2015 PokerStars.com EPT Season 11 Malta

€25,500 High Roller
Day: 3
Event Info

2015 PokerStars.com EPT Season 11 Malta

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
1010
Prize
€572,300
Event Info
Buy-in
€25,000
Prize Pool
€2,156,000
Entries
88
Level Info
Level
25
Blinds
25,000 / 25,000
Ante
5,000

Connor Drinan Leads €25,000 High Roller Final Table

Connor Drinan
Connor Drinan

At 12:30 local time (in 1.5 hours), the final table of the 2015 PokerStars.com EPT Season 11 Malta €25,500 High Roller will commence. It's Day 3 and it's the day a champion will be crowned. He'll be the biggest poker winner on Malta ever, only to be overtaken by the Main Event champion next week most likely.

Connor Drinan is leading the charge with 893,000 in chips, good for 56 big blinds. Second in chips is Dani "Ansky" Stern with 827,000 (52 big blinds). Nick Petrangelo is the short stack, starting out with just 179,000 (12 big blinds). Sandwiched in between these Americans are two Poles (Franczak and Urbanovich), two Canadians (Dvoress and Greenwood) and a German (Finger).

The first level to be played is 8,000/16,000 with a 2,000 ante.

There will be no live stream, so keep your eyes glued to PokerNews.com for updates from all the big hands.

SeatNameChip CountBig Blinds
1Piotr Franczak612,00038
2Dani Stern827,00052
3Sam Greenwood431,00027
4Daniel Dvoress367,00023
5Nick Petrangelo179,00012
6Connor Drinan893,00056
7Martin Finger358,00022
8Dzmitry Urbanovich734,00046

PositionPrize
1€572,300
2€397,800
3€263,000
4€205,900
5€166,000
6€129,400
7€102,400
8€79,800
Player Chips Progress
Connor Drinan us
Connor Drinan
893,000
Dani Stern us
Dani Stern
827,000
Dzmitry Urbanovich pl
Dzmitry Urbanovich
734,000
EPT 1X Winner
Piotr Franczak pl
Piotr Franczak
612,000
Sam Greenwood ca
Sam Greenwood
431,000
Daniel Dvoress ca
Daniel Dvoress
367,000
Martin Finger de
Martin Finger
358,000
EPT 1X Winner
Nick Petrangelo us
Nick Petrangelo
179,000

Tags: Connor DrinanDani SternDaniel DvoressDmitry UrbanovichDzmitry UrbanovichMartin FingerNicholas PetrangeloNick PetrangeloPiotr FranczakSam Greenwood

Martin Finger Eliminated in 8th Place (€79,800)

Level 20 : 8,000/16,000, 2,000 ante
Martin Finger
Martin Finger

"We're doing good with five North-Americans here, good showing," Connor Drinan said a few minutes after the final table started.

"Where are all the Germans, there used to be five of you guys and now it's just you?" Drinan jokingly poked at Martin Finger, who was sitting on his immediate left.

"Hey don't blame me for them, I'm doing my job here," Finger responded with a smile.

Drinan and Finger had been involved in friendly banter yesterday, but the former will have to find a new friend as the German was the first casualty at the final table.

Finger raised before the flop to 33,000 from middle position and Dzmitry Urbanovich three-bet from his immediate left to 79,000. The other players folded and Finger moved all in for right about 350,000 chips. Urbanovich called right away and the showdown went as following.

Urbanovich: {10-Diamonds}{10-Clubs}
Finger: {A-Diamonds}{K-Clubs}

The board ran out {J-Hearts}{J-Diamonds}{3-Diamonds}{4-Hearts}{6-Diamonds} and Finger left the tournament room after shaking hands with the remaining seven finalists while Urbanovich strengthens his chip lead.

Player Chips Progress
Dzmitry Urbanovich pl
Dzmitry Urbanovich
1,300,000
393,000
393,000
EPT 1X Winner
Martin Finger de
Martin Finger
Busted
EPT 1X Winner

Tags: Connor DrinanDzmitry UrbanovichMartin Finger

Franczak's Hand Mucked by the Dealer

Level 20 : 8,000/16,000, 2,000 ante
Piotr Franczak
Piotr Franczak

Piotr Franczak was seated in the big blind and busy texting on his phone when the cards were dealt. In the mean time, Dani Stern under the gun and Sam Greenwood under the gun plus one folded their cards by throwing them over the line. Franczak's yet untouched cards were halfway over the line as well.

With two folds underway, the dealer scooped up all six cards, mucking Franczak's cards by accident.

Nobody noticed what had happend till action folded to Connor Drinan on the button who raised to 35,000. Dzmitry Urbanovich folded his small blind and Piotr Franczak shifted his attention from his phone to his cards... The cards that weren't there.

