2015 PokerStars.com EPT Season 11 Malta

€25,500 High Roller
Day: 3
Event Info

2015 PokerStars.com EPT Season 11 Malta

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
1010
Prize
€572,300
Event Info
Buy-in
€25,000
Prize Pool
€2,156,000
Entries
88
Level Info
Level
25
Blinds
25,000 / 25,000
Ante
5,000

Congratulations to Dzmitry Urbanovich, Winner of the EPT Malta €25,500 High Roller (€572,300)!

Level 25 : 25,000/25,000, 5,000 ante
Dzmitry Urbanovich - EPT Malta 2015 - €25,500 High Roller winner
Dzmitry Urbanovich - EPT Malta 2015 - €25,500 High Roller winner

The first-ever European Poker Tour Malta event kicked off with a bang, as Dzmitry Urbanovich won the €25,500 High Roller after an epic three-day battle against some of the best players in the world. This event drew a total of 68 entries and 20 reentries, creating a prize pool of €2.156 million and 13 players ultimately were paid.

After a very long penultimate day that included a 90-minute money bubble and another two-hour bubble before the final table was reached, many players started out with small stacks. The shortest stack among the final eight was Nick Petrangelo, but the current No. 5 on the GPI Player of the Year ranking was not the first to get knocked out.

A few hands into the final table, it was former EPT London Super High Roller and EPT Prague Main Event champion Martin Finger who raised from middle position to 33,000. Urbanovich three-bet from his immediate left to 79,000, the action folded back around to Finger, who had started the day seventh in chips, and he moved all in for 350,000 in chips. Urbanovich called holding pocket tens and he sent Finger to the rail holding ace-king. Finger collected €79,800 for his eighth-place finish.

Not too long after Finger had left the room, it was Sam Greenwood who moved all in for 297,000 in chips. Greenwood was the tournament chip leader for quite some time on Day 2, but now his tournament life was hanging in the balance versus Urbanovich. Urbanovich called Greenwood's shove from the big blind with ace-nine of spades and the Canadian pro was in good shape with pocket queens. The flop and the turn, however, both contained a nine so that Urbanovich made trips, and Greenwood took home €102,400 for his seventh-place finish.

After Greenwood's elimination, there were four stacks that dwindled and two that grew bigger. Both Connor Drinan and Urbanovich kept chipping up while the others fell behind more and more. Piotr Franczak was the first of the four to get knocked out when he ran pocket threes into Drinan's kings. Franczak cashed for €129,400, which is his biggest live tournament result to date.

After a short break with five players remaining, Dani Stern and Petrangelo hit the rail in quick succession. First, Stern ran pocket nines into Daniel Dvoress' ace-jack of clubs, followed by Petrangelo losing with queen-ten of diamonds against Drinan's jack-ten of spades. Both players had less than six big blinds, but their reward for making it this far certainly wasn't something to sneeze at. Stern collected €166,000 for fifth, while Petrangelo, who recorded his second-biggest tournament result to date, walked away €205,900 richer.

Dvoress was the last man standing of the four shorter stacks, and he couldn't get anything going during three-handed play, either. After losing a string of hands, Dvoress finally ended up all in with jack-nine of spades versus Urbanovich's ace-three. The board brought the all-in player no help, and Dvoress cashed for €263,000 to double his career live tournament earnings.

The final two players started with the following chip counts:

NameCountryChipsBig Blinds
Connor DrinanUSA2,674,00089
Dzmitry UrbanovichPoland1,727,00057

Coming into the final table, Urbanovich's biggest live result was a third-place finish in an Estrellas Poker Tour €1,000 turbo event for €31,950, and even a second-place in this event would mean a huge increase of that score.

Drinan had a bit more experience under the bright lights of big international final tables, as he finished fourth in the Asia-Pacific Poker Tour Macau Super High Roller this last November for the equivalent of $657,605. He was also one of the Big One for One Drop players at the World Series of Poker last summer, having won his way into the event via a $25,000 live satellite. With Drinan, it was safe to say he has dealt with much poker pressure before in his life. In total, Drinan had six six-figure scores before this final table started, and it wasn't a stretch calling him the favorite going into the heads-up stage.

