2025 PokerStars EPT Barcelona

€100,000 EPT Super High Roller
Day: 3
Event Info
2025 PokerStars EPT Barcelona
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
a9
Prize
€1,450,385
Event Info
Buy-in
€100,000
Prize Pool
€4,559,940
Entries
47
Level Info
Level
23
Blinds
80,000 / 160,000
Ante
160,000
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
6
Players Left
1
Players Left 1 / 47
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€100,000 EPT Super High Roller

Day 3 Completed

Leon Sturm Clinches Career-Best Score of €1,450,385 in EPT Super High Roller

Level 23 : Blinds 80,000/160,000, 160,000 ante
Leon Sturm
Leon Sturm

The €100,000 EPT Super High Roller at Casino Barcelona, part of the PokerStars European Poker Tour (EPT) Barcelona, has crowned a new champion as Germany’s Leon Sturm conquered a 47-entry field to win one of the most prestigious titles of the series.

Sturm locked up a career-best score of €1,450,385 after a heads-up deal with David Coleman, which left €200,000 and the trophy still in play. “Yeah, new high score unlocked,” Sturm said with a smile. “That’s very nice, always very cool to win a trophy. I think that’s more important than the score in the end.”

The three-day event generated a prize pool of €4,559,940, with the final six players taking home a share. Coleman earned €1,148,755 for finishing second, while Jesse Lonis capped another strong showing in 2025 by finishing third for €706,800. “I just kind of feel lucky to have gotten lucky right now,” Sturm added.

Final Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Leon SturmGermany€1,450,385*
2David ColemanUnited States€1,148,755*
3Jesse LonisUnited States€706,800
4Espen JorstadNorway€524,400
5Aleksejs PonakovsLatvia€410,400
6Punnat PunsriThailand€319,200

*denotes heads-up deal

Winner's Reaction

One hand in particular shifted the momentum in Sturm’s favor when he got all in against Coleman holding ace-king versus ace-king. The board rolled out a four-card flush for the German, giving him the chip lead for the first time.

“After that, I felt like I had a substantial lead and I could just do anything and all the spots worked out incredibly well,” he said. “Obviously, I was fortunate that my opponents didn’t pick up cards after that, but momentum definitely shifted in that moment, and I kind of just overtook. This one’s super, super brutal for David, of course.”

Leon Sturm
Leon Sturm

Sturm also reflected on the dynamic at the final table, which featured plenty of banter despite the high stakes. “It’s nice to play against friends and people that you know more so than if you play against unknowns,” he explained. “Here, all pros were definitely a good atmosphere. But yeah, we were also just rocking the shades, literally everyone, five people staring into each other’s sunglasses, so there’s room for growth in terms of table talk.”

Looking ahead, the German already has his next events lined up. “Yeah, the Main is on right now. I’ll play after. And other than that, there’s a 50K and a big 10K, so exciting stuff,” he said.

Sturm's Rollercoaster RIde

The final table got off to an electric start as Thailand's Punnat Punsri hit the rail on the very first hand. Coleman jammed from the small blind with a weak ace and Punsri snap-called with cowboys, only to see an ace-high flop crush his hopes and send him out in sixth place.

Coleman’s dream start just continued to get better as he dominated the early levels, dragging in pot after pot while barely putting a foot wrong. Sturm, meanwhile, found himself on the ropes, bleeding chips and sitting at the bottom of the counts with less than half the stack of his nearest rival when the first break arrived.

Espen Jorstad
Espen Jorstad

The start-of-day chip leader, Espen Jorstad, also struggled on the felt as his bluffs kept getting picked off, plus with his opponents relentlessly raising and reraising him. At one point, Lonis windmilled a bluff across the table at him. Still, the world champion stayed composed and didn’t let the setbacks tilt him.

Sturm’s turning point came with five players left when he found himself all in with big slick against Coleman in a hand that would decide the chip lead. Coleman held the same hand, and the two laughed, expecting a chop. But the monotone flop gave Sturm a flush draw, and when he completed it on the turn, the final table momentum shifted entirely in his favor.

Aleksejs Ponakovs
Aleksejs Ponakovs

With the chip lead for the first time, Sturm ramped up the aggression, putting the middling stacks of Coleman, Lonis, and Jorstad in ICM prison by repeatedly open-shoving, while Aleksejs Ponakovs clung on with fewer than ten big blinds. Ponakovs fell in fifth, and Jorstad soon followed in fourth. Three-handed play began with Sturm holding around 60 percent of the chips, leaving Coleman and Lonis nearly even.

