2019 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo®Casino EPT

€2,200 No-Limit Hold'em Deep Stack
Day: 1
Event Info

2019 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo®Casino EPT

Final Results
Winner
Georgios Kitsios
Winning Hand
k8
Prize
€72,170
Event Info
Buy-in
€2,200
Prize Pool
€310,400
Entries
160
Level Info
Level
27
Blinds
30,000 / 60,000
Ante
60,000

Alexandre Reard Leads 29 Survivors to Day 2 in the €2,200 Deep Stack

Level 15 : 2,000/4,000, 4,000 ante
Alexander Reard
Alexander Reard

Day 1 of the €2,200 No-Limit Hold'em Deep Stack event is in the books at the PokerStars and Monte-Carlo®Casino European Poker Tour. Frenchman Alexandre Reard leads the 29 remaining players to Day 2. Reard bagged 358,000 from the starting stack of 30,000. All remaining players still have a shot at the first-place prize of €72,170.

The day started with just 24 players on the clock but when late registration closed that number stood at 160. That meant that 23 players would make it into the money but the bubble has yet to burst with 29 survivors. Reard stands on top of the leaderboard but he's followed by Yake Wu (300,000), Romain Piraux (297,000), and Sasan Tabib (291,000). All bagged (close to) ten times the starting stack and are in a great position to make a deep run in one of the final events of the EPT Monte Carlo.

Plenty of notable players showed up in the Salle des Etoiles but only a few made it through to the final day of the event. Players like Charlie Carrel, Joey Weissman, Ben Heath, Matas Cimbolas, Jack Sinclair, and Orpen Kisacikoglu showed up to play the event but they all failed to make Day 2.

Orpen Kisacikoglu
Orpen Kisacikoglu

Others that entered were Melika Razavi and Conor Beresford both busted out of the Main Event on Day 4 and hopped straight into the €2,200 Deep Stack. Razavi busted in the Main Event in 17th place, cashing for €36,620 while Beresford just missed out on the final table in 11th place, cashing for €50,930. Both of them weren't able to bag any chips and were sent to the rail empty-handed after their deep run in the Main Event earlier.

Ariel Celestino busted in the last level of the Main Event on Day 3 in 32nd place. He earned €17,310 with his deep run and now he has a shot to improve on that score. Celestino bagged 188,000 which is slightly above the average stack of 165,000. Celestino would have to finish in 5th or higher to improve on his Main Event score.

Jean-René Fontaine (212,000), Thomas Muehloecker (168,000), Maria Lampropulos (150,000), Artur Koren (137,000), Winfred Yu (131,000), and Aylar Lie (102,000) did make it through to Day 2 and they'll be battling for the first place prize of €72,170. Six players will bust out of the tournament empty-handed but the other 23 players are going to be guaranteed €3,600. A spot at the final nine will guarantee €7,200.

The tournament will continue Friday, May 4th, at 12:30 p.m. The remaining 29 players will battle for a spot in the money and they will play down to a winner. Levels will still be 30 minutes long.

PokerNews will be on the floor to report on all the ins and outs of the tournament.

Tags: Alexandre ReardAriel CelestinoArtur KorenAylar LieBen HeathCharlie CarrelConor BeresfordJack SinclairJoey WeissmanMaria LampropulosMatas CimbolasOrpen KisacikogluThomas MuehloeckerWinfred Yu

Ami Barer Times Wrong

Level 13 : 1,000/2,500, 2,500 ante
Ami Barer in a previous event
Ami Barer in a previous event

Arsenii Karmatckii raised to 5,500 from early position and he was called by Aylar Lie from the button and big blind Ami Barer.

The flop fell {a-Clubs}{9-Clubs}{7-Clubs} and all three players checked to see the {5-Hearts} turn.

Barer checked to Karmatckii again and he made a delayed continuation-bet of 13,500. Lie got out of the way and Barer pushed his last 39,000 to the middle and Karmatckii called. Barer let out a curse word as soon as Karmatckii called and people chuckled around the table.