As the heads-up battle grew more intense, the rail also started the swell up as notable players like Pratyush Buddiga, Shyam Srinivasan, and Craig McCorkell supported Drinan versus the Polish contingent supporting Urbanovich that included Dominik Panka and Jose Carlos Garcia.

For the first hour of heads-up play Drinan maintained his chip lead, but Urbanovich chipped away at his American opponent the more Drinan couldn't get anything going. The first all-in pot occurred after almost two hours of play when Urbanovich put Drinan all in on the river. Drinan folded and was left behind with just 14 big blinds.

After getting down to just 11 big blinds, Drinan doubled up once, but he turned out to just be putting off the evil for another 30 minutes. On the final hand of the tournament, Urbanovich raised to 100,000 from the button, and Drinan shoved for about 700,000. Urbanovich called with pocket tens and held up against Drinan's nines. Drinan took home €397,800 for his amazing run, but it was Urbanovich who came out on top and took home the biggest score of his life worth €572,300.

Here are the final payouts of this event:

PlaceNameCountryPayout
1Dzmitry UrbanovichPoland€572,300
2Connor DrinanUSA€397,800
3Daniel DvoressCanada€263,000
4Nick PetrangeloUSA€205,900
5Dani SternUSA€166,000
6Piotr FranczakPoland€129,400
7Sam GreenwoodCanada€102,400
8Martin FingerGermany€79,800
    
9Ramin HajiyevAzerbadijan€60,400
10Jeff RossiterAustralia€46,400
11Agshin RasulovAzerbadijan€46,400
12Andreas EilerGermany€43,100
13Philipp GruissemGermany€43,100

Make sure to stay tuned to PokerNews.com, as we will do live coverage of both the inaugural Global Poker Masters, the EPT Malta €5,300 Main Event, and the EPT €10,300 High Roller.

Tags: Agshin RasulovAndreas EilerConnor DrinanCraig McCorkellDani SternDaniel DvoressDmitry UrbanovichDzmitry UrbanovichGlobal Poker MastersJeff RossiterJose Carlos GarciaMartin FingerNicholas PetrangeloNick PetrangeloPhilipp GruissemPiotr FranczakPratyush BuddigaRamin HajiyevSam Greenwood

Connor Drinan Eliminated in 2nd Place (€397,800)

Level 25 : 25,000/25,000, 5,000 ante
Connor Drinan
Connor Drinan

Dzmitry Urbanovich opened for 100,000 from the button and Connor Drinan shoved for his, what appeared, last 700,000. Urbanovich quickly checked his cards one last time, and called.

Dzmitry Urbanovich: {10-Clubs}{10-Hearts}
Connor Drinan: {9-Diamonds}{9-Spades}

The flop came {5-Clubs}{6-Clubs}{5-Hearts}, making some railbirds believe Drinan had flopped a full house. He didn't.

The {Q-Clubs} gave Urbanovich a flush draw on top, but the {9-Clubs} was still good as the board was paired.

The {7-Clubs} gave Urbanovich a flush and Drinan hit the rail in 2nd place, good for almost €400,000.

Player Chips Progress
Dzmitry Urbanovich pl
Dzmitry Urbanovich
EPT 1X Winner
4,400,000 805,000
Connor Drinan us
Connor Drinan
Busted

Tags: Connor DrinanDzmitry Urbanovich

A Night to Remember: The Inaugural GPM Draw Party

Level 25 : 25,000/25,000, 5,000 ante
Global Poker Masters draw party.
Global Poker Masters draw party.

At 7 p.m. on Friday, March 20, in a quaint ballroom in the bowels of the Hilton Hotel, the first-ever Global Poker Masters (GPM) got underway. Not with a traditional "shuffle up and deal" – that'd come a day later – but with a festive draw party catering to a mix of players, tournament officials, and the media.

The two-day GPM, the brainchild of the Global Poker Index's Alexandre Dreyfus, will see 40 of the world's most elite players, each representing one of eight countries, battle in a series of heats to determine the best of the best.

It will begin with the Playoffs – 25 total eight-max matches played in five rounds of five concurrent matches – which will be followed by the Quarterfinals, Semifinals, and Finals. For more info on how it will all work, click here.

