Earlier in the tournament we told you about the Skrill Last Longer Promotion; as such, we thought we'd give you a quick update here on Day 4. Originally 203 players signed up for the promotion — which will see the last player standing receive their €5,300 buy-in refunded into their Skrill account — but at the start of the day just nine remained.
Here's a look at the nine players still remaining in the competition: Kevin Vandermissen, Alejandro Bellucia Manuel Cuberos, Andrey Danilyuk, Valentino Konakchiev, Maximilian Senft, Tom Middleton, Alain Debackere and Francesco Delfoco.
Things aren't going so well for Kevin Iacofano here on Day 4. He is seated at the feature table and seems to be bleeding chips.
In a recent hand, action folded to Iacofano on the button and he shoved all in. Eduard Bhaggoe quickly called off for 92,000 from the small blind, and after the big folded, the cards were turned up.
Iacofano:
Bhaggoe:
Iacofano held live cards, but little good they did him as the board ran out to give Bhaggoe the double.
Manuel Cuberos opened for 25,000 and the player to his left, Sebastian Von Toperczer moved all in. They both had very similar stack sizes with Cueboros just covering his opponent with 295,000 chips. Cueboros went deep in the tank, thinking for about five minutes before making the call. Von Toperczer turned over his and felt moved to comment “Slow roll.” When Cuberos tabled . The board ran out . Von Toperczer’s two pairs beaten by the straight of Cuberos. Cuberos apologised for taking so long and was told to take all the time he needed.
Eli Heath had raised under the gun and was called by Pasi Sormunen in the big blind. They saw a flop of [qd tsk kd]. Sormunen checked and when Heath continued for a small 24,000 Sormunen moved all in. Heath called and showed for the flopped straight and Sormunen had two pair . The turn card gave Sormunen the full house though and the on the river eliminated Heath.
Kevin Iacofano put the last of his 100,000 chips in the middle with versus Pasi Sormunen’s . The board ran out and Iacofano survived but is still short.
We missed the action, but a back-and-forth raising way saw Albert Daher get his stack of approximately 450,000 all in preflop against Madis Müür. Daher held the in the big blind, while Müür tabled the in the cutoff.
The look on Daher's face was one of discontent, and it got even worse when the gave Müür a set. Daher needed either running nines to win of running straight cards to chop, and he got a little sweat as the turn made the chop possible. Unfortunately for him, the river wasn't the three he was looking for and Daher was sent to the rail while Müür chipped up to a million in chips.
Action folded to a short-stacked Kevin Iacofano in the cutoff and he moved all in for 63,000. Kent Lundmark, who won this event back in Season 7, called from the big blind and the cards were flipped on their backs.
Lundmark:
Iacofano:
Iacofano got it in good, but Lundmark was drawing to live cards. The flop was kind to Iacofano as it paired his king, and the turn actually guaranteed him the win as Lundmark was drawing dead. The meaningless was put out on the river for good measure and Iacofano was shipped the double.
Kevin Iacofano's comeback has come to an end courtesy of Kent Lundmark.
It happened when action folded to Iacofano in the hijack and he shipped for 110,000. The cutoff and button both folded, and then Lundmark moved all in over the top from the small blind. The big folded and Iacofano discovered the bad news.
Lundmark:
Iacofano:
Both players held an ace, but it was Lundmark's ten kicker that had him as the heavy favorite. The board ran out a rather uneventful and Iacofano took the long, lonely walk off the feature table.