Ludovic Riehl opened for 43,000, Raul Mestre three-bet to 100,000 and Giacomo Fundaro four-bet shoved. Andrea Benelli then cold called the all in. Riehl and Mestre folded.
So far Andreas Goeller's bluffs haven't really worked. He keeps building up his stack, but his bluffs are getting called which results in a drop of chips every now and then.
Just now we saw him check-call a 44,000 bet from the small blind on . His opponent, Jeffrey Hakim on the button, checked the on the turn behind. The river was the and Goeller bet out 100,000.
Hakim thought about it for a long time, but eventually called. This time Goeller didn't muck, but his wasn't going to take it down. Hakim showed and won a much needed pot to gain some breathing room.
Raul Mestre opened under the gun and was called by Andrea Benelli. Alex Kravchenko then moved all in from the big blind for 18 big blinds. Mestre folded and Benelli thought for a while before making the call.
Kravchenko showed the and it was a race for his tournament life against the of Benelli.
The cards ran out
It looked grim on the flop for Kravchenko, but the turn gave him 16 outs, and the river duly delivered a flush and salvation for the PokerStars Pro.
Jordan Westmorland opened for 50,000 under the gun and, not for the first time, Eros Nastasi shoved all in. This time it was for 458,000 total. It was 408,000 more to Westmorland after all other players folded. He thought about it for a little bit, then called.
Eros Nastasi:
Jordan Westmorland:
The flop was good for Westmorland as he picked up a flush draw on top of the already better hand he had. The on the turn brought some outs for Nastasi, but the on the river was a blank.
Nastasi gets €20,100 for his 18th place finish, the remaining 17 players are all guaranteed €22,575.
EPT first timer Jordan Westmorland is chip leading Day 4 of the Main Event, and he talks to Jennifer Robles about how good it feels to be in the money and on a good path.