Here's a look at the eight teams in this year's GPM. Click on each for more information:

It's a complex format, and explaining it was one of the reasons for the get together. The other, of course, was to determine the full table draws, round by round of the Playoffs. However, before that happened, there was plenty of food to be consumed, drinks to wash it down, and of course mingling to be done.

Dreyfus, the man who less than a month ago gratified the poker industry with the American Poker Awards in Los Angeles, was the man of the hour, and understandably it was a busy week for the man from Malta, who was not only hosting the GPM, but also the European Poker Awards on Wednesday.

"I'm excited, but I'm a bit stressed because I haven't prepared anything for my speech [laughs]," Dreyfus told PokerNews. "No, no, I'm excited. As you can see 80-90% of the players we invited are here even though they never replied to my emails, so I actually feel relieved. It's a three-year plan and six months of work. I'm very happy. In reality I'm more nervous about tonight than tomorrow. After tomorrow it's going to be amazing – I don't know if it's going to be amazing – but it's going to be beautiful. If we're very lucky it's going to be amazing."

Dreyfus was soon swooped away by others interested party guests, which opened the door to talk to his right-hand man, Eric Danis. The long-time face and voice of the Global Poker Index was a driving force behind the draw party, which was a prelude to his GPM commentary duties, which he'd undertake alongside the lovely Kara Scott.

"I think it's been ok," Danis said when asked about the night. "Some deadlines that we had to meet were very stressful. At this point I'm still good. I think tomorrow is when the jitters will start. Really cool to see a lot of people here. We're adding tables as we speak. That's cool. We didn't expect every player to be here, but it looks like they will be. We appreciate that. They see the hard work we've done, and we're going to appreciate them coming out tomorrow."

Indeed, the turnout seemed to surpass even the most optimistic expectations. Not only were GPM participants – like Sam Trickett, Vanessa Selbst, and Bertrand "ElkY" Grospellier – in attendance, but a who's who of industry veterans were there to partake. For instance, there was the president of the European Poker Tour, Edgar Stuchly; poker hostesses Tatjana Pasalic and Laura Cornelius; legendary poker commentator Jesse May; and EPT Live's Joe "Stapes" Stapleton.

Liv Boeree & Joe Stapleton

"The alcohol came out a little too late," Stapleton joked when asked about the atmosphere of the party. "I would have started a little sooner with the drinks, but hey, Alex is a rich guy, but he probably doesn't have bottomless pockets so I can understand. When you have drinkers like me here it can get costly.

"The atmosphere of the party? Everyone seems to be in good spirits. It seems like a fun thing, there's a nice competition aspect, but not in a bad way. Sort of like the Pro Bowl. It's fun and everyone is excited to see what happens. The big stars show up. No one is going to hit too hard, but they probably will at the table because everyone wants to win. It's all fun and games until they say 'shuffle up and deal.'"

A life of the party, Stapes was busy entertaining guests regardless of their nationality, but he did take some time to dish on which countries he wanted to see do well in the GPM?

"I don't know if I should say this or not, but apparently you can bet on who is going to win, so I bet all the long shots a couple days ago," Stapleton admitted. "I want Russia to win. I've got £40 on Russia. If Russia wins, I got the line when they were 40-1, so if they win I'll get like a grand. I'd like to Russia to win, but if not them than Ukraine, because they were like 35-1. And then after that France, [switches to a hushed voice] but honestly France probably isn't going to win regardless of the bet. If you ask me, Russia is no long shot, not by any stretch."

As Stapes talked, waitstaff ramped up the festivities by making the rounds with wine and hors d'oeuvres (the Ukrainians seemed especially fond of the former). They brought in more tables and chairs to accommodate the groundswell of guests, and all the while players socialized. The Salter brothers, Jack and Louis, chummed it up with fellow countrymen Simon Deadman and Oliver Price; the nationless Steve O'Dwyer settled in between Team USA's Dan Smith and Bryn Kenney; and Team PokerStars Pro Bertrand "ElkY" Grospellier, who recently launched his own Twitch stream, was busy chatting with Scott Ball, the man who connected Twitch to the poker world.

