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Archive for February, 2009


lrdvoldemort vanquishes his foes in Sunday Warm-Up win

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Ah, back to quiet way of life in these poker parts. After the dash for the 25 billionth hand promotion had people multi-tabling like never before, and over 6,000 players playing the juiced up promotional $1.25 million guarantee Sunday Warm-up last week it's time to roll back to simpler times.

Or not.

With the Spring Championship of Online Poker on the horizon, players are hoping for a big score to head into the April 2nd-12th competition with a shot at the $30 million in guarantees being offered. Tonight 4,452 players ponyed up the $215 to vie for the $113,971.20 first prize.

Among those in the final nine, a fixture on the Tournament Leader Board, Roothlus was heading towards another big pay day in tonight's Sunday Warm-Up. Last big splash he made on these pages, was a sixth place finish in event #29 (write up here) at the 2008 World Championship of Online Poker for a sizable $37,815 and don't forget the penny. lrdvoldemort will kick off the final table with the big stack, and has a WCOOP bracelet to his credit (2008 Event #13, live blog here) he will also be looking for another six figure score to add to his $207,772.50 he won in September. He was also responsible for securing the final table after knocking out ROCKEY975 in tenth when his pocket kings held up to ROCKEY975's quiet pocket sevens.

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Seat 1: strahhh25 (3309102 in chips)
Seat 2: lrdvoldemort (13193270 in chips)
Seat 3: omasa81 (2518730 in chips)
Seat 4: Naropa (6933632 in chips)
Seat 5: Christos911 (8779585 in chips)
Seat 6: UnXplainable (2890707 in chips)
Seat 7: Noctus (1108060 in chips)
Seat 8: Roothlus (4827794 in chips)
Seat 9: CaAngels2002 (959120 in chips)

Wasting no time, lrdvoldemort needed no black magic to decrease the size of the final table from nine to eight. strahhh25 raised to 320,000 from UTG with the blinds at 80,000/160,000 ante 16,000 and got a flat call by lrdvoldemort to his left as the blinds folded. Flop of Qd-8h-Qc got a 320,000 chip continuation bet from strahhh25 and another call by lrdvoldemort. 480,000 chip bet by strahhh25 on the 2d turn got another flat call by the chip leader. The Ts river was enough for strahhh25 to push his remaining 2.1 million into the pot, and was promptly called by slow-played the pocket rockets of lrdvoldemort. Ninth place and $6,945.12 for strahhh25 as his ace-high hand (Ah-7h) shipped the 6.9 million chip pot to the huge chip leader.

With under ten big blinds to their credit, the two shorties decided to take their wars preflop. First, it was CaAngels2002 taking a shot with Ah-8s from the cutoff, pushing his 623,120 chips in the middle and getting a call from omasa81 in the small blind, but Naropa in the big blind had other ideas. Naropa would push his 6.2 million stack, prompting omasa81 to abandon his bet. Pocket ducks for Naropa was enough to outrace the ace and eight of CaAngels2002 on the Qc-6s-7s-Jc-3d board. Eighth place and $10,684.80 for the Anaheim baseball fan.

Nine hands later the other short stack, Noctus, took his shot to improve. Pushing his 772,060 chips with Ks-Jd from UTG+2, the big blind having already invested 160,000 chips made the call with 7d-6c. The math call was the right one, as the flop provided a pair of the sevens (7s-2d-Ad) and the turn 6d locked up the 1.7 million chip pot with two pair. The Canuck will be warmed up by the $17,808.00 being shipped to his PokerStars account tonight for his seventh place finish.

At the first final table break here's how the dark wizard loomed over the heads of the rest of the table and they returned to 125,000/250,000 ante 25,000 blinds:

lrdvoldemort (15,707,372 in chips)
omasa81 (3,931,220 in chips)
Naropa (5,401,110 in chips)
Christos911 (5,969,296 in chips)
UnXplainable (6,697,414 in chips)
Roothlus (6,813,588 in chips)

Big pot after the break between lrdvoldemort and UnXplainable saw the chip leader's stack take a big hit when UnXplainable raised to 750,000 on the button and lrdvolemort shoved from the big blind only to be shown the pocket aces of UnXplainable. Kc-Qd for lrdvolemort could not scratch the rockets and the chip lead was shipped in a southern direction towards UnXplainable

Naropa and omasa81 could not get anything going after the break and were sent home in consecutive hands. With blinds at 150,000/300,000 ante 30,000 omasa81 tried to snag the blinds from the button with a shove for 2.3 million with Qd-Ts, but found a customer in Christos911 who covered easily in the big blind. Christos911 turned over Ks-Th for the dominating hand that would hold up on the 9d-9c-8c-2c-4c board for the 5.1 million chip pot and sent omasa81 home in sixth place ($26,712.00).

The very next hand Naropa would get to race off his remaining 2.4 million chips against the hot-hot lrdvoldemort. Big slick for Naropa and pocket tens for lrdvoldemort, no love on the 9s-Qd-8h flop for the short stack. The Tc on the turn shortened the outs list to just four for Naropa, and the river 8c left Naropa off the final table guest list in fifth place ($35,616.00).

