€1,100 Main Event
Day 5 Started
€1,100 Main Event
Day 5 Started
Welcome to the Final Day of the 2018 OlyBet Kings of Tallinn €1,100 Main Event at Olympic Park Casino. After four days of play, the field of 268 entrants was trimmed down to a nine-max final table with all players having their eyes on the €62,000 top prize.
Blind levels begin at 12,000/24,000 with an ante of 3,000 and increase every 60-minutes as has been the case throughout the festival. Additionally, breaks are scheduled every two blind levels.
A total of five players from Finland are represented at the final table including Day 4 chip leader Totti Matias Arusuo, who has almost one-quarter of the chips in play with a stack of 1,959,000.
Juha Helppi, who has been playing in the big €50/€100 pot-limit Omaha cash games with €200 and €400 straddles with Patrik Antonius and others throughout the festival, heads into the final table in second place with 1,400,000. Other Finns at the final table include Arto Ilmari Loikkanen (third - 1,137,000), Quang Thanh Doan (sixth - 643,000) and Arto Antero Lehtonen (seventh - 626,000).
Lithuania has the second most players represented at the final table with two. Arunas Garunkstis starts the day in fourth place with 989,000 in chips and [Removed:174], who took seventh place in the same event last year, starts off in fifth place with 647,000 in chips.
Sweden and Finland each have one player represented at the final table and both players are the short stacks with Sweden's Shahin Shirazi Nejad starting things off in eighth place with 347,000 and Silver Nommik in ninth place with 278,000 in chips.
Cards will be in the air at 1 p.m. EET and will be streamed on a 30-minute delay on Twitch, Facebook, YouTube and here on PokerNews by clicking on the live stream tab in our coverage. The entertaining Kristjan Laas will be behind the booth announcing the action with all hole cards exposed.
Stay tuned at PokerNews as we will report all of the important hands and eliminations on the same delay starting at 1:30 p.m.
2018 OlyBet Kings of Tallinn Final Table Seat Assignment
Seat | Name | Country | Chips |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Shahin Shirazi Nejad | Sweden | 347,000 |
2 | Arunas Garunkstis | Lithuania | 989,000 |
3 | [Removed:174] | Lithuania | 647,000 |
4 | Arto Antero Lehtonen | Finland | 626,000 |
5 | Arto Ilmari Loikkanen | Finland | 1,137,000 |
6 | Quang Thanh Doan | Finland | 643,000 |
7 | Totti Matias Arosuo | Finland | 1,959,000 |
8 | Silver Nommik | Estonia | 278,000 |
9 | Juha Helppi | Finland | 1,400,000 |
Shahin Shirazi Nejad is Sweden's lone representative on the final table in Seat 1. While he plays tons of live poker back in his home country, this is only his second trip outside of Sweden to play poker. The other was also in Tallinn when he ran deep in the Swedish Poker Championships.
Although Nejad enters the final table with the second shortest stack with 14 big blinds with 347,000 in chips, he shared with PokerNews that playing without a lot of chips is one of his strengths and is confident he will make the right moves.
He is excited about the prospects of making a deep run and shared he would have fun no matter how deep he finishes in the Main Event.
The Kings of Tallinn also helped him get the bug to travel more for poker. He shared the experience allows him to meet new people and discover new places.
Arunas Garunkstis is one of two Lithuanians represented at the final table. He is known in his country as a true force on the cash game tables and has proven his ring game prowess in several other countries as well including during the Kings of Tallinn on some of the nights during the Main Event and at the Cash Game Festival in London.
Garunkstis also has managed several live tournament cashes for a total of almost $40,000. He enters the final table with a fourth-place stack of 989,000 and regardless of how he finishes the tournament today, this will be his highest tournament cash.
[Removed:174] is the other Lithuanian represented on the final table. He finds himself in a familiar spot as last year he finished seventh on the final table of the 2017 Kings of Tallinn Main Event.
This year he comes in with a healthy fifth-place stack and has higher expectations.
"Any place but first will be a fiasco," shared Tamasauskas. "I need revenge from last year. I learned a lot and am hungry."
He has been thinking about a chip-leader pot when he was all-in with pocket fives and lost against pocket kings and shared he wouldn't make the same mistake if put into a similar spot.
Tamasauskas is also no stranger to winning big money as part of his over $100,000 in tournament cashes is a win in 2012 in a €1,000 EPT side event for €48,000.
Arto Antero Lehtonen in Seat 4 is one of five Finns at the final table and kicks off play with a seventh-place stack of 626,000.
He shared with PokerNews that he is excited and "hoping for a good run."
Lehtonen has already secured his largest live tournament cash to date and explained he has very happy with his performance especially after last year busting on Day 1.
Despite Lehtonen entering in seventh place, he does start the action in the middle of the pack. He has visibly been enjoying himself all tournament and that will likely continue throughout the final table.
"I am having a fun time and enjoy myself," shared Lehtonen. "I have nothing to lose as this is my biggest cash ever anyway and I hope to climb up as high as I can."
Arto Ilmari Loikkanen is one of five Finnish players, one of two players named Arto and one of the three players to enter the final table with a seven-figure stack with 1,137,000 in chips.
If he finishes in seventh-place or better, he will surpass $100,000 in career live tournament cashes.
The Finn is just coming fresh off a win taking down the 2018 Helsinki Freezeout €550 H.O.R.S.E. event for €15,739.
Loikkanen has been consistently been near the top of the pack throughout most of the tournament and looks to nail his biggest win of his poker career.
Finland's Quang Thanh Doan is one of the most experienced players at the final table with nearly $500,000 in live cashes. He enters the day with a sixth-place stack of 643,000.
He had a big smile on his face this morning and shared he wasn't nervous and was going to just play his best game.
Doan's claim to fame goes back almost a decade when he won The Grosvenor Victoria London Poker Championships & Unibet Open £2,750 Main Event for a huge haul of £187,000. Since then he has consistently piled on the cashes and a win today would be his second biggest in his poker career.
Totti Matias Arosuo, or Matias to his friends, is in Seat 7 and starts off the action with a sizeable chip lead with 1,959,000 in chips. This represents a huge one-quarter of the total chips in play.
During the last couple of blind levels yesterday, Arosuo was taking charge and scooping pot after pot.
Nothing is guaranteed in poker, but it is likely this will be Arosuo's biggest live tournament cash as all he needs is a seventh-place finish or better for it to be a new high point. A win will take his almost $40,000 in career earnings over the six-figure mark.
Arosuo has made several final tables, however, has never been able to hoist a trophy. He has a pair of runner-up finishes including in a side-event in last year's OlyBet Kings of Tallinn.
Silver Nommik is the sole Estonian on the final table and enters play with the shortest stack of 278,000 or 11 big blinds.
Despite the Estonian only having a handful of cashes he has made a deep run in events in the past, most notably a third place finish in the Nordicbet Superweekend €550 Main Event in 2013 for €13,000.
Nommik also shared with PokerNews that he plays a bit online and has managed five-digit scores in the past. He also explained he won $20,000 in December in Spin & Go's alone.
The Estonian shared his biggest poker moment during the tournament was simply "making it to the final table."
He also shared he will play this like any other tournament he is short-stacked in and not intimidating about the table being streamed.
"I am not really nervous at all," shared Nommik. "I know how to play and only have a little more than 10 big blinds."