August 28 2011, Marc Convey

The tournament room at the PokerStars.com European Poker Tour Barcelona was full Sunday because 465 players turned up with the hope of scooping the whopping “850,000 first-place prize. The field totaled out at 811 players, creating a prize pool of “4,055,000. The man at the top of the chip counts is Guillaume Darcourt, who bagged up 195,300 chips and will lead the field coming back for Day 2.
Darcourt amassed his stack by running a huge multi-street bluff with 
on a 



board. His river shove finally got his opponent off his hand. The Frenchman showed and then utilized this image to build his stack all the way to the end of the day. He has a history of using a big stack well, including his 35th place finish at this year’s WSOP Main Event and a WPT title are.
He’ll have to be on top of his game though because the chasing pack from today’s field has formidable talent including Eugene Katchalov (153,100), Leo Fernadez (148,600) Vytautas Milvydas (172,400) Marvin Rettenmaier (114,200), Matthias De Meulder (110,000) and James Mitchell (84,000).
Those remaining from Team PokerStars Pro, apart from the three above, are Ivan Demidov (36,600), Jason Mercier (25,500), Arnaud Mattern (21,400) and Victor Ramdin (21,400). And we can’t forget Team PokerStars SportStar Boris Becker who seemed to have a very enjoyable knockabout with Bertrand “ElkY” Grospellier en route to building a 47,500 stack.
The talent on show Sunday confirmed what we thought Saturday; EPT Season 8 is well and truly alive and kicking. Those who came but failed to progress included: Chris Moneymaker (coolered), John Duthie (queens never good), Viktor Blom (sophisticated bluff fail), Roberto Romanello (stuck in the blocks), Bertrand “ElkY” Grospellier (Beckered), Daniel Negreanu (missed the world) and Liv Boeree (three-outered). The list goes on. The omens for the live tournament scene in Europe this coming year look very good indeed.
The remaining 228 players will combine with the 179 survivors from Day 1a, meaning 407 players will return at 1200 CEST (0300 PDT). Only 120 on those will walk away with a payday. The min-cash will net them “8,000 and if you make the final table the money starts at “73,000 and rapidly increases in ever bigger jumps. Of course there is always the chance for stardom as well tomorrow since the TV set is built and ready to go for the feature table that will be in action until the sweet end of the tournament on Thursday.
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March 20 2011, Dana Immanuel

It was a relatively bijou field that turned out for Day 1a of this year’s PokerStars.net European Poker Tour Snowfest – just 180 players coughed up the requisite €3,500 to buy in, well down from last year’s 270-player strong Day 1a field. The reason for the downturn in numbers wasn’t entirely clear, but we suspect that the perfect skiing conditions in Saalbach-Hinterglemm today may have had something to do with it. We expect to see a larger turnout Monday, although we are unlikely to improve on last year’s total field of 546.
Team PokerStars Pro Arnaud Mattern was one of the first casualties of the day. Reduced to 13,000 after a few early clashes, Mattern got the lot in with 
and looked good for a double up against his opponent’s 
, but a queen dropped on the turn to send the Frenchman on the piste for the rest of the week.
EPT founder and Team PokerStars Pro John Duthie amassed a big stack early, but chose to bluff off much of it with 
offsuit. Two hands later and he disappeared off into the Alpine afternoon, just in time for a nice bit of apre-ski.
Other players who failed to last through the day and now have to endure a whole awful week of skiing, eating and otherwise having fun rather than playing the Main Event include Stephen “stevie444″ Chidwick, John O’Shea and Marcin Horecki.
This has so far been the year of the Brits at the EPT, and it seems to be turning out nice again for the UK. Today’s field saw only a handful of Brits take to the felt and 2009 WSOP Main Event finalist James Akenhead and Irish Open champion James Mitchell both crashed out just after the dinner break, but their fellow countryman Martins Adeniya seemed to be enjoying enough good fortune for all of them. “I’ve just flopped the nuts a few times and got paid,” he said a couple levels into the day of his early big stack. By the end of the day he had increased his stack to an impressive 182,500, enough to claim the overnight chip lead by a massive margin of 50,000.
Other notable big stacks include high stakes heads-up specialist Wim Bos (130,200), Josh Prager (91,200) and Dominik Nitsche (92,000). Also still in the running are Team PokerStars Pros Alex Kravchenko and Michael Keiner, EPT Berlin runner up Ilari Tahkokallio and current king of the EPT side events Kristijonas Andrulis.
Day 1 starts all over again tomorrow at 2 p.m. local time and it promises to be a good field – Liv Boeree, Kevin MacPhee, Fatima Moreira de Melo, Lex Veldhuis, George Danzer and Jan Heitmann are among the players confirmed to take a shot at this comparatively diminutive EPT.
The Live Reporting Team will be back on the floor then to bring you all the action as it happens. But if you can’t wait until the Austrian afternoon, take a look at brand new PokerNews hostess Laura Cornelius enjoying the sights and beverages of picturesque Saalbach-Hinterglemm in our EPT welcome video below.
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