Attempts to make a deal despite the similar stacks were thwarted at each turn and four handed play went on with the blinds reaching a sizable 200,000/400,000 ante 40,000.

Short-handed, and escalating blinds in the 250,000/500,000 ante 50,000 still did not open up chop talks but did open up the aggression as several preflop raises were met with all-in over shoves but no calls. No flops were played until Christos911 tried to pick off Roothlus' big blind with a shove for his remaining 3.4 million from the button. Roothlus made the correct call with Kc-Js and found himself well ahead of the Jc-Td of Christos911. The all low board of 2d-5h-6s-6c-8c caught no one's broadway cards and with king high we were down to three as Christos earned $44,520.00 in fourth place.

About ten hands later, it was Roothlus' turn to fell the wraith of lrdvoldemort. As Roothlus completed the small blind, lrdvoldemort pounced on the weak bet with a shove that covered Roothlus' stack. With some thought, Roothlus made the correct call with Ah-7s and found himself well ahead of the As-2s of lrdvoldemort. The master of the dark arts found the right spell as a deuce hit the Kd-2d-4c flop. After taking the lead, the 9h and Td fell on the turn and river harmlessly for lrdvoldemort and sent the MTT crusher Roothlus home in third place ($53,067.84).

While he was willing to deal earlier, lrdvoldemort turned down the offer to make a deal with UnXplainable while under a two million chip difference. Maybe the WCOOP bracelet holder had a premonition of the next two hands. After lrdvoldemort gave up his preflop raise in the next hand after Roothlus left in third place, the two remaining players got all the chips into the middle preflop for the $34,000 difference between first and second:

UnXplainable: Tc-Th
lrdvoldemort: Ah-Qs

The flop was an UnXplainable-y safe 4h-8s-8h, but the dark chip wizard did it again as the As dropped on the turn to leave UnXplainable with just two outs and didn't get there as the 7s fell and left the formerly slight chip leader with just 819,312 chips and 250,000/500,000 ante 50,000 blinds. Those scraps would be eaten up on the very next hand when UnXplainable's 9s-2s couldn't overcome lrdvoldemort's Ad-Js and find neither a third spade, nor a pair on the board of 8s-Qd-4c-3s-4d and UnXplainable finished as tonight's runner-up earning $79,690.80 in the process.

Two six figure wins in six month's time for the young Swedish pro is a huge accomplishment, as lrdvoldemort did it again winning $113,971.20 as this week's Sunday Warm-up champion!

Sunday Warm-up Results (02-22-09)
1. lrdvoldemort $113,971.20
2. UnXplainable $79,690.80
3. Roothlus $53,067.84
4. Christos911 $44,520.00
5. Naropa $35,616.00
6. omasa81 $26,712.00
7. Noctus $17,808.00
8. CaAngels2002 $10,684.80
9. strahhh25 $6,945.12


Kirua wins the February Battle of the Planets triple shootout

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

Champions of the Mercury, Mars, Venus, Earth, Neptune, Uranus, Saturn, and Jupiter divisions all lined up again at the end of the month to face off for the a big chunk of the monthly Battle of the Planets SnG promotion. Having given away over $3 million to date for SnG players for simply playing and acquiring the most points on their given stakes planets. No SnG too low (except for play chips), and no SnG too high as all 442 qualifiers today started the triple shootout with 1,500 chips at each table regardless of their normal SnG buy-in. $12,000.00 potentially for the victor, and $195.00 to those places that mastered their first table but didn't quite sneak into the final nine for the big money.

delucabr could only get out a "lolololol" in the chat box as his dominating 9h-6h (yes, dominating) over the 9d-3d of GoldStar VIP level NL_Profit. His domination failed to even make it past the flop. 3h-3s-As rained down on the flop making trips for NL_Profit, no miracle flush or running sixes on the turn and river, and delucabr was the official bubble boy for today's contest finishing in 82nd place. NL_Profit however could not continue his stroke of luck, falling in 31st place.

In the round of 81, the players at table number 8 were apparently late for dinner or forgot the winner gets a shot at $12,000.00, bigtime4K and e4e5nf3nc6 were heads up at before any other table got down to five. Those two would slow down to lengthy heads-up game as it was BB_ShiNing taking the first seat at the final table, when his gutshot straight flush draw overcame the top pair-top kicker of anttoy1 and assured himself at least $775.00. bigtime4K would finally knock off e4e5nf3nc6 for the second final table seat, as the antes were finally introduced and the last seven tables came down quickly. With just shinng and previous Battle of the Planets final tablist (October 2008, fifth place, read the write up here) BakonJarser left to round out the field of nine, and BakonJarser starting with a sizable lead heads-up, they would start a drawn out battle for the final seat. A return to the final table was not in the cards for BakonJarser as in the space of two hands he lost his chip lead, then with a flop of 9h-Qs-Tc both players pushed with shinng showing Ac-Jh for an open-ended straight draw and an overcard to BakonJarser's Jd-Th for the same draw and a leading pair. 9s on the turn helped no one as BakonJarser looked good for a double up, but the Ah on the river set our final nine and BakonJarser will have to wait till next month for another final table shot:


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Seat 1: BB_ShiNing
Seat 2: shinng
Seat 3: mak10
Seat 4: Kirua
Seat 5: PokerGoat111
Seat 6: Boku87
Seat 7: hockey65
Seat 8: bigtime4k
Seat 9: vladimwd

Boku87's SnG chops were shown at the recent World Cup of Poker qualifying, while helping his Germany 1 team earn a free trip to the Bahamas (write up of the qualifier found here) and making this final table is another notch on his PokerStars tournament belt.