"I think the whole mission to sportify poker and make it more mainstream is really exciting," Ball told PokerNews after concluding his conversation with the Frenchman. "If you look at the country-versus-country thing, it's really been successful in every traditional sport you can think of. The fact that there is someone pushing it to happen in poker is exciting, and I'm super excited it's going to be on our site for sure. Our demographic is definitely worldwide, and definitely quite scattered. It's by no means everyone from the US, so it should appeal to a huge variety of audiences."

Ball, who accepted an American Poker Award on behalf of Twitch for Innovation of the Year, also offered his pick for the GPM.

"I'm from the USA, but I think the German team looks quite strong," said Ball. "However, I definitely hope the USA team does well. I'm just really excited to see everyone compete for something they usually don't compete for, and to see how it turns out. I think there are a lot of interesting dynamics. They're not just playing for a million dollars, they're playing for the pride of their country."

After the socializing period wound down, players took their seats and Dreyfus took the stage. He proceeded to thank the GPM sponsors, explained the rules, and eventually got to the draw, which he did with the assistance of Danis and poker vixen Liv Boeree. Afterwards, Dreyfus fielded a Q&A session where players like Selbst and George Danzer expressed concerns over certain elements of the event.

Selbst among Team USA.

Selbst worried that, given the seat draw, some countries would always have position on others, something that was an issue at the World Poker Cup at the PCA a couple years back. Likewise, Danzer pointed out the structure made it so at the end of each heat, which were slated to last 2.5 hours each, the correct play for the shorter stacks would be to move all in no matter their cards. The German then explained that the winner of that hand could very well end up as the chip leader.

The was feedback both Dreyfus and referee/tournament director Thomas Lamatsch took to heart. Dreyfus admitted Selbst's concern may not be rectified in time for the first GPM, but would be certainly be taken into account. Meanwhile, Danzer's was immediately resolved when Lamatsch said they would end each heat around the 2.5-hour mark (give or take a few mintues) without prior notice to the players.

The inaugural GPM draw party ended up being two things. First, it was a social event that brought together players and industry veterans from across the world. Everyone was in good spirits – even the late-arriving Ole Schemion – and all either supported Dreyfus' "sportify poker" mission, or were willing to give it a fair shake. It was also a learning opportunity. Things weren't perfect, not all details had been considered, and there were definitely things that needed ironing out. The good news was that Dreyfus and company was willing to listen. They're committed to their mission, and will do whatever's necessary to achieve it.

Whether or not the GPM proves to be a success remains to be seen, but by weekend's end the industry will have a clearer picture on the whole affair. In the meantime, there's sure to be some great poker action to be had in this brand new event.

For more on the GPM draw party, check out Sarah Herring's video interview with Dreyfus:

Remember, when talking about the GPM on social media, be sure to use the dedicated hashtag #globalpokermasters. You can also watch the competition on Twitch, and of course PokerNews will be providing you updates throughout the event.

Tags: Global Poker MastersPokerNews Live Blog Feature

Drinan Down to 16 Big Blinds

Level 24 : 20,000/40,000, 5,000 ante
Connor Drinan
Connor Drinan

Dzmitry Urbanovich opened the button for 85,000 and Connor Drinan made the call from the big blind.

Drinan check called 90,000 on {Q-Clubs}{4-Diamonds}{3-Clubs}, and check called another 175,000 on the {J-Diamonds} turn.

The river came the {K-Spades} and Drinan checked a third time.

After about twenty seconds of thinking, Urbanovich announced all in and turned away his face. Urbanovich, still with shades and his head tucked away in his hood, effectively shoved for 650,000.

Drinan thought for half a minute tops, before releasing his hand into the muck.

Player Chips Progress
Dzmitry Urbanovich pl
Dzmitry Urbanovich
EPT 1X Winner
3,750,000 560,000
Connor Drinan us
Connor Drinan
650,000 -560,000

Tags: Dzmitry UrbanovichConnor Drinan

Thoughts of the Teams from the Global Poker Masters Draw Party

Level 24 : 20,000/40,000, 5,000 ante
Team UK represent.
Team UK represent.