Barer showed {k-Clubs}{10-Spades} and he needed to hit against the {a-Hearts}{8-Diamonds} of Karmatckii.

The river was the {7-Spades} and Barer was out of the tournament area before his chips were added to Karmatckii his stack.

Player Chips Progress
Arsenii Karmatckii ru
Arsenii Karmatckii
190,000
190,000
190,000
EPT Main Event Champion
EPT 1X Winner
Aylar Lie no
Aylar Lie
60,000
12,000
12,000
Ami Barer ca
Ami Barer
Busted

Tags: Ami BarerArsenii KarmatckiiAylar Lie

Reard Doubles in Huge Set-Up

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 2,000 ante
Alexandre Reard in a previous event
Alexandre Reard in a previous event

The complete {6-Diamonds}{4-Clubs}{2-Clubs}{3-Spades}{7-Clubs} board was on the table and Samvel Grigoryan had a bet of 35,000 in front of him from the hijack. The pot had about 80,000 in it and Alexandre Reard pushed all in from the big blind. The bet was for 87,200 and Grigoryan didn't seem to be very call-happy.

He thought it over and flicked some chips in the middle before tabling {k-Clubs}{5-Clubs}. Reard showed {a-Clubs}{3-Clubs} for a higher flush and he scored a huge double up.

Player Chips Progress
Alexandre Reard fr
Alexandre Reard
260,000
Day 1 Chip Leader
Samvel Grigoryan ru
Samvel Grigoryan
70,000
-64,800
-64,800

Tags: Alexandre ReardSamvel Grigoryan

Last to First: Wei Huang Playing with his Poker Idols in EPT Monte Carlo Main Event

Level 12 : 1,000/2,000, 2,000 ante
Wei Huang
Wei Huang

Dead last of 30 players coming into Day 4 of the EPT Monte Carlo €5,300 Main Event to chip leading within three levels — it’s been a very lucky day for amateur poker player Wei Huang.

The 34-year-old amateur poker player from Shanghai, China is enjoying his very first trip to Europe, and picked a great time to run good.

While he stays busy with his job as a finance controller for PepsiCo, Huang loves poker and plays for fun when he can. Sitting with the big-time pros late in the Main Event in Monaco, Huang is a little starstruck, but not letting it interfere with his game. In the late levels of the day, he's been seated with the likes of Ryan Riess, Sam Greenwood and Manig Loeser at the featured live-streamed table.

“It’s amazing because when I look at them, they’re like my idols. I’m a big fan of most of these players.”

Click here to read the full article at the PokerNews homepage.

Tags: Wei Huang

Yang Eliminates Speranza

Level 11 : 800/1,600, 1,600 ante
Gianluca Speranza in a previous event
Gianluca Speranza in a previous event

A player in middle position raised to 3,500 and Gianluca Speranza put his last 10,100 in the middle. He was called by Renjun Yang in the small blind and by the initial raiser.

The flop fell {k-Hearts}{5-Diamonds}{3-Hearts} and both players still to act checked. The turn was the {5-Spades} and Yang bet 4,500. He was called and the {5-Hearts} river completed the board.

Both checked again and Yang opened up {8-Diamonds}{8-Clubs}. That was enough to win the side pot against the {a-Spades}{q-Hearts} of the initial raiser. It was also more than enough to take down the main pot since Speranza finished in last place with {a-Diamonds}{7-Clubs}.

Player Chips Progress
Renjun Yang cn
Renjun Yang
204,000
204,000
204,000
Gianluca Speranza it
Gianluca Speranza
Busted

Tags: Gianluca SperanzaRenjun Yang

Lie Busts Guenni

Level 9 : 500/1,000, 1,000 ante
Aylar Lie in a previous event
Aylar Lie in a previous event

Aylar Lie sat in early position and she put Mikael Guenni at risk who was in the big blind. Guenni was only playing 6,800 and Lie had him covered.

