Henri Schalin was the first player eliminated after the redraw. He shoved a short-stack with and was called by Thanh Doan with . The board ran all blanks and Schlain hit the rail in 24th place for €1,550.
The action folded to Aleksander Lammas on the small blind and he jammed for his short stack of 78,000. Craig Timmis seemed uncomfortable and went into the tank. He eventually called.
Lammas:
Timmis:
Lammas had a commanding edge in the hand before the flop. While he flopped a set on the flop, it also gave his opponent a straight draw.
The on the turn was a safe card for Lammas. However, the on the river gave Timmis the straight and sent Lammas to the rail in 21st place.
David Levy flew into Tallinn from Israel after a friend told him about the Coolbet Open. His deep run in the Main Event just came to an end.
Jan-Mikael Kesanen opened for 50,000 before Niko Mykkänen three-bet to 150,000. Levy then cold four-bet jammed for 250,000. Kesanen folded while Mykkänen called.
Levy:
Mykkänen:
Levy was a huge favorite in the hand, however, the deck was stacked against him. His opponent flopped a set on the and Levy was unable to catch-up as the and fell on the turn and river.
While Levy shared he was disappointed in the turn of events, he didn't walk away empty-handed with his 19th place performance being worth €1,750.
Anne Mari shoved for around six big blinds with and got called by Niko Mykkänen .
Mari's tournament ended after the board ran out and claimed the 18th place prize for €1,750.
On another table at around the same time, Ants Olav with a short stack was also eliminated in 17th place for €1,750.
The tournament director is now consolidating the action into two tables where it will remain until it plays down is the unofficial nine-max final table.
Shortly after play resumed, Roger Pedersen jammed for under 10 big blinds with and was called by Craig Timmis with .
Pedersen was very behind and the board was unable to help him catch up. He walked away with a healthy prize of €2,065 for his valiant 16th place finish.