Franczak thought he hadn't been dealt in, but in fact he was but his cards were already mucked. Franczak didn't understand and the floor man stepped in to make the ruling that Franczak's hand was dead, and there was nothing there could be done about it.

Franczak was unpleasantly surprised, but was quickly convinced by the table that it was the correct ruling, however unfair it seemed.

"It's good that you folded," Drinan said with a serious voice, stating he had a real hand when he raised his button.

Player Chips Progress
Connor Drinan us
Connor Drinan
950,000
57,000
57,000
Piotr Franczak pl
Piotr Franczak
459,000
-153,000
-153,000

Tags: Connor DrinanDani SternSam GreenwoodPiotr Franczak

Sam Greenwood Eliminated in 7th Place (€102,400)

Level 21 : 10,000/20,000, 3,000 ante
Sam Greenwood
Sam Greenwood

Sam Greenwood had 297,000 chips left when he just moved all in from the under-the-gun plus two position and the action quickly folded to the chip leader in the big blind. Dzmitry Urbanovich looked at his cards, twirled them around, looked back down at them and paused briefly before tossing in a a single 5,000-chip to make the call.

Greenwood: {Q-Clubs}{Q-Diamonds}
Urbanovich: {A-Spades}{9-Spades}

The board ran out {2-Hearts}{9-Clubs}{3-Clubs}{9-Diamonds}{5-Clubs} and Urbanovich hit three of a kind to knock Greenwood out. Extremely disappointed Greenwood exited the room and we are down to just six players.

Player Chips Progress
Dzmitry Urbanovich pl
Dzmitry Urbanovich
1,600,000
300,000
300,000
EPT 1X Winner
Sam Greenwood ca
Sam Greenwood
Busted

Tags: Dzmitry UrbanovichSam Greenwood

Piotr Franczak Eliminated in 6th Place (€129,400)

Level 21 : 10,000/20,000, 3,000 ante
Piotr Franczak
Piotr Franczak

Connor Drinan opened the cutoff for 46,000 and Dzmitry Urbanovich quickly folded his button.

Small blind Piotr Franczak shoved all in for around 320,000 and Dani Stern folded instantly, leaving himself behind with a very short stack.

Drinan took one extra look at his cards to make sure, and called almost in the same movement.

Connor Drinan: {K-Spades}{K-Hearts}
Piotr Franczak: {3-Spades}{3-Clubs}

It was an unfair battle to begin with, and Franczak wouldn't come from behind; {9-Clubs}{5-Clubs}{J-Hearts}{5-Diamonds}{4-Clubs}.

With the departure of Franczak, who takes home €129,400, the remaining five players are guaranteed €166,000.

Player Chips Progress
Connor Drinan us
Connor Drinan
1,579,000
429,000
429,000
Piotr Franczak pl
Piotr Franczak
Busted

Tags: Piotr Franczak

Dani Stern Eliminated in 5th Place (€166,000)

Level 22 : 12,000/24,000, 3,000 ante
Dani Stern
Dani Stern

Daniel Dvoress opened for 50,000 from under the gun/the hijack, and action folded to Dzmitry Urbanovich in the small blind. The Polish prodigy three bet to 132,000 and Dani Stern in the big blind had a decision.

After a little bit of thinking, Stern called all in for 113,000. Dvoress reshoved and Urbanovich almost instantly folded.

Daniel Dvoress: {A-Clubs}{J-Clubs}
Dani Stern: {9-Diamonds}{9-Hearts}

Dani Stern had the possibility to triple up, but it wasn't meant to be.

After the {5-Clubs}{10-Clubs}{Q-Clubs} flop it was already almost over. The {3-Spades} on the turn sealed the deal, the {J-Hearts} on the river was there just to make things official.

Dani Stern takes home €166,000, the remaining four players are guaranteed €205,900.

Player Chips Progress
Daniel Dvoress ca
Daniel Dvoress
801,000
219,000
219,000
Dani Stern us
Dani Stern
Busted

Tags: Dani SternDaniel DvoressDmitry UrbanovichDzmitry Urbanovich

Nick Petrangelo Eliminated in 4th Place (€205,900)

Level 22 : 12,000/24,000, 3,000 ante
Nicholas Petrangelo
Nicholas Petrangelo

Just two hands after we lost Dani Stern it was Nick Petrangelo who moved all in from the button for just 88,000 chips. Connor Drinan three-bet to 175,000 from the small blind and Dzmitry Urbanovich gave up his big blind.

Drinan: {J-Spades}{10-Spades}
Petrangelo: {Q-Diamonds}{10-Diamonds}

The flop brought {K-Spades}{8-Hearts}{6-Diamonds} and Petrangelo called for the nine of diamonds to make things a bit more exciting. The turn brought the {Q-Spades} and Petrangelo said, "Oh man, I hadn't even thought of that one."

