August 25 2012, Chad Holloway
The 2012 PokerStars.com European Poker Tour Barcelona Main Event concluded early Sunday morning as Mikalai Pobal topped a field of 1,082 players to capture the “1,007,550 prize.
Prior to this win, Pobal’s only live cash was a 104th-place finish at the EPT Berlin Main Event in April for “7,500, and his best online score on PokerStars, where he plays under the name “leanod,” was a third place finish in the Sunday Million.
Season 9 EPT Barcelona Final Table Results
1st | Mikalai Pobal | “1,007,550 |
2nd | Ilari Sahamies | “629,700 |
3rd | Joni Jouhkimainen | “404,050 |
4th | Anaras Alekberovas | “301,750 |
5th | Samuel Rodriguez | “230,900 |
6th | Sinel Anton | “178,400 |
7th | Antonin Duda | “125,950 |
8th | John Juanda | “76,100 |
The day got off to a fairly quick start. On Hand #11, action folded around to Samuel Rodriguez in the small blind and he put in a raise to 180,000 with . John Juanda was in the big blind and thought a long while before moving all-in for 1.665 million with
. Rodriguez thought even longer, but eventually made the call.
The flop was safe for Juanda, but the
turn gave Rodriguez counterfeit options, meaning a seven on the river would give him eights and sevens with an ace kicker. Much to the shock of the crowd, the
spiked to put an end to Juanda’s tournament in eighth place.
A short time later, Anaras Alekberovas opened for 190,000 under the gun and was met with a three-bet to 450,000 by Antonin Duda, the economics student from Jablonec, Czech Republic, who qualified for the tournament via a “22 re-buy event on PokerStars. Alekberovas pushed back with a four-bet to 800,000, Duda moved all-in for 2.56 million, and Alekberovas snap-called.
Showdown
Alekberovas:
Duda:
It was the second time Alekberovas had picked up kings, and while the flop paired Duda’s ace, it also delivered Alekberovas a set. Neither the
turn nor
river helped Duda, and the Day 3 chip leader was eliminated in seventh place.
In the first hand back from the break, Sinel Anton raised to 205,000 from early position with and was met with a three-bet to 375,000 from Alekberovas, who held
in the cutoff. After the button and blinds folded, the short-stacked Anton just called. Not only that, he check-called bets of 100,000 and 205,000 on the
flop and
turn respectively.
Anton checked for a third time when he paired his queen on the river, and then called off his last million when Alekberovas moved all-in. Anton seemed to think he won the hand as he lingered at the table until someone told him, “You lost.” Anton finally realized the situation and took his leave in sixth place.
EPT Barcelona Final Table (L to R): Anaras Alekberovas, Antonin Duda, Ilari Sahamies, Samuel Rodriguez, John Juanda, Joni Jouhkimainen, Mikalai Pobel, Sinel Anton
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
In the very next hand, Joni Jouhkimainen, who began the final table as the short stack, and Rodriguez created a 1.1 million pot preflop and saw a flop of . There was destined to be fireworks as Rodriguez had flopped two pair holding
and Jouhkimainen held an up-and-down straight draw with
.
Rodriguez’s last 2.32 million ended up in the pot and the players were on their feet, especially when the turn gave Jouhkimainen an added flush draw. Much to the dismay of Rodriguez, and those hoping to see a Spaniard take down an EPT for the first time, the
spiked on the river to complete Jouhkimainen’s flush and increase his stack up to 11.1 million; meanwhile, the local player exited the stage in fifth place to a nice round of applause.
It took over three hours for the next elimination to occur, but happened when Jouhkimainen raised to 325,000 from the button and Alekberovas re-raised to 725,000 from the big blind. Jouhkimainen four-bet to 1,175,000, Alekberovas announced an all-in, and Jouhkimainen called. Alekberovas was in for 4,535,000 along with his tournament life.
Showdown
Jouhkimainen:
Alekberovas:
Jouhkimainen’s kings were in good shape against Alekberovas’ nines, which needed some major help from the board. None came on the flop, and the
turn was no help. It was down to the river for the Alekberovas, but the useless
appeared and he was eliminated in fourth place for “301,750, the biggest tournament prize of his young career.
Things slowed considerably after that, and it took another three hours before the next elimination, which happened to be Jouhkimainen. He had an interesting day as he started on the short stack and ran it up to amass nearly 75 percent of the chips in play; unfortunately for him, he would be whittled back down in three-handed play against Sahamies and Pobal.
In what would be his last hand, Jouhkimainen opened with a raise to 500,000 from the button with only to have Sahamies shove all-in from the big blind holding
. Jouhkimainen snap called and the two went for a showdown.
The flop paired Shamies’ ace and put Jouhkimainen on the verge of elimination. The
on the river left him with only two outs, but the
on the river wasn’t one of them. Jouhkimainen was eliminated from the tournament in third place, while Sahamies entered heads-up play with 12.175 million to Pobal’s 20.2 million. The stacks suggested it might be a long haul to the finish, but nothing could have been further from the truth.
Just a short time into heads-up play, Sahamies raised to 600,000 on the button with . Pobal reraised to 1.6 million from the big blind with
and received a massive treat when Sahamies moved all-in for 10.485 million in chips. Pobal snapped and tabled his hand as quickly as possible to show Sahamies the bad news.
The flop only made things worse for Sahamies when the fell. Sahamies was now in need of a runner-runner miracle, but after the
landed on the turn, he was officially drawing dead. The river completed the board with the
and officially ended the tournament. For his finish, Sahamies earned “629,700 and Mikalai Pobal pocketed “1,007,550 for besting the field.
