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2015 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino EPT Grand Final

€10,600 Main Event
Dias: 1b
Event Info

2015 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino EPT Grand Final

Resultados Finais
Campeão
Mão Vencedora
a8
Premiação
€1,082,000
Event Info
Buy-in
€10,000
Premiação
€5,640,000
Entries
564
Informações do Nível
Nível
31
Blinds
60,000 / 120,000
Ante
20,000

Paon Leads, Stephensen Thrives & Slew of Team Pros Bag on Day 1b

Nível 8 : 300/600, 75 ante
Felix Stephensen
Felix Stephensen

Day 1b of the 2015 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino European Poker Tour Grand Final €10,600 Main Event saw 337 players turn out for eight levels of play. Along with Day 1a's 219 entrants, the total field currently stands at 556, though it's sure to go up as registration is open until the start of Day 2.

By the end of the night, 186 players remained with France's Romain Paon and his stack of 161,900 leading the way, which was a bit less than Jose Carlos Garcia, who was the Day 1a chip leader with 182,800. To date, Paon's biggest score was €22,000 for a runner-up finish in the 2012 Barriere Poker Tour Deauville Main Event. Paon is an online reg who is playing his first live event for Team PMU Poker after winning an online contest called "Challenge ProDream."

Others who bagged up big stacks were Eric Sfez (148,600), Samy Salah (144,500), and Felix Stephensen (143,000), just to name a few. As for Stephensen, who you may remember finished runner-up in the 2014 World Series of Poker Main Event, he had a fairly even-keel day as he slowly built his stack to the fourth-biggest in the room.

"It wasn't a really big one hand," Stephensen told PokerNews. "Flopping big, getting paid, getting lucky with some hero calls."

Stephensen then explained one bit of luck he had was going broke with pocket queens on a {a-}{q-}{7-} flop with two diamonds. The {J-Diamonds} turn slowed the action, and the {10-Diamonds} river brought it to a grinding halt. It was a good thing too as Stephensen's opponent had flopped a bigger set with pocket aces.

Of course not everyone was so lucky. Among those to swing and miss on Day 1b were reigning World Poker Tour Player of the Year Anthony Zinno; former EPT champ Toby Lewis; French pro Erwann Pecheux; Canadian Sorel Mizzi; German cardsharps Philipp Gruissem and Max Lehmanski; Team PokerStars Pro Leo Margets; and EPT8 champ Mohsin Charania.

The man known as "chicagocards1" fell in the last level of the night at the hands of Eros Nastasi. It happened after a player opened for 1,500 in middle position, and Charania shipped all in for 6,725 from the cutoff. Nastasi called from the big blind, and the original raiser folded.

Charania: {a-Diamonds}{9-Spades}
Nastasi: {a-Hearts}{j-Clubs}

Charania had a kicker issue, and it did not get solved as the board ran out a clean {10-Hearts}{2-Clubs}{10-Spades}{3-Hearts}{q-Diamonds}.

While dozens fell, plenty of notables survived the day including Faraz Jaka (90,400), David Peters (90,200), Jeremy Ausmus (75,000), Simon Deadman (63,600), Sergio Aido (62,200), Viktor "Isildur1" Blom (51,900), and Team PokerStars Pros Vanessa Selbst (66,200), Johnny Lodden (65,400), Ivan Demidov (64,900), Liv Boeree (30,100), Jake Cody (11,700), and Fatima Moreira De Melo (10,800).

As for Selbst, she had an up-and-down day, which included a key double in Level 3 (100/200). With approximately 15,000 already in the pot and a board reading {3-Spades}{a-Spades}{q-Hearts}{8-Diamonds}{j-Hearts}, Selbst moved all in for roughly 17,500 from the small blind, and Giacomo Fundaro called from the cutoff. Selbst rolled over the {3-Clubs}{3-Hearts} and her Italian foe simply mucked.

The surviving players from both flights will return on Monday at Noon local time for Day 2 action. Players such as Daniel Negreanu and Phil Ivey are expected to join before the start of play. The plan is to play six 75-minute levels with no dinner break, meaning play will come to an end at approximately 10:15 p.m. The PokerNews Live Reporting Team will here every step of the way to capture all the action in our live blog, so be sure to check back then.

