Who Will Be the Next Team Pro? 2025 PokerStars LIVE League Winners Revealed

Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor
3 min read
PokerStars Live League

The PokerStars Open Cannes festival brought the curtain down on the 2025 PokerStars LIVE season, and that meant the three PokerStars LIVE League champions became known. Players from far and wide have been accumulating points for the low, medium, and high leaderboards by playing in PokerStars LIVE events.

PokerStars LIVE League High Top 10

Enrico Camosci
Enrico Camosci

Italian Enrico Camosci came out on top in the High leaderboard, edging out Klemens Roiter and Aleksejs Ponakovs for the title. Camosci is a regular on the European Poker Tour (EPT), and players will see much more of him in 2026 because PokerStars rewarded him with four EPT Main Event and four EPT High Roller buy-ins for topping this leaderboard.

Roiter banked four EPT Main Event buy-ins for his runner-up finish, while Ponakovs collected a pair of EPT Main Event buy-ins.

RankPlayerCountryPoints
1Enrico CamosciItaly4,025.13
2Klemens RoiterAustria3,778.38
3Aleksejs PonakovsLatvia2,039.84
4Jesse LonisUnited States1,754.88
5Christopher NguyenAustria1,628.17
6David ColemanUnited States1,572.43
7Cesar Garcia DominguezSpain1,539.35
8Alisson PiekazewiczBrazil1,524.95
9Masato YokosawaJapan1,492.80
10Leon SturmGermany1,438.78

PokerStars LIVE League Medium Top 10

Gerard Rubiralta
Gerard Rubiralta

Spain's Gerard Rubiralta triumphed in the PokerStars LIVE League Medium race. The 695.48-point gap between Rubiralta and Andreas Froehli in second was the largest points difference across all three leagues. PokerStars ambassador Kenny Hallaert capped off an impressive year at the felt by claiming third place.

Rubiralta now gets to play four EPT Main Events and four PS Open Main Events for free in 2026, while Froehli banked six PS Open Main Event buy-ins. Hallaert has three PS Open Main Event buy-ins to use next year.

RankPlayerCountryPoints
1Gerard Rubiralta CortesSpain3,499.25
2Petre Bigdan IonescuRomania2,803.77
3Kenny HallaertBelgium2,792.55
4Jon KyteNorway2,468.10
5Robert BullUnited Kingdom2,438.76
6Gerard CarboSpain2,368.42
7Claudio Di GiacomoItaly2,303.09
8Umberto RuggeriItaly2,285.34
9Barny BoatmanUnited Kingdom2,269.91
10Antoine LabatFrance2,151.98

PokerStars LIVE League Low Top 10

Steinn Thanh Du Karlsson
Steinn Thanh Du Karlsson

The low leaderboard could have been won by any of the eventual top three finishers right up to the PS Open Cannes festival. Iceland's Steinn Karlsson finished sixth in the €550 Second Chance event on the penultimate night of the series, which ultimately clinched the title.

Andreas Froehli edged out David Docherty right at the death to claim second place and leave the Scotsman in third.

Karlsson's reward for a year-long grind is €15,000 worth of buy-ins, made up of 10 PS Open Main Event and 10 PS Open Cup entries. Froehli will go to battle in 2026 with 10 PS Open Cup buy-ins, while Docherty received five PS Open Cup entries.

RankPlayerCountryPoints
1Steinn Thanh Du KarlssonIceland1,145.66
2Andreas FroehliSwitzerland1,052.50
3David DochertyUnited Kingdom1,028.24
4Soraya Estrada GonzalezSpain953.18
5Gerard CarboSpain655.54
6Thomas ClackUnited Kingdom592.69
7Thor William MorstoelNorway552.65
8Artus Gimenez LeyvaSpain511.72
9Samir AinousFrance500.89
10David LappinIreland499.51

Who Will Get Their Hands on a €100,000 Team PokerStars Ambassador Contract?

Team Pro

Although the top three finishers from each leaderboard won live event prizes, there's a massive prize still waiting to be won. The top 10 finishers from each leaderboard are invited to do an audition to become a Team PokerStars Pro ambassador for a year, which PokerStars values at a cool €100,000.

The winner of the ambassadorship will be announced during EPT Paris, the first EPT of 2026. EPT Paris runs from February 18 through March 1.

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Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor

Matthew Pitt hails from Leeds, West Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom, and has worked in the poker industry since 2008, and worked for PokerNews since 2010. In September 2010, he became the editor of PokerNews. Matthew stepped away from live reporting duties in 2015, and now concentrates on his role of Senior Editor for the PokerNews.

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