4 as the man to beat.
Only 72 players made the money in this event, so Day 3 started out with the money bubble looming.
Two former EPT champions made Day 3, but before the money bubble had burst, only one remained. Michael Tureniec, who recently won EPT Copenhagen outlasted 2008 EPT Barcelona winner, Team PokerStars Pro’s Sebastian Ruthenberg. Ruthenberg made his exit just before the money bubble when his jacks failed to hold against Morten Mortensen’s .
Tureniec had a good start to the day, eliminating Tim Finne six places off the money. In the hand, Tureniec spiked an ace and his defeated Finne’s
. However, it was not an entirely good day, since he found himself short-stacked after an ill-timed all-in push with
against the super-aggressive Vladimir Geshkenbein’s
. “There you go, back to Sweden,” Geshkenbein told him, before asking the EPT champion, “Is it your first time playing live?” Tureniec made it into the money but not into Day 4 – he was eliminated in 65th place and took home a min-cash of €5,250.
Curiously, the actual bubble boy was not the unluckiest man in the room. That award went to Sander Benjamins, who had his pocket queens outdrawn by Martins Adeniya’s , leaving the field squarely on the bubble. Benjamins left with absolutely nothing, which was not the case for the actual bubble boy, Pontus Khosravi. Khosravi’s
was no good against Kevin Vandersmissen’s
when the first card out of the deck was a five. Although he didn’t make any money, the proprietors of the Alpine Palace awarded him a consolation prize of a helicopter ride piloted by Alpine Palace owner Thomas Wolf, in the mountains surrounding Saalbach-Hinterglemm.
Other notable players who made it into the money but no further were Team PokerStars SportStar Fatima Moreira de Melo in 56th (her first EPT Main Event cash), 2010 WSOP $2,500 NLH bracelet winner Tomer Berda in 41st place, last year’s Snowfest runner up Russell Carson in 31st place, and Jack “Doctor Fun” Powell in 29th.
Another one to bite the Day 3 dust was serial EPT finalist Luca Pagano. His pocket nines failed to hold against Pieter Druif’s and he was reduced to short-stack status. Although Pagano doubled up a little later in the day, he couldn’t fully recover, and exited in 51st place. Pagano will have to wait at least a few weeks to attempt to make his seventh EPT final table, but he has once again raised the bar for anyone wishing to challenge his EPT cash record – it now stands at 18.
Giacomo Maisto lurched into the top spot on the chip leaderboard when he made a runner-runner flush against Denis Murphy. Maisto doubled his stack then, and then added more chips to his stack with another flush against Domantas Klimciauskas. Maisto bagged over 1.5 million in chips at the end of Day 3. His closest competitor is Iulian Ruxandescu, who occupies the second spot on the chip leaderboard with 1,281,000 in chips.
Other players who bagged big stacks include Cristian Dragomir with 895,000, APPT Macau High Roller champion Vladimir Geshkenbein with 889,000 and a heavy Flemish contingent made up of Kevin Vandersmissen (803,000), Koen de Visscher (768,000) and Philip Meulyzer (762,000). A little lower in chip counts, but also still in the running, is Martins Adeniya (402,000), Friend of PokerStars Pierre Neuville (335,000) and Team PokerStars Pro Alex Kravchenko (379,000).
The PokerNews Live Reporting Team will be back at the Alpine Palace on Thursday from 2:00 p.m. CET (1:00 p.m. GMT) to bring you all the action as the remaining 24 players play down to a final table.
Be sure to follow us on Twitter for up-to-the-minute news.