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2015 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino EPT Grand Final

€25,500 High Roller
Dias: 2
Event Info

2015 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino EPT Grand Final

Resultados Finais
Campeão
Mão Vencedora
k6
Premiação
€1,114,000
Event Info
Buy-in
€25,000
Premiação
€5,267,500
Entries
215
Informações do Nível
Nível
27
Blinds
40,000 / 80,000
Ante
10,000

Andreev Leads Final 12 Players; Jacobson & O'Dwyer Still in Contention

Nível 21 : 10,000/20,000, 3,000 ante
Andrey Andreev
Andrey Andreev

The 2015 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino EPT Grand Final €10,600 Main Event is down to a final table, while just a dozen players remain in the €25,000 High Roller, a single-reentry tournament that attracted 215 entries — 162 unique (159 on Day 1 + three on Day 2) and 53 reentries (42 on Day 1 + 11 on Day 2) – and created a prize pool of €5,267,500. Of that, €1.114 million is reserved for the eventual winner.

After 10 levels of play, just 12 players remain with Russian amateur businessman Andrey Andreev and his stack of 2.27 million best positioned to make a run at the title. Others still in contention include Charlie Carrel (1.534 million), Jeremy Ausmus (1.126 million), Martin Jacobson (628,000), and Steve O'Dwyer (356,000).

The day started off with some players jumping in at the last minute, but Phil Ivey, Vanessa Selbst, and Gus Hansen – who've all been spotted in Monaco – were not among them. Of the hundred or so players in action, only 31 of them would earn a payday.

Among the dozens to leave with nothing to show were Daniel Colman, Mustapha Kanit, Erik Seidel, Faraz Jaka, Mike "Timex" McDonald, and defending champ Philipp Gruissem. Likewise, Team PokerStars Pros Eugene Katchalov, Bertrand "ElkY" Grospellier, Liv Boeree, and Daniel Negreanu were all eliminated short of the money.

The high roller's bubble boy ended up being a familiar face in Poland's Piotr Franczak, who suffered a particularly bad beat to bubble the €100,000 Super High Roller earlier this week. This time, he dwindled down to nothing and failed to spin it up.

High Roller events continue to grow. PokerNews examines the EPT11 Grand Final €25K and its place in the grand scheme of things. Check it out here.

From there, the in-the-money eliminations came at a rapid pace and included Christoph "Tight-Man1" Vogelsang (29th - €46,400), Sorel Mizzi (26th - €51,600), Matt Waxman (24th - €51,600), Igor Kurganov (22nd - €56,800), and Scott Seiver (20th - €62,100).

Seiver, who finished runner-up in the same event last year, made history in Monaco by completing a high roller hat trick, cashing in the €100,000 Super High Roller (8th - €261,800), €50,000 Super High Roller (9th - €92,860), and €25,000 High Roller (20th - €62,100). While other players like Selbst and Ole Schemion have completed a Super High Roller/High Roller/Main Event hat trick at other EPT stops, the EPT11 Grand Final was the first time there's ever been three high rollers of this caliber.

Seiver, who also won Event #43 €5,300 Pot-Limit Omaha for €75,900 while in town, fell when he shoved his last 124,000 from the cutoff and Andreev called from the button.

Seiver: {k-Hearts}{9-Clubs}
Andreev: {10-Diamonds}{10-Hearts}

The {6-Spades}{7-Spades}{10-Spades} flop gave Andreev a set, but Seiver was drawing live to an eight. The {K-Spades} gave Seiver some chop options to a flush, but it was not meant to be as the {6-Hearts} blanked on the river.

Before the end of the night, several other players would hit the rail including Team Online's Isaac Haxton (17th - €70,000), $111,111 One Drop High Roller champ Tony Gregg (16th - €70,000); and Azerbaijan's Ramin Hajiyev (14th - €77,900).

The plan tomorrow is to play down to a winner, and of course the PokerNews Live Reporting will there every step of the way to capture all the action. Until then, check out this video of Bryn Kenney, who finished in 13th place for €86,800, talking about million-dollar swings:

Tags: Andrey Andreev

Remko Report Episode #13: REG Charity with Kurganov, Boeree, Mannino, and Donnelly

Nível 20 : 8,000/16,000, 2,000 ante
Liv Boeree and Igor Kurganov
Liv Boeree and Igor Kurganov

On the 13th episode of the Remko Report, host Remko Rinkema speaks with Igor Kurganov, Liv Boeree, Adriano Mannino, and Ruairí Donnelly about the charity Raising for Effective Giving, otherwise known as REG.