While you wait, check out our video with Stephensen:

Tags: Felix StephensenRomain Paon

Nastasi Eliminates Charania

Nível 8 : 300/600, 75 ante
Mohsin Charania
Mohsin Charania

Mohsin "chicagocards1" Charania, a former champion here at European Poker Tour Monte Carlo who also has a pair of WPT wins to his name, just had his tournament ended by Eros Nastasi. A player opened for 1,500 in middle position, and Charania shipped all in for 6,725 in the cutoff. Action folded to big blind Eros Nastasi, who called, and the opener dumped his hand.

Charania: {a-Diamonds}{9-Spades}
Nastasi: {a-Hearts}{j-Clubs}

The Italian had Charania dominated, and the board ran out {10-Hearts}{2-Clubs}{10-Spades}{3-Hearts}{q-Diamonds}, booting Charania from the tournament.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Eros Nastasi it
Eros Nastasi
28,300
Mohsin Charania us
Mohsin Charania
EPT 1X Winner
Eliminado

Tags: Mohsin CharaniaEros Nastasi

An Orbit with Online Superstar Viktor "Isildur1" Blom

Nível 6 : 200/400, 50 ante
Viktor Blom
Viktor Blom

Late last week, Viktor "Isildur1" Blom was busy winning himself a million dollars online in a single day, a feat documented in the latest edition of PokerNews' Online Railbird Report. Today, Blom's in action here in the EPT11 Grand Final Main Event, and we decided to spend an orbit with the Swede to see if his live game is as good as his online shenanigans.

The orbit happened at the tail end of Level 5, and Blom was sitting with 20,950.

Hand #1 (Under the Gun): Blom folded.

Hand #2 (Big Blind): The under-the-gun player raised to 1,000 and action folded to Blom, who also folded.

Hand #3 (Small Blind): The under-the-gun player raised to 650 and everyone folded, including Blom.

Hand #4 (Button): A player in early position raised to 700 and Blom folded after action had folded to him.

Hand #5 (Cutoff): A player in the under-the-gun raised to 700 and Blom folded after action had folded to him.

Hand #6 (Hijack): Action folds around to Blom, who also folds.

Hand #7 (Lowjack): Action folds to Blom, he raises to 1,000, and takes down the blinds and antes.

Hand #8 (Middle Position): Action folds to Blom and he releases. Level 5 expired, which seemed like a good place to stop.

Clearly Blom is content to play patiently, which is definitely a different gear than we're used to. We'll see if we can't catch the young superstar in a notable hand or two as the day progresses.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Viktor Blom se
Viktor Blom
21,000

Tags: Viktor Blom

Grisa Spikes River to Score Double Elimination & Vaults Into Chip Lead

Nível 4 : 100/200, 25 ante
Luigi Mario Grisa
Luigi Mario Grisa

Switzerland's Luigi Mario Grisa just got lucky to knock out two opponents. It also vaulted him into the chip lead.

It happened when Grisa opened for 700 from middle position and received a call from Russia's Andrey Shatilov. Italy's Pietro Alerci then called from the button, and Japan's Shinobu Tanaka three-bet all in for roughly 12,000 from the big blind. Grisa called, Shatilov folded, and Alerci four-bet jammed for 24,250 total. Grisa, who was sitting on a big stack kind of shrugged and dropped in a call.

Grisa: {a-Spades}{j-Diamonds}
Alerci: {10-Hearts}{10-Spades}
Tanaka: {q-Diamonds}{q-Spades}

Tanaka was ahead in the main pot, while Alerci was the side pot favorite. The {9-Clubs}{5-Clubs}{5-Diamonds} flop changed nothing, and neither did the {7-Clubs} turn. The only way for Grisa to win was to catch an ace on the river, and much to the dismay of his two opponents, that's exactly what happened when the {A-Clubs} spiked!

Tanaka and Alercia both seemed stunned, eventually composing themselves enough to take their leave while Grisa was pushed the pot.

Jogador Fichas Progresso
Luigi Grisa ch
Luigi Grisa
100,000 100,000
Shinobu Tanaka jp
Shinobu Tanaka
Eliminado
Andrey Shatilov ru
Andrey Shatilov
Eliminado

Tags: Andrey ShatilovLuigi Mario GrisaPietro AlerciShinobu Tanaka

Rapid Reaction: Is Erik Seidel the G.O.A.T.?

Nível 3 : 100/200, 0 ante
Erik Seidel
Erik Seidel

Before the 2015 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino European Poker Tour Grand Final began, one of the things we hyped was that the €100,000 Super High Roller field could be the largest ever. With 71 entries, our prediction was spot on.