The final table started with no excitement from the neither 10/20 nor 15/30 blind levels as small pots were pushed from side to side as the players jockeyed for position. Only vladimwd found himself below the 1,000 chip mark from the beginning 1,500 chips when the 25/50 blind level started, but three hands into the level he flopped Aces Full against hockey65 and a nice value on the end snagged a 1,150 chip pot as he would get right back into the game.

Luck would reverse for vladimwd as the 50/100 blinds started. He got his money in good versus the short stacked hockey65 twice and things did not turn out for the ninth place finisher. First was re-raising the short stacked hockey65 for the rest of his chips preflop and finding himself well ahead with Ad-Kc versus hockey65's Kh-Js. Flopping top pair (4c-Tc-Ah) was huge and shifted the outs from a jack to a queen for hockey65. The 6h on the turn did nothing but the river Qd delivered the broadway straight and knocked vladimwd to the short stack. The very next hand, again vladimwd and hockey65 would tangle preflop, and again vladimwd found As-Ks and dominating hockey65's hand (Ad-Qh). The domination would last about two seconds as the Jh-Kh-Th flop left vladimwd looking for one of the two remaining queens for a chop. The flush never came, but neither did the queen on the turn and river, vladimwd took home $775.00 in ninth.

Unfortunately for bigtime4K, big slick finally pulled through in for someone. In back-to-back hands bigtime4K got his stack in the middle preflop. First against the short stacked BB_ShiNing then again against the chip leader shinng. After pushing on the button with Ah-5c, bigtime4K found himself up against the small blind BB_ShiNing's As-Kd, which held up on the 8s-4s-7d-9d-7s board and left him with 415 chips. Those remaining chips would go into the middle again preflop with Qc-8c where shinng was quietly waiting in the big blind with As-Ks. A small threat to shinng's lead emerged on turn of the Td-5d-7c-9d board, but the Kc sealed bigtime4K's eighth place finish. Not exactly 4K in winnings but a free $1,200.00 never hurt anyone.

Continuing the big slick theme, Boku87 found himself all-in preflop after re-raising UTG+2 to 1,050 chips. Folded around to BB_ShiNing in the cutoff who covered by 450 chips, made the easy push with pocket kings (Kc-Ks). The original raiser, PokerGoat111 went out to the pasture as Boku87 flipped up As-Kh. This time big slick was the underdog and found himself with two outs after the all club (9c-4c-Jc) flop. The ace on the turn was of the club variety, and instead of sucking out, Boku87 found himself drawing dead as the 2,725 chips had BB_ShiNing's name on it with the nut flush. $1,700.00 for the German rounder as Boku87 finished in seventh place.

With the blinds ramping up to 100/200, so did the action. After shinng doubled up Kirua, the very next hand saw a three way all-in.

hockey65 Jd-Qh
shinng Kd-Kh
PokerGoat111 Ad-Ah

shinng still covered the other two competitors by 415 chips as hockey65's and PokerGoat111's tournament lives were on the line. The flop of 8s-7h-Jc gave hockey65 an open five hole but the 3h and Ts on the turn and river stop his wrist shot in its tracks. PokerGoat111 took in the 4,570 chip pot and the chip lead, as hockey65 skated off the rink in sixth place ($2,200.00).

shinng would get a boost from the very next hand turning his 415 chips into 1,345 chips after big slick outraced the pocket eights of BB_ShiNing and 7d-5s of PokerGoat111. With those chips he dug himself out of the hole even further after catching running spades with Ks-7s against the pocket queens of mak10 to cripple the Michael Jordan fan. mak10 would survive the next hand with big slick (again), but his Jh-6h on the following hand would provide a little more fun (but alas, no chips). After pushing on the button for his remaining 810 chips, mak10 would get an insta-call from PokerGoat111 holding pocket rockets (Ad-Ac). After the turn the board showed 5c-5h-3s-4h giving mak10 an open ended straight and flush draws. The plethora of outs did not materialize for mak10 as the 8d on the river gave him $2,700.00 in fifth place.

BB_ShiNing's stack would take a huge hit against shinng when his Jc-8c shove on the button didn't get by shinng in the small blind with Ad-Td and after trip tens hit by the river for shinng, BB_ShiNing would be left with 745 chips. A few steals and a double up helped BB_ShiNing get back to around 2,000 chips but a race with Kirua ended with BB_ShiNing taking home $3,350.00 in fourth place. With the blinds at 125/250 ante 25, BB_ShiNing shoved from the button with Ah-Jd which was called by Kirua in the big blind with pocket nines (9c-9d). Kirua covered by 1,445 and couldn't have been happy with the 4h-8s-As flop. Firmly in the lead of the race, BB_ShiNing watched a 2c on the turn looking to take the 3,655 chip pot. But, the dirty river presented one of the two nines left in the deck as the 9s fell and BB_ShiNing was shot down by Kirua's rivered set of nines in fourth place.

