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2013 PokerStars.com EPT Prague

€5,300 Main Event
Dias: 5
Event Info

2013 PokerStars.com EPT Prague

Resultado Final
Vencedor
Mão Vencedora
1010
Prémio
€725,700
Event Info
Buy-in
€5,000
Prize Pool
€4,883,950
Entradas
1,007
Informações sobre o nível
Nível
33
Blinds
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
30,000
Informações sobre o torneio - Dia 5

Track Leads Stacked EPT Prague Final Table that Includes Schemion, Silver & Chidwick

Nível 26 : 20,000/40,000, 5,000 ante
Julian Track
Julian Track

They say no one remembers who loses a football cup semi-final and in the poker world the penultimate day of the tournament is the semi-final. And what do you know, all our attention tonight is on the elite eight who have made the final table of the 1,007-runner EPT Prague Main Event.

Leading them is Julian Track. The German has 7,240,000 in chips and is in pole position to win the €889,000 first prize. When cards get in the air tomorrow the blinds will be 20,000-40,000 ante 5,000 meaning the average stack is a massive 94.4 big blinds.

Tomorrow’s cup final will almost certainly go to extra time as the descent from 22 to eight was one of the fastest ever seen on the EPT as it took less than two full levels of play to eliminate the 14 players necessary to set the final table. Interestingly, the top two stacks at the end of player were number one and two when play started today. However, their positions have been reversed and it’s Track who’ll lead the way.

The German’s ascent to the top owed everything to a huge hand he played against Ori Hasson with 13 players remaining. The two of them created a pre-flop pot of 7,605,000, Track was at risk with pocket tens, and Hasson helds two overs with the {A-Clubs}{Q-Diamonds}. The board stayed low coming {9-Diamonds}{9-Clubs}{6-Spades}{9-Spades}{6-Clubs}, and with that Hasson, who had got his hands on that stack by eliminating Lasell King, was left with just a couple of big blinds and was out in 12th soon after.

The other star of yesterday’s feature table was Max Silver, the Englishman was back on there today and picked up where he left off. He took care of Tamer Kamel (19th) and Artem Metalidi (17th) within the first hour and only relinquished the chip lead when Track won that huge pot. He played the big stack impressively applying pressure and putting other players to the test.

Silver formed a bad cop, bad cop UK partnership with Stephen Chidwick. When Silver would take a rest from sending players to the rail, Chidwick stepped into the breach. The 24-year-old, who seems like he’s been around forever, mainly because he has, eliminated no less than four players today. He claimed the scalps of Ihar Soika (18th), Dimitri Holdeew (15th), Nikita Nikolaev (14th) and Erwann Pecheux (11th). It’s likely that of Holdeew’s was the sweetest. The German won the Eureka Poker Tour Main Event on Thursday, eliminating Chidwick in third in the process. The Brit got some measure of revenge today and will start third tomorrow.

Completing the top half of the table is Georgios Sotiropoulos, the Greek player was the most active player on the outer table today, often seemingly involved in every pot. He folded to aggression in many of them but won the ones that mattered. Including the hand that ended play for the night when he eliminated Sigurd Eskeland in ninth place. Sotiropoulos flopped a set of sevens, Eskeland the nut flush draw, and it all went on in the turn when Eskeland turned a pair. Unfortunately for the Norwegian, he missed all his outs on the river. Furthermore, Sotiropoulos also denied Andrew Chen a fourth EPT Final Table when he sent the Canadian home in 13th place when his pair of eights held up against Chen’s {A-Spades}{J-Spades}.

Whilst the top four in the chip counts are the only ones with an above average stack the other four aren’t exactly short. Take Ka Kwan Lau for instance, his stack of 2,995,000 equates to almost 75 big blinds. He had a smooth day of steadily accumulating chips.

The same can’t be said of Ole Schemion, but then you wouldn’t of expected him to simply sit back and coast to the final table. Whilst he may have eliminated Romain Chauvassagne (20th) and Tapio Vihakas (16th). He also doubled up Sotiropoulos and lost a big pot to Silver. He actually finished the day with 300,000 less chips than he started. No matter, the German has 60 big blinds, a fearsome reputation and every chance of winning an EPT title tomorrow. Speaking of titles, he passed Daniel Negreanu to become the Global Poker Index’s 2013 Player of the Year.

Zdravko Duvnjak will start the final table with over 30 big blinds and has flown under the radar for large portions of the tournament. That all changed when he got moved to the feature table with 16 players left and he was under the spotlight in more ways than one with just 10 players remaining. All in and at risk with {Q-Spades}{9-Spades} he was behind to Radek Stockner’s {K-Hearts}{8-Hearts}, but a nine on the river kept him alive. Stockner, the last Czech player in the tournament, was left extremely short and was out soon afterwards in tenth.

What would an EPT final table be without some Nordic interest? Tomorrow their one representative will carry short stack status but don’t back against Jorma Nuutinen running up a stack. The Finn has shown no fear all week and a man with nothing to lose can be very dangerous indeed.

Remember tomorrow’s final table will be broadcast on pokerstars.tv and it’s a ‘cards up’ final table which means we’ll be blogging and they’ll be broadcasting on a one-hour delay. So join us, James Hartigan and Joe Stapleton from 1 p.m. local time for the final table.

In the meantime, follow the action from the €10,000 High Roller and check out Sarah Grant's Christmas Movie video:

Tags: Julian TrackMax SilverOle Schemion