PokerNews were in attendance at the Global Poker Masters Draw Party, and we wanted to get an idea how each team was feeling about representing their country while facing off against the best in the world. To get answers, we grabbed a representative from each team for a quick chat.

Here's what they had to say:

Mustapha Kanit (Italy):

“It’s a fun competition for me and I really like it. It’s nice that we get to represent our country

“Italy’s strength is that we are always kind of crazy, so for sure we’ll bring something to the competition. All of us, in a different way, have to bring something to the team. We’ve all known each other a long time and have a lot of experience together, which will help, and I’m looking forward to playing with my friends.

“I think the favorite of course is the US, followed by Canada, but I like all the teams. They all have good players and everybody knows what’s going on so everyone has a chance to win. I like Russia, the Ukraine, and each team has something we have to be wary about.”

Olivier Busquet (USA):

“It’s an honor to be able to play for the US, especially with my team. I’m probably the fifth-best player out of the five, so it’s very cool to be able to play with such great players and I think it’s going to be a lot of fun.

“As a team we have an overwhelming amount of strength; we have so many super-talented players. A decent amount of the format is heads-up so that’s good for me and good for a bunch of the players on our team. We have a couple of players – Vanessa [Selbst] and Dan Smith who are very, very good at adjusting to new formats or ways to change up a game or create a new game plan. I think we have a great chance.

“I know the Canadian team is very strong and the German team too. To be honest, there are 40 very good poker players here, so a lot of it will come down to whoever plays the format best. “

Eugene Katchalov (Ukraine):

“Definitely looking forward to representing Ukraine, I think it’s going to be fun.

“We’re all good players so we’ve been laughing at the odds that existed at first. They’ve corrected now, but when they first came out we were 40-1 underdogs, which is insane! It’s basically saying that if we get it in with jacks versus ace-king we’re like 10-1 dogs, ha, ha! It’s kind of silly as I like our chances.

“It’s hard to say which team to fear most, a lot depends on the structure. Every team has good a shot at winning this, there’s no big advantage here.”

Bertrand “ElkY” Grospellier (France):

“I feel great about representing my country. It’s a great competition and the first time so hopefully will help the profile of poker. It’s kind of similar to a World Cup with all the top national teams. There were efforts like this before but this is on a grander scale.

“I don’t think we the favorites by far, but we have a strong team. There are some other superstar teams though, so that definitely makes us outsiders. It will help us that there are a lot of heads-up matches and in poker anything can happen. Patrick Bruel is on our team and a lot of the other players haven’t played with him so that could be good for us.”

Antoly Filatov (Russia):

“I’m really excited to be representing Russia. It’s a new format for us and we play only for fame and our countries. It’s going to be fun and we’re going to do our best to show you what we can do.

“I think all the teams have equal chances to win as there’s not a big difference in skill between us. We just need to run good!”

Simon Deadman (UK):

“I feel good about representing my country, it should be a lot of fun and I’m looking forward to it. Getting to represent your country in anything is exciting and, as it didn’t happen in football, I’m glad it could be poker, even though I thought that would never happen.

“We’re not going to have many strengths is the heads-up format. I think we have one trophy between us despite lots of heads-up matches, so not looking forward to that. The Salter brothers are sit-and-go specialists so that bit should be fine.

“I think it’s close as all the teams are really, really good. You know what poker’s like, I don’t think any team can be a huge favorite. Ukraine are odds-on to come last but I think that’s silly as they have a great team the same as everyone else.”

Andrew Chen (Canada):

“I’ve no idea what it’s going to entail but I think it’ll be fun at the very least, players against some good players.

“I’d say the US is probably the favorite, especially as there’s a heads-up format. They probably have two of the best players, period. Olivier [Busquet] plays heads-up obviously, and Ike [Haxton] is just one of the best heads-up players. The rest of the team are really good, too. I’d say ourselves and Germany are right up there, and then the rest are not that far behind. I think Russia are underrated to the general public, and a couple of the unknown Italian players – Rocco Palumbo and Giuliano Bendineli – are actually pretty good. Basically, no team is going to be really bad or severe underdogs.”

George Danzer (Germany):

“It feels very nice to represent Germany. We have a lot of new players and I’m one of the chosen ones so that feels great.