After a level of tussling between the trio, it was Lonis who came up short, taking the bronze position on the podium. He correctly called off with ace-nine and had Coleman’s nine-eight dominated, but an eight on the flop was another dream for Coleman. Once the board ran out without an ace, Lonis was gone, and the tournament entered heads-up.

David Coleman
David Coleman

The moment Coleman and Sturm reached heads-up, they quickly agreed to a deal that left €200,000 and the trophy to play for. Sturm began with nearly a 2:1 advantage and extended it early with well-timed aggression and by picking off a bluff from Coleman.

In the final hand of the Super High Roller, Coleman had been ground down to about twenty big blinds when Sturm shoved from the button to put him at risk. Coleman called with ace-five, but was in bad shape against Sturm’s ace-nine. The board helped neither player, and Sturm’s kicker played to win him the pot, the trophy, and €1,450,385.

Leon Sturm
Leon Sturm

That concludes PokerNews coverage of the €100,000 EPT Super High Roller. Attention now turns to the Main Event, where live updates will continue from Casino Barcelona.

Tags: Aleksejs PonakovsDavid ColemanEspen JorstadJesse LonisLeon SturmPunnat Punsri

David Coleman Eliminated in 2nd Place (€1,148,755*)

Level 23 : Blinds 80,000/160,000, 160,000 ante
David Coleman
David Coleman

Leon Sturm jammed from the button and David Coleman called for his stack of 2,500,000 from the big blind.

David Coleman: A5 All in
Leon Sturm: A9

Both players had an ace, but Sturm's was better, and if the dealer produced a clean runout, Sturm would be the champion of the event.

The flop came down J4J, keeping Sturm in the lead, but Coleman had some chop outs. The 6 hit the turn and Sturm was one card away from victory. A card was burned, then the 2 dropped on the river, meaning Sturm was the champion.

Coleman was out in second place, and Sturm was the winner of the €100,000 EPT Super High Roller.

*denotes heads-up deal

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Leon Sturm de
Leon Sturm
11,750,000
3,000,000
3,000,000
Profile photo of David Coleman us
David Coleman
Busted

Tags: David ColemanLeon Sturm

Sturm Can't Be Stopped

Level 23 : Blinds 80,000/160,000, 160,000 ante

David Coleman completed from the small blind, and then Leon Sturm made it 600,000 from the big blind. Coleman continued in the form of a call.

The flop came down 8J2 and Sturm bet out for 270,000. Coleman threw his cards into the muck, and Sturm won another pot.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Leon Sturm de
Leon Sturm
8,750,000
800,000
800,000
Profile photo of David Coleman us
David Coleman
3,000,000
800,000
800,000

Tags: David ColemanLeon Sturm

Level: 23

Blinds: 80,000/160,000

Ante: 160,000

Sturm Starting to Pull Away

Level 22 : Blinds 60,000/120,000, 120,000 ante

On a completed board of 4Q5J8, David Coleman fired out a near pot-sized bet of 540,000 from the big blind, and Leon Sturm quickly called.

Coleman showed a bluff and lost the pot to Sturm's Jx4x for two pair.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Leon Sturm de
Leon Sturm
7,950,000
700,000
700,000
Profile photo of David Coleman us
David Coleman
3,800,000
700,000
700,000

Tags: David ColemanLeon Sturm

Sturm Extracts Some Value from Coleman

Level 22 : Blinds 60,000/120,000, 120,000 ante

David Coleman completed from the button, and Leon Sturm checked from the big blind.

Sturm check-called a bet of 120,000 by Coleman on the 4A10 flop.

A 9 hit the turn and both players checked to see the 7 fall on the river. Sturm bet 300,000, and Coleman quickly called.

Sturm tabled second pair with 102 to take down the pot with a pair of tens, as Coleman mucked.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Leon Sturm de
Leon Sturm
7,250,000
200,000
200,000
Profile photo of David Coleman us
David Coleman
4,500,000
200,000
200,000

Tags: David ColemanLeon Sturm

Deal Numbers

Level 22 : Blinds 60,000/120,000, 120,000 ante
Leon Sturm &David Coleman
Leon Sturm &David Coleman

The players have agreed to a deal as outlined below, leaving €200,000 to play for, along with the trophy.

They also agreed to reduce the blind lengths to 12 hands per level.

PlayerPrize
Leon Sturm€1,250,385
David Coleman€1,148,755
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