"Ew"

My monosyllabic non-word, after watching shinng's bust out courtesy of the following hand:

150/300 ante 25 blinds, after a min-raise by shinng in the small blind and a call from Kirua in the big blind the board showed 4h-4d-Jd. Both players go nuts and get their chips into the middle with Kirua holding 2,200 behind. Both flip up QJo, shinng has Qc-Jh and Kirua's Jc-Qd for the only live card between the two. As you can see where this is going, the 3d on the turn cranked the music up for a possible flush and blew out the subwoofers on the 8d river for runner-runner flush sending home an unlucky shinng in third place ($4,500.00).

Heads-up play was of the blink and you missed it variety as Kirua took his 7,905 chips versus 5,595 for PokerGoat111 and turned it into a victory on the very first hand. A preflop raise of 900 from Kirua on the button was called by PokerGoat111 to see the flop of 9c-3d-4c. Kirua followed thru with a 1,200 chip continuation bet, which had PokerGoat111 pushing his remaining 4,670 into the middle. Kirua took a little time to make the correct call with pocket eights (8c-8s) which found himself ahead of PokerGoat111's Qs-Jc. 7c on the turn opened up even more outs for PokerGoat111, but the red 4d on the river shipped the $12,000 first prize to our February Battle of the Planets champion Kirua! For fighting through three tables and only one club away from extending the match, our runner-up PokerGoat111 is going home with $7,500.00 today.

February Battle of the Planets Results (02-22-09)

1. Kirua $12,000.00
2. PokerGoat111 $7,500.00
3. shinng $4,500.00
4. BB_ShiNing $3,350.00
5. mak10 $2,735.00
6. hockey65 $2,200.00
7. Boku87 $1,700.00
8. bigtime4K $1,200.00
9. vladimwd $775.00


EPT Copenhagen: Kyllönen crushes Copenhagen

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

Veterans of the European Poker Tour know that final tables in Copenhagen can take some time. From the epic Mads Anderson/Edgar Skjervold battle of season two, to the four-hour Tim Vance/Soren Jensen heads up of a year ago, television directors know to bring extra tapes, journalists are well-stocked with caffeine pills, and an emergency table has been arranged in the car-park should the casino close before play is done.

That was then, this is now. Thanks in the main to two players -- Jens Kyllönen, from Finland, and Anders Langset, from Norway -- crates of unused tapes will be floating down the Copenhagen canals tonight as wired reporters go buzzing around the city with hours to kill until they can sleep. I write this at 6.45pm, less than five hours after play began on the final table of the season five Copenhagen EPT, and minutes after Kyllönen was named the new champion, earning the equivalent of €878,057 for demolishing his seven adversaries in one of the swiftest ever final days.

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Jens Kyllönen, EPT Copenhagen champion

This breakneck resolution reconfirmed every preconception of Nordic poker players we have ever held. Firstly, there were loads of them -- from the final eight, only the French player Eric Larcheveque hailed from a non-Nordic nation. Secondly, they all played supremely quickly and aggressively -- a "dwell" was anyone who thought about a million-chip call for more than about 30 seconds. And finally, they were all exceptionally talented -- it surely says enough that three online superstars Jonas "Tulkaz" Klausen, Rasmus "Jungleras" Nielsen, and Petter "Slaktarn" Petersson were among the first four out. It was that tough.

Yet even among these notable talents, one was especially irresistible. Kyllönen was one of the relative short stacks at the start of play, but there was a rare focus to the Finn and seasoned observers noted early on that if he was to get chips, he could be very dangerous indeed. So it proved. The two massive overnight stacks -- Langset and Nielsen -- clashed in a 700,000 pot early in the day, crippling Nielsen and vaulting Langset clear at the top.

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Rasmus Nielsen

Nielsen never recovered and followed Klausen and Larcheveque, both of whom busted in the first level, out the door. That set the stage for Kyllönen's rise.

Five handed, Langset was looking exceptionally comfortable. Rumours had been circulating around the tournament arena for the past couple of days that the young Norwegian had only graduated from the play money to real money tables of PokerStars within the past month or so.

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Anders Langset

But no one believed the story, not because Langset looked dishonest (far from it), but because he had put on such an accomplished display in what was his first-ever live tournament. He'd been chip leader and principal vanquisher for two full days, and here he was with more than the rest of his final four adversaries put together. Even advisors to Copenhagen's prime yarn-spinner Hans Christian Anderson might have tapped him on the shoulder and said, "Listen, Hans. That's a fairytale too far, mate."

Langset, though, was able to sit back and relax as Peterson perished in fifth, before Jussi Nevanlinna and Kyllönen went to battle in a series of Finn-on-Finn escapades. The countrymen seemed to have been targeting one another for much of the final table, and Kyllönen ultimately came out on top when his A-7 out-raced Nevanlinna's pocket fives in a pot from which the latter never recovered. Nevanlinna left us in fourth.