You can subscribe to the entire iBus Media Network on iTunes here, or you can access the RSS feed here. The PokerNews family of podcasts is now available on Stitcher.

Tags: Adriano ManninoIgor KurganovLiv BoereeRaising for Effective GivingREG CharityRemko ReportRemko RinkemaRuairí Donnelly

The Champ Doubles Through O'Dwyer

Nível 20 : 8,000/16,000, 2,000 ante
Martin Jacobson
Martin Jacobson

Martin Jacobson, reigning champion of the World Series of Poker Main Event, opened with a raise from under the gun to 27,000. Yingui Li called from the next seat, and then Steve O'Dwyer reraised to 96,000 on the button. Dario Sammartino took some time to think from the small blind, then folded.

Play moved back to Jacobson after that, and he reraised all in for 540,000. After Li gave it up with a shake of his head, O'Dwyer tanked. Eventually, O'Dwyer made the call, but he saw the bad news when his {J-Clubs}{J-Diamonds} were behind the {K-Spades}{K-Diamonds} for Jacobson.

The {4-Diamonds}{2-Clubs}{2-Hearts}{2-Spades}{6-Hearts} board kept Jacobson in front with his kings, and the Swede doubled to over 1.1 million in chips. O'Dwyer was knocked back to 253,000.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Martin Jacobson se
Martin Jacobson
1,135,000 165,000
Steve O'Dwyer ie
Steve O'Dwyer
EPT 1X Winner
253,000 -447,000

Tags: Martin JacobsonDario SammartinoYingui LiSteve O'Dwyer

Tony Gregg Eliminated in 16th Place (€70,000)

Nível 20 : 8,000/16,000, 2,000 ante
Tony Gregg - 16th Place
Tony Gregg - 16th Place

Tony Gregg opened for an unknown amount preflop from under the gun and got three callers. He checked the {4-Clubs}{5-Hearts}{4-Hearts} flop, and Andrey Andreev bet 100,000. Everyone else folded, and Gregg called. The "End Boss" checked again on the {q-Diamonds} turn, and Andreev put him all in for 340,000. Gregg wasted no time calling with {a-Spades}{a-Clubs}, but he saw the bad news: Andreev had outflopped him with {7-Spades}{4-Spades}. Gregg could only smile in amazement and send his stack over as he bricked the river.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Andrey Andreev ru
Andrey Andreev
2,200,000 500,000
Tony Gregg us
Tony Gregg
Eliminado

Tags: Andrey AndreevTony Gregg

Seiver Exits 20th Place; Completes EPT11 Grand Final Hat Trick

Nível 20 : 8,000/16,000, 2,000 ante
Scott Seiver - 20th Place
Scott Seiver - 20th Place

Scott Seiver, who finished runner-up in the event last year, has made history here in Monaco by completing a high roller hat trick, cashing in the €100,000 Super High Roller (8th - €261,800), €50,000 Super High Roller (9th - €92,860), and €25,000 High Roller (20th - €62,100).

While other players like Vanessa Selbst and Ole Schemion have completed a Super High Roller/High Roller/Main Event hat trick at other EPT stops, the EPT11 Grand Final was the first time there's ever been three high rollers of this caliber.

Seiver, who also won Event #43 €5,300 Pot-Limit Omaha for €75,900 here in Monte Carlo, fell when he shoved his last 124,000 from the cutoff and Andrey Andreev called from the button.

