Rehman Kassam Wins Record-Breaking 2017 PokerStars Festival London

Rehman Kassam

The third and final day of the record-breaking PokerStars Festival London £990 Main Event saw 24 survivors out of a 944-entry strong field return to the tables of the Hippodrome Casino.

It took until midnight to determine the winner and it was Rehman Kassam who emerged victorious after defeating Daniel Harwood in heads-up. The first series on European soil more than doubled the initial guarantee and created a massive prize pool of £824,112.

Kassam, Harwood and Eric Cech struck a deal with three players remaining. Harwood received the biggest portion of the prize pool with £95,000 while Kassam got £89,320 and the coveted golden trophy. Cech received £70,000 while Yuriy Boyko had to settle for fourth place, the exact same position he finished at in the £2,200 High Roller a few days ago.

PlaceWinnerCountryPrize (GBP)Prize (USD)
1Rehman KassamUnited Kingdom89,320*112,543*
2Daniel HarwoodUnited Kingdom95,000*119,700*
3Eric CechAustralia70,000*88,200*
4Yuriy BoykoIreland43,37054,646
5Clement TripodiFrance31,51039,702
6Ludovic GeilichUnited Kingdom22,95028,917
7Alexis FleurFrance16,70221,044
8Lam Van TrinhUnited Kingdom12,15015,309

*denotes deal of the last three players

It wouldn't take long for the first player to bust after the restart. It was Edgar Drozdov, who missed the first few hands and eventually had to settle for £4,250. The last PokerStars qualifier, Kevin Steward, lost a massive pot to the full house of Ludovic Geilich and busted soon after with pocket deuces against the pocket eights of Smit Trivedi.

Within quick succession, four players were sent to the rail and the last two tables were set. Paul Skipper was all in and at risk with pocket queens and James Mitchell also showed pocket queens. Four clubs on the board saw Mitchell complete a flush and Skipper was gone in 15th place. David Kahan and Peter Bergman followed before three big clashes reduced the field to the last nine.

James Mitchell four-bet shoved with pocket kings and three-bettor Geilich called with ace-king and flopped an ace.


Francesco Cortese had slowly but surely made his way to the top of the leaderboard before losing some chips and defended the big blind with pocket fours. The Italian turned bottom set and check-raised before calling the shove of Harwood. His opponent had pushed with eight-five suited for the gutshot and flush draw, which got there on the river.

Trivedi, a friend of High Roller champion Joe Johnson, was unfortunate enough to run with pocket queens into the pocket aces of Boyko and the same table provided more fireworks soon after. Day 2 chip leader Mitchell four-bet shoved with pocket kings in the last hand of level 27, three-bettor Geilich called with ace-king and flopped an ace.

Guillem Cusco Bach was among the short stacks when the hopefuls had combined to one table and got through with three all-ins without being called. The fourth one was a four-bet shove with pocket jacks and Kassam snap-called with pocket aces. A roller coaster run out saw a jack appear on the flop, only for an ace to follow right away on the turn.

Here is how the final eight lined up:

SeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Alexis FleurFrance1,750,00021
2Clement TripodiFrance2,965,00037
3Yuriy BoykoIreland4,850,00060
4Lam Van TrinhUnited Kingdom1,195,00015
5Daniel HarwoodUnited Kingdom6,875,00086
6Rehman KassamUnited Kingdom5,400,00067
7Eric CechAustralia1,080,00013
8Ludovic GeilichUnited Kingdom4,140,00051

Harwood was still in the lead, but Kassam suddenly jumped into second place with Boyko and Geilich not too far behind. Everyone had £12,150 locked up for the effort and it was short stack Lam Van Trinh who would be the first to fall. He three-bet shoved with pocket eights and Boyko called with ace-queen to spike a queen on the flop.

Start-of-the-day chip leader Alexis Fleur never got anything running throughout the day and had to settle for seventh place. Fleur called the shove of Cech with king-jack only to find himself up against pocket aces. The Frenchman was drawing dead on the turn of an eight-high board.

Geilich was very active for most of the final day and finished in sixth place. The Scotsman defended his big blind with king-nine and flopped top pair against Harwood. Geilich check-called a continuation bet and reluctantly check-called all in after a blank turn to see Harwood turn over ace-king for the dominating kicker.

Down to six tables on Day 2, Cech was down to a mere five big blinds and doubled through Clement Tripodi twice. Both would meet again on the final table and it was Tripodi who three-bet shoved with eight-seven suited. Cech called with ace-four off suit and faded both live cards and a flush draw to eliminate Tripodi in fifth place.

They agreed to a deal and left £8,000 and the trophy aside.

With four players remaining, deal discussions emerged and came to no avail before Boyko was sent to the rail in fourth place. The Irishman check-raised a ten-high flop with the nut flush draw and Harwood instantly moved all in. Boyko eventually called and was shown pocket kings, both the turn and river were blanks.

Harwood had a dominating lead over Kassam and Cech three-handed, but they still agreed to a deal and left £8,000 and the trophy aside. Cech got it in good for his last eight big blinds after calling a shove by Kassam with ace-eight, as his opponent only had jack-six. A six on the flop and four clubs by the river gave Kassam the better hand with a flush and the heads-up duel saw Harwood with a 2-1 chip advantage.

Kassam soon found a double and both then got their stacks in again on a ten-high flop; Harwood had ten-seven and Kassam king-ten. The turn and river failed to improve Harwood and the most active player had to settle for second place eventually.

This marks the end of the PokerNews live reporting here from the Hippodrome Casino, but make sure to check back in regularly for updates from tournaments all over the world.

Rehman Kassam Wins the 2017 PokerStars Festival London
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  • Rehman Kassam lifted the trophy at 2017 PokerStars Festival London.

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