€5,300 Main Event
Day 1a Completed
€5,300 Main Event
Day 1a Completed
The €5,300 Main Event of 100th European Poker Tour (EPT) stop got underway today at the Season 11 Barcelona Poker Festival held at Casino Barcelona.
Day 1a attracted an impressive 475 entrants and a fearsome array of talent including Team PokerStars Pros Johnny Lodden, Eugene Katchalov, Vanessa Selbst, Jan Heitmann, Alex Kravchenko, and, playing on her home turf, Leo Margets.
At the end of eight 75-minute levels of play, 270 survived to return for Day 2, and it was Michael "The Grinder" Mizrachi who ended the day as the chip leader, bagging up 186,600. That's more than six times the 30,000-chip starting stack, and Mizrachi was very busy at work all day.
Mizrachi more than lived up to his reputation. Seemingly involved in every pot, he consistently outwitted and out-flopped his opponents throughout the day to accumulate his stack — at one point, he even flopped quads. When he is focused and catching cards, there are few players who can compete with a stacked Mizrachi, but that's exactly what everyone will have to deal with moving forward.
Second place belonged to Charlie Combes from the UK with 172,400, while the talented young Russian, Dmitry Yurasov, finished the day in third with 163,100. Other notables to make it through to Day 2 included Marc-Andre Ladouceur (113,700), Max Pescatori (91,500), Thor Hansen (77,400), Ruben Visser (55,900), Ronnie Bardah (28,200), and Erik Seidel (12,300).
Schemion took the EPT by storm last season and is currently the number one tournament player in the world, as ranked by the Global Poker Index (GPI). Schemion is back in full swing this season and it doesn't look like much has changed. Last season, Schemion took sixth in the €50,000 Super High Roller (€159,200), 123rd in the €5,300 Main Event (€10,000), and sixth in the €10,300 High Roller (€90,700) at EPT Barcelona, and he might just make another deep run this year after bagging up 80,000 in chips on Day 1a.
Daniel Shak, who finished in eighth place in the €50,000 Super High Roller yesterday, has made it through to Day 2 with 61,200, though he found some of the play by his opponents a bit confusing.
Some of the players who didn’t survive the day included last year’s hugely popular winner of this event, Tom Middleton, who told PokerNews after his exit in Level 7 that he "just couldn't win a pot today." Other UK Pros who fell towards the end were Mat Frankland and Toby Lewis.
Olivier Busquet, the winner of the €50,000 Super High Roller to the tune of €896,434, had a good stack for most of the day, but he busted in the final level. Busquet was involved in a three-way all-in battle holding queens, but unfortunately for him his opponents held kings and ace-king that he couldn't overcome.
Busquet beat Daniel Colman heads up to win the €50,000 Super High Roller last night, and Colman too failed to navigate his way through the day here in the Main Event.
Selbst joined the action in Level 3 today, but barley lasted half of that level. Selbst had already lost a sizeable number of chips when before exit hand occurred. Holding the , she raised and picked up two callers. The flop was checked and it all went in on the turn of a board reading . Her opponent had the goods with the , and the river was the harmless to send Selbst packing.
Your PokerNews Live Reporting team will return tomorrow at 12 p.m. local time to bring you full coverage of Day 1b, which is expected to attract a much larger field and a further stellar lineup of players looking to get their hands on the trophy and go down in history as the winner of "EPT100." With rumors of 1,500 total players in this event, tomorrow will be packed wall to wall across two tournament rooms.