Both Drinan and Petrangelo laughed as the former now had an open ended straight and flush draw.

The river was the {9-Clubs} and Drinan filled up his straight.

"Good game guys," Petrangelo said with a smile, before shaking the hands of the three remaining players.

With little chips to play with all day Petrangelo managed to stay in the tournament for quite some time and this result will go down as his second biggest ever after finishing sixth in the PCA $25,000 High Roller for $301,500 earlier this year. Before this event started Petrangelo was fifth on the GPI Player of the Year ranking and this result will obviously improve his position.

Player Chips Progress
Connor Drinan us
Connor Drinan
1,700,000
124,000
124,000
Nick Petrangelo us
Nick Petrangelo
Busted

Tags: Connor DrinanDani SternDzmitry UrbanovichNick Petrangelo

Daniel Dvoress Eliminated in 3rd Place (€263,000)

Level 22 : 12,000/24,000, 3,000 ante
Daniel Dvoress
Daniel Dvoress

Connor Drinan folded his button and Dzmitry Urbanovich had the option in the small blind. He plummeted a small tower of 5,000 chips in the middle. Big blind Daniel Dvoress, down to his last 75,000 at this point, made the call.

Daniel Dvoress: {J-Spades}{9-Spades}
Dzmitry Urbanovich: {A-Spades}{3-Diamonds}

The flop came {K-Spades}{Q-Diamonds}{5-Clubs} and Drinan remarked there were some possibilities all of the sudden.

The {4-Diamonds} on the turn and {Q-Spades} on the river were both blanks though, sending Dvoress to the rail.

The remaining two players are guaranteed €397,800 and are going to battle it out for €572,300 after a short break.

Player Chips Progress
Daniel Dvoress ca
Daniel Dvoress
Busted

Tags: Daniel DvoressDzmitry Urbanovich

The Birth of the High Roller on the EPT

Level 22 : 12,000/24,000, 3,000 ante
Jason Mercier
Jason Mercier

The latest European Poker Tour €25K High Roller final table is hurtling towards a finish here in the Portomaso Casino, Malta, as the remaining two players battle it out to win one of the most coveted titles on the tour.

High Rollers, be it 25K, 50K or 100K, seem the norm now on the EPT. It’s taken for granted that the world’s best players will turn up and play whenever one is scheduled into a stop. That wasn’t always the case though.

Throughout the first four seasons of the EPT, the biggest buy-in event was the €10,000 Grand Final held in Monaco at the end of every season. The common thinking back in those days was that side event buy-ins had to be smaller than the Main Event.

“The buy in for side events has to be smaller, we can’t take the shine off the Main Event,” was probably whispered within the walls of the PokerStars office. That all changed in Season 5 though as the tour gave birth to its first-ever High Roller Event. It was dubbed the "EPT £1 Million Pound Showdown." Many thought PokerStars was crazy to guarantee such a large prize pool for an untried format, but the timing proved perfect. A new dawn had arrived.

For a three-year period London became the center of the poker world for one month a year. The inaugural World Series of Poker Europe was held in 2007, and was deemed a great success after attracting many big-name North American pros who had rarely ventured away from their continent. EPT London was cleverly scheduled to take place just after the WSOP Europe so many stayed on to play. They must have liked what they saw.

Fast forward one year and even more made the long journey across the pond to play the back-to-back of the WSOP Europe and EPT London. It was also the first year the WSOP delayed their final table, creating the November Nine, and many of those players made the trip to London to gain the extra practice. Team PokerStars Pro Ivan Demidov ended up making the final table of the WSOP Europe, falling in third place, before going on to finish runner-up to Peter Eastgate in the WSOP Main Event a few weeks later.

The Season 4 EPT London Main Event attracted 392 players, and that number jumped up to 596 in Season 5. The risky £1-million Pound guaranteed prize pool? Smashed as 86 players created a whopping £1.72 million to play for. The numbers may not seem that impressive today, but back in 2008 it was a very big deal.

Around that time, Jason Mercier had announced himself on the poker scene by taking down EPT4 San Remo for $1,372,893, and proved he was no flash-in-the-pan success by defeating John Juanda heads-up for $944,847 along with the accolade of being the first ever High Roller Champion on a tour that was fast gaining a reputation as the world’s best.

As for Juanda, he was delighted the tournament was just taking place because he had missed the EPT Main Event due to the 22 hours it'd taken him to dismantle the WSOP Europe final table days earlier. By making his own history, Mercier had denied Juanda the chance of historic double titles in London.

Dennis Phillips – another November Niner who would go onto finish third the following month – bubbled the tournament, leaving a stacked final table to play out for the title. Along with Mercier and Juanda, the final table was comprised of such names as Isaac Haxton (6th), Peter Jetten (4th), and Mike Watson (3rd), all of who are still successful players on the tour today.

