Ramazan Ramazan was left with no chips after calling all in on the river of a board and mucked his hole cards. Ad Schaap had flipped over for a full house and that was better than what Ramazan had, who headed to the rail. The screens currently show 81 out of 85 players remaining.
The previous area of the High Roller tournament has one single table running and that belongs to the Main Event. Quite a few of the previous High Rollers from today, who all busted already, are there though and EPT Malta champion Jean Montury got moved over.
It was the Frenchman who won a bigger pot with pocket aces against Faraz Jaka to bump up his stack.
Gleb Kovtunov had won a big pot against Vlado Banicevic early on but since the tides have changed a lot and the Ukrainian is below his opponent in chips. Jorryt van Hoof also lost half of his stack in the meanwhile and was taking a short break away from the table when last checked upon.
On the turn, Przemyslaw Piotrowski bet 4,700 after the check of Matthias de Meulder and the Belgian called before the hit on the river. De Meulder once again checked and then sighed when his opponent had fired 7,700. The Belgian eventually tossed in a T-10,000 chip for the call and was met with the bad news, Piotrowski flipped over for quads to see de Meulder muck a jack-high flush.
Jason Wheeler, who considers Amsterdam as his new home away from home, was eliminated in the High Roller Event and jumped straight into the action of the Main Event. The American expat has had excellent live results as of lately and it would be no surprise to see another deep run here.
On the heads-up flop of , Morten Mortensen made a bet of what looked like 600 chips and was called by Pascal Hartmann in the cutoff seat. The on the turn was checked through and Mortensen then bet the river for 1,050 to receive a call by his opponent. The Dane flipped over and Hartmann tapped the table.
On the river of a board, Georgios Zisimopoulos' bet of 1,000 was called by an opponent and the Greek showed for two pair. That was good enough to scoop the pot, though the Greek fell down to just under two times the starting stack recently and recovered some of the previous losses.
Dennis Smith had defended his big blind against a raise and a call by Louis Salter to see a flop of . The initial raiser looked up the Dutchman after the turn with only to see Smit return the for the better flush, giving the Dutchman an urgently needed double up.