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Jussi Nevanlinna

Then there was the tournament-defining hand. Kyllönen and Langset had largely stayed out of one another's way until the gloves came off in a whopping all-in pre-flop clash. Langset had pocket eights and the chance to eliminate his closest opponent; Kyllönen had Kd-Qh and the opportunity to get right back in it.

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Jens Kyllönen

The two players put their arms around one another and stood as the dealer decided their fate. The flop was good for both: 9d-6d-4h. The turn made things even more interesting: 3d and the river was the clincher for the Finn: Qd. He hit his overcard and his flush for good measure and for the first time Langset was on the ropes.

One further hand between the two and it was all over for the Norwegian: Kyllönen's As-8s flopped the nut flush and picked off Langset's bluff. Langset went to the rail in the same manner he had played for four days: with a huge smile. One suspects we'll see him again.

That left two players, and the absence of Peter Hedlund's name in this report to date is only so that he can get his own full paragraph here, which he so richly deserves. Hedlund, firstly, is no mean poker player. This is his second EPT final table, and we've seen him through all five seasons of the tour, always offering a threat. But more than that, Hedlund is among the most charismatic players in the whole of the continent: sitting on the same table as him (or in the same tournament room as him, in fairness) means exposure to an incessant rat-a-tat-tat of observations, gags, questions, jokes, usually with himself as the brunt.

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Peter Hedlund

The waiting staff and bartenders usually get to know Hedlund quite well too, oiling the cogs of this unique machine. And once he got heads up today, he bought beers for the entire crowd around the final table: "You can't beat me, so join me!" seemed to be the tacit invitation.

And so Hedlund and his enthusiastic supporters went heads-up with Kyllönen, who had now begun to sport a baseball cap emblazoned with the apt slogan: "Teenage Millionaire". Hedlund had it all to do, giving up a three-to-one chip advantage to the young Finn. They probed and they jousted for a while, but ultimately it was something of a heads-up cooler. Kyllönen found jacks as Hedlund had A-J. The board ran out in favour of Kyllönen, and that was the end of that.

"I definitely didn't expect anything," Kyllönen said. "I came in as the short stack and tried to play the best game I could. It turned out well."

No kidding. The money was shipped to the 19-year-old teenage millionaire as Finland produced its second EPT champion. Jens Kyllönen is our champion and I suggest you remember the name. I have a feeling you won't be able to forget it in a couple of years.


Watch EPT Copenhagen S5: The Winner - Jens Kyllonen on PokerStars.tv

Now take a look back at how this all played out, including some riveting internet connection issues during the first couple of levels:

Introducing our finalists
Level 22 updates
Level 23 updates
Level 24 updates
Level 25 updates

And here's all that stuff in numerous other languages. These languages, to be precise, are: German, Swedish, Danish, Norwegian or Finnish.

Stuff in free flowing moving pictures: PokerStars.tv.

And where would you find a full list of the prize-winners? The prizewinners page, of course. Fools.

Good night from Copenhagen. It's Dortmund next. Be back.

Photography: (c) Neil Stoddart


EPT Copenhagen: Level 25 updates

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

This post shows updates from level 24 of EPT Copenhagen, updated on a regular basis. The blinds are 20,000-40,000 with a 3,000 ante. Updates are brought to you by Stephen Bartley and Howard Swains.

You can find the most recent official chip count on the chip-count page. Prizewinners to date are on the prizewinners page. Today we will play down to a winner.

6.46pm -- Jens Kyllonen is the new EPT Copenhagen champion, earning €878,057
Full details to follow soon.

6.45pm -- Peter Hedlund, Sweden, out in second, earning €497,069
This may be the exact opposite final table as that of 12 months ago. Hedlund raised pre-flop to 220,000. Kyllonen re-raised all in and Hedlund insta-called. As-Jh for Hedlund, Js-Jc for Kyllonen. As the two players stood with an arm around each others shoulder the board ran out 9s-8h-5s-Kc-Qc. That did it. Hedlund in second, Kyllonen the new EPT Copenhagen champion.

6.35pm -- We go on...
While it shows no signs of being the check-check marathon heads-up of last year there's no question the pace of the final has slowed as Hedlund and Kyllonen lock horns. Hands pass with pre-flop bets enough, with the occasional flop thrown in. The main feature of the room, apart from the table of golden beers, is Anders Langset pacing the room happiliy talking on the phone, passing on his news. We may yet see the dinner break.

6.20pm -- A lot of folding pre-flop
A lot of folding pre-flop.

6.15pm -- Mine's a pint
A tray full of beers has arrived, filling a table. It's from Peter Hedlund looking to sway the support on teh rail in his favour. It's working.

6.10pm -- Six high
Kyllonen wins the first head up pot, a quiet affair, after a small bet on the flop. A few hands later Kyllonen made it 120,000 pre-flop which Hedlund called for a flop of Qh-Ad-2h. Hedlund checked. Kyllonen went to his stack and made it 175,000 before Hedlund immediately moved all in. Kyllonen was forced to pass as Hedlund showed his 6-3.

