2017 World Series of Poker Europe

Event #3: €1,100 No-Limit Hold'em Turbo Bounty Hunter
Day: 1
Event Info

2017 World Series of Poker Europe

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
107
Prize
€53,557
Event Info
Buy-in
€1,100
Prize Pool
€214,337
Entries
325
Level Info
Level
33
Blinds
150,000 / 300,000
Ante
50,000

John Racener Eliminated in 6th Place (€7,609); Yves Kupfermunz Eliminated in 5th Place (€10,620)

Level 28 : 40,000/80,000, 10,000 ante
John Racener
John Racener

Hand #21: Liran Twito shoved for 620,000 from the hijack with {q-Hearts}{9-Hearts}. And that was enough for him to take the pot.

Hand #22: Yves Kupfermunz shoved all in for 540,000 from the cutoff. John Racener, in the small blind, also went all in for the 315,000 he had behind. Martin Kabrhel, in the big blind, called.

Martin Kabrhel: {A-Hearts}{10-Clubs}
Yves Kupfermunz: {A-Clubs}{8-Clubs}
John Racener: {K-Spades}{Q-Diamonds}

The board ran out {4-Spades}{A-Diamonds}{6-Diamonds}{A-Spades}{K-Diamonds} - Kabrhel wins it all and Racener was eliminated in 6th place as he had a smaller stack. Kupfermunz takes fifth place. The remaining four players are now going for a 15-minute break.

Yves Kupfermunz

Yves Kupfermunz finishes 5th

Player Chips Progress
Philipp Caranica gs
Philipp Caranica
2,770,000
530,000
530,000
Martin Kabrhel cz
Martin Kabrhel
1,975,000
895,000
895,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Salvatore Camarda it
Salvatore Camarda
1,230,000
-60,000
-60,000
Liran Twito il
Liran Twito
790,000
160,000
160,000
John Racener us
John Racener
Busted
WSOP 1X Winner
Yves Kupfermunz be
Yves Kupfermunz
Busted

Tags: John RacenerMartin KabrhelYves Kupfermunz

Liran Twito Eliminated in 4th Place (€15,168)

Level 28 : 40,000/80,000, 10,000 ante
Liran Twito
Liran Twito

Hand #25: Martin Kabrhel raised to 160,000 from the under-the-gun position. Liran Twito shoved for the 800,000 that he had behind. Action folded back to Kabrhel who called.

Martin Kabrhel: {a-Diamonds}{q-Spades}
Liran Twito: {Q-Clubs}{J-Diamonds}

The board ran out {K-Spades}{2-Clubs}{3-Hearts}{Q-Hearts}{4-Clubs} - they both hit a pair of queens but Kabrhel had the higher kicker with the ace in his hand and Twito was sent home in 4th place with €15,168 in his pocket.

Player Chips Progress
Martin Kabrhel cz
Martin Kabrhel
3,025,000
1,050,000
1,050,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Liran Twito il
Liran Twito
Busted

Tags: Liran TwitoMartin Kabrhel

Salvatore Camarda Eliminated in 3rd Place (€22,159)

Level 29 : 50,000/100,000, 15,000 ante
Salvatore Camarda
Salvatore Camarda

Hand #31: Martin Kabrhel raised to 200,000 from the button with {A-Hearts}{4-Clubs}. Salvatore Camarda called in the big blind with {9-Diamonds}{4-Spades}.

The flop came {8-Spades}{4-Diamonds}{A-Clubs} on which they both checked.

The turn brought them the {k-Diamonds}, Camarda bet 225,000, Kabrhel called.

The river completed the board with the {5-Hearts}, Camarda shoved for 585,000 and Kabrhel snap-called. Kabrhel wins the hand with two pair, aces and fours. Camarda was eliminated in 3rd place.

Heads-up play will continue immediately without a break as agreed by both players.

Player Chips Progress
Martin Kabrhel cz
Martin Kabrhel
4,200,000
1,175,000
1,175,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Salvatore Camarda it
Salvatore Camarda
Busted

Tags: Martin KabrhelSalvatore Camarda

Philipp Caranica Eliminated in 2nd Place (€33,094)

Level 33 : 150,000/300,000, 50,000 ante
WSOPE Event #3 Heads-Up
WSOPE Event #3 Heads-Up

Hand #89: Martin Kabrhel shoved all in and was called by Philipp Caranica with the shorter stack.