Lie had {9-Hearts}{9-Clubs} while Guenni opened up {k-Clubs}{q-Diamonds}.

The board ran out {9-Diamonds}{4-Clubs}{2-Diamonds}{3-Hearts}{6-Spades} and the pot was pushed to Lie who eliminated Guenni in the process.

Player Chips Progress
Aylar Lie no
Aylar Lie
48,000
Mikael Guenni fr
Mikael Guenni
Busted

Tags: Mikael GuenniAylar Lie

The World According to Boutros Naims

Level 3 : 100/200, 200 ante
Boutros Naim
Boutros Naim

Boutros Pierre Naim is a man of will.

The Lebanese-born, poker-playing Monaco resident — and PokerStars qualifier to the EPT Main Event this week — once quit his investment banking job on a whim because his company moved offices from one part of London to another. It increased his commuting time and Naim wouldn’t stand for it.

“For me,” he says, “this was basically a no-go.” So he moved to Monaco.

But when he was in his 60s and living in the principality, Naim found himself missing his son, who had moved to Massachusetts to attend Babson College. Naim decided to move nearby and applied to Harvard University — not to seek a degree but simply to take courses on subjects like economics, the history of the Ottoman Empire, and meta-ethics. He applied for admission through the same process as any other student, leading to some bureaucratic-themed amusement.

Read the full article by Jason Kirk at the PokerStars Blog.

Tags: Boutros Naim

Carrel is ''Not Winning''

Level 3 : 100/200, 200 ante
Charlie Carrel in an earlier event
Charlie Carrel in an earlier event

A player from early position raised to 600 and Charlie Carrel three-bet from the button to 2,000. He was called by Sam Higgs from the big blind and by the initial raiser.

The flop fell {a-Clubs}{5-Clubs}{4-Hearts} and it checked to Carrel. He continued with a bet of 2,400 and he was called by Higgs. The other player got out of the way and they continued the hand heads-up.

The turn was the {9-Clubs} and Carrel bet 5,000 when it checked to him, only to be called again by Higgs. The {9-Hearts} came down and Higgs checked to Carrel for the third time in a row.

Carrel said ''I'm not winning this'' before he checked behind and he mucked his cards when Higgs showed {a-Hearts}{3-Hearts}.

Player Chips Progress
Sam Higgs au
Sam Higgs
34,000
34,000
34,000
Charlie Carrel gb
Charlie Carrel
16,800
-13,200
-13,200

Tags: Charlie CarrelSam Higgs

Day 1 of the €2,200 No-Limit Hold'em Deep Stack Starts at 4 P.M.

Tournament Room
Tournament Room

The 2019 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo®Casino European Poker Tour is coming to an end but there will be a new tournament today. The €2,200 No-Limit Hold'em Deep Stack tournament will start at 4 p.m. later today.

The tournament will feature a €2,200 buy-in and it will be played in the freeze-out format. No reentries are allowed and players that bust out of the tournament would have to find something else on the schedule to play. Plenty of winners have been crowned at the EPT Monte Carlo already and the winner of this event will be crowned tomorrow.

Levels will be 30-minutes long and players start with 30,000 in front of them. The first level starts at 100/100 without a big blind ante and the second level has the same blinds but they will start with a big blind ante. They will play 15 levels before they bag and there will be a 20-minute break after every four levels. There will be a 75-minute break after level eight. Registration will be open until the start of level nine.

Structure

LevelDurationSmall BlindBig BlindAnte
130 min.100100 
230 min.100100100
330 min.100200200
430 min.100300300
Break20 min.   
530 min.200400400
630 min.200500500
730 min.300600600
830 min.400800800
Break75 min.   
930 min.5001,0001,000
1030 min.6001,2001,200
1130 min.8001,6001,600
1230 min.1,0002,0002,000
Break20 min.   
1330 min.1,0002,5002,500
1430 min.1,5003,0003,000
1530 min.2,0004,0004,000