2013 European Poker Tour Berlin High Roller Day 2: Team Pro Lykov Leads Final Seven
On Friday, the second day of play of the Season 9 European Poker Tour Berlin High Roller event wrapped up. Forty-five hopefuls returned to the felt hoping to win one of the most prestigious events at this stop. Play took place all of the way to a final table of eight and then continued to the final seven before concluding for the evening. Leading the final seven and representing the red spade is Team PokerStars Pro Max Lykov with a stack of 1.683 million.
Right on Lykov's heels, the incomparable Martin Kabrhel is just 40,000 shy of Lykov with 1.643 million. Rounding out the top three is Griffin Benger, who will bring 1.128 million back for Day 3.
Final Table Chip Counts
Rank | Player | Country | Chips |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Max Lykov | Russia | 1,683,000 |
2 | Martin Kabrhel | Czech Republic | 1,643,000 |
3 | Griffin Benger | Canada | 1,128,000 |
4 | Aaron Lim | Australia | 1,128,000 |
5 | Philippe Ktorza | France | 679,000 |
6 | James Mitchell | United Kingdom | 593,000 |
7 | Joni Jouhkimainen | Finland | 412,000 |
The field was littered with big-name professional players seeking the coveted trophy, as well as the �429,000 first-place prize. That being said, some fell more quickly than others. Well-knowns like Jan Heitmann, Bryn Kenney, Daniel Cates and Marvin Rettenmaier all fell within the first level of the day. Mike McDonald was also eliminated by Aaron Lim in a relatively brutal fashion.
Lim, who recently took down the 2013 APPT Seoul Main Event, as well as his first bracelet at the World Series of Poker Asia-Pacific during Event #4, $5,000 No-Limit Hold'em Six Max, is running hot, which showed when he and McDonald took a flop of 3?8?8? together. Lim check-raised McDonald all in and McDonald, snapped it off with A?A?. Lim was behind with his Q?Q? but managed to prevail when he spiked a queen immediately on the turn.
While those players fell in the first level, others continued to drop quickly as the day progressed. Scott Seiver eliminated Ankush Mandavia when his ace-queen held against Mandavia's ace-ten. Not too much later in the day, there were a flurry of eliminations that saw the exit of professionals Paul Volpe, Jake Cody and Dominik Nitsche. Others to bust as the money bubble approached were Fabian Quoss, Paul Berende, Jussi Nevanlinna and Marc-Andre Ladouceur.
The money bubble finally approached with 17 players left. Short-stacked Chris Brammer found a bit of hope when he was able to score a double up through Lim. However, a few hands later Lim was able to exact revenge and pop the bubble through Brammer's elimination.
At 3,000/6,000/1,000, Brammer opened to 19,000 from the cutoff. The Aussie cut out a three-bet to 49,000 out of the big blind, and Brammer moved all in over the top for around 200,000. Lim instantly called and the hands were rolled over on the felt.
Lim: A?Q?
Brammer: A?K?
Brammer was in great shape, and the 2?J?4? board missed Lim completely. The K? on the turn looked like a bad card for Lim, but it gave him an extra out to make the best hand. And, as the 10? struck the felt, Brammer was suddenly the bubble boy.
Everyone from there on out was guaranteed at least �22,000, which is what Georgios Karakousis and David Peters received. Also finishing in the money were Gautam Sabharwal, Artem Litvinov (�24,700), Igor Kurganov, AP Phahurat (�27,500) and Day 1 chip leader Ronny Voth (�30,300).
Voth's elimination set in motion the unofficial final table of nine. The final table bubble was burst quickly, however, when Kabrhel and Jan-Peter Jachtmann played a 1.4 million-chip pot before the flop. Jachtmann opened from early position to 37,000, and action trickled around to Kabrhel on the button. He made it 101,000 to go, and it folded back to Jachtmann. He double fisted all of his chips into the middle of the table for a bet totaling over 700,000. Kabrhel snapped him off.
Jachtmann: Q?Q?
Kabrhel: A?A?
The board fell down 9?3?4?3?5?, and just like that, the official final table was set. The players decided to keep playing rather than stopping at the final table and so the cards continued to fly for two more levels. During that time, the final table saw its first casualty: PCA $100,000 Super High Roller champion Scott Seiver.
Seiver was very active at the final table but finally saw his demise when he opened a pot with a min-raise at 10,000/20,000/3,000. It folded around to Lykov, who made it 92,000 to go. Action came back to Seiver who moved the rest of his stack all in. Lykov quickly tabled his cards and announced a call.
Seiver held the A?Q? and was crushed by Lykov's A?K?. Seiver found gin on the flop, however, as he paired up when A?Q?4? was spread across the felt. Suddenly Lykov was looking for a king or a spade to send the online legend packing. The 7? on the turn was meaningless, but the 10? on the river sealed Seiver's fate.
The final seven will return to the felt on Saturday at 13:00 CET to engage in battle one last time. Be sure to stay tuned to PokerNews as the Live Reporting Team remains on hand for the exciting conclusion of this massive high-roller event.
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Read more: https://www.deadgamerecords.com/news/2013/04/2013-european-poker-tour-berlin-main-event-day-5-14862.htm
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