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2014 PokerStars.com EPT Season 11 Prague

�10,300 High Roller
Dias: 3
Event Info

2014 PokerStars.com EPT Season 11 Prague

Resultados Finais
Campe?o
M?o Vencedora
33
Premia??o
€487,180
Event Info
Buy-in
€10,000
Premia??o
€3,028,200
Entries
309
Informa??es do N��vel
N��vel
32
Blinds
120,000 / 240,000
Ante
30,000

Andrey Zaichenko Wins EPT Prague High Roller (�487,180)!

N��vel 32 : 120,000/240,000, 30,000 ante
Andrey Zaichenko EPT Prague High Roller Winner 2014
Andrey Zaichenko EPT Prague High Roller Winner 2014

The third and final day of the 2014 PokerStars.com European Poker Tour Season 11 Prague �10,300 High Roller started with 23 players left in the tournament. They were already well into the money, but a final table was not in sight yet.

A lot of familiar faces took their seats at noon local time. Marvin Rettenmaier wasn't one of them, though, as he was two minutes late. He rushed through the tournament room, jumped over chairs, and was in his seat milliseconds before his cards would have been mucked by the dealer. He shoved the first hand and ran ace-five suited into Martin Finger's ace-nine.

"I'll take a chop," said the still cheerful Rettenmaier.

He got more than he asked for as the turn gave him a flush and guaranteed him the double up.

"That's what you get for being modest," replied Anton Astapau with a smile.

Finger wouldn't recover from the clash and would bust minutes later. He ran king-jack into Ole Schemion's ace-queen.

Like Finger, many big names wouldn't make the final table. Jonathan Little busted in 20th, Ari Engel couldn't double and hit the rail in 19th spot, and many more followed.

After the redraw at 16, the tournament was down to its final 13 players within the hour and it looked like it might keep going with that pace. But while the �5,300 Main Event was already nearing its early finish, the High Roller slowed down a lot.

It would take some time before Senh Ung got eliminated in 13th place when his king-ten couldn't beat Clavio Anzalone's ace-king.

Then it was Alexander Ivarsson to bust in 12th when he fell at the hands of Viacheslav Goryachev.

Short stacks Roman Emelyanov (11th) and Oleksii Khoroshenin (10th) followed soon after, and the final nine players moved to one table �� just one elimination away from the official final table.

Dan Shak would be the unlucky one to fall in ninth place. The high-rolling regular lost aces to kings earlier in the day, but doubled a couple of times to stay alive. He maneuvered his stack enough to make the final nine, but not enough to be able to recover from being on the short end of another set up. With ace-king he ran into Andrey Zaichenko's pocket aces and was gone.

Schemion started out as the chip leader at the final table of eight. As per usual, he had been crushing in the short-handed period leading up to the last table, and poker reporters all over the world must have already started writing recaps expecting Schemion to win. Not this time around, though, as a lot went wrong. Schemion lost chips left and right, didn't get there where he usually would, and got called by ace-high at one point where he didn't have much of anything.

After Anzalone was eliminated in eighth place by Zaichenko, the latter took the lead. By the time the dinner break started, there were seven players left and Schemion was the shortest of them all with just 10 big blinds.

After returning from break, Joao Vieira was the first out the door. He was knocked down to a single big blind and all in for the main pot as Francois Billard and Zaichenko battled for the side pot. When it was all said and done, both Billard and Zaichenko showed up with ace-king for top pair and top kicker, and that meant Vieira's unimproved nine-five was worthless.

While Schemion was short for a long time, Goryachev was as well. This made for some interesting situations as none of the players wanted to bust before one of the two small stacks got eliminated, but neither of these two wanted to go. Both just hung around, but it came to a point where Schemion eventually had to make a move. He moved in with ace-eight and eventually battled it out with Levinskas who had ace-king. Schemion flopped two pair, but he got counterfeited on the turn and was sent home in sixth place.

Goryachev would eventually finish fifth. He did well to stay alive for this long, but eventually his jacks got beaten by ace-queen when an ace hit the river.

Simon Deadman was the next to go. He got it in with ace-eight and was up against Zaichenko with pocket eights. Rail bird Jack Salter rooted hard for Deadman, but no ace, no straight, no flush, no nothing for Deadman, and he departed in fourth place.

The remaining three players discussed a deal, and after some 30 minutes they got to an understanding. With �39,000 still to battle for, these were the numbers they agreed on:

PlayerPrize Money
Andrey Zaichenko�448,180
Laurynas Levinskas�412,905
Francois Billard�405,260

After the deal, Billard pushed from the small blind with ace-ten suited and was looked up by Levinskas, who held the king-queen. The flop was full of blanks, but the {Q-Spades} turn gave Levinskas a pair and Billard a flush draw. The river blanked, and Billard hit the rail in third for �405,260.

Heads-up play started with a lead for Levinskas. That soon changed though when Zaichenko turned trips and Levinskas pushed with his open-ended straight draw. The straight didn't come for Levinskas on the river, and the two remaining players effectively changed chip stacks. Another big hand happened soon after. Levinskas and Zaichenko got their chips in on an {Q-}{6-}{6-} flop. Both had a six but Levinskas had the better kicker. The river queen gave both players the same full house, though, and they chopped the pot.

The chips moved back and forth, and every time someone was all in and there was a call, it was a colliding of two big hands. It truly was the story of the day; in spots where players should shove a wide range of hands, they always had strong holdings.

The same occurred on the last hand where Zaichenko pushed all in and Levinskas called with just about 11 big blinds left. Zaichenko had the worst of it with pocket threes, and Levinskas had pocket nines. A three on the turn ended the tournament this time, and Zaichenko was crowned the champion.

PositionPlayerCountryPrize
1Andrey ZaichenkoRussia�487,180*
2Laurynas LevinskasLithuania�412,910*
3Francois BillardCanada�405,260*
4Simon DeadmanUnited Kingdom�238,320
5Viacheslav GoryachevRussia�186,840
6Ole SchemionGermany�141,420
7Joao VieiraPortugal�103,870
8Clavio AnzaloneItaly�76,310

*Denotes three-way deal.

With that, the PokerNews coverage from EPT Prague has come to a close and it's time for the holidays. We wish everyone a grand holiday season, and we look forward to seeing you back here with us for coverage of the 2015 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure to kick off the calendar year on the tournament circuit.

Tags: Alexander IvarssonAndrey ZaichenkoAnkush MandaviaAnton AstapauAri EngelChristopher AndlerClavio AnzaloneDan ShakDario SammartinoGeorgios KarakousisHenrik HecklenIgor YaroshevskyyIoannis ApostolidisIvan SoshnikovJoao VieiraJonathan LittleMartin FingerMarvin RettenmaierMaxim LykovMichel DattaniNicholas RamponeNicolas ChouityOle SchemionOleh OkhotskyiOleksii KhorosheninOliver PricePablo FernandezPatrick UzanRoman EmelyanovRoman KorenevSenh Man UngSimon DeadmanSimon RavnsbaekSylvain LoosliUmang DattaniViacheslav GoryachevVojtech Ruzicka