6.05pm -- Heads up
We are now heads up, and the players return from a five-minute breather to find the following stacks:

Jens Kyllönen - 3,508,000
Peter Hedlund - 1,154,000

5.55pm -- Anders Langset, Norway, out in third, earning €288,717
Langset made it 120,000 from the button whicj Kyllonen called for a flop of Js-9s-Qs. Kyllonen checked. Langset made it 200,000 which again Kyllonen called. With a turn card 7s the money went in, Kyllonen checking before Langset moved all-in. Kyllonen called at light speed, showing the nut flush, As-8s. Langset could only manage a 4s. The river was an irrelevant jack. Langset out.

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Anders Langset

5.50pm -- Double up for Kyllönen
The first hand of the new level is a massive one for Jens Kyllönen and might yet go a long way to determining the winner of this tournament. The Finn takes Kd-Qh up against Anders Langset's 8-8, all in pre-flop. The two players embrace as they see the 9d-6d-4h flop, which changes nothing. The 3d on the turn gives Kyllönen plenty of outs -- he can now hit any diamond or any of the remaining kings or queens -- and the Qd fills both roles. Kyllönen wins the two-million-plus pot and becomes the chip leader.

5.45pm -- New level
And now, as the world continues to turn on its axis, we have a new level. It's the last before dinner.


EPT Copenhagen: Level 24 updates

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

This post shows updates from level 24 of EPT Copenhagen, updated on a regular basis. The blinds are 15,000-30,000 with a 3,000 ante. Updates are brought to you by Stephen Bartley and Howard Swains.

You can find the most recent official chip count on the chip-count page. Prizewinners to date are on the prizewinners page. Today we will play down to a winner.

5.40pm -- Level comes to a close
The level ends with Kyllonen taking a small pot from Langset in a battle of the blinds.

5.35pm -- None shall pass
Anders Langset might only have been playing a short amount of time, but he must have read all the right books about aggressive play. In an unraised pot, he and Jens Kyllönen see a flop of 10h-10c-Qc and Langset bets 105,000 at it, after Kyllönen checks. Now the Finn wants something to do with it and re-raises to 280,000. "All in," declares Langset, which is plenty good enough to get Kyllönen to lay it down.

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Anders Langset

5.25pm -- Jussi Nevanlinna from Finland, out in fourth, earning €220,258
Nevanlinna moves all-in from under the gun. Hedlund asks for a count - it's 164,000 to call. "When Peter flat calls" says Nevanlinna to the others "you're supposed to squeeze."
Hedlund calls and then Kyllonen does the same. The action moves to Langset who spends a minute thinking about doing the same. A four way pot? No, just the three, he passes and Hedlund and Kyllonen check down the board of 2d-5s-Qc-Ad-2h. Nevanlinna shows K-9, Kyllonen pocket nines, but Hedlund takes it down showing A-4, sending Nevanlinna to the rail in the process.

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Jussi Nevanlinna

5.20pm -- Double up for Kyllönen
Jens Kyllönen is a force here now in Copenhagen after he doubles his stack to around 1,200,000 with a double up through his countryman Jussi Nevanlinna. Kyllönen opened from under-the-gun and Nevanlinna shoved from the small blind. He had Kyllönen covered and it was a huge call to make, especially with only Ah-7c. But he went ahead and made the call and was racing against 5-5. There was an ace in the window and Kyllönen took the lead, which he did not relinquish. Nevanlinna is now the prohibitive short stack, with Kyllönen about a million short of Langset. Hedlund is probably in third at the moment.

5.05pm - Three way action
A three way pot develops with Langset betting 85,000 pre-flop which is called by Nevanlinna and Kyllonen. On the flop of 9d-8d-Ks Kyllonen and Langset check but Nevanlinna bets out 157,000, enough to win the hand.

5pm -- Power play
Peter Hedlund and Anders Langset get to a flop in an unraised pot. It's 8d-6h-5c. Langset bets 125,000 and Hedlund eventually folds, showing a seven, for an open-ended straight draw. Langset shows a queen and "Queen high is good," according to Hedlund.

4.50pm -- Oranges are not the only chips
Orange chips are now in play, each worth 25,000.

4.45pm -- Hedlund all-in
Hedlund bet 70,000 pre-flop which Langset called in the big blind for a flop of 2c-2s-Qd. Both checked for a turn card 9s. Checked to Hedlund, he made it 40,000 before Langset raised to 150,000. Hedlund then moved in for 743,000 more. Then the chat started, Langset asking Hedlund if he had A-Q, "maybe" being the reply.

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Peter Hedlund

"If you had a little less I'd call" said Langset. "Or maybe I'll call anyway."

It went on like this for a while before Langset folded with a roar.

"How could you fold?!" asked Hedlund, showing the A-Q.

4.40pm -- Petter Petersson, Sweden, out in fifth, earning €181,564
The two Swedish players get their chips in pre-flop and Peter Hedlund is significantly ahead in both chips and hand of Petter Petersson. Hedlund has As-Qs and Petersson A-2o. The flop gives chop possibilities: Js-6s-6d but the 4d and Ks on turn and river gave Hedlund the nut flush and Petersson is out.