“I don’t want to avoid any teams but I want to play Italy last. They are the most unpredictable with the style they employ. I think they are the most dangerous team and definitely the most underrated. They play with feel, go on to check-raise you and you don’t know what to do! It’s different with the other teams, as you kind of know where you are at against most of the players. Of the 40, I probably know 30 or 35 of them pretty well.”

Today’s events all are going to be streamed live on Twitch with commentary from EPT Live’s Joe Stapleton and Jesse May. We caught up with the latter to get his thoughts:

“I love team events! I’ve been involved with a lot of different team events in poker and I think this one’s got a nice shot of working. Anytime you can get tactics involved and players cheering for their team, it’s going to be fun. Hopefully the Twitch stream will get people really going for it, I want to see people in there getting really partisan. I’m not sure who I’m rooting for as Denmark doesn’t have a team. I kind of like Germany and Canada right now but the Germans seem strongest top to bottom right now, with Canada second favourites.”

Tags: Global Poker MastersPokerNews Live Blog Feature

Huge River For Urbanovich

Level 23 : 15,000/30,000, 4,000 ante
Dzmitry Urbanovich
Dzmitry Urbanovich

Dzmitry Urbanovich limped from the button and Connor Drinan raised to 90,000. Urbanovich made the call and the flop showed {A-Clubs}{9-Clubs}{6-Hearts}.

Drinan bet 75,000 and Urbanovich raised it up to 180,000. Drinan tanked before making the call and the turn was the {J-Diamonds}.

Both players checked and the river was the {8-Diamonds}. Drinan thought for about 30 seconds before betting 225,000 and Urbanovich went into the tank for a long time before raising to 545,000.

Drinan put together the call and slid the chips forward, only to see his opponent turn over {10-Hearts}{7-Hearts} for a rivered straight.

Player Chips Progress
Dzmitry Urbanovich pl
Dzmitry Urbanovich
EPT 1X Winner
2,305,000 795,000
Connor Drinan us
Connor Drinan
2,095,000 -795,000

Tags: Connor DrinanDzmitry Urbanovich

Helping Hands Charity Tournament Latest in PokerStars' Long History of Charitable Endeavors

Level 23 : 15,000/30,000, 4,000 ante
PokerStars - Helping Hands & Right to Play
PokerStars - Helping Hands & Right to Play

Poker and charity go hand in hand. In fact, the Global Poker Index (GPI) has even dedicated a category, Charitable Initiative of the Year, in the 14th Annual European Poker Awards, which will take place at the Hilton Hotel here in Malta on March 25. Among the four nominees in the category is Helping Hands Charity Tournament, an event that raises funds for PokerStars' charity partner, Right To Play.

According to their mission statement, Right To Play is a global charity using sport and play to educate and empower children and young people to overcome the effects of poverty, conflict and disease in disadvantaged communities around the world.

On Saturday, March 21 during the EPT Malta, Helping the Hands Charity Tournament will take place at the Portomaso Casino, which is connected to the Hilton Malta. The event will kick off at 7:30 p.m. with drinks and canapé reception, which will also offer newbies free training lessons. Then, beginning at 8:30 p.m., the €100 buy-in, invite-only tournament will begin.

"The tournament and refreshments will be on the second floor of the Hilton congress hall in the magnificent 'Grand masters suite,'" said Anna Colley of Rational Group. "If you should wish you can also participate in some poker training, we will have tables allocated for this before the tournament starts."

She went on to add: "It will be a fantastic night, with plenty of opportunity to chat and play against our Team Pros, as well as staff and well-connected figures from the local business community. There will be some great prizes to be won too."

All proceeds from the event, which will have several Team PokerStars Pros in attendance, will go toward PokerStars' goal of training 1,000 Right To Play coaches, which will bolster the 2,500 volunteer coaches who are currently changing the lives of 185,000 children all over the world. To date, through there charitable endeavors, PokerStars has raised £354,201 of their £420,000 goal, meaning they're 84% of the way there. The event in Malta will no doubt bring them much closer to their target.