Their success was no doubt one of the key factors why High Roller events have stuck around and become a huge success. Every season, Main Event numbers were growing and schedules had to be lengthened to stop the days being ridiculously long. It was great that top prizes swelled, but it also made it a lot harder to get there. High Rollers, played over two to three days, offered the top players a chance to achieve similar rewards with less time investment and less players to get through. It proved to be a winning combination. This also appealed to rich businessmen amateurs — whose time was precious — and a perfect poker melting pot was created that continues to this day.

This season on the EPT has (or will feature) two 100k High Rollers, two 50Ks, three 25Ks and a bunch of 10Ks, one of which will feature next week at the back end of the Malta festival. We'd call that a success story!

Tags: Jason MercierJohn JuandaPokerNews Live Blog Feature

Helping Hands Charity Tournament Latest in PokerStars' Long History of Charitable Endeavors

Level 23 : 15,000/30,000, 4,000 ante
PokerStars - Helping Hands & Right to Play
PokerStars - Helping Hands & Right to Play

Poker and charity go hand in hand. In fact, the Global Poker Index (GPI) has even dedicated a category, Charitable Initiative of the Year, in the 14th Annual European Poker Awards, which will take place at the Hilton Hotel here in Malta on March 25. Among the four nominees in the category is Helping Hands Charity Tournament, an event that raises funds for PokerStars' charity partner, Right To Play.

According to their mission statement, Right To Play is a global charity using sport and play to educate and empower children and young people to overcome the effects of poverty, conflict and disease in disadvantaged communities around the world.

On Saturday, March 21 during the EPT Malta, Helping the Hands Charity Tournament will take place at the Portomaso Casino, which is connected to the Hilton Malta. The event will kick off at 7:30 p.m. with drinks and canapé reception, which will also offer newbies free training lessons. Then, beginning at 8:30 p.m., the €100 buy-in, invite-only tournament will begin.

"The tournament and refreshments will be on the second floor of the Hilton congress hall in the magnificent 'Grand masters suite,'" said Anna Colley of Rational Group. "If you should wish you can also participate in some poker training, we will have tables allocated for this before the tournament starts."

She went on to add: "It will be a fantastic night, with plenty of opportunity to chat and play against our Team Pros, as well as staff and well-connected figures from the local business community. There will be some great prizes to be won too."

All proceeds from the event, which will have several Team PokerStars Pros in attendance, will go toward PokerStars' goal of training 1,000 Right To Play coaches, which will bolster the 2,500 volunteer coaches who are currently changing the lives of 185,000 children all over the world. To date, through there charitable endeavors, PokerStars has raised £354,201 of their £420,000 goal, meaning they're 84% of the way there. The event in Malta will no doubt bring them much closer to their target.

The Helping Hands Charity Tournament is the latest in a long line of charity work involving Rational Group. Here's a sample of Rational Group's charitable activities over the last decade:

  • 2004—PokerStars players raise $187,768 for tsunami relief, but the company rounded it up to $400,000 to benefit the International Federation of the Red Cross.
  • 2005—PokerStars online tournaments helped raise more than $100,000 for the American Red Cross after Hurricane Katrina.
  • 2007—PokerStars teams with Ocean's Thirteen to donate $1 million to Not On Our Watch charity, which helped those in Darfur.
  • 2007-2008—Life Ball, which was sponsored by PokerStars, received $100,000 and $150,000 in 2007 and 2008 respectively thanks to PokerStars players.
  • 2008—PokerStars players raise HKD$2,226,146 (~$285,000 USD) for the Red Cross after devastating Chinese earthquake. PokerStars also ran the Million Dollar Men series, which raised more than $100,000 for charities endorsed by the six PokerStars players who made the World Series of Poker Main Event final table.
  • 2009—Ante Up for Africa, which raised money for war-torn Darfur, took place during the EPT Monte Carlo Grand Final.
  • 2010—Celebrities such as Boris Becker, Nelly, and Kelly Rowland attended a charity event at the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure that raised nearly $100,000 for AIDS research via amfAR.
  • 2013—PokerStars raises money for Cancer Research UK while also paying for female players in the UK to enter Race for Life events. Meanwhile, Rational Group players and staff donated more than $260,000 for CARE International after Hurricane Haiyan hit the Philippines. Rational Group doubled that.
  • 2014—Rational Group funded the development of Play to Cure: Genes in Space mobile game, a game by Cancer Research UK that analyzes genetic data while you play.

For those hoping to participate in the Helping Hands Charity Tournament should RSVP to: Anna Colley – [email protected]. Remember, space is limited.

To give you an idea of what the night will hold, check out this video featuring a similar charity initiative for the Quintessentially Foundation that was held last year in London.

Tags: Helping Hands Charity TournamentPokerNews Live Blog Feature