Seiver: {k-Hearts}{9-Clubs}
Andreev: {10-Diamonds}{10-Hearts}

The {6-Spades}{7-Spades}{10-Spades} flop gave Andreev a set, but Seiver was drawing live to an eight. The {K-Spades} gave Seiver some chop options to a flush, but it was not meant to be as the {6-Hearts} blanked on the river.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Scott Seiver us
Scott Seiver
Eliminado

Tags: Andrey AndreevScott Seiver

Franczak Follows Up €100K SHR Bubble by Bubbling the €25K

Nível 17 : 4,000/8,000, 1,000 ante
Piotr Franczak bubbles PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino EPT Grand Final 2015 €25,000 High Roller
Piotr Franczak bubbles PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino EPT Grand Final 2015 €25,000 High Roller

Earlier in the week, Poland's Piotr Franczak suffered a particularly bad beat to bubble the €100,000 Super High Roller. Unfortunately for him, he had to experience the bubble pain yet against here at the EPT11 Grand Final, this time in the €25,000 High Roller.

This time however, it wasn't a bad beat. Instead, Franczak had grown extremely short, down to just 4,000 in fact, when he committed it under the gun. Dario Sammartino, who was next to act, called the 8,000 big blind, and then Matt Waxman did the same from the cutoff. A short-stacked Tom-Aksel Bedell called the additional 4,000 from the small blind — leaving himself just 8,000 back — and Dominik Nitsche checked his option from the big.

Two checks on the {a-Clubs}{5-Spades}{8-Clubs} flop saw Sammartino bet 10,000, Waxman folded, and Bedell called off. Nitsche got out of the way, and the remaining three players tabled their cards.

Sammartino: {8-Spades}{q-Diamonds}
Bedell: {8-Hearts}{3-Hearts}
Franczak: {4-Diamonds}{4-Clubs}

Sammartino had the best of it with middle pair and a big kicker, and the hand held after the {J-Spades} appeared on the turn followed by the {K-Diamonds} river. Had the double elimination taken place between two players at different tables, the 31st-place prize money (€46,400) would have been split; however, the rules state when two eliminations occur at the same table, the player with the lower chip count technically busts first.

That meant Franczak left empty handed in 32nd place, while Bedell got the min-cash.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Tom-Aksel Bedell no
Tom-Aksel Bedell
Eliminado
Piotr Franczak pl
Piotr Franczak
Eliminado

Tags: Dario SammartinoPiotr FranczakTom-Aksel Bedell

Jacobson Eliminates Negreanu

Nível 16 : 3,000/6,000, 1,000 ante
Daniel Negreanu
Daniel Negreanu

Martin Jacobson's momentum continues to build.

The defending Main Event champ called a bet of about 25,000 on a {k-Spades}{5-Clubs}{a-Spades} flop from Daniel Negreanu. Bryn Kenney folded from the button, and Christoph Vogelsang, who had checked in the big blind, followed suit. Negreanu piled in his stack of 134,500 on the {3-Diamonds} turn, and Jacobson thought briefly and called with {a-Diamonds}{j-Diamonds}. Negreanu was crushed: {a-Clubs}{10-Spades}.

"That was the one hand I was trying to get you off," Negreanu said with a laugh.

The {9-Clubs} river didn't save Negreanu, and the Team PokerStars pro bowed out while the world champ has heaps now.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Martin Jacobson se
Martin Jacobson
542,500 399,300
Daniel Negreanu ca
Daniel Negreanu
Eliminado

Tags: Bryn KenneyChristoph VogelsangDaniel NegreanuMartin Jacobson

The High-Roller Events That Continue To Impress

Nível 16 : 3,000/6,000, 1,000 ante
Monte Carlo Bay
Monte Carlo Bay

This year's 2015 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino European Poker Tour Grand Final €25,500 High Roller attracted 215 total entries, with 162 of those being unique entries, and then 53 reentries. That's quite the plump field for an event priced at €25,500 per entry, and it generated a prize pool of €5,267,500.

Just how big is this event, though?

In term of total entries in the field, in order to be ranked in the top 10 largest events with a buy-in of $25,000 or €25,000, one would have to have a field of 214 or more. Last year's EPT Grand Final High Roller attracted 214 total entries and was the event of this buy-in with the 10th-largest field size in history.

Now that this year's field topped last year's by one, it's the new standard to break into the top 10, as seen in the table below.