Video: http://www.pokernews.com/video/ept9-barcelona-main-event-champion-mikalai-pobal-7099.htm
The next stop on the EPT schedule is San Remo, which will take place from Oct. 5-11. The PokerNews Live Reporting Team will be on hand for that event, so be sure to check out our live reporting section then for even more EPT action.
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June 29 2012, Mickey Doft
Each week, the Global Poker Index releases a list of the top 300 tournament poker players in the world using a formula that takes a player’s results over six half-year periods. The World Series of Poker is quickly reaching the end, and for the time being, Bertrand “ElkY” Grospellier has held off the field to remain at No. 1. For a look at the entire list of 300, visit the official GPI website.
The Top 10 as of June 25, 2012
2,455.62 | +1 | ||
9 | Erik Seidel | 2,407.73 | -2 |
10 | Vanessa Selbst | 2,388.29 | +4 |
It didn’t take long for Jason Mercier to get back inside the top three. His Period 1 results got a huge boost this week from his eighth-place result in Event #39 ($10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha) for $72,132. He only has one other five-figure score comprising his Period 1 slate.
Welcome to the GPI
A whopping 24 players are new to this week’s GPI. Debuting with the best standing is Jan Peter Jachtmann. He took down WSOP Event #39 ($10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha) for $661,000. Chris Tryba is back on the GPI after winning Event #35 ($2,500 Mixed Hold’em) for $210,107.
New Additions
Jan Peter Jachtmann | 1,340.13 | 178th |
Fernando Brito | 1,311.22 | 189th |
Chris Tryba | 1,271.05 | 208th |
Max Lehanski | 1,226.68 | 223rd |
Ted Lawson | 1,186.69 | 240th |
Michael Telker | 1,172.51 | 244th |
Yorane Kerignard | 1,162.39 | 248th |
Chris McClung | 1,155.27 | 250th |
Antony Lellouche | 1,148.30 | 254th |
Kyle Bowker | 1,123.31 | 267th |
Yuliyan Nikolaev Kolev | 1,122.24 | 270th |
Sean Getzwiller | 1,113.03 | 273th |
James Akenhead | 1,112.20 | 274th |
Dylan Wilkerson | 1,112.20 | 276th |
David Pham | 1,102.31 | 282nd |
Vladimir Kochelaevskiy | 1,101.44 | 284th |
Dana Kellstrom | 1,097.03 | 285th |
Nikolai Yakovenko | 1,091.47 | 287th |
Ryan Welch | 1,088.89 | 289th |
Bernard Lee | 1,088.46 | 291st |
Nicolas Cardyn | 1,086,19 | 293rd |
Daniel Colman | 1,084.28 | 295th |
Mike Leah | 1,083.32 | 297th |
Balazs Botond | 1,082.79 | 299th |
The 24 players who fell this week were Andrey Gulyy, Benjamin Pollak, Brent Hanks, Brett Richey, Daniel Alaei, Humberto Brenes, Ignat Liviu, Jesse Alexis Cohen, Jon Spinks, Jose Manuel Nadal, Jude Ainsworth, Justin Schwartz, Lee Goldman, Maksim Semisoshenko, Marko Neumann, Matt Berkey, Max Pescatori, Mike Matusow, Nicolas Chouity, Ravi Raghavan, Robert Cezarescu, Stuart Fox, Tim Finne, and Ty Reiman.
Ups and Downs
The biggest rise of the week belonged to Chris DeMaci. He finished runner-up in Event #34 ($5,000 Pot-Limit Omaha Six-Max) for $316,308.
Biggest Gains
53rd | Elio Fox | 1,828.74 | +63 |
66th | Joseph Cheong | 1,775.55 | +63 |
118th | Chris DeMaci | 1,567.07 | +114 |
124th | Dimitar Danchev | 1,525.69 | +64 |
146th | Allen Cunningham | 1,438.06 | +74 |
148th | Michael Benvenuti | 1,436.38 | +66 |
182nd | Mario Puccini | 1,332.30 | +97 |
192nd | Jeff Lisandro | 1,303.13 | +75 |
197th | Dwyte Pilgrim | 1,287.07 | +68 |
201st | Antonio Esfandiari | 1,278.12 | +86 |
This week’s biggest fall belonged to Justin Young. His three cashes from the 2011 WSOP fell from Period 2, and only one was picked up in his Period 3 results.
Biggest Drops
170th | Ben Lamb | 1,355.03 | -59 |
180th | Dan O’Brien | 1,337.42 | -47 |
196th | Mikhail Lakhitov | 1,297.37 | -44 |
202nd | Max Martinez | 1,277.95 | -45 |
219th | Micah Raskin | 1,238.53 | -45 |
245th | Kevin Iacofano | 1,172.30 | -62 |
257th | Justin Young | 1,143.61 | -88 |
262nd | Joe Hachem | 1,137.95 | -62 |
288th | Manuel Bevand | 1,090.89 | -46 |
290th | Joe Cassidy | 1,088.55 | -62 |
What’s In Store?
Michael Mizrachi won the $50,000 Poker Players Championship and will see a nice rise from his current No. 36 ranking. Chris Klodnicki, No. 29, will also see a nice bump in his ranking after finishing second to Mizrachi in the $50,000 Poker Players Championship.
To look at the entire list of 300, visit the official GPI website. While you’re at it, follow the GPI on Twitter and its Facebook page.
To stay on top of the GPI and other happenings in the poker world, follow us on Twitter and like us on Facebook.
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