Philipp Gruissem Wins EPT10 Grand Final �25K HR; Moves Atop All-Time German Money List
The 2014 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo? Casino European Poker Tour Grand Final �25,000 High Roller came to a close on Friday. The final nine players of a 214-entry field (159 unique entries that accounted for 55 reentries and a prize pool of �5,243,000) returned to the Salles des Etoiles room at Le Sporting to play down to a winner, and after a mere five hours of play, high-roller wizard Philipp Gruissem walked away with the �993,963 first-place prize and a stunning watch from luxury Swiss brand SLYDE, the official watch sponsor for EPT Season 10 main and high roller events.
The win also moved Gruissem to the top of the all-time German money list ahead of 2011 World Series of Poker Main Event champ Pius Heinz.
Place | Player | Prize |
---|---|---|
1 | Philipp Gruissem | �993,963* |
2 | Scott Seiver | �857,637* |
3 | Davidi Kitai | �526,400 |
4 | John Juanda | �426,800 |
5 | Byron Kaverman | �337,650 |
6 | Martin Finger | �256,400 |
7 | Stephen Chidwick | �187,200 |
8 | Chenxiang Miao | �136,900 |
9 | Pascal Lefrancois | �113,250 |
*Denotes heads-up deal
Day 3 action began in Level 22 (12,000/24,000/3,000), and it didn��t take long for the first elimination to occur. It happened when action folded to WSOP bracelet winner Pascal Lefrancois on the button and he opened for 52,000. Chip leader Davidi Kitai then three-bet to 133,000 from the small blind, the big folded, and Lefrancois announced that he was all in for roughly 600,000. Kitai snap-called.
Kitai: Q?Q?
Lefrancois: A?10?
Lefrancois had picked a bad time to shove as Kitai had woken up with a powerhouse hand. The 4?K?9? flop was no help to Lefrancois, but he did pick up a gutshot straight draw on the J? turn. Unfortunately for him, the K? blanked on the river and he hit the rail in ninth place for �113,250.
In Level 23 (15,000/30,000/4,000) China��s Chenxiang Miao exited in eighth place when his flush draw failed to get there against Kitai��s trips, and he was followed out the door by Stephen Chidwick, who lost the last of his chips after running pocket fours into Scott Seiver��s tens.
In Level 24 (20,000/40,000/5,000), Martin Finger, who won the EPT10 London ��50,000 Super High Roller for ��821,000 last year, busted to Kitai.
From there, recent World Poker Tour World Championship runner-up Byron Kaverman fell in fifth place when his K?Q? ran into the A?A? of Gruissem, and John Juanda, who was the short stack at the start of the final table, bowed out in fourth after getting unlucky in two hands.
Kitai was the short stack in three-handed play, and he soon got his chips in holding the A?5? against the Q?J? of Gruissem. The Frenchman held through the flop and turn, but then a lady spiked on the river to give Gruissem the win. Kitai took his leave in third place and earned �526,400 for his performance.
At that point Gruissem and Seiver, who faced off against one another in heads-up play last October in the WPT Alpha8 ��100K Event, opted to strike a deal that saw the former take home �993,963 and the latter �857,637. As for the title and the SLYDE watch, the two agreed to go all in blind until a winner was determined. It took just one hand.
In it, Seiver immediately announced that he was all in, and Gruissem had a look at his cards, though it was obvious he just forgot that he wasn't suppose to look at his cards. "Alright, I call," the German said to make it official.
Seiver then tabled the 2?3? and began laughing. Gruissem then said something along the lines of how bad Seiver was to move all in with such a hand, and then waited a beat before tabling his Q?Q?. It was a good-natured slowroll, and both players shared a laugh.
The 4? in the window got Seiver excited, but his enthusiasm died down when it was followed by the humdrum 10? and K?. The A? turn gave Seiver a wheel draw, but it didn't come in as the 8? blanked on the river.
"Alright, now you have to stay here and deal with all of this stuff," Seiver said with a smile before motioning to the various media around the table. A few more laughs and a handshake, and it was all over.
Congratulations to Philipp Gruissem, the 2014 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo? Casino EPT Grand Final �25,000 High Roller champion.
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