The Helping Hands Charity Tournament is the latest in a long line of charity work involving Rational Group. Here's a sample of Rational Group's charitable activities over the last decade:

  • 2004—PokerStars players raise $187,768 for tsunami relief, but the company rounded it up to $400,000 to benefit the International Federation of the Red Cross.
  • 2005—PokerStars online tournaments helped raise more than $100,000 for the American Red Cross after Hurricane Katrina.
  • 2007—PokerStars teams with Ocean's Thirteen to donate $1 million to Not On Our Watch charity, which helped those in Darfur.
  • 2007-2008—Life Ball, which was sponsored by PokerStars, received $100,000 and $150,000 in 2007 and 2008 respectively thanks to PokerStars players.
  • 2008—PokerStars players raise HKD$2,226,146 (~$285,000 USD) for the Red Cross after devastating Chinese earthquake. PokerStars also ran the Million Dollar Men series, which raised more than $100,000 for charities endorsed by the six PokerStars players who made the World Series of Poker Main Event final table.
  • 2009—Ante Up for Africa, which raised money for war-torn Darfur, took place during the EPT Monte Carlo Grand Final.
  • 2010—Celebrities such as Boris Becker, Nelly, and Kelly Rowland attended a charity event at the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure that raised nearly $100,000 for AIDS research via amfAR.
  • 2013—PokerStars raises money for Cancer Research UK while also paying for female players in the UK to enter Race for Life events. Meanwhile, Rational Group players and staff donated more than $260,000 for CARE International after Hurricane Haiyan hit the Philippines. Rational Group doubled that.
  • 2014—Rational Group funded the development of Play to Cure: Genes in Space mobile game, a game by Cancer Research UK that analyzes genetic data while you play.

For those hoping to participate in the Helping Hands Charity Tournament should RSVP to: Anna Colley – [email protected]. Remember, space is limited.

To give you an idea of what the night will hold, check out this video featuring a similar charity initiative for the Quintessentially Foundation that was held last year in London.

Tags: Helping Hands Charity TournamentPokerNews Live Blog Feature

The Birth of the High Roller on the EPT

Level 22 : 12,000/24,000, 3,000 ante
Jason Mercier
Jason Mercier

The latest European Poker Tour €25K High Roller final table is hurtling towards a finish here in the Portomaso Casino, Malta, as the remaining two players battle it out to win one of the most coveted titles on the tour.

High Rollers, be it 25K, 50K or 100K, seem the norm now on the EPT. It’s taken for granted that the world’s best players will turn up and play whenever one is scheduled into a stop. That wasn’t always the case though.

Throughout the first four seasons of the EPT, the biggest buy-in event was the €10,000 Grand Final held in Monaco at the end of every season. The common thinking back in those days was that side event buy-ins had to be smaller than the Main Event.

“The buy in for side events has to be smaller, we can’t take the shine off the Main Event,” was probably whispered within the walls of the PokerStars office. That all changed in Season 5 though as the tour gave birth to its first-ever High Roller Event. It was dubbed the "EPT £1 Million Pound Showdown." Many thought PokerStars was crazy to guarantee such a large prize pool for an untried format, but the timing proved perfect. A new dawn had arrived.

For a three-year period London became the center of the poker world for one month a year. The inaugural World Series of Poker Europe was held in 2007, and was deemed a great success after attracting many big-name North American pros who had rarely ventured away from their continent. EPT London was cleverly scheduled to take place just after the WSOP Europe so many stayed on to play. They must have liked what they saw.

Fast forward one year and even more made the long journey across the pond to play the back-to-back of the WSOP Europe and EPT London. It was also the first year the WSOP delayed their final table, creating the November Nine, and many of those players made the trip to London to gain the extra practice. Team PokerStars Pro Ivan Demidov ended up making the final table of the WSOP Europe, falling in third place, before going on to finish runner-up to Peter Eastgate in the WSOP Main Event a few weeks later.

The Season 4 EPT London Main Event attracted 392 players, and that number jumped up to 596 in Season 5. The risky £1-million Pound guaranteed prize pool? Smashed as 86 players created a whopping £1.72 million to play for. The numbers may not seem that impressive today, but back in 2008 it was a very big deal.