Martin Kabrhel: {10-Hearts}{7-Hearts}
Philipp Caranica: {A-Diamonds}{6-Diamonds}

The flop came {2-Hearts}{2-Clubs}{J-Diamonds} - Caranica was still good for now as Kabrhel needed a ten or seven to eliminate them. The turn brought the {9-Spades}, Kabrhel now had the eights as extra outs to be crowned the winner as there was now also a straight draw. The {8-Hearts} on the river was exactly that what Kabrhel needed and he hit his backdoor straight draw. Caranica was eliminated and the last bounty went to Kabrhel.

Player Chips Progress
Martin Kabrhel cz
Martin Kabrhel
6,500,000
2,400,000
2,400,000
WSOP 2X Winner
Philipp Caranica gs
Philipp Caranica
Busted

Tags: Martin KabrhelPhilipp Caranica

Martin Kabrhel Wins 2017 WSOPE Turbo Bounty Hunter Event #3 (€53,557)

Level 33 : 150,000/300,000, 50,000 ante
Martin Kabrhel, WSOPE Event #3 Champion
Martin Kabrhel, WSOPE Event #3 Champion

The third of eleven golden bracelets was awarded at the 2017 World Series of Poker Europe at the King's Casino in Rozvadov and it was Czech poker pro and grand master of table talk Martin Kabrhel who claimed the title, his first WSOP bracelet and payday of €53,557 for his efforts in the inaugural €1,100 No-Limit Holdem Turbo Bounty Hunter Event #3.

While the nine-handed final table was set at 1 a.m. local time and the first eliminations came in quickly, the final river card only fell after 5 a.m. local time with a happy Kabrhel and a happy hippo card protector.

“Can we just stay like this? It won't take long,” Kabrhel said right away before the duel for the elusive bracelet against Philipp Caranica got underway and indeed the stacks went into the middle a few hands in. Kabrhel's pocket sevens were ahead until the river, but Caranica got there with his ace-queen to hit a straight. What followed were several double ups and it took more than 50 hands of heads-up to determine a champion.

“I am pretty happy here to win it, especially at King's. I was really looking forward to this festival.” When asked about the format, Kabrhel said he didn't necessarily like to play turbo events. “It was pretty short, but not as short as it could be, and it was playable. I was pretty happy with how I played.”

The King's Casino in Rozvadov is a second home to the Czech: “It is a great poker room, the final table at the venue here is beautiful. I play 90% of my poker at King's and I won two Circuit Rings here.” Up next for Kabrhel is “a really nice sleep” and likely some celebration after.

When asked which events he will play for the remainder of the WSOPE festival, Kabrhel added: “I will play whatever I have time for, but probably like all the bracelet events which I can catch and I look forward to the Main Event and One Drop."

As for Caranica, the German had to settle for second place and a consolation prize of €33,094. Caranica was railed by Nico Ehlers, who also ended runner-up just a few hours prior in the €550 Pot-Limit Omaha Event #2. Caranica was not intimidated by the table talk of Kabrhel and both joked back and forth until a winner was crowned.

Martin Kabrhel, WSOPE Event #3 Champion

Final Result Turbo Bounty Hunter Event #3

PlaceWinnerCountryPrize
1Martin KabrhelCzech Republic€53,557
2Philipp CaranicaGermany€33,094
3Salvatore CamardaItaly€22,159
4Liran TwitoIsrael€15,168
5Yves KupfermunzBelgium€10,620
6John RacenerUnited States€7,609
7Bernd GleissnerGermany€5,582
8Georgios KoliofotisGermany€4,195
9Viktor KovachevBulgaria€3,232

Early Action

After ten levels of 20 minutes each, the registration closed with a total of 325 entries including 92 re-entries, and a prize pool of €214,337 emerged with the top 49 spots earning a share of it. Until the dinner break, fewer than one third of the field remained and the eliminations continued to happen at a lighting-fast speed.

Such big names as two-time bracelet winner Barny Boatman, Maxim Lykov, MONSTER STACK finalist Ismael Bojang and Jeff Lisandro were already on the rail. They were soon joined by Michael Eiler, Sam Grafton, James Akenhead, Eddy Scharf and Ryan Hughes.

The last player to leave empty-handed was Viacheslav Goryachev, who moved all in from the cutoff with ace-jack. Jan Mach on the button and Bernd Gleissner in the big blind called, and Mach's bet on the turn with queen-jack for top pair forced out Gleissner. Goryachev had a gutshot still, but the river was a blank.

Among those to bust as soon as the bubble burst were Vivian Saliba, Yehuda Cohen and Teunis Kooij. Chris Ferguson locked up another cash in his bid to win the 2017 WSOP Player of the Year race and he was eliminated in 36th place after shoving nine-seven suited into the ace-four of Mike Leah. Fellow Canadian Kristen Bicknell also sent her chips over to Leah soon after and it wouldn't take long to set up the last three tables.

