Arnaud Mattern was gathering his things and heading for the door with on the board and showing. Gianluca Speranza had showing to secure the elimination with a pair of eights.
Dominik Nitsche raised it up in the cutoff and Pascal Lefrancois shoved all in for around 50,000 in the big blind. Nitsche quickly called and the cards were tabled.
Pascal Lefrancois:
Dominik Nitsche:
The flop of hit neither player, leaving Lefrancois in the lead with his ten-high. The turn was the but the river brought the to give Nitsche the only pair and eliminated Lefrancois.
Ramiro Petrone raised on the button and Orpen Kisacikoglu shipped all in for 133,000 in the small blind. Petrone called to put Kisacikoglu at risk.
Orpen Kisacikoglu:
Ramiro Petrone:
The flop came to give Petrone the lead with a pair of jacks. The on the turn and the on the river was no help to Kisacikoglu who was bounced from the tournament.
Action was heads-up with more than 200,000 in the pot and on the board when Troy Quenneville checked from the small blind and Jean-Noel Thorel shoved from under the gun. Quenneville went into the tank for a few moments before he finally committed the rest of his chips.
Thorel turned over and Quenneville had . The river was , with no help for Quenneville, and he was eliminated from the tournament in 16th place for €58,020.
Rodrigo Seiji raised to 24,000 from early position and Daniel Rezaei defended from the big blind. The flop came and Rezaei checked to Seiji who continued for 18,000. Rezaei check-raised all in for 126,000 and Seiji instantly called.
Daniel Rezaei:
Rodrigo Seiji:
Rezaei flopped a pair but still needed some help against the pocket aces. The turn was the and the river was the which sent Rezaei to the payout desk.
Action was heads-up with more than 200,000 in the pot and on the board, Byron Kaverman checked and Vicente Delgado jammed his last 265,000. Kaverman called after using a time bank and turned over for a pair of nines. Delgado showed and made his way to the payout desk.
Another 10 levels were completed on Day 2 of the €25,000 EPT High Roller at the 2022 PokerStars European Poker Tour presented by Monte-Carlo Casino. There will be just 13 players returning for the third and final day of action where a large portion of the €4,297,790 will be handed out.
Leading the way among the 13 survivors will be Dimitar Danchev who bagged up a whopping 1,379,000 chips. Danchev has most recently been known for his online poker prowess, however, he already has one EPT title under his belt. Danchev took down the PCA Main Event in 2013 for his only seven-figure score to date. Bruno Lopes (1,116,000) and Gianluca Speranza (1,073,000) round out the top three chip stacks.
Day 3 Seating Assignments
Table
Seat
Player
Chip Count
1
1
Dominik Nitsche
455,000
1
2
Davidi Kitai
285,000
1
3
1
4
Dimitar Danchev
1,379,000
1
5
Rodrigo Seiji
424,000
1
6
Marton Czuczor
520,000
1
7
Gianluca Speranza
1,073,000
1
8
Manig Loeser
445,000
2
1
Jean-Noel Thorel
1,005,000
2
2
Byron Kaverman
912,000
2
3
Steve O’Dwyer
466,000
2
4
Ramiro Petrone
536,000
2
5
Joao Vieira
325,000
2
6
2
7
2
8
Bruno Lopes
1,116,000
The day kicked off with 69 players returning to their seats along with 19 other re-entries before the cards went in the air. That created a total of 179 entries for this event and a prizepool of nearly €4.3 million. The remaining 13 players have already locked up over €70,000 while the winner will be walking home with €951,950.
There were short stacks that were falling by the wayside in the early going along with some of the new entries. As the bubble approached, the action came to a screeching halt and the tournament staff opted to go hand-for-hand two players off the money. Kent Staahle was the first to exit, followed by Pedro Garagnani who ran his pocket kings into the pocket aces of Dominik Nitsche.
There was still some excessive stalling for the coming pay jumps with a few short stacks that scraped into the money. Among those that cashed include Sam Greenwood, Thomas Muehloecker, Ben Heath, Christoph Vogelsang, and Pascal Lefrancois.
During the last couple of levels is when Danchev earned all of his chips, thanks to a bit of luck in the cards. Danchev got into a preflop raising war with Vogelsang, both of which had an above-average chip stack. Danchev found himself all-in and at risk with pocket kings against the aces of Vogelsang. However, a four-card flush runout gave Danchev the best hand and left Vogelsang on crumbs in the process.
Day 3 action will commence at 12:30 p.m. local time with the blinds resuming on level 21 at 8,000/16,000 and a 16,000 big blind ante. The levels will continue to be 60 minutes in length until a winner is crowned. The PokerNews live reporting team will be on the tournament floor to bring you all of the action.