PokerStars player Sofia Lovgren moved all in but when Mario Nagel re-shoved from the small blind she sensed she was in trouble. Indeed she was, her was dominated by the . The board ran out and she said goodbye to the table and the tournament.
Want to see more of Sofia? Check out our interview with her earlier in the day:
Bruno"Kool Shen" Lopes opened for 3,200 and the blinds, including small blind Jack Melki called. They saw a flop of and all three players checked. The turn card was the and Melki bet out 5,000. The big blind folded and Melki started giving Lopes the death stare. Maybe he didn’t notice because he called the bet. The River was the . Lopes bet 12,000. Now a bit of an argument broke out in French and it seemed to be about whether Melki had checked or not. To end the matter Melki called the bet and showed to win the pot as Lopes couldn’t beat it. Order was swiftly restored.
Just 234 players remain and among those to have lost their chips during Level 11 were: Kevin MacPhee, Ignat Liviu, Mihails Morozovs, Cathal Shine, Antoine Labat, Rabah Ait-Abdelmalek, Konstantin Puchkov, Romain Maulin, Jean-Baptiste Loll, Walter Buss, Ozgur Arda, Raffaele Sorrentino...
Diogo Cardoso, Yovan Jeauneaux, Jeremy Nock, Allan Tirel, Abdulaziz Abdulaziz, Jean-Francois Rial, Gisle Olsen, Nikita Nikolaev, Emile Petit, Arunas Sapitavicius, Vojtech Ruzicka, Frederic Vacher, Gareth Teatum, Patrick Nataf, Juri Zaprudnov, Pascal Vos, Patrick Sacrispeyre, Anthony Faisca, Adam Ashadally, Fabian Laute and Robert Haigh.
The cutoff opened to 3,500 with a 45,000 stack and Marco Della Tommasina made it 10,000 to go from the button with a 60,000 stack. The big blind had just one big blind left so he wasn't a big threat to Paul Berende who was seated in the small blind with and a stack big enough to cover everyone.
Berende decided to push all in, effectively putting everyone else at risk but himself. The big blind had no other choice and called, the cutoff folded. Della Tommasina on the button however made the call with kings and won the entire thing.
Berende didn't seem all that happy with his play in the hand. Luckily for him he still has around 75,000 left.
She already won the Ladies' Event earlier this week but Jamila von Perger has clearly not finished yet. She just eliminated Philippe Olivier, albeit with a stroke of luck.
von Perger:
Olivier:
The board ran out and von Perger's flush took the pot while the Frenchman left, muttering to himself.
We had 669 listed as the amount of players but it turns out to be 671. The total prize pool is €3,220,800 and 95 players will walk away with a minimum of €9,500.
Our thanks to JP Kelly for telling us how Dominik Nitsche busted, the two were sat side by side so Kelly had a front row seat. "He raised with ace-king and seat five (Christophe Dartagnan) called. The flop was K-J-7, Dominik bet, Dartagnan raised and Dominik went with it. Nitsche had A-K and Dartagnan had jacks," he said. "Dominik only had about 25 big blinds to start the hand," he added.
So that all means that Team PokerStars Pro Eugene Katchalov is the only player who can complete the Triple Crown here in Deauville.
David Williams, a UK PokerStars qualifier, seemed to be a bit upset about the manner in which the dealer had made some change from his stack, a little distracted even. He had a stack of around 15k. So began his rollercoaster next few hands. He was in the big blind and faced a bet of 3,200 from Bruno"Kool Shen" Lopes. Williams made the call and they saw a flop of . William’s checked and when Lopes bet 5,000, Williams check-raised all in. Lopes snapped him off with against the of Williams who was drawing thin. The turn was the and the river . Williams was left with 600. And a chair.
Williams was automatically all in on the next hand in the small blind, and with two other players pushing the action preflop it looked like he was doomed. A flop of and a bet from Lopes forcing the other player out meant the cards were turned up. Lopes had and Williams had . No matter; the turn and river soon sorted that out. Williams was still in with 2,500.
Williams shoved the next hand with got two callers and won again. Good God, what a story. He could go on to win this whole event. Next hand he grabs his stack, yellows T1000s in the left, black T100s in the right. Over the line they go, but no, the dealer rules it’s a string bet and only the yellows will count.
Anders Pedersen saved the day with a raise though, and all the chips did go in. Pedersen had raised with and was racing against the of Williams. Could he do it again? The board ran out . The last card counterfeiting Williams pair and robbing him of another double up.
What a few minutes in his tournament. He took it in good spirits saying it was nice playing with the table and wishing them luck.
On the turn of a board, Eric Sfez set David Zakine all in and was instantly called.
Zakine:
Sfez:
Sfez was drawing dead as the dealer put out the on the river. But then she didn't stop there and ended up dealing a sixth card (the sea?) which was the . Either way, Zakine doubled up while Sfez was left nursing a short stack.