Ognyan Dimov limped the button with the and Matthias Tikerpe moved all in from the big blind for 3.24 million with the . Dimov asked for a count and used one time bank before calling.
Both players hit a pair on the flop, and the turn and the river secured the second double up for Tikerpe in quick succession.
Rodrigo Carmo raised to 350,000 with the and Matthias Tikerpe called in the small blind with , as did Piotr Nurzynski in the big blind with . The flop of gave Carmo top two pair and his small bet of 350,000 got rid of both opponents.
Ognyan Dimov raised to 350,000 with and Nurzynski flat-called with in the small blind. Carmo also called with in the big blind and the three players checked the flop. On the turn, Nurzynski bet 700,000 and two folds followed.
Rodrigo Carmo raised to 320,000 from under the gun and saw Matthias Tikerpe call in the small blind , and Piotr Nurzynski call in the big blind with .
The flop came down , and the players in the blinds checked to Rodrigo Carmo whose continuation bet was enough to win the pot after both players folded.
Haoxiang Wang raised to 350,000 in the small blind with the and Pedro Marques called in the big blind with . The two players headed to a flop of and a bet of 355,000 by Wang did the trick.
One hand later, Wang raised on the button to 350,000 with the and Marques called in the small blind with . The flop brought and Marques checked, Wang checked behind. After the turn, Wang checked and called a delayed continuation bet worth 400,000 to pick up a call from Marques. There was no further action on the river and Marques scooped the pot.
The remaining six players have bagged up for the day and will return at lunchtime tomorrow to play down to a champion. A recap of today's action is to follow.
The final six of the 2018 PokerStars European Poker Tour Barcelona €5,300 Main Event is set after Day 5 saw seven players eliminated from the proceedings.
Haoxiang Wang (16,200,000) will return as the chip leader after he saw his stack rise early in the day and continued his momentum into the final table. Piotr Nurzynski is close behind on 15,425,000 with Ognyan Dimov in third place on 10,125,000. Matthias Tikerpe will return with 7,100,000, and the line-up is completed by the Portuguese duo of Pedro Marques (6,925,000) and Rodrigo Carmo (2,000,000).
Dimov is still in with a shot of becoming only the second-ever player in EPT history to win two Main Events after Vicky Coren-Mitchell.
Seat Assignments for the Final Day
Seat
Player
Country
Chip Count
Big Blinds
1
Matthias Tikerpe
Estonia
7,100,000
35
2
Piotr Nurzynski
Poland
15,425,000
77
3
Rodrigo Carmo
Portugal
2,000,000
10
4
Haoxiang Wang
China
16,200,000
81
5
Pedro Marques
Portugal
6,950,000
35
6
Ognyan Dimov
Bulgaria
10,125,000
50
Remaining Payouts
Place
Prize (in EUR)
Prize (in USD)
1
€1,611,500
$1,870,178
2
€859,050
$996,945
3
€590,000
$684,707
4
€424,250
$492,353
5
€354,200
$411,056
6
€287,050
$333,127
Results of Day 5 at a Glance
Place
Winner
Country
Prize (in EUR)
Prize (in USD)
7
Mark Buckley
Ireland
€220,000
$255,314
8
Patrick Clarke
Ireland
€155,000
$179,881
9
John Juanda
Indonesia
€118,265
$137,249
10
Georges Hanna
Lebanon
€98,900
$114,775
11
Fabiano Kovalski
Brazil
€98,900
$114,775
12
Ben Heath
United Kingdom
€88,250
$102,416
13
Danny Tang
Hong Kong
€88,250
$102,416
Action of the day Danny Tang was the first player to exit on Day 5 when Pedro Marques hit a full house against him. Tang held ace-nine on the three-three-deuce-ten-nine board, but Marques had ten-three. Tang was put to the ultimate test on the river when Marques put him all in. Tang threw all of his time bank cards into the middle, ultimately made the call and saw the bad news before he departed in 13th place for €88,250.
Ben Heath (12th place - €88,250), Fabiano Kovalski (11th - €98,900) and Georges Hanna (10th - €98,900) also missed out on a spot at the unofficial final table.
In a pivotal hand that set the tone for the day, Kovalski lost a 10m chip pot against Haoxiang Wang, when he called an all in with pocket jacks only to see Wang reveal pocket kings. Wang held to take the chip lead at the time with Kovalski left short and the latter departed shortly afterward.
When the final nine sat down to battle, there was not one, but two former EPT champions remaining in the form of Dimov and John Juanda. Both were looking to become only the second person to win two EPT Main Events, but Juanda's dream was not alive for long, and it was Dimov that ended it.
In a classic coinflip situation, Juanda needed to hold with pocket tens against Dimov's ace-queen. The queen-three-three flop saw Dimov take the lead and by the river he had hit two pair to eliminated Juanda in 9th place for €118,265.
At this point, Dimov and Wang had full control of the table, and the other players were all just trying to outlast each other to attain a vital pay jump.
In the line-up for final eight was the Irish duo of Patrick Clarke and Mark Buckley, but by the end of the day, both had exited.
Clarke was first to depart when he made a move from the small blind with pocket nines. Piotr Nurzynski had raised from under the gun and saw both Haoxiang Wang and Pedro Marques call. With the action on Clarke, he moved all in for close to 30 big blinds. Nurzynski asked for a count before he reshoved, which got Wang and Marques, who held pocket tens, to fold.
Nurzynski had Clarke crushed with pocket aces, and the board confirmed Clarke's elimination in 8th place for €155,000.
After seeing his compatriot depart the table, Buckley was looking for better luck, but he ultimately had the same fate as Clarke, with Nurzynski scoring another knockout.
Buckley had called a raise from Nurzynski in the big blind with jack-ten, and the jack-deuce-deuce flop gave him two pair. Buckley opted to check-shove on Nurzynski and was called. Nurzynski held ace-king suited for the nut flush draw and hit on the queen of clubs turn to take the lead. Buckley needed to hit a full house on the river but it was not to be, and he walked away in 7th place for €220,000.
With the field down to six, they played out the remaining 25 minutes of the level before they bagged their chips and will return on Sunday, September, 2 at noon local time.
PokerNews will be back with all the coverage of the final day as the PokerStars European Tour Barcelona Main Event champion is crowned.