Around that time, Jason Mercier had announced himself on the poker scene by taking down EPT4 San Remo for $1,372,893, and proved he was no flash-in-the-pan success by defeating John Juanda heads-up for $944,847 along with the accolade of being the first ever High Roller Champion on a tour that was fast gaining a reputation as the world’s best.

As for Juanda, he was delighted the tournament was just taking place because he had missed the EPT Main Event due to the 22 hours it'd taken him to dismantle the WSOP Europe final table days earlier. By making his own history, Mercier had denied Juanda the chance of historic double titles in London.

Dennis Phillips – another November Niner who would go onto finish third the following month – bubbled the tournament, leaving a stacked final table to play out for the title. Along with Mercier and Juanda, the final table was comprised of such names as Isaac Haxton (6th), Peter Jetten (4th), and Mike Watson (3rd), all of who are still successful players on the tour today.

Their success was no doubt one of the key factors why High Roller events have stuck around and become a huge success. Every season, Main Event numbers were growing and schedules had to be lengthened to stop the days being ridiculously long. It was great that top prizes swelled, but it also made it a lot harder to get there. High Rollers, played over two to three days, offered the top players a chance to achieve similar rewards with less time investment and less players to get through. It proved to be a winning combination. This also appealed to rich businessmen amateurs — whose time was precious — and a perfect poker melting pot was created that continues to this day.

This season on the EPT has (or will feature) two 100k High Rollers, two 50Ks, three 25Ks and a bunch of 10Ks, one of which will feature next week at the back end of the Malta festival. We'd call that a success story!

Tags: Jason MercierJohn JuandaPokerNews Live Blog Feature

Daniel Dvoress Eliminated in 3rd Place (€263,000)

Level 22 : 12,000/24,000, 3,000 ante
Daniel Dvoress
Daniel Dvoress

Connor Drinan folded his button and Dzmitry Urbanovich had the option in the small blind. He plummeted a small tower of 5,000 chips in the middle. Big blind Daniel Dvoress, down to his last 75,000 at this point, made the call.

Daniel Dvoress: {J-Spades}{9-Spades}
Dzmitry Urbanovich: {A-Spades}{3-Diamonds}

The flop came {K-Spades}{Q-Diamonds}{5-Clubs} and Drinan remarked there were some possibilities all of the sudden.

The {4-Diamonds} on the turn and {Q-Spades} on the river were both blanks though, sending Dvoress to the rail.

The remaining two players are guaranteed €397,800 and are going to battle it out for €572,300 after a short break.

Player Chips Progress
Daniel Dvoress ca
Daniel Dvoress
Busted

Tags: Daniel DvoressDzmitry Urbanovich

Nick Petrangelo Eliminated in 4th Place (€205,900)

Level 22 : 12,000/24,000, 3,000 ante
Nicholas Petrangelo
Nicholas Petrangelo

Just two hands after we lost Dani Stern it was Nick Petrangelo who moved all in from the button for just 88,000 chips. Connor Drinan three-bet to 175,000 from the small blind and Dzmitry Urbanovich gave up his big blind.

Drinan: {J-Spades}{10-Spades}
Petrangelo: {Q-Diamonds}{10-Diamonds}

The flop brought {K-Spades}{8-Hearts}{6-Diamonds} and Petrangelo called for the nine of diamonds to make things a bit more exciting. The turn brought the {Q-Spades} and Petrangelo said, "Oh man, I hadn't even thought of that one."

Both Drinan and Petrangelo laughed as the former now had an open ended straight and flush draw.

The river was the {9-Clubs} and Drinan filled up his straight.

"Good game guys," Petrangelo said with a smile, before shaking the hands of the three remaining players.

With little chips to play with all day Petrangelo managed to stay in the tournament for quite some time and this result will go down as his second biggest ever after finishing sixth in the PCA $25,000 High Roller for $301,500 earlier this year. Before this event started Petrangelo was fifth on the GPI Player of the Year ranking and this result will obviously improve his position.

Player Chips Progress
Connor Drinan us
Connor Drinan
1,700,000 124,000
Nick Petrangelo us
Nick Petrangelo
Busted

Tags: Connor DrinanDani SternDzmitry UrbanovichNick Petrangelo