RankEventEntriesWinnerPrize PoolFirst-Place Prize
12007 WPT World Championship639Carlos Mortensen$15,495,750$3,970,415
22006 WPT World Championship605Joe Bartholdi$14,671,250$3,760,165
32008 WPT World Championship545David Chiu$13,216,250$3,389,140
42005 WPT World Championship453Tuan Le$10,961,000$2,856,150
52004 WPT World Championship343Martin De Knijff$8,342,000$2,728,356
62009 WPT World Championship338Yevgeniy Timoshenko$8,172,250$2,143,655
72015 PCA High Roller269Ilkin Garibli$6,456,000$1,294,460
82014 PCA High Roller247Jake Schindler$6,051,500$1,279,880
92011 WPT World Championship220Scott Seiver$5,309,500$1,618,344
102015 EPT Grand Final High Roller215--TBD--€5,267,500€1,114,000

With the Euro being valued higher than the U.S. Dollar, the prize pool for the €25,500 High Roller at the EPT Grand Final is usually always a bit higher than the $25,500 High Roller held at the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure each January. But, the event in January tends to get a larger field.

As previously written in Four Exciting Things To Watch For at the European Poker Tour Grand Final in Monaco, "The EPT Grand Final €25,500 High Roller and the PCA $25,500 High Roller are very similar in field-size history. This year will be the seventh installment of the EPT Grand Final €25,500 High Roller, and the PCA $25,500 High Roller had its seventh installment earlier this year in January. Minus one down year for each event, the fields sizes have gotten larger each edition."

Adding in the field from this year's EPT Grand Final High Roller, the following table looks at the two events side by side.

YearPCA $25K Entries% ChangeEPT GF €25K Entries% Change
200948--79--
201084+75%113+43%
2011151+79.8%58-48.7%
2012148-2%133+129.3%
2013204+37.8%158+18.8%
2014247+21.1%214+35.4%
2015269+8.9%215+0.47%
 Average+36.8% +29.7%

The one decline in the EPT Grand Final High Roller field was mainly due to the event being held in a different location. In 2011, the event was held in Madrid, and the turnout suffered because of it. Other years, it has been held in Monte Carlo. The PCA High Roller and the EPT Grand Final High Roller when held in Monte Carlo have seen increases in the field size each year. That's an extremely positive trend for events of this buy-in size, and we wanted to find out a little more as to why they're always so successful.

"I think super high roller events continue to grow for two reasons," stated Chad Holloway, managing editor at PokerNews. "First, both high-stakes players and wealthy amateurs don't want to grind weeklong tournaments, which is the length of many of today's premiere main events. They'd rather play for three days or less for a chance at a seven-figure score. Second, super high roller events are the new standard in prestige. It's there that you're guaranteed the highest level of play against the best players in the world. That's appealing."

As a regular member of the media at these tournaments, Holloway makes some very good points. Another regular at these stops is EPT tournament supervisor Luca Vivaldi. Like Holloway, we also talked to Vivaldi about the success of these events to see what he thought.

"I think the players kind of know that it's going to be a big number in these events, so they tend to come and play these tournaments," Vivaldi said. "Maybe they save some buy-ins from other tournaments because they know how big these fields are going to be. That's the most simple reason that I can give you. Everybody seems to like the structure as a three-day event and it attracts a lot of players."

After speaking to a member of the media and a tournament official, we also wanted to get the view from a player's perspective. For that, we caught up with Matt Waxman, who happens to be building quite a contending stack in this event.

"With these events in particular, it's because of PokerStars," Waxman said. "When they have their own tour, they're able to facilitate all of the high-stakes players very well so that they can just use their online accounts to come to these events and buy in. That's very convenient. Not to mention the destinations are nice, too. You get to go to the Bahamas, which is pretty nice for vacation, and Monaco is very nice as well."

Big fields, large payouts, player-friendly structures, elite competition, and impressive locations all seem to play a hand in making these events as successful as they are. In a poker world where tournament field size numbers can jump around like an electrocardiogram, it's refreshing to see a healthy, positive trend in the realm of these high-stakes events.

Tags: BahamasChad HollowayEPTEPT Grand FinalLuca VivaldiMatt WaxmanMonacoMonte CarloPCAPokerStars Caribbean Adventure

Andreev Continues to Roll; First Over a Million

Nível 14 : 2,000/4,000, 500 ante
Andrey Andreev
Andrey Andreev

With around 25,000 in the pot and a board reading {k-Clubs}{9-Clubs}{a-Diamonds}{q-Spades}, chip leader Andrey Andreev bet 30,000 from the small blind and Connor Drinan called from the button. When the {4-Spades} completed the board on the river, Andreev slid out a stack of blue T5,000 chips for a bet of 100,000.