One thing we didn't focus on, though, was the chance at a big, superstar winner. The thing is, there was probably somewhere around a 95-percent chance that this event was going to be won by one of poker's biggest names. That, or a talented, new young gun was going to walk away with the title. When the final river card fell, we had the former with Erik Seidel hoisting the trophy, but his win is much more than we hoped for.

In poker, when the term "G.O.A.T." is thrown around (meaning greatest of all time), the list of names is short, often containing the select bunch of Phil Ivey, Chip Reese, and Daniel Negreanu. But, Seidel has shown us time and time again that he deserves to be in the argument as the greatest. Now, with this premier €2 million win, the case has never been stronger.

It's really no secret that this writer considers Ivey the greatest poker player of all time, but I'm starting to have a bit of a change of heart because what Seidel continues to do is nothing short of amazing. He even leapfrogged Ivey (and Daniel Colman) on poker's all-time money list with his latest victory and now ranks third all time.

For argument's sake, if you throw out the World Series of Poker Big One for One Drop, Seidel is poker's top all-time money earner, and Ivey is second. Both have well over $20 million in live tournament earnings, but failed to score a results-inflating payday from the One Drop event.

Side by side, let's see how these two stack up across several important categories:

PlayerTotal $ WonAll-TIme RankTotal CashesOpen WinsBraceletsWSOP CashesWPT Titles$1M+ Scores$1M+ Years
Ivey$22,482,6915th140241056168
Seidel$24,065,9413rd22426890136

As you can see, the two have their fair share of wins in a particular category. While Ivey is widely considered the game's greatest, Seidel has certainly done his part to close the gap.

Looking deeper at those numbers, Ivey has the edge in average earnings per cash result, win percentage when cashing, and WSOP gold bracelets. Seidel has won more all time, both money and open events, has more cashes all time, and he's been doing it for longer. His tournament cashes date back to 1988 versus Ivey's first that came 10 years later in 1998. Over the last 30 years, it is without a doubt that no player has stood the test of time in a more impressive fashion.

Seidel is also a member of the Poker Hall of Fame, having been inducted in 2010 alongside Dan Harrington. In the years since his induction, Seidel has earned over $13.7 million, or nearly 57 percent of his total live tournament earnings. Ivey has yet to be inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame, but that will likely come in 2016 when he will turn 40 on Feb. 1 to meet the minimum age requirement.

Talking to many players around the tournament circuit, especially those in the game's younger generation, Seidel's no-limit hold'em tournament game ranks better than Ivey's, and that's the format all of the biggest events are played these days.

With this victory, Seidel gave us, the poker media and audience, another piece of evidence that he should be right up there when talking about who is poker's G.O.A.T. At 55 years old, he is poker's elder statesman, and no matter how many new young guns storm onto the scene, he continues to showcase timeless talent and enthusiasm.

Tags: Big One for One DropChip ReeseDaniel NegreanuErik SeidelPhil Ivey

Welcome to Day 1b of the EPT11 Grand Final Main Event

EPT11 Grand Final Main Event
EPT11 Grand Final Main Event

Welcome back to the 2015 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino European Poker Tour Grand Final. Today features a jam-packed schedule that includes the one-day €50,000 High Roller, the Shark Cage finale, and of course Day 1b of the €10,600 Main Event. PokerNews will be providing coverage from both the €50,000 High Roller and Main Event, with the latter being the focus of this blog.

Yesterday, 219 players took to the felt for Day 1a, and double that is expect for the second flight, which is traditionally the largest. Late registration is open until the start of Day 2, so there's a good chance those preoccupied with the aforementioned events, like Daniel Negreanu and Phil Ivey who're both in the Shark Cage final, will either register late or jump into action tomorrow.

Still, plenty of big names are expected to be in action, each looking to replicate Juan Carlos Garcia's success on Day 1a, which is when he bagged up 182,800 to finish as the chip leader among the 113 survivors. Others who thrived on Day 1a were Joao Simao (179,100), Nicolas Chouity (168,200), Steven Zhou (158,000), and Roger Hairabedian (153,800). In addition, they were joined by a slew of notables including Ole Schemion (121,600), Steve O'Dwyer (109,000), Ivan Soshnikov (64,700), Dan Heimiller (53,200), Mike "Timex" McDonald (49,500), Martin Jacobson (42,000), and Team PokerStars Pros Andre Akkari (114,900), Eugene Katchalov (95,600), Jason Mercier (74,900) and Isaac Haxton (33,200).

The plan for the day is to play eight more 75-minute levels. The PokerNews Live Reporting Team will here there every step of the way to capture all the action in our live blog, so be sure to stay tuned.