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Petter Petersson

4.30pm -- New level
Five players return for the new level and they have the following chips in front of them. (You might notice one player has a few more than the others):

Anders Langset, Norway, 2,570,000
Peter Hedlund, Sweden, 606,000
Jens Kyllönen, Finland, 605,000
Jussi Nevanlinna, Finland, 444,000
Petter Petersson, Sweden, 335,000

Don't forget, you can follow all the action LIVE! on EPT LIVE!


EPT Copenhagen: Level 23 updates

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

This post shows updates from level 23 of EPT Copenhagen, updated on a regular basis. The blinds are 10,000-20,000 with a 2,000 ante. Updates are brought to you by Stephen Bartley and Howard Swains.

You can find the most recent official chip count on the chip-count page. Prizewinners to date are on the prizewinners page. Today we will play down to a winner.

4.20pm -- Taking aces to the break
On the final hand before the break, Jens Kyllönen and Jussi Nevanlinna have some more Finn on Finn action. Nevanlinna makes a standard opener from late position, Kyllönen repops it to 140,000 from the small blind, and Nevanlinna thinks, thinks, thinks, but then folds. Kyllönen curses his luck as he shows two red aces.

4.15pm -- Hedlund
Peter Hedlund and Jens Kyllönen get to a flop of As-9s-9c, which both players check. The turn is Qc and Kyllönen bets 65,000. Hedlund calls. The river is 2h and Hedlund checks. Kyllönen checks behind, wisely as it turns out. Hedlund shows A-7 and that's good.

4.05pm - Rasmus Nielsen, Denmark, out in sixth, earning €142,870
With the action folded to Nielsen in the small blind he completes his option and then calls the bet of Langset on the big blind for a flop of 5d-6c-Ad. Nielsen checks in the dark and Langset makes it 200,000. Nielsen then moved all in and winced as Langset called immediately, showing A-K to Nielsen's A-9. The 7h turn gave the Dane a gutshot draw but the Ks on the river ended his tournament.

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Rasmus Nielsen

4pm -- Chip leader chips up
Anders Langset raises pre-flop to 60,000 and Peter Hedlund calls the additional 40,000 in the big blind. The flop is 4s-Jc-7c and both players check. They also check the 5d turn and the 3h comes on the river. Hedlund bets 60,000, Langset calls and Hedlund mucks. Langset still shows the Q-6 for the seven-high straight, and that's more than good enough.

3.48pm -- What was that? Fold?
Peter Hedlund opens the hand, making it 50,000 pre-flop. Rasmus Nielsen re-raises to 160,000 in total. It's back on Hedlund who spends a few minutes looking serious and slightly suspicious, or as if he's picking out which of the voices in his head is offering the best solution. He takes a sip from a glass next to him that has a plastic stirrer in it and then folds. Nielsen shows him the 3c.

3.44pm -- You had me on the flop
The action is folded to Petersson in the small blind who completes the bet. Nielsen checks his option for a Jh-Td-8s flop. Both check for a 4d turn and check again for a 8d river. Petersson makes it 35,000 and Nielsen passes. Petersson shows Q-9 for a flopped straight.

3.40pm--Finn on Finn, then Finn again
Jussi Nevanlinna and Jens Kyllönen get involved in a pot that gets to the flop. Nevanlinna makes it 55,000 pre-flop, his countryman calls and they see 10s-5h-Ah. Nevanlinna bets 80,000 but is then seen folding his cards and the pot going to Kyllönen, which suggests there might have been an unseen/unheard all in reraise.

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Jens Kyllonen

But no worries for Nevanlinna because he gets a bunch back on the very next hand. Petter Petersson makes it 60,000 and Nevanlinna shoves from the blinds. He has Petersson well covered and the Swede opts to lay it down. He's looking a little short these days, with only about 200,000 left. The two Finns are possibly the most active players at this stage, with Kyllönen in particular looking solid, despite his relatively short stack.

3.30pm -- Little to report
After a flop of Qh-Ah-4h Nielsen and Kyllonen check the 7d turn and 9h river. Nielsen shows Ks-9s for a pair, good enough. It's the first hand of any note in the level which has been dominated by hands taken down by a pre-flop raise.

3.25pm -- New level
We begin a new level with the whole of the Danish internet system apparently creaking under the strain of the supremely popular EPT Live. If you're seeing it -- and you should be, because it's on a satellite feed -- then you can see more than us. Enjoy. Still, we have all this in the flesh and will continue to bring the action from Casino Copenhagen as best we can.


EPT Copenhagen: Level 22 updates

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

This post shows updates from level 22 of EPT Copenhagen, updated on a regular basis. The blinds are 8,000-16,000 with a 2,000 ante. Updates are brought to you by Stephen Bartley and Howard Swains.

You can find the most recent official chip count on the chip-count page. Prizewinners to date are on the prizewinners page. Today we will play down to a winner.

3.20pm -- End of level
A difficult level, in which two players were eliminated and the internet died, finishes with the chip counts as follows:

Anders Langset, 1,600,000
Rasmus Nielsen, 600,000
Jussi Nevanlinna, 730,000
Petter Petersson, 400,000
Peter Hedlund, 750,000
Jens Kyllönen, 450,000

3.10pm -- Small confrontations
Jens Kyllönen raises back to back pots and takes the blinds of the two chip leaders, Langset and Nielsen. Then Jussi Nevanlinna and Peter Hedlund get involved in a battle of the blinds, which might have turned nasty. Nevanlinna bets out on a flop of 8d-6c-9s and Hedlund folds A-Q face up. Nevanlinna shows pocket eights for flopped top set and takes down a small pot.

