2012 PokerStars.net EPT Prague

Main Event
Day: 6
Event Info

2012 PokerStars.net EPT Prague

Final Results
Winner
Ramzi Jelassi
Winning Hand
aj
Prize
€835,000
Event Info
Buy-in
€5,000
Prize Pool
€4,190,400
Entries
864
Level Info
Level
33
Blinds
100,000 / 200,000
Ante
30,000

Main Event

Day 6 Started

Ramzi Leads Final Eight Chasing Last EPT of 2012

Ramzi Jelassi
Ramzi Jelassi

It's crunch day at the final EPT of 2012. Just eight players remain of the record breaking 864 players that sat down six long days ago. Ramzi Jealssi is the most experienced EPT player of the final eight and he happens to have the most chips as well.

There are seven other players riding high on confidence as well though who will have something to sat about that. Play is due to start at 12:00 PM CET time and we'll play as long as it takes to crown a winner. This could take a while as the average stack is a 81 big blinds deep.

Coming up we have profiles of all the players so we can get to know them a little better before plays begin.

Here's how they will line up:

SeatNameChips
1David Boyaciyan4,635,000
2Sergey Kuzminskiy1,850,000
3Ramzi Jelassi5,675,000
4Ben Warrington2,200,000
5Sotirios Koutoupas3,775,000
6Mark Herm1,700,000
7Aleh Plauski4,705,000
8Diego Gomez1,380,000

Seat 1: David Boyaciyan, 33, Amsterdam, Netherlands – 4,635,000

It’s here we go again for Dutch banker David Boyaciyan, who was runner-up here at EPT Prague last season. Boyaciyan, a banker by trade, first took the poker world by storm when he won the Amsterdam Master Classics in November 2011 for €382,200.

Not only had a total unknown bested some of the best players in the world, but he wasn’t even a pro. A month later and he was at it again, finishing second to EPT8 Prague champion Martin Finger. That €535,000 prize is still Boyaciyan’s biggest cash to date but he has also made two WPT Bellagio finals, the Partouche final and finished 11th in the PCA €2k NL Turbo in January.

Boyaciyan, who took a 12-month sabbatical from work this year to focus on poker, won his seat in a €550 live satellite in Prague. He has played all three EPTs this season as well as the WSOP in the summer.

He is married with two children – Joel, 5, and Elina, 2.

Tags: David Boyaciyan

Seat 2: Sergey Kuzminskiy, 22, Kemerovo, Russia – 1,850,000

Kuzminskiy is a 22-year-old linguistics student from Kemerovo. He first started playing five-card draw at the age of 12 with his younger brother. In 2008 he saw Poker After Dark on TV and start playing NLHE - freerolls, micro-limit MTTs and 6-max turbo SNGs.

In October, he won his seat to Prague in a special EPT Prague Social Networks freeroll for Russian players. This is his first live tournament.

Seat 3: Ramzi Jelassi, 26, Stockholm, Sweden - 5,675,000 chips

Even though Ramzi Jelassi is still only 26, he is one of the old hands when it comes to the European Poker Tour, having first started on the tour way back in Season 2 when he won a seat online to EPT2 Barcelona. He went deep in two side events at that event and then cashed twice the following season – in Baden and Warsaw.

Since then he has cashed a further nine times in EPT Main Events, including 19th at the EPT6 Grand Final in Monaco for €50,000, and 20th at EPT Barcelona in Season 5 for €24,700. His biggest victories to date though were winning IPT San Remo in 2009 for €170,000 and winning a €2k side event at EPT Prague in Season 5. His live tournament winnings now total more than $1.2 million.

Before taking up poker in 2004, Jelassi was a successful soccer player, participating in the Boy’s Allsvenskan (the highest boy’s league in Sweden) as a 16-year old. This is his deepest EPT Main Event run to date.

Tags: Ramzi Jelassi

Seat 4: Ben Warrington, 25, London, UK - 2,200,000

Ben Warrington is a 25-year-old professional poker player, originally from Epsom in Surrey and now living primarily in London - when he's not travelling the international poker circuit. After making his mark online, where he won more than $2 million in tournaments alone, he is now focused on establishing himself as a live player. He considers his stellar performance here as evidence that he is getting close to achieving that goal.

