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2013 PokerStars.com EPT Barcelona

€50,000 Super High Roller
Dias: 3
Event Info

2013 PokerStars.com EPT Barcelona

Resultado Final
Vencedor
Mão Vencedora
a5
Prémio
€771,300
Event Info
Buy-in
€48,500
Entradas
51
Informações sobre o nível
Nível
24
Blinds
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
30,000

Quoss Shoves on Timex

Nível 19 : 30,000/60,000, 10,000 ante

Mike "Timex" McDonald opened for 140,000 from middle position holding the {k-Hearts}{q-Diamonds} only to have Fabian Quoss, who looked down at the {8-Spades}{8-Hearts} in the hijack, shoved all in for 880,000. Action folded back to McDonald and he thought for about 45 seconds before releasing his hand.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Profile photo of Mike McDonald ca
Mike McDonald
2,400,000
-125,000
-125,000
EPT 1X Winner
Profile photo of Fabian Quoss de
Fabian Quoss
1,190,000
70,000
70,000

Tags: Mike McDonaldFabian Quoss

Benefield Doubles Early

Nível 19 : 30,000/60,000, 10,000 ante

Ole Schemion opened his cutoff with a raise and David Benefield shipped all in from the button for his last 880,000. It folded back to Schemion who called.

Schemion: {A-Clubs}{K-Clubs}
Benefield: {A-Spades}{A-Hearts}

Benefield was a huge favorite to double up and secured it after the board dropped down {3-Spades}{10-Spades}{3-Clubs}{7-Hearts}{Q-Clubs}. Benefield now sits around 1.9 million while Schemion has dropped out of the chip lead and has 2.2 million.

Jogador Fichas Oscilação
Profile photo of Ole Schemion de
Ole Schemion
2,200,000
-635,000
-635,000
Profile photo of David Benefield us
David Benefield
1,900,000
880,000
880,000

Tags: David BenefieldOle Schemion

Alexander Stevic Looks Back On Making EPT History

Nível 19 : 30,000/60,000, 10,000 ante
Season 1 EPT Barcelona Champ Alexander Stevic.
Season 1 EPT Barcelona Champ Alexander Stevic.

Ten years ago the first ever EPT main event was held right here in Barcelona. A field of 229 players took their seats, making Tour history as they did so, particularly one Swedish player Alexander Stevic who would be crowned the first ever EPT winner, as the PokerStars Blog reports.

Tags: PokerStars Blog

Nível: 19

Blinds: 30,000/60,000

Ante: 10,000

Seat 1: Timothy Adams (845,000)

Timothy Adams - Seat 1
Timothy Adams - Seat 1

Despite bringing the smallest stack into the final eight, Timothy Adams is no stranger to high pressure situations and success on the poker circuit. Adams, a Canadian professional poker player hailing from Burlington, ON, holds over $1.6 million in live tournament winnings to his name. Adams is also known for his online play under the name "Tim0thee".

Adams' live tournament results date back as far as 2007, but he found true glory during the summer of 2012 at the World Series of Poker. During that summer, Adams scored an impressive five cashes, one of which happened to be a victory and a WSOP bracelet. Adams conquered the field of Event 28: $2,500 No-Limit Hold'em Four-Handed to clinch his first bracelet win and pocket over $392,000 in prize money.

Despite his WSOP bracelet being one of, if not the most prestigious items on Adams' live poker resume, his largest cash came earlier this year at the 2013 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino EPT Grand Final. Adams scored a fourth-place finish in the €100,000 Super High Roller which netted him €485,100 in prize money ($636,088) for the largest live tournament score of his life. If Adams can work his short stack up and best the field today, he will break his personal record set at the EPT Grand Final and find a new event sitting at the top of his resume.

Seat 2: Steve O'Dwyer (1,015,000)

Steve O'Dwyer - Seat 2
Steve O'Dwyer - Seat 2

Steve O'Dwyer is a familiar face on the European Poker Tour and may be best known for winning the 2013 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo® Casino EPT Grand Final Main Event. In what was the final Main Event of the EPT 9 season, O'Dwyer bested what was one of the most stacked final tables in EPT history. O'Dwyer conquered the likes of Jason Mercier, Daniel Negreanu, Johnny Lodden, Jake Cody, Noah Schwartz, and Grant Levy to pocket the €1,224,000 in first-place prize money as well as the title and the trophy.

Prior to winning that prestigious event, O'Dwyer was still a staple of the tournament circuit and found much success worldwide. O’Dwyer’s first big score was back in 2009 when he came sixth in the World Poker Tour Doyle Brunson Five Diamond World Poker Classic for more than $213,796, but it was 2011 when the communications graduate had his breakthrough year. O’Dwyer won nearly $1.5 million that year and snagged a further $880,000 in 2012, tearing through EPT Season 8 with a fifth place in the EPT Barcelona €10,000 High Roller, a runner-up finish at EPT London for £465,000, and seventh at EPT Copenhagen for DKr 290,000. O’Dwyer originally hails from the United States but now holds an Irish passport and now lives in Dublin where he plays poker online.

Seat 3: Mike McDonald (2,300,000)

Mike McDonald - Seat 3
Mike McDonald - Seat 3

Born in 1989 in Waterloo, Ontario, Mike McDonald is a Canadian professional poker player best known for being the youngest-ever European Poker Tour champion. McDonald won the EPT Dortmund Main Event in 2008 and pocketed €933,600 for his impressive showing.

