€1,100 Main Event
Day 4 Started
€1,100 Main Event
Day 4 Started
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Nine months ago, Gaspare Sposato was the final player standing in the UKIPT London Main Event, banking a score of £107,660 and hoisting his first PokerStars trophy. Today, at 12:30 p.m. local time, Sposato returns to Casino di Campione for the finale of the first-ever PokerStars Open (PSO) Main Event, looking to bring home his second Shard and improve his best-ever score set in London.
The PSO Campione €1,100 Main Event blew all expectations out of the water, attracting a record-setting field of 2,423 entries and generating a prize pool of €2,326,080. Only 26 players made it to Day 4, all eyeing the victory and the €363,000 prize money that comes with it. Sposato made the final day with an above-average stack of 3,390,000, which will be worth 57 big blinds and is just enough to squeeze into the ten.
Meanwhile, the field is led by Spanish player Manel Sala, who starts today with nearly 100 big blinds as he comes back with a stack of 5,875,000. Salvatore Russo is Italy's best hope to keep the trophy at home soil, sitting in second with 5,620,000. The remaining two five-million stacks are in posession of Austrian regular Andreas Putz and Friedrich Raez from Switzerland, who scored his first six-figure cash at EPT Prague a few months ago and will be looking to repeat that feat.
| Rank | Player | Country | Chip Count | Day 4 Big Blinds |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Manel Sala | Spain | 5,875,000 | 98 |
| 2 | Salvatore Russo | Italy | 5,620,000 | 94 |
| 3 | Andreas Putz | Austria | 5,110,000 | 85 |
| 4 | Friedrich Raez | Switzerland | 5,070,000 | 85 |
| 5 | Jakub Sterba | Czechia | 4,925,000 | 82 |
| 6 | Giorgio Soceanu | Italy | 4,645,000 | 77 |
| 7 | Mykhailo Demydenko | Ukraine | 4,410,000 | 74 |
| 8 | Andrii Nikitin | Ukraine | 3,875,000 | 65 |
| 9 | Christian Andronico | France | 3,615,000 | 60 |
| 10 | Gaspare Sposato | Italy | 3,390,000 | 57 |
Petre Ionescu suffered a brutal cooler on Day 3 but still made Day 4 with 2,720,000, as a decent score will elevate his lifetime earnings into seven-figure territory. Adrian State (2,135,000) and Alessandro Giordano (1,970,000) are looking for their second six-figure score at a PokerStars Event, while Christopher Day (1,650,000) is on the hunt for his second PokerStars trophy after winning a side event at EPT Berlin in 2013. Day 1 chipleader Darius Neagoe is also still in contention, coming back with a stack of 1,705,000.
All contenders have guaranteed themselves €8,600 for making the final day. Final table payouts start at €33,320, while six-figure scores are reserved for the top four finishers. As mentioned, the eventual champion will walk away with the massive sum of €363,000, the biggest-ever prize awarded at a standalone PokerStars 1K Main Event.
| Place | Prize | Place | Prize | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | €363,000 | 10-11 | €25,650 | |
| 2 | €225,200 | 12-13 | €21,380 | |
| 3 | €160,880 | 16-17 | €14,860 | |
| 4 | €123,760 | 18-20 | €12,370 | |
| 5 | €95,190 | 21-23 | €10,320 | |
| 6 | €73,210 | 24-26 | €8,600 | |
| 7 | €56,330 | |||
| 8 | €43,340 | |||
| 9 | €33,320 |
The players will return to a blind level of 30,000/60,000 with a 60,000 big blind ante. A shot clock of 30 seconds will be in play from the start, and levels will have a length of 75 minutes until the final seven players are reached, with a break after every two levels. From the final seven onward, the levels will last ten minutes per player still in contention. If a deal is made at any point, the clock will be reduced to 30 minutes instead.
The action will also be streamed live on Pokerstars' YouTube and Twitch channels, which feature a cards-up broadcast on a 30-minute delay. The live reporting will follow a similar delay to avoid spoilers on the final day and will thus commence around 1 p.m.
Stay tuned as PokerNews will be on the floor from start to finish to relay who gets crowned the first-ever PSO champion at PokerStars Open Campione, along with all the action along the way.
Level: 30
Blinds: 30,000/60,000
Ante: 60,000
The 26 players have found their seats and the cards are in the air for Day 4 of the Main Event.
Michael Desiderio open-jammed for 405,000 in the hijack. Petre Ionescu made the call on the button, while the rest of the table got out of the way.
Michael Desiderio: A♥3♥
Petre Ionescu: A♣10♦
Ionescu made a flush on 2♦5♦K♦5♠7♦ to secure the pot on the river, making Desiderio the first eliminated player of Day 4.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
3,225,000
505,000
|
505,000 |
|
|
Busted |
The tournament has been briefly paused while a technical issue is being resolved.
Any issues seem to have been resolved, as the cards are back in the air for the Main Event.
Christian Andronico made it 120,000 under the gun before Luca Bartolacci three-bet jammed his stack of 715,000 from the hijack. It folded back to Andronico, who made an instant call.
Christian Andronico: J♠J♣
Luca Bartolacci: K♣Q♣
The 5♥8♦6♣ flop and 10♥ turn were of no use to Bartolacci, and Andronico riverd a set with the J♥ to secure the pot and knock out Bartolacci in 25th.
After the hand, Vincenzo D'Agostino claimed he had folded pocket tens in the small blind with his short stack.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
4,900,000
1,285,000
|
1,285,000 |
|
|
1,175,000
265,000
|
265,000 |
|
|
Busted |
With 330,000 in the middle, Barnaba Perone pushed in his stack of 780,000 from the big blind on a turn of [9c9cd8hth]. Andreas Putz sat on the button and made the call with the covering stack.
Barnaba Perone: 7♣6♣
Andreas Putz: A♠10♠
Putz needed a ten or nine to win the pot, but the river came the J♠ instead, seeing Perone's straight earn him a double-up.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
3,875,000
1,235,000
|
1,235,000 |
|
|
1,990,000
890,000
|
890,000 |