Warrington was tournament chip leader after day four and took a steady approach to day five, allowing players to bust around him. "I played very patiently," he said. "And I'm still only one double up from pretty much the chip lead." After a placement in Valencia, while studying Spanish at university, he lived in Spain for a few years before returning to his native UK in June.

He is being supported in Prague by his girlfriend Yuresky, who played the ladies event here after qualifying on PokerStars.

Tags: Ben Warrington

Seat 5: Sotirios Koutoupas, 29, Thessaloniki, Greece – 3,775,000

Sotirios Koutoupas, 29, hails from Thessaloniki, Greece and qualified for the EPT9 Prague Main Event on PokerStars via a €82 satellite. Koutoupas made his presence known in the Main Event on Day 3 when he was one of only three players to bag up over a million in chips.

Koutoupas, who is single, plays primarily big buy-in tournaments on PokerStars under the screen name “SKWINNER” and has more than $190K in earnings. Prior to making the EPT9 Prague final table, Koutoupas’ only live cash was a runner-up finish to Kenny Hallaert in the EPT8 Loutraki €300 No-Limit Hold’em Turbo back in November 2011 for €5,200.

Despite his online success, Koutoupas is still a workingman back home where he works in the family business. Koutoupas is in Prague with his best friend, who was actually with him when he made the final table of the aforementioned EPT8 Loutraki event. “I can’t even imagine,” Koutoupas said when asked what it’d mean to win an EPT title.

Tags: Sotirios Koutoupas

Seat 6: Mark Herm, 27, Philadelphia, USA - 1,700,000

The lone American remaining in Prague, Mark Herm has had seven World Series cashes and one at the PCA but none on this side of the Atlantic. The 27-year-old from Philadelphia turned pro after leaving college seven years ago. He began with a $50 deposit online, grinding limit hold’em games and running it up to more than $1,000.

After leaving college he took up poker professionally and has never looked back. Herm says he is primarily an online tournament player and this is his first EPT in mainland Europe, which he claimed was a good way to avoid being bored. It’s made for a profitable week. “There’s no online poker back home,” said Herm. “Prague is a cool city and we wanted to check it out, more for travelling rather than poker.”

Tags: Mark Herm

Seat 7: Aleh Plauski, 28, Minsk, Belarus - 4,705,000

Aleh ‘cooltwister’ Plauski has scored more than a million dollars online at PokerStars and $449,386 in live tournaments, most of which came from a sixth place finish at the EPT Grand Final for €300,000. Not only is Plauski obviously a tournament talent but he’s also keeps good company.

“I think it’s important for me [to win]. A friend of mine has this result, he’s my classmate,” said Plauski. That classmate, with whom he shared a maths class, is Mikalai Pobal, winner of EPT Barcelona earlier this season.

“There are two trophies that Belarus took, but only one for Russia. It would be nice to have a third result for Belarus. Let’s go!” added Plauski, aiming to follow in Pobal and Vadzim Kursevich’s footsteps.

Tags: Aleh Plauski

Seat 8: Diego “ildieko” Gomez, 33, Oviedo, Spain - 1,380,000

If you were superstitious, you would say bowtie-wearing insurance broker Diego Gomez was destined to make the EPT Prague final table. Back in August, he was in Barcelona for work and dropped in to watch JC Alvarado on the Super High Roller final table. He decided it was his dream to make an EPT final table and set about winning a seat on PokerStars. After bubbling THREE EPT Prague satellites, he decided he should come here anyway and buy in direct.

Within days, he had managed to win the first Eureka side event (for €5,550) and then win a seat to the EPT Main Event in a live satellite, even though he was down to one big blind at one point.

Diego has been playing poker for around four years, mainly casino tourneys, although he did finish 12th at Estrellas San Sebastian He is being supported in the final by a large group of Spanish mates, including his girlfriend Marina.

Tags: Diego Gomez