Padraig O'Neill limped on the button with J♣7♣ and Jon Kyte checked his option with 9♣4♣.
Both players flopped a flush draw on the Q♠2♣8♣ flop and Kyte checked to O'Neill, who bet 400,000. Kyte then check-raised to 1,300,000 and O'Neill called.
Kyte continued for 2,700,000 on the J♠ turn and O'Neill again called after pairing his jack to go along with his flush draw.
The 2♠ fell on the river and Kyte placed a hefty 7,000,000 bet into the middle. O'Neill mulled it over and tossed his hand into the muck — awarding the large pot to Kyte on a successful bluff.
Jon Kyte opened to 1,000,000 from the button with K♠9♠ and Padraig O'Neill called with J♠4♣. Kyte made top pair on the 9♥6♦5♦ flop and continued for 1,400,000 and O'Neill let go of his hand.
In a limped pot to the J♦8♥6♦ flop, Kyte check-folded his 4♦2♥ after O'Neill bet 800,000 with his J♥10♠.
Kyte raised to 1,000,000 the hand after with J♣8♣. O'Neill had Kyte dominated with K♥J♠ and called. Both players paired their jack on the J♥3♥2♦ flop. O'Neill, with the better kicker, check-raised to 2,300,000 over a bet of 800,000 and was called.
The 3♣ came on the turn to bring in some chop outs. O'Neill fired out another 3,000,000 and was called.
There were 13,100,000 chips in the middle, and O'Neill had the best hand. He moved all in for 7,150,000 on the 10♦ river. Kyte was unable to lay down his top pair holding and called after using a couple of time bank cards.
O'Neill doubled up with the better kicker and reclaimed the chip lead.
Jon Kyte opened to 1,000,000 from the button with Q♦9♠. Padraig O'Neill called with 10♣4♣. O'Neill then check-folded to a bet of 800,000 on the Q♥7♦6♣ flop.
O'Neill made it 1,000,000 with J♠2♥ the hand after. Kyte folded J♣4♦ in the big blind.
The following hand, Kyte had a premium with A♣K♣ and made it 1,000,000 from the button. O'Neill defended with 9♦4♦. Both players paired up on the K♥9♥6♥ flop, with Kyte having the best of it. O'Neill check-called for 800,000. Kyte made trips on the K♦ turn and saw O'Neill check-call again for 2,050,000. The 4♠ completed the board and O'Neill checked for a third time. Kyte sized up to 9,500,000 into a pot of 8,2000,000. O'Neill got away from his kings and nines as Kyte retook the lead.
Jon Kyte opened to 1,300,000 with 9♦4♦ and Padraig O'Neill defended with Q♣8♣. O'Neill's queen-high was already best, but the Irishman welcomed the J♣5♥2♣ flop as he had a flush draw. He check-called for 1,300,000. The 10♥ turn kept O'Neill ahead and he checked. Kyte bet 3,750,000 and after a few moments, O'Neill jammed and Kyte laid down his nine-high.
The hand after, O'Neill opened to 1,200,000 with 8♥8♦. Kyte called in the big blind with K♦5♠. O'Neill made a set on the 9♠8♠6♠ flop while Kyte had a flush draw of his own. The Norweigian check-called for 800,000. The J♣ turn kept things the same, and Kyte check-called for 3,500,000. With 11,600,000 in the pot, the Q♥ river completed the board and O'Neill took in the pot after both players checked.
Padraig O'Neill limped on the button and Jon Kyte checked his option in the big blind.
Both players checked on the 10♠7♠10♦ flop and Kyte checked again on the 4♦ turn. O'Neill bet 600,000 and Kyte shoved for his last 4,000,000. O'Neill asked for a count and called to put Kyte at risk.
Jon Kyte: 9♦7♥
Padraig O'Neill: 5♥4♣
Kyte was an overwhelming favorite with his higher two pair and the 8♣ river bricked out for O'Neill, awarding the double up to Kyte.
Jon Kyte, who had led the tournament from Day 3, entered the finale with 229 big blinds and a historic chip lead, one that was assumed to be unassailable. Padraig O'Neill had other ideas and was unexpectedly awarded the final EPT Trophy of the 2023 season after overcoming the Norwegian in heads-up play.
