The stack of Thomas Mjeldheim has been cut into half in the first level and the opponents to benefit the most from it were Raman Afanasenka and Pascal Hartmann.
On a three-way flop of , Hartmann checked out of the big blind and Mjeldheim bet 525 from under the gun. Afanasenka folded on the button and Hartmann came along for the ride. The German checked again the turn and called a bet of 800 before check-calling another 1,000 on the river.
Mjeldheim rolled over for a pair of jacks briefly, but the cards soon landed in the muck when Hartmann showed as the winning hand.
We found Stefan Jedlicka in the big blind facing a bet of 5,550 on a board of . The chips were in the pot courtesy of John Mooney, and Jedlicka paid off the bet after some thought. Mooney turned over for the nut flush and took the pot down.
Martin Staszko bet 1,700 into a pot of about 1,900 from the big blind against a player in the cutoff, with on the felt. After a brief tank and a call, the former WSOP Main Event runner-up turned over for top boat.
Raman Afanasenka was sent back to just over starting stack after paying off the check-raise of Epstathios Kavoukis on the river of a board . Afanasenka had bet 2,200 and Kavoukis check-raised to 5,600 out of the small blind to pick up the call and roll over for a back door flush.
Further assorted stacks from level two can be found below.
Down to his last 2,725, Stefan Peukert three-bet all in out of the small blind and he was quickly called by initial raiser Vladimir Troyanovskiy in early position.
Stefan Peukert:
Vladimir Troyanovskiy:
The flop improved Peukert, and the turn and river changed nothing anymore to let the German double. Despite the small setback, Troyanovskiy has started well into Day 1a and is among the early chip leaders.
Two players were in a preflop raising war, with Louis Linard putting in 4,100 on the button and then calling another raise to 8,800 from a player in middle position. That player checked the flop and then tank-folded to a bet of 4,700 from Linard.
From early position, Thomas Mjeldheim pushed all in for 13,400, a slight overbet into a pot of about 11,000. Saar Wilf stretched and sighed at the board.
"This is not a good card for me," he mused.
Mjeldheim smiled, but he wasn't smiling a few minutes later when Wilf slid some calling chips in. That's because Mjeldheim had for a missed draw. Wilf showed for tens up and Mjeldheim took his leave.
Four players have been eliminated thus far and that also includes Stefan Peukert, who doubled his tiny stack not long ago before running out of chips. Furthermore, EPT regular Boutros Naim from Lebanon was also felted in level two as well.
On the three-way flop of , Marco Molon checked out of the big blind and Christophe Larquemin bet 1,175 from early position, which was called by Ondrej Jakubcik on the button and Molon. After the turn, Molon checked once more and Larquemin bet 3,000, which this time only Jakubcik called.
The on the river completed the board and the Frenchman bet 5,000. "How much do you have behind?" Jakubcik asked and Larquemin showed his stack to see Jakubcik call. Larquemin rolled over for trips queens, while Jakubcik had that beat with for a full house. "That's dirty," Larquemin said in French. "Make sure to write that down, dirty."
According to the Czech bloggers, Jakubcik won his seat to the Main Event in the satellite last night despite being down to half an ante on the bubble.