With that, we'll leave you with a little bit of fun. Check out this video with 2014 World Series of Poker November Nine chip leader Jorryt van Hoof as he dives into the "ALS Ice Bucket Challenge" with a little help from Remko Rinkema:
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Michael Mizrachi |
186,600
11,600
|
11,600 |
Charlie Combes |
172,400
20,400
|
20,400 |
Dmitry Yurasov |
163,700
-23,300
|
-23,300 |
Maksim Semisoshenko |
153,500
4,500
|
4,500 |
Jose Goncalves Pinheiro |
147,300
25,300
|
25,300 |
Marko Neumann |
146,200
146,200
|
146,200 |
Mihails Morozovs | 130,500 | |
Jonas Klausen |
130,500
12,500
|
12,500 |
Jens Moysich
|
130,200 | |
Bryn Kenney |
129,600
600
|
600 |
[Removed:40] |
128,900
-13,100
|
-13,100 |
Andreas Candelof
|
127,900 | |
Ori Miller |
121,000
-19,000
|
-19,000 |
Benjamin Lamprecht |
120,400
11,400
|
11,400 |
Ana Marquez |
118,000
33,000
|
33,000 |
Jonas Mackoff | 116,000 | |
Andrew Dean |
114,800
7,800
|
7,800 |
Joel Micka |
114,100
8,100
|
8,100 |
Jorge Abreu |
114,000
114,000
|
114,000 |
Marc-Andre Ladouceur |
113,400
86,900
|
86,900 |
Olof Haglund |
113,200
19,200
|
19,200 |
Mikalai Pobal | 107,400 | |
|
||
Zachary Korik | 107,300 | |
Andres Federico Jeckeln | 102,200 | |
Denis Kipnis | 101,400 |
Play has wrapped up for the day, and the players are bagging and tagging their chips. Chip counts and a recap will be posted shortly.
Michael "The Grinder" Mizrachi just added another opponent's stack to his own when he sent Chaofei Wang home.
Wang was all in with against Mizrachi's , and Mizrachi flopped a set of nines to finish off the man from China. He's now up to 175,000 in chips.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Michael Mizrachi |
175,000
29,000
|
29,000 |
Chaofei Wang | Busted |
The final four hands of the day are being played.
PokerStars Team Pro Jan Heitmann made a big bet of 22,000 on the river of an board against Fabio de Francesco - the latter eventually had the clock called on him but with about 30 seconds left, de Francesco made the call. Heitmann turned over for an unlikely straight to win a large pot.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Jan Heitmann |
80,000
29,000
|
29,000 |
Ari Engel checked the board over to his opponent, Ole Schemion. Schemion bet 3,750, and Engel made the call to see the land on the river. Engel checked again, and then Schemion bet 8,100. Engel thought for several minutes before he eventually tossed in the chips to make the call. Schemion tabled the for three nines, and Engel mucked his hand.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Ole Schemion |
86,000
19,000
|
19,000 |
Ari Engel | 18,000 |
Ori Miller just skyrocketed his stack to 140,000 thanks to successfully picking off a big bluff run by Adrien Guyon.
When we arrived at the table, Miller had 6,875 in front of him and Guyon had 12,675 in front of him. Guyon was in position and action was back on Miller. Miller took some time, and then reraised to 19,200. Guyon called to take a flop.
The flop came down , and both players checked to see the land on the turn. Miller led for 7,700, but Guyon fought back a little harder with a raise to 17,000. Miller tanked, then called.
After the fell on the river, Miller checked. With around 20,000 left in his stack, maybe slightly less, Guyon moved all in. Miller went back into the tank with a look of pain stricken across his face. Eventually, he made the call.
Guyon had the for just queen high. Miller saw that and turned up his for a pair of aces, and his hand baffled Guyon, who couldn't quite believe his bluff didn't work against Miller's ace-ten.
Needless to say, the table was quite intrigued by this hand, and especially by the two hands that were turned over at the showdown given how big the action was.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Ori Miller |
140,000
85,000
|
85,000 |
Adrien Guyon | Busted |
Well, you can't win them all.
Olivier Busquet, who won the Super High Roller last night, is one of a spate of late casualties at the end of the day. He was eliminated in a three-way all in with pocket queens against pocket kings and ace-king, the cowboys scooping the pot.
Also out is former champion Toby Lewis and EPT regular Mat Frankland.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Mat Frankland | Busted | |
Toby Lewis | Busted | |
|
||
Olivier Busquet | Busted |