Brandon Cantu bowed out in 24th place and Felipe Ramos followed when losing a flip with pocket tens versus ace-king. Irish poker pro Marc MacDonnell, who finished 4th in the $1,500 Millionaire Maker (Event #20) this summer in Las Vegas, came up short of the final table this time and finished in 19th place. Robert Auer moved all in over the top of a shove by Martin Kabrhel with pocket jacks and Philipp Caranica looked both up with pocket kings. Kabrhel's ace-king struck gold with the nut straight and the Czech jumped into a big stack on the last two tables.

Dominik Desset already reached a final table at the King's Casino not long ago, but this time he had to settle for 14th place. His ace-five had the slightly inferior kicker to the ace-six suited of Liran Twito and the board changed nothing whatsoever. Jan Mach was the next to fall when his big three-bet jam with pocket eights was picked up by Philipp Caranica with pocket tens and Mach was drawing dead on the turn.

Tobias Schaaf was the next to fall and almost at the same time on the other table, Phil Hellmuth's bid to further build his legacy with a 15th bracelet came to an end. Hellmuth's ace-deuce ended up second best to the pocket kings of John Racener and both had the exact same stack size to see the Poker Brat take 11th place.

Phil Hellmuth

Mike Leah took two hits to bubble the official live-streamed final table when losing with pocket queens to ace-nine and ace-queen versus king-queen suited to set up the following final table.

WSOPE Event #3 Final Table
SeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
1Philipp CaranicaGermany1,250,00031
2Yves KupfermunzBelgium595,00015
3Salvatore CamardaItaly920,00023
4John RacenerUnited States455,00011
5Martin KabrhelCzech Republic1,640,00041
6Georgios KoliofotisGermany380,00010
7Liran TwitoIsrael655,00016
8Viktor KovachevBulgaria235,0006
9Bernd GleissnerGermany370,0009

Final Table Action

It took only two hands for the first player to join the rail. Viktor Kovachev was the shortest stack among the final nine and his queen-jack stood no chance against the ace-jack of Philipp Caranica.

In hand #4 of the official final table, Georgios Koliofotis jammed with a gutshot on a three-way flop and Liran Twito reshoved with king-nine for top pair to see the turn and river brick off.

While Caranica dominated the early stages of final table and built his lead after an ill-timed bluff of Martin Kabrhel, it was the Czech that was responsible for eliminating all remaining opponents on his way to the maiden WSOP bracelet. A short-stacked Bernd Gleissner was his first victim with ten-eight and Kabrhel's pocket tens had no reason to worry.

The shove of Yves Kupfermunz with ace-eight was called by John Racener with king-queen and and Kabrhel called in the big blind with ace-ten. The remaining two aces in the deck showed up on the flop and turn, and Kabrhel's kicker suddenly reduced the field to the last four. Racener fell short of claiming his second career-bracelet in 2017, but picked up vital points for the 2017 WSOP Player of the Year race.

John Racener

Liran Twito's queen-jack were dominated by the ace-queen of Kabrhel in hand #25 and a king-high board provided no held for the player from Israel, who recorded his first-ever WSOP cash. Only six hands later, there were just two hopefuls remaining as the shove of Salvatore Camarda with nine-four off suit for bottom pair on an ace-high river was snap-called by Kabrhel with two pair.

Both Kabrhel and Caranica had their hands on the bracelet already, but after more than 50 hands of heads up and several double ups, it was Kabrhel that ended up victorious. Kabrhel shoved with ten-seven suited and Caranica called with ace-six suited. A jack-high board provided a runner-runner straight for Kabrhel and the bracelet remained on home soil.

The next chance for players to win a bracelet already kicks off on Thursday, October 26th as of 3 p.m. local time with Day 1 of the €1,650 No-Limit Hold'em 6-Handed Event #4. Late registration remains open until the start of Day 2 the very next day and the PokerNews live reporting team will be on the floor to provide all the action.

Tags: Barny BoatmanBernd GleissnerBrandon CantuChris FergusonDominik DessetEddy ScharfFelipe RamosGeorgios KoliofotisIsmael BojangJames AkenheadJan MachJeffrey LisandroJohn RacenerKristen BicknellLiran TwitoMarc MacDonnellMartin KabrhelMaxim LykovMichael EilerMike LeahPhil HellmuthPhilipp CaranicaRobert AuerRyan HughesSalvatore CamardaSam GraftonTeunis KooijTobias SchaafViacheslav GoryachevViktor KovachevYehuda CohenYves Kupfermunz