2009 PokerStars.com EPT Prague

EPT Prague Main Event
Day: 1b
1a1b2345
Event Info
2009 PokerStars.com EPT Prague
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
jj
Prize
€682,000
Event Info
Buy-in
€5,000
Prize Pool
€2,842,100
Entries
586
Level Info
Level
32
Blinds
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
25,000
Players Left 1 / 586

Mucking the Winner

Geshkenbein can't believe it
Geshkenbein can't believe it
We just caught the very end of this hand, but we'll mention it anyways as there's not much going on at the moment.

We walked up to the table to see a board of {K-?} {J-?} {8-?} {7-?} {J-?} spread out in the middle, and Alexander Selishchev had checked with a pot of about 20,000 up for grabs. His opponent, Vladamir Geshkenbein sat in the tank for several minutes. At first, it looked like he was about to move all in. But his fingers were clumsy, and he was unable to get ahold of his stacks properly. From his body language, it appeared that he actually gave up trying to go all in and decided to take the easy way out by checking behind instead. When he did, Selischev tabled {A-?} {K-?} for kings up. Geshkenbein shook his head and tossed his cards into the muck.

The pot was pushed to Selischev, and just as the dealer scooped up the board with the winning hand, Geshkenbein bolted out of his chair. "Wait, there were two jacks there?"

The table confirmed, and Geshkenbein fell backwards into his chair. He claims to have folded a jack after mistakenly thinking it was two kings on board. It didn't look like an angle; Geshkenbein was clearly gutted as he sat there fingering his ~10,000 remaining chips. Just to make things better, Thierry van den Berg recounted the whole event for him. "Yes, he checked, and you grabbed the chips but then you checked. He had ace-king but there was jack-jack on the board."

And just to take it one step further, Luca Pagano, Vitaly Lunkin, and van den Berg all took turns reminding the young Russian to table his hand to avoid mistakes like that in the future. Lesson learned, we're guessing.

Tags: Alexander Geshkenbein