2019 PokerStars EPT Sochi

₽77,000 EPT National
Day: 2
Event Info

2019 PokerStars EPT Sochi

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
a9
Prize
9,317,000 RUB
Event Info
Buy-in
77,000 RUB
Entries
721
Level Info
Level
33
Blinds
125,000 / 250,000
Ante
250,000
Players Info - Day 2

Masliankou Leads Final 8 of the EPT Sochi 2019 National

Level 26 : 25,000/50,000, 50,000 ante
Yury Masliankou
Yury Masliankou

That's a wrap for Day 2 of the EPT National! Yury Masliankou finished top of the counts and will return tomorrow with 5,260,000 chips in play. Giorgiy Skhulukhiya (4,145,000) returns in second place and Leonid Bilokur (3,210,000) rounds out the top three.

Daniil Lukin, Andrey Lukyanov, Alexandr Sergutin, Kartik Ved and Sarkis Karabadzhakyan are all still in contention and with RUB 9,317,000 ($139,755) up top, we don't expect anyone to give up without a fight.

SeatNameCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Yury MasliankouBelarus5,260,000105
2Kartik VedIndia1,385,00028
3Leonid BilokurRussia3,210,00064
4Daniil LukinRussia2,595,00052
5Andrey LukyanovRussia2,380,00048
6Sarkis KarabadzhakyanRussia670,00013
7Giorgiy SkhulukhiyaRussia4,145,00083
8Alexandr SergutinRussia1,985,00040

The Day began with 108 players that had made it through from the three starting flights and all of them were guaranteed a mincash of RUB 122,500 ($1,895). Over almost 10 hours of play, Masliankou is the man who will start in front. In the biggest hand of the tournament so far, he took the chip lead from Skhulukhiya in the last hand of Level 25. Masliankou took a chunk of Skhulukhiya's chips after six-betting all in and Skhulukhiya thought long and hard before folding. The Belarussian held onto that lead for the remainder of the day and starts with a quarter of the chips in play, which is double the average. Not bad at all.

Matous Houzvicek
Matous Houzvicek

It was an exciting day of poker from the start with a slew of eliminations before the first break. Matous Houzvicek began with the chip lead and had a strong start for the first few levels but the tide turned and Houzvicek lost a series of pots that chipped away at his stack. One of the biggest setbacks was in a clash with Kartik Ved. Ved moved all in on the river with four clubs down and Houzvicek let it go. He was unable to recover from there.

Mikhail Shalamov
Mikhail Shalamov

Houzvicek wasn't the only big name to exit during Day 2, with Team PokerStars Pro Mikhail Shalamov eliminated before the first break. Kiryl Radzivonau, Aleksandr Denisov, Dmitry Yurasov and Day 1b joint chip leaders Yaniv Peretz and Andrey Chernokoz, were just some of the notables to fall by the wayside during Day 2.

With 40 minutes and 47 seconds left on the clock for Level 26, the final table was reached. It came at the expense of Artur Martirosyan who three-bet all in from the small blind against Daniil Lukin's cutoff open and ran ace-jack into pocket queens. It wasn't long after the final table redraw that we saw the last elimination of the night. Sergey Petrushevskiy moved all in with ace-ten for a total of 10 big blinds over an open by Alexandr Sergutin and ran into pocket rockets. He earned RUB 700,000 ($10,500) for his 9th place result.

Sergey Petrushevskiy
Sergey Petrushevskiy

Tomorrow the eight remaining finalists return at 12pm on 24th March to continue their campaign. Play resumes at Level 27 with blinds at 30,000/60,000 and a big blind ante of 60,000.

Join PokerNews for all the action from the moment cards are in the air until the new EPT Sochi 2019 National Champion is crowned.

PositionPayout (CSU)Payout (RUB)Payout (USD)
1CSU 133,100RUB 9,317,000$139,755
2CSU 81,500RUB 5,705,000$85,575
3CSU 58,100RUB 4,067,000$61,005
4CSU 43,700RUB 3,059,000$45,885
5CSU 34,400RUB 2,408,000$36,120
6CSU 25,800RUB 1,806,000$27,090
7CSU 18,500RUB 1,295,000$19,425
8CSU 12,700RUB 889,000$13,335

Tags: Aleksandr DenisovAlexandr SergutinAndrey ChernokozAndrey LukyanovArtur MartirosyanDaniil LukinDmitry YurasovGiorgiy SkhulukhiyaKartik VedKiryl RadzivonauLeonid BilokurMatous HouzvicekMikhail ShalamovSarkis KarabadzhakyanSergey PetrushevskiyYaniv PeretzYury Masliankou