While his breakout showing in Dortmund remains McDonald's largest score on the EPT, he has found much success at other events since. In 2010, McDonald made a final table appearance that resulted in a third place finish at the EPT Prague Main Event. McDonald pocketed a cool €295,000 for this showing. Not too long after, McDonald claimed victory at the 2010 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em side event where his first place showing won him over $146,000.

McDonald started playing poker when he was a teenager and soon became known at the online poker tables by his nickname “Timex”, a moniker that he still goes by to this day. Despite being a short stack for a majority of the early final table play during Day 2, McDonald managed to build a stack and will be entering this final table third in chips with 2.3 million.

Tags: Mike McDonald

Seat 4: Fabian Quoss (1,120,000)

Fabian Quoss - Seat 4
Fabian Quoss - Seat 4

Hailing from Nuremberg, Germany, Fabian Quoss is a professional poker player who is no stranger to success at the tables. Quoss, who has over $3.1 million in lifetime live tournament winnings, burst onto the live scene back in 2009. At the 40th World Series of Poker, Quoss made a deep run in the $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em event that eventually resulted in a runner-up finish. This deep run allowed Quoss to pocket $427,911 and from there Quoss' tournament winnings continued to grow.

Just over one year later, Quoss added his first live tournament win to his resume when he took down the £3,500 English Poker Open Main Event in London.

While these early highlights showcase the talent that helped propel Quoss onto the live tournament scene, the young poker superstar has found much success in high roller tournaments as of late. Quoss scored his largest lifetime live score earlier this year at the 2013 Aussie Millions AU$250,000 Challenge when he finished in third place for a AU$750,000 payday. Just one month later, Quoss found himself with another third place finish, this time at the EPT 9 London High Roller event. Quoss is clearly no stranger to high pressure and high buy in events and will certainly be a force to be reckoned with at this final table.

Seat 5: Erik Seidel (1,145,000)

Erik Seidel
Erik Seidel

Erik Seidel is no stranger to the poker scene, and he's especially no stranger to high buy-in events like this one. He won the Aussie Millions $250,000 Challenge in 2011 for AU$2,500,000. That same year Seidel took third in the $100,000 Challenge for AU$625,000. Needless to say, the Poker Hall of Famer, who has more than $17.6 million in career earnings, knows just what he is doing in big buy-in events.

In 2003, Seidel took fourth in the AU$2,000 Limit Omaha Hi/Lo event for AU$9,200, then took second in the AU$1,000 Pot-Limit Hold'em event for AU$35,000. In 2007, Seidel placed second in the $100,000 Challenge for AU$550,000 and topped that earning the next year when he came runner-up in the Aussie Millions Main Event for AU$1,000,000. He then won the AU$10,000 Pot-Limit Omaha in 2010 for AU$120,000 in 2010, but 2011 proved to be his best year ever Down Under.

Born in New York City in 1959, Seidel always had a gifted mind for games of all kinds. He took up backgammon while in college and soon dropped out to pursue a professional career playing the game. New York’s famous Mayfair Club was like a second home to Seidel. There he was able to hone his skills against some of the best players around.

Seidel traveled around playing backgammon tournaments for about eight years before making some forays into the stock market. With more and more people indulging in poker at the Mayfair Club, Seidel decided to give it a shot. Poker wasn’t his only source of income though, as Seidel took up a regular job as a stockbroker with much more of a secure income. The security of a regular paycheck went out the window though in 1987 when the stock market crashed and Seidel lost his job. Luckily, he still had poker.

The Mayfair Club was growing with players and Seidel soon became one of the best of them, along with the likes of Howard Lederer and Dan Harrington. It was around this time that Seidel took a shot in Vegas at the 1988 World Series where he ended up placing second in the Main Event to the world renowned Johnny Chan. A few years later in 1991, Seidel would return to place second in another WSOP event. It would only take one more year for his wrist to be wrapped in WSOP gold.

In 1992, Seidel captured his first bracelet followed by a second bracelet in 1993. Another year later saw Erik walk away from the WSOP with another bracelet. The 1998 was another good year at the Series for Seidel. He was able to cash four times and win his fourth bracelet. One more year later, Seidel made a run at the WSOP Main Event again, this time placing fourth for almost $280,000.

Taking the next logical step, Seidel moved out to Vegas with his wife and from there the winnings just seemed to pile up. The years 2001, 2003, 2005, and 2007 all saw Seidel walk away from WSOP with more gold wrapped around his wrist to give him a total of eight bracelets.

Erik Seidel's Top 8 WSOP Results

YearEventPlacePrize
1992$2,500 Limit Hold'em1st$168,000
1993$2,500 Omaha 8 or Better1st$94,000
1994$5,000 Limit Hold'em1st$210,000
1998$5,000 No-Limit Deuce to Seven Draw1st$132,750
2001$3,000 No-Limit Texas Hold'em1st$411,300
2003$1,500 Pot-Limit Omaha1st$146,100
2005$2,000 No-Limit Hold'em1st$611,795
2007$5,000 No-Limit Deuce to Seven Draw1st$538,835

Australia and the WSOP aren't the only places Seidel shines. He had a deep, second-place run at the Jack Binion World Poker Open in 2002 along with wins at Festa Al Lago II and III, where he secured wins in both events. In 2008 Seidel took down the World Poker Tour Foxwoods Poker Classic for almost $1 million.

The big questions is... can Seidel notch his first EPT win here today? Only time will tell!

Tags: Erik Seidel