Drinan eyed him up, but all Andreev did was laugh.

"You bluffing?" Drinan asked. Andreev laughed some more and shrugged.

Drinan hit the tanks for several minutes before making the call, but mucked just as soon as Andreev showed the nuts with the {j-Clubs}{10-Hearts}.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Andrey Andreev ru
Andrey Andreev
1,120,000 300,000
Connor Drinan us
Connor Drinan
65,000 -125,000

Tags: Andrey AndreevConnor Drinan

Pocket Nines Continue To Be Mercier's Kryptonite

Nível 13 : 1,500/3,000, 400 ante
Jason Mercier
Jason Mercier

Jason Mercier and pocket nines don't exactly see eye to eye, especially recently.

Yesterday in the €10,600 Main Event here at the 2015 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino EPT Grand Final, Mercier was deep in the remaining field with 28 players left. It was then that Mercier raised from under the gun before action folded to Ludovic Geilich in the big blind. Geilich reraised all in, and Mercier quickly called off for just under 26 big blinds total.

Mercier had pocket nines — the {9-Hearts}{9-Clubs} — and was well out in front of the {5-Diamonds}{5-Clubs} for Geilich. Unfortunately for the Team PokerStars Pro, the board ran out {10-Hearts}{6-Clubs}{4-Clubs}{5-Spades}{10-Diamonds}, and Geilich turned a set before finishing with a full house. With that, Mercier fell short in his quest for the final table and earned €29,900.

"I just felt like a five was coming," Mercier said to one of our reporter's in passing a day later. "It was just one of those feelings you have."

Today, things didn't get much better for Mercier. He was involved in Day 2 of this €25,500 High Roller and found himself returning from the last break to look down at the same hand — the {9-Hearts}{9-Clubs}.

This time, Stephen Chidwick opened the pot with a raise to 6,500 from middle position. Mercier was next in the hijack seat and reraised all in for 60,900. The action slid over to Pablo Melogno Cabrera on the button. He got counts on both Mercier and Chidwick, thought for a few moments, then reraised all in. Everyone, including Chidwick, folded, and it was Mercier with his nines against the {A-Diamonds}{Q-Spades} for Cabrera.

The flop came down {Q-Hearts}{Q-Clubs}{4-Diamonds} and delivered trip queens to Cabrera. The turn was the {2-Diamonds}, and the river was the {3-Spades}. This meant Mercier was gone from the event, as his pocket nines once again failed to hold up.

If you think this is bad, wait until you here about another instance in which Mercier had pocket nines and it cost him a whole heck of a lot of money.

Back at the 2013 World Series of Poker, Mercier was playing Day 3 of the 1,072-entry $3,000 No-Limit Hold'em event. The winner was set to get $592,684, and Mercier was in line for his third bracelet and a big payday, but he stood to win even more than that as 2013 was the year he made a large amount of WSOP bracelet bets.

With 16 players left, Mercier played a pot with Michael Rocco where about 20% of the chips in the entire event were in the middle. The money went in on the {9-Clubs}{7-Spades}{3-Spades}{7-Hearts} board with one card to come, and Mercier had Rocco dead to rights with the {9-Hearts}{9-Spades}. Rocco had the {A-Clubs}{A-Spades} and was in need of a two-outer.

But then, everything changed when the {A-Diamonds} smacked down on the river and gave Rocco a winning full house. It sent Mercier to the rail in 16th place, and he was left with a consolation prize of $21,773.

Of course, it's hard to quantify just how much equity these hands have been worth to Mercier because tournament poker can be a brutal game, but given his record over the years and the fact that he is widely considered one of the game's strongest minds, certainly hundreds of thousands of dollars have been lost had these hands held up.

It goes without saying that pocket nines haven't been that kind to Mercier.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Pablo Melogno uy
Pablo Melogno
375,000 100,400
Stephen Chidwick gb
Stephen Chidwick
105,000 -2,800
Jason Mercier us
Jason Mercier
EPT 1X Winner
Eliminado

Tags: Jason MercierLudovic GeilichPablo Melogno CabreraStephen Chidwick