O'Neill was nearly the first bustout of the day after he was flipping with fours against Kyte's ace-king. A king on the flop had O'Neill with one foot out of the door, but a four on the turn ensured his survival and began one of the best comeback stories of the year.
Known affectionately as "Smidge" in the Irish poker community, O'Neill came into the day as the shortest stack and turned his 12 big blinds into a €1,030,000 payout. With the victory, he became Ireland's second-ever EPT Main Event champion, 11 years after Steve O'Dwyer reigned supreme in Monte Carlo.
The high-flying Kyte was brought back down to earth after a turbulent session and collected a career-best payday of €643,000 for his runner-up finish. Umberto Ruggeri took third, while Cheng Zhao and Adam Wagner bowed out in fourth and fifth, respectively.
The event garnered 1,285 entries, a best here in the Czech capital, and saw 191 players get a portion of the €6,101,300 prize pool.
2023 EPT Prague €5,300 Main Event Final Table Results
O'Neill expressed his delight to PokerNews after the triumph. "It feels amazing. It's just happened. It hasn't sunk in."
"I was hoping to get fourth," said O'Neill after being the smallest stack as Day 6 began. "Third would've been amazing. To get heads-up, I never thought it would've happened. I booked a flight last night for 7 p.m. today. That's how optimistic I was," O'Neill joked.
Padraig O'Neill
The newly minted champion was complimentary to Kyte after the pair battled for nearly five hours.
"He's really tough. I didn't want to play [him] for €300,000 or €400,000 heads-up. He put me in lots of tough spots." said O'Neill. "He would've been a really worthy champion."
The seven-figure up top was the perfect early Christmas for O'Neill as he has recently become a father for the first time.
"I won't be jumping up in stakes. I might have more of myself in some of the tournaments that I play," he added.
All his current plans centre around spending as much time with his family, with maybe the odd appearance at one of the 2024 EPT stops.
How the Finale Unfolded
Adam Wagner
The first casualty of the day was Wagner, the last Czech resident in the competition. His stack went over to O'Neill, who had picked up two doubles in the early goings of the session to shoot up the counts. Wagner moved all in with ace-five and ran into the Irishman's tens to bring the tournament to its final four players.
Ruggeri doubled up twice through Kyte to stay alive before Zhao departed in fourth place. Zhao started second in chips but was left short after O'Neill pulled off an incredible bluff with the nut-flush blocker. The Greek resident was quickly ousted by Kyte after jamming his ace-queen into the chip leader's big slick.
After the first break, O'Neill crossed the ten million chip mark after picking up pots off Ruggeri and Kyte. Ruggeri then scored a trio of doubles through Kyte to remain in contention and bring the chip stacks close to even. Ruggeri held with ace-deuce when up against ten-five and remained best. The second double came when Ruggeri turned a flush to crack Kyte's two pair. The latter then jammed into Ruggeri's full house soon after to level out the field.
Umberto Ruggeri
O'Neill found some momentum to take top spot, while Kyte found himself at the bottom of the chip leaderboard by the time the second break came around. Ruggeri dented Kyte before the players took some time away from the table after picking off a triple barrel bluff with top pair.
When play resumed, O'Neill further extended himself away from his two opponents with a series of value bets and well-executed bluffs. The table captain set up heads-up play with Kyte after busting Ruggeri in third place. O'Neill paired up on the river after a three-bet jam preflop from Ruggeri to bring the Main Event to its final two participants, holding more than a 4:1 chip advantage over Kyte.
Padraig O'Neill - Jon Kyte
O'Neill had Kyte on the ropes after getting the best of his opponent in the first part of a long duel. Kyte fought back and closed the gap, not relinquishing his hopes of the title that many predicted him to secure with ease. At the dinner break, Kyte had reclaimed the chip lead after a huge bluff with missed clubs and was once again the favorite. Had O'Neill called, Kyte would have been down to just a few big blinds.
A top pair vs. top pair encounter allowed O'Neill to double back in front. Both players hit a jack but Kyte was outkicked and couldn't get away from his hand. It did not take long for Kyte to regain the lead. He turned trips kings and got through a sizeable bluff of his own to put the ball back in his court.
The chip lead continued to switch, but eventually, someone had to give. O'Neill managed to erode Kyte down without any response, and his king-ten sealed the stunning comeback against Kyte's ten-five after both players committed their stacks preflop.