3pm -- Eric Larcheveque, France, out in seventh place, earning €113,106
Well, it doesn't come much more emphatic than that. Eric Larcheveque gets it all in pre-flop against Rasmus Nielsen. Nielsen has 2-2 and Larcheveque Kc-Qh, but the flop is a brutal 2-2-J, giving quads to Nielsen. Larcheveque departs and Nielsen earns some back.

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Eric Lacheveque

2.55pm -- Critical issues
Thanks largely, I suspect, to the success of EPT Live we have had some critical internet issues here in Copenhagen and are struggling to post at the moment. But the major news from the past half hour is that Anders Langset took a pot of about 700,000 from Rasmus Nielsen when his 5h-6h hit a six on the river to beat Nielsen's 5-5. Then this...

2.20pm -- Shove, take
Jens Kyllönen moves all in from the small blind over a mid position opener. This time it's good. Remember, you can watch the action over at EPT Live

2.12pm -- Jonas Klausen, Denmark, out in eighth place, earning €80,364
Strap yourself in - another all-in comes on the second hand. Jonas Klausen shoved for 240,000 with 7h-7c and he's called by Peter Hedlund with Ah-Ad. The flop came 5c-Qc-Td and the turn card Tc gave Klausen a flush draw and the crowd some early drama. He hit the flush on the river but the Ac also gave Hedlund a full house, sending Klausen to the rail.

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Jonas Klausen

2.10pm -- No wasting time...
First hand and an all-in. Nevanlinna made a pre-flop bet of 42,000 before Kyllonen on the small blind pushed in for 362,000. A simple fold for Nevanlinna and we're underway.


EPT Copenhagen: Our finalists

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

With the elimination late last night of Mikael Lundell, the final table was set for EPT Copenhagen. The following players return today to play down to our champion. Play begins at the start of level 21 and we will have complete coverage of all the action here until the day is done.

These are our contenders:

Seat one: Jussi Nevanlinna, 30, Helsinki, Finland - 894,000
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Jussi Nevanlinna started playing poker just three years ago but turned pro within a year. The 30-year-old plays mostly online, anything from $10-$20 to $50-$100 no limit cash games, but has competed in EPT events in San Remo and Monte Carlo in season four, and London and Budapest in season five. Nevanlinna's best result came in the 2009 Helsinki freezeout where his eighth place finish was worth €14,045. He added €25,171 to that win finishing second in the €200 pot limit Omaha event at the same festival. In his spare time, Nevanlinna enjoys tennis and lives with his girlfriend in Helsinki.


Seat two: Peter Hedlund, 40, Stockholm, Sweden - 367,000
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Peter Hedlund makes his second EPT final table appearance after a seventh place finish in EPT3 London, a result worth £36,000. His poker career started in Las Vegas in 1992, but it was two years before he really got the hang of the game. By 1997 Hedlund was playing semi-professionally; juggling poker with his job working the financial markets, but for the last five years has played full time. His supporters on the rail include seven-time speedway world champion Tony Richardson, while his mother and girlfriend support him from home where, he says, they will be less of a distraction. Away from poker Hedlund enjoys playing his grand piano - a hobby he admits to being terrible at. He also loves to cook and is a major sport fan.


Seat three: Jens "Jeans" Kyllönen, 19, from Helsinki, Finland - 366,000 chips
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Jens Kyllönen has been playing poker for two years, playing full time since he completed his national service. While he used to play mostly no limit hold 'em his usual game is pot limit Omaha. Kyllönen will be playing the remaining EPT events in season five, saying he really enjoys the atmosphere on the tour. His best results to date though have come online and the EPT Copenhagen is only his second major international tournament.


Seat four : Jonas Klausen, 22, from Odense, Denmark - 262,000
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Jonas Klausen is best known as an online player, where he competes under the username "Tulkaz". He has scored major cashes in the $215 heads up tournament, and also finished third in the Sunday Million, sixth in a $320 pot-limit hold 'em WCOOP event and seventh in a $530 $250,000 guaranteed tournament, all on PokerStars. Now Klausen has turned his attention to live events and has already achieved some notable successes, including an 11th placed finish at EPT Barcelona and 12th at EPT San Remo last year. Klausen also made two final tables at the national Danish poker championship and cashed at the WSOP last year. Nevertheless, if there was no such thing as poker, Klausen says he'd like to train has a police officer.


Seat five: Eric Larcheveque, 35, Puteaux, near Paris, France - 221,000

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Eric Larcheveque has only been playing poker for two years but has already made the final table in three major tournaments. In 2007, he came sixth at the Master Classics in Amsterdam for €87,000 and the following March finished eigth at the Irish Open for €75,000. He also won a $500 tournament at the Bellagio last summer for a further $50,000. Larcheveque runs an online entertainment company and recently created a small poker team -- "Cenacle" -- with his friends Sébastien Decamps and Thierry Tregaro. The team made their first outing at EPT