€1,100 FPS Paris Main Event
Day 4 Completed
€1,100 FPS Paris Main Event
Day 4 Completed
The record-breaking €1,100 France Poker Series (FPS) Paris Main Event wrapped up after a relatively short Day 4 that saw Alan Goasdoue defeating fellow Frenchman Jean-Luc Labryga after a brief heads-up battle to take home the shimmering silver trophy and €287,830.
Goasdoue, a 23-year-old who has been playing poker since he was 18 and professionally for the last five months, had just $39,562 in Hendon Mob earnings when he decided to play his European Poker Tour (EPT) festival here in Paris after satelliting into the FPS Main.
Despite entering the day as the shortest stack, Goasdoue managed to ladder past several players — including fellow French natives Thibault Reverdito (7th - €44,990) and Roger Taieb (4th - €98,870) and fellow Europeans Oleksii Natoptanyi (6th - €58,490), Christopher Dowling (5th - €76,050) and Elias Fisz (3rd - €128,530) — before ultimately overcoming start-of-day chip leader Labryga.
“I'm pretty calm right now," Goasdoue said in a winner's interview. "Everything has been going well for me since the beginning of the tournament and I've always managed to survive with double-up when I was dominated. Even though I came into today's final with the last stack, I stayed focused. I figured out how my heads-up opponent was playing and I was also lucky to win."
PLACE | PLAYER | COUNTRY | PRIZE (IN EURO) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Alan Goasdoue | France | €287,830 | |
2 | Jean-Luc Labryga | France | €179,950 | |
3 | Elias Fisz | Netherlands | €128,530 | |
4 | Roger Taieb | France | €98,870 | |
5 | Christopher Dowling | Ireland | €76,050 | |
6 | Oleksii Natoptanyi | Ukraine | €58,490 | |
7 | Thibault Reverdito | France | €44,990 | |
8 | Vasyl Zabrodskyy | Ukraine | €34,610 | |
9 | Alexis Lucarini | France | €26,620 |
The FPS Paris Main Event, one of the first events to kick off the inaugural EPT Paris stop, attracted a massive 2,071 runners and a prize pool of €1,988,160. The field likely would have been even larger if not for capacity limitations at the Hyatt Regency Paris Etoile.
Seven players returned to finish out the final table on Day 4 after the late-night elimination of Vasyl Zabrodskyy, whose pocket sixes couldn't hold up against the eventual runner-up's ace-jack.
Labryga was a Day 1 chip leader before entering Day 4 with the biggest stack and his run-good was just beginning. In the first level of play, Labryga got it in on the flop with just ace-high against the top pair of Reverdito, but a runner-runner straight sent Reverdito to the rail in seventh place.
After the respective eliminations of Natoptanyi and Dowling, Labryga picked up aces to be far in front of the nines of Taieb, who had playfully teased Labryga throughout the final table before his fourth-place exit.
Goasdoue stayed quiet throughout most of the day's action but that changed when he picked up pocket nines and looked up a shove by Fisz with ace-eight, who couldn't improve to fall in third and set up a French heads-up battle.
Labryga and Goasdoue, the oldest and youngest players at the final table, entered heads-up play nearly even in chips but Goasdoue quickly took a lead after making a few hands, including two full houses. Labryga was down to a short stack when he open-jammed on the button holding ace-eight and Goasdoue looked him up with nines, which proved to be the holding of the day as they once again held up to earn Goasdoue the victory.
The career-best score marked the PokerStars qualifier's first major live score just a few months after transitioning from online poker.
"My goal was to play more live events in the future," said Goasdoue. "I've known for a long time that I'm capable of a big performance. Now I've ticked the box, as they say! I said at the beginning of the tournament that I was going to put one bullet the FPS and win, then one bullet in the EPT (Main Event) and win. So I'm halfway there!”
That wraps up PokerNews' coverage of the record-breaking FPS Main Event. Be sure to check out the live reporting hub for the team's coverage of other events here at EPT Paris.
France's Alan Goasdoue is the winner of the €1,100 FPS Paris Main Event for €287,830 after he defeated fellow Frenchman Jean-Luc Labryga during a short heads-up match.
Stay tuned for a full recap and winner's interview.
Jean-Luc Labryga open-jammed his stack of around 9,000,000 from the button and Alan Goasdoue peeked at his cards before calling to put Labryga at risk.
Jean-Luc Labryga:
Alan Goasdoue:
The flop landed to give Labryga plenty of hope with a pair and a backdoor flush draw, and the turn kept him afloat despite improving Goasdoue to a set. Unfortunately for Labryga, the bricked off on the river and he shook Goasdoue's hand before hitting the rail in second place for a career-best €179,950.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Alan Goasdoue |
62,100,000
9,000,000
|
9,000,000 |
Jean-Luc Labryga | Busted | |
|
Alan Goasdoue completed on the button and Jean-Luc Labryga checked his option in the big blind.
Labryga checked on the flop of and Goasdoue checked back. Labryga checked again on the turn and Goasdoue bet 600,000. Labryga called.
Labryga checked a third time on the river and Goasdoue bet 800,000. Labryga check-raised to 3,000,000 and Goasdoue quickly called. Labryga showed a bluff with and Goasdoue turned over for fours full of fives.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Alan Goasdoue |
53,100,000
3,500,000
|
3,500,000 |
Jean-Luc Labryga |
9,000,000
-3,500,000
|
-3,500,000 |
|
Alan Goasdoue has won the majority of pots so far in this heads up, the last of which saw Jean-Luc Labryga go down to around 20 big blinds in the chip count.
Goasdoue raised his button to 1,400,00, and Labryga called from the big blind. On the flop, Labryga led out for a size of 2,600,000 chips. Goasdoue made the call.
The turn was shown to the players, and Labryga added a single T-100,000 chip to his flop sizing, making the bet 2,700,000. Once again, Goasdoue put in the same amount for the call.
On the river both players checked, and Labryga instantly mucked his hand, winning Goasdoue the pot without showdown
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Alan Goasdoue |
49,600,000
7,500,000
|
7,500,000 |
Jean-Luc Labryga |
12,500,000
-7,500,000
|
-7,500,000 |
|
Jean-Luc Labryga completed on the button and Alan Goasdoue checked his option in the big blind.
Goasdoue checked on the flop and Labryga checked back. Goasdoue then led out for 1,000,000 on the turn and Labryga called.
The river completed the board and Goasdoue fired a bet of 4,500,000. Labryga pushed out a stack of chips for a call, only to muck when Goasdoue showed kings full of queens.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Alan Goasdoue |
42,100,000
7,475,000
|
7,475,000 |
Jean-Luc Labryga |
20,000,000
-7,500,000
|
-7,500,000 |
|
The two players have sat down and the heads up battle has started. The blinds are now 300,000/600,000 with a big blind ante of 600,000, and they will last 30 minutes each.
Level: 37
Blinds: 300,000/600,000
Ante: 600,000
The two remaining players are taking a quick break before heads-up play.