The flop showed when Alexander Isenberg bet 1,700 from the small blind and Imed Mahmoud raised to 4,000 from the cutoff. Isenberg tanked for a bit and called.
On the turn the hit and Isenberg checked to Mahmoud who bet 8,000. Isenberg put together the correct amount and proceeded to make the call.
The river brought the and both players quickly checked. Mahmoud, winner of a WSOPE bracelet last summer, tabled his with confidence but he did not win. Isenberg turned over and took down the pot.
In horse racing picking a winner can be all about how a horse looks prior to the start. Can the same theory be applied to the EPT Berlin main event? The PokerStars Blog finds out.
Such was Griffin Benger's desperation to appear in the blog that he recounted a hand that saw AP Phahurat take an early lead.
Kai Vater opened with a raise and Phahurat called to see a jack-seven-nine (two hearts) flop appear. Vater c-bet and called when Phahurat raised. The turn fell as the and Phahurat led for 5,100. Call.
Phahurat went for an 11,000 bet on the river and was called again. He opened for a flush, beating out his German opponent's pocket jacks for flopped top set!
Benger just needs to play a hand now to appear for real.
Depending on the number of runners the tournament attracts today the players will play 9, 10, or 11 one-hour levels. That'll take them through to a 00:30, 01.30 or 02:30AM finish. There will be a one-hour dinner break after level 6.
This tournament is a one re-entry tournament and players can register all the way up until play begins on day 2.
As Day 4 of the Main Event rolls along to the few final tables, the High Roller emerges to compete for your attention. It kicks off at 1:00PM CET and promises to be a star-studded affair.
Last season's event certainly was and climaxed with an epic heads-up battle between Bertrand "Elky" Grospellier and Chris Moorman. Team Pro ElkY finally got the better of Moorman and took home €231,000. It was some achievement seeing as he had to get past Martin Jacobson, Viktor Blom, Tobias Reinkemeier, David Peters and Marvin Rettenmaier at the final table as well.
Everyone is hoping for a repeat this season. Join the PokerNews reporting team back here soon.