Javier Gomez Zapatero opened to 25,000 and called the three-bet of Manuel Zapf from one seat over for 65,000 to see a heads-up flop of . The Spaniard check-called a bet worth 65,000 and did so again for 155,000 on the turn.
Once the fell on the river, Gomez Zapatero checked and Zapf fired for what looked like 380,000. The Spaniard threw in a red T-1,000 chip for the call of more than half his remaining stack, and Zapf mucked immediately. Ship a nice pot to Zapatero.
Marius Pospiech opened to 24,000 and Remigiusz Wyrzykiewicz three-bet on the button before Bart Kuiper four-bet in the big blind, also showing a t-shirt with the slogan "random button clicker". Pospiech folded and then both remaining players checked down the board of .
Remigiusz Wyrzykiewicz has soared pat the million-mark since returning from break. Many of those chips came curtesy of Miltiadis Kyriakides.
Kyriakides three-bet all in for 183,000 after an early position open. Wyrzykiewicz was in the small blind and made the call which was enough to fold out the original opener.
Wyrzykiewicz:
Kyriakides:
The board ran and Kyriakides shook Kyriakides' hand before departing.
Mitch Johnson opened to 26,000 in the cutoff and Stefan Schillhabel three-bet to 65,000 from one seat over. Then, the Brit clicked it to 116,000 and eventually folded when Schillhabel put in another reraise.
Arriving at the river of a board with plenty of chips in the middle, Nir Levy checked in the big blind and Noah Vaillancourt put in a last attempt to steal the pot with a bet of 155,000. Levy called and Vaillancourt quickly mucked his cards to drop down in chips.
Hossein Ensan opened to 24,000 and was called by Carlo Citrone in the small blind before Andrey Shatilov three-bet to 85,000 out of the big blind. Both Ensan and Citrone called and saw a three-way flop of ]9c] . The action was checked to Ensan and his bet of 110,000 won the pot without further action.
Ronny Voth defended his big blind against a raise by Sergio Aido and then check-called two streets before the board was laying complete with . Voth checked again and Aido moved all in for his last 183,000. The German tanked for minutes and eventually called to muck his cards once he was shown the of Aido.
The dealer first shipped over the chips and then flipped over Voth's inferior that were laying on top of the muck.
Sergio Aido lost a big pot to Rony Voth earlier but had the last laugh by busting the German player.
Voth had recovered to 110,000 but that was still very short. He woke up with in early position and in they went. Aido looked down at in the big blind and wasted no time in calling.
Sergio Aido min-raised and picked up two callers before Marius Pospiech moved all in for 140,000 with pocket nines. Bart Kuiper was the first player to call the initial raise and also called the shove of the German with , but failed to improve.
Fast Forward one minute, Noah Vaillancourt opened to 27,000 and Manuel Zapf three-bet to 63,000 before calling all in for effectively 341,000 when Vaillancourt had shoved. Zapf's spiked a set on the flop but Vaillancourt's picked up a straight draw with the turn. The river was safe for Zapf and he doubled.
In the last hand, Diogo Xavier Veiga moved all in for what looked like 160,000 and Koray Aldemir called with . Veiga had a flip for his tournament life with and got there on the board.
The World Poker Tour is headed to Amsterdam, and this is huge news for the Netherlands.
Host Remko Rinkema talks with WPT Europe General Manager Hermance Blum and PokerNews.NL leading man Frank Op de Woerd about the exciting news and what this really means for Holland.