August 26 2011, Josh Bell
After six tough levels of play, Day 2 of the 2011 PokerStars.net Asia Pacific Poker Tour Queenstown Main Event came to a close on Friday. The day began with 71 players heading back to the felt and by the start of the third level, over 20 of them had made their ways to the rail. At the end of play, there were exactly 50 players who headed toward the exit on Friday. Ricky Kroesen, Ben McLean, Jesse McKenzie and PokerStars Team Online’s Dale Philip are some of the players who no longer have a chance at APPT glory on this stop.
The player primed with the best chance at making a run at the NZD$94,300 first-place prize is Germany’s Marcel Schreiner. Schriener began the day as one of the chip leaders and even though he had a roller coaster start to the day, by the time his chips went into the bag, his stack was towering over the competition.
A large proportion of Schreiner’s stack came from young Australian Tom Grigg, who is known for crushing online tournaments under the screen name “tollgate.” It looked like Grigg was set to finish the day as the chip leader, but he managed to lose a big chunk of his stack to Schreiner on the third-to-last hand of the day. The two players fought out the massive pot while hand-for-hand play had already ended for the rest of the field.
The pot in question was four-bet preflop, with the aggression continuing onto the flop. By the time the board was showing , one of the biggest pots of the day was building. On the river, Grigg fired out 35,500 into the six-figure pot. Schreiner tanked for several minutes before calling and taking down the pot when his
, holding just the high cards was too good for Grigg’s
.
Only 21 players will return on Saturday and there are still plenty of familiar names in the field including Andrew Hinrichsen (90,000), Jackson Zheng (121,200) and Hugh Cohen (143,900). Also remaining in the field and returning for Day 3 is 2010 APPT Sydney Main Event Champion Jonathan Karamalikis. Returing with an impressive 192,800 in chips, “xMONSTERxDONGx” is set to give himself a fighting chance at becoming a two-time APPT champion. Below is a look at how all the returning players stack up.
Day 3 Chip Counts
Place | Player | Country | Chip Count |
1 | Marcel Schreiner | Germany | 453,800 |
2 | Tom Grigg | Australia | 220,500 |
3 | Jonathan Karamalikis | Australia | 192,800 |
4 | Ben Paurini | New Zealand | 180,100 |
5 | Carl Knox | New Zealand | 148,100 |
6 | Hugh Cohen | Australia | 143,900 |
7 | Daniel Laidlaw | Australia | 138,100 |
8 | Jackson Zheng | New Zealand | 121,200 |
9 | Cole Swannack | New Zealand | 120,100 |
10 | Matty Yates | New Zealand | 100,200 |
11 | Andrew Hinrichsen | Australia | 90,000 |
12 | John Waterman | New Zealand | 85,900 |
13 | Brian Biggs | New Zealand | 76,500 |
14 | Xia Dong Xia | New Zealand | 53,800 |
15 | Charles Caris | Australia | 48,800 |
16 | Ryan Mckay | Australia | 42,800 |
17 | Rewi Emerson | New Zealand | 37,400 |
18 | Artur Prokhorov | Russian Federation | 31,600 |
19 | Gavin Vickers | New Zealand | 29,200 |
20 | Octavian Voegele | Austria | 23,800 |
21 | Wayne Bell | New Zealand | 16,400 |
With the small amount of players returning for Day 3 and play not scheduled to finish until Day 4 on Sunday, the tournament will have late afternoon start on Saturday. The action will be kicking off at 1600 NZST (2100 PDT) and the PokerNews Live Reporting Team will again be on the floor with all the action as the 2011 APPT Queenstown Main Event plays down to a final table.
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April 08 2011, Jen Mason
The third day of play at the Spielbank Berlin brought the number of players remaining in the €5,000 European Poker Tour Berlin Main Event down from 119 hopefuls to just 24. Leading the field is Daniel Pidun with 2,429,000 chips, while ten players return with over a million. The next to leave the Main Event will do so with €20,000 in prize money, and by Saturday night the final table will be determined.
All 119 players returned Friday afternoon with the security of having already cashed and maybe this contributed to the early all-in frenzy. The first to be eliminated today received €7,500; the last person to fall short of Day 4 – Anton Thotatinsson – received €17,500. Cashing for the second time in a row on the EPT circuit was Team PokerStars SportStar Fatima Moreira de Melo who could not develop her short stack and joined Paco Torres, Jack Ellwood, Sam Chartier and Team Pro Sebastian Ruthenberg on the rail in the opening levels. Also finishing in the money were the top three players from EPT Snowfest: Vladimir Geshkenbein, Kevin Vandersmissen and Koen De Visscher.
In contrast, Maximilian Heinzelmann, who started the day in 91st place, clawed his way to second place (2,140,000) by the time the final hand was over. Anton Morgenstern also made a bid for the chip lead eliminating Felix Schulze in one of the biggest pots from early in the day, winning a queens versus ace-king flip to jump over the million-chip mark. He busted to Ben Wilinofsky late in the day, however, and Wilinofsky now sits in third with 2,046,000.
All the experience of a pro with a knack for the comeback did not stop George Danzer from exiting in 26th place after a roller coaster day in which the deck ran alternately hot and cold for the popular Team Pro. Start of day chip leader Fabrice Soulier’s stack also dwindled during his lengthy stint on the feature table, down to 890,000 as he prepares for Day 4. There’s no shortage of experienced players left in the field, although all prior EPT champions and all but two PokerStars Team Pros (Henrique Pinho and Joep van den Bijgaart) are now in the side events.
Among the players who’ve consistently been in the thick of the action today are young, aggressive Lithuanian Kristijonas Andrulis (1,650,000 chips) and Martin Jacobson, whose EPT cash list sports two runner-up finishes (both this season) and one third place. He’ll be looking to make the final for a chance to better this already impressive achievement.
After tables had broken speedily all day, the last stage (28 players down to 24) was a more contemplative, hard-fought affair, and the final table bubble could not help but raise the tension of all the players in the room, and slow them down accordingly. The pace was further slowed by the fact that “all in and call” has to be shouted whenever it occurs and the hands frozen so that their holders’ expressions may be captured on film for posterity. Meanwhile the heads-up, €2,000 and €1,000 events continued to pack every inch of the Spielbank.
Drifting into the weekend brings no rest for these 24 players. They return Saturday at 1 p.m. CEST (0400 PDT) to start the penultimate leg of the EPT Berlin Main Event journey: the climb to the final table. Join PokerNews for live coverage throughout the day, and check out the video below to meet some of the team behind the tournament.
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