Guillon Flushed
Vincent Guillon was short stacked and all in with preflop against his opponent’s . Hartigan and Stapes would not be impressed, but Guillon let out a yelp of delight as the cards ran out giving him the flush.
Vincent Guillon was short stacked and all in with preflop against his opponent’s . Hartigan and Stapes would not be impressed, but Guillon let out a yelp of delight as the cards ran out giving him the flush.
A ação começou com um jogador a abrir o pote com raise para 2,500 e um outro (hijack) a fazer call. Diogo Cardoso fez raise para 7,000 no botão e recebe call do raiser inicial. O adversário no hijack mete 17,000 no centro e Norte empurra as suas 64,000. Call do hijack
O de Norte bateu no do villain e sem ajuda da board (na foto) foi eliminado.
Nikolas Segredakis was looking good for a double up when he was all in with on a board against Ghattas Kortas' . The changed nothing but the on the river caused a Greek tragedy.
Kortas is one of the chip leaders.
Jogador | Fichas | Oscilação |
---|---|---|
Ghattas Kortas |
230,000
20,000
|
20,000 |
Nikolas Segredakis | Eliminado |
It's a running joke that king-queen is the 'nuts' on PokerStars due to the frequency with which it outflops better hands, well for some balance here are two hands in which it didn't win.
In the first Ozgur Arda moved all-in for 13,400 from middle position with and Giuliano Bendinelli made the call with . The board meant Arda spiked the river to survive.
On another table Tobias Wenker was all-in for 60,000 with and in bad shape against Anthony Lerust's it didn't get any better on the board and Lerust let out a big sigh of relief as he took the pot.
One of the earliest fallers on Day 2 was one of the biggest names left in the field. PokerStars Blog watches ElkY depart EPT Deauville — but he was far from the first to go in a busy start to the day.
Pierre Neuville opened to 3,000 preflop before calling a three-bet to 8,100 from Christian Aris.
The flop was and Aris quickly moved all in, Neuville instantly called.
Aris:
Neuville:
The turn and river were both blanks and Neuville doubled up.
Jogador | Fichas | Oscilação |
---|---|---|
Pierre Neuville |
55,000
-8,600
|
-8,600 |
|
||
Christian Aris
|
35,000
12,100
|
12,100 |
On a flop Ekrem Sanioglu fired out a bet of 6,000 only for Emile Petit to move all-in for 27,300 total. Back on Sanioglu he tanked before folding face up, Petit showed him as he took the pot.
On a board Sfez pushed all in to effectively put Oliver Price all in for his last 37,500. The man from the United Kingdom didn't know how quickly he wanted to get his chips in and called.
Sfez showed first and confidently tabled . Price tabled seconds later, still looking a bit dazed by Sfez' swift show. Swift show or not, six-five wasn't much of anything on this board and Price was pushed the pot with his flush.
Jogador | Fichas | Oscilação |
---|---|---|
Eric Sfez |
79,900
-9,600
|
-9,600 |
Who would you say is the best EPT Deauville champion ever? Plastic rat-waving Lucien Cohen? Bright red hoodie hiding Jake Cody? Player turned helicopter pilot Brandon Schaefer? The PokerStars blog takes a look and introduces the (somewhat flaky) concept of the EPT champion streak.
Abdel Boukbir from France opened from the button for 2,500 and small blind Sebastian Gohr moved all in. The big blind folded and it was decision time for Boukbir who had 14,000 behind and would be the at risk player if called. Boukbir gave him the full chat, running through the full gamut of hands his opponent could possibly have. He tried the “Do you want to go home?” and moved on to the “Do you want a call.” Gohr would only respond laughing, “I don’t know what you have. It’s really up to you.” It was and Boukbir made the fold reasoning that “It can wait.”