Finally, a Spanish EPT Champ: 20-Year-Old Adrian Mateos Wins Grand Final Main Event
The European Poker Tour found its first Spanish winner on Friday night, with 20-year-old Adrian Mateos walking away with the largest score of his poker career and second major poker title. It may have taken until the very end of Season 11 for a Spaniard to win, but Mateos did it, and he now holds two legs of poker's Triple Crown.
Final Table Results
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Adrian Mateos | Spain | �1,082,000 |
2 | Muyedine Fares | Senegal | �679,000 |
3 | Hady El Asmar | Lebanon | �486,000 |
4 | Johnny Lodden | Norway | �379,000 |
5 | Jose Carlos Garcia | Poland | 297,250 |
6 | Ole Schemion | Germany | �233,500 |
7 | Markus Ross | Germany | �74,300 |
8 | Koichi Nozaki | Japan | �120,700 |
The final day of the 2015 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo? Casino EPT Grand Final Main Event started with just six players remaining �� and what a tough final six it was.
Ole Schemion, one of the best players in the world and EPT Season 10 Player of the Year, was perhaps the most recognizable name, but there were certainly others in contention. Team PokerStars Pro Johnny Lodden was still in, back for more after finishing third in this event two years ago. Mateos, the 2013 WSOP Europe Main Event champ and current number two on the Spanish all-time money list, was present. Then, Jose Carlos Garcia, the Polish regular with a lot of experience, also joined.
But, leading this bunch of seasoned players were two players not playing the game professionally at all �� Hady El Asmar from Lebanon and Muhyedine Fares from Senegal were first and second in chips when play got underway.
The day started with Garcia as the short stack, but he wouldn't be the first to go. It was fan favorite Schemion hitting the rail in sixth. Schemion paid off Fares in a huge hand where the German hit two pair on the turn, only to see his opponent hit the nut flush on the river. Not much later, he lost the remainder of his chips with ace-three against Mateos' ace-king. Schemion took home �233,500 for his sixth-place finish.
Short stack Garcia exited in fifth place when he moved in with a suited ace-nine. Again, Fares was the one benefitting, as the man from Senegal had kings and saw his hand hold up. Garcia took home �297,250 for his fifth-place finish.
The first two players made their way to the pay out desk rather quickly, but four-handed play would take a bit longer. All four had pretty deep stacks, and it would take a big hand to change that for one of them. It was a hand to remember, for both involved, but maybe more so of a nightmare memory for Lodden..
Lodden made it 160,000 to go with the 5?5?, and Mateos called on the button with the J?10?. Fares was in the small blind and called with the 9?6?, and then El Asmar had the 8?6? in the big blind and called.
The flop came A?3?9?, and action was checked around to Mateos. The Spaniard bet 275,000, and Fares called with second pair. El Asmar folded before Lodden check-raised to 715,000. Mateos, with nothing but some back doors, called in position. Fares folded the best hand.
With 2.385 million in the pot, the 4? fell on the turn. Lodden, with 2.7 million behind, checked, and Mateos bet 650,000. Lodden made the call. The A? fell on the river and Lodden checked with 3.685 million in the pot. Mateos moved all in after some heavy tanking, but Lodden tanked even longer.
After about four minutes, he double checked his cards and said, "Still the same cards," with a smile. Eventually, Lodden decided against it, and he folded the best hand. Mateos showed the bluff and Lodden couldn't hide his frustration, though he did it with class.
Despite all his experience, Lodden was surely tilted by this hand, and he couldn't get anything going after. Finally, he exited in fourth place for �379,000 when his ace-queen was out drawn by El Asmar's ace-nine. The first community card in the window was the 9?, and no queen would appear behind it.
El Asmar was the one who knocked out Lodden, but he was still the short stack behind Mateos and Fares. There was no need to splash chips around, though, as there was enough play left for all three of them. Somehow it didn't take long for El Asmar to exit, and he finished in third place for �486,000.
Fares started the heads up with more than a 2-1 lead �� 11.2 million to Mateos' 5.5 million. The two swung back and forth a little bit, being even at one point, only for Mateos to drop back down again. Mateos eventually closed the gap by hitting bigger hands and winning more pots without showdown.
Mateos only had 2 million less than Fares when the biggest hand of the tournament was played. Fares opened with the A?9?, and Mateos called with the 7?4?. With 660,000 in the pot and both hit something on the A?4?7? flop, Mateos check-raised the 425,000 bet from Fares to 1.1 million. Fares wasn't backing down and three-bet to 2.675 million. Mateos shoved all in for 7.045 million, and Fares made the call without much hesitation. A 14.75 million-chip pot was the result. A J? on the turn and K? on the river saw Mateos land as the new chip leader and Fares was down to less than 20 big blinds.
Four hands later, it was all over.
Mateos and Fares got their chips in the middle before the flop with the A?8? for Mateos and the A?6? for Fares. Mateos flopped an eight and had his opponent drawing dead by the time the turn landed.
Here's Mateos' reaction to taking down one of the biggest poker tournaments in Europe:
With that, Mateos became the first-ever Spanish European Poker Tour champion. After 11 seasons and 105 EPT events, the 106th title finally will go into the books as won by a Spaniard. Mateos is still the number two on the Spanish all-time money list, with Carlos Mortensen and his almost $12 million in winnings far away, but he has widened the gap over 2014 November Niner Andoni Larrabe considerably. Mateos won an Estrellas Main Event at the ripe old age of 18, the WSOP Europe Main Event at 19, now the EPT Grand Final Main Event at age 20. He'll turn 21 just before the WSOP Main Event in Las Vegas, so he'll be able to play.
One thing we can say without a doubt is that we should hear a lot more from this Spanish sensation!
Here's PokerNews.com Editor-in-chief Donnie Peters' hot take on the final table, and whether or not Lodden will ever get his big win.
That concludes the 11th season of the European Poker Tour. The tour makes its return in August in Barcelona, as it will once again be the opening stop for the tour's new season.
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