Jakub Fujerik raised to 600,000 from late position and Stefan Vukojevic shoved his remaining 650,000 in from the button after having lost a big pot on his first table. Fujerik confirmed the amount and called.
Jakub Fujerik:
Stefan Vukojevic:
The board ran out - no help for Vukojevic and he made his way to the payout desk.
The flop read and the pot already had around 1,500,000 in there. Nico Montani was sitting in the small blind and had checked. Aristeidis Moschonas, on the button, shoved all in. Their stacks were pretty even and Montani called.
Aristeidis Moschonas:
Nico Montani:
Moschonas had flopped two pair, queens and sixes. The turn brought them the and the river the , no help for Montani. The dealer counted out Moschonas' stack out first and then Montani. In the end, Moschonas had him covered by about 100,000 and Montani was done for today.
The minimum cash today was €1,350 in total, but they will all be trying their best to win that Grand Prix Main Event Trophy and €75,000 for first place.
This is what the players have been playing for today:
Stefan Raschbauer shoved all in from the small blind and was called by Martin Lechner in the big blind. Lechner had about 7,300,000 and was covered by Raschbauer.
Martin Lechner:
Stefan Raschbauer:
The board ran out - Lechner's aces hold and he doubled up.
Action folded all the way to Gabor Deak in the small blind, who raised it up to 700,000 before Christian Georgescu put in the 3-bet, making it enough to set Deak all-in.
Deak gleefully called, tabling , and was in great shape to double up through Georgescu's .
The flop gave Deak a straight flush draw to go with his aces, but he didn't want to see an offsuit 5! The board paired on the turn, and double-paired on the river, with the spoils heading Deak's way.
The very next hand he picked up a big chunk of change when he got a 3-bet squeeze through on the button, and he can now place his Golden Chip atop an eight-figure stack.
Mirek Spicka and Bernhard Wladkowski got it all in pre-flop, with and respectively, and It looked like it was all going Wladkowski's way on the flop, with the turn changing nothing. Unfortunately for him, though, the hit the river and the pot was shipped Spicka's way, leaving Wladkowski with just over a million to play with.
The very next hand, the same two players got it all-in blind versus blind, without looking at their hole cards. Spicka tabled , while Wladkowski showed the somehow inferior . In possibly the least classic showdown of the tournament so far, 10-high held on a runout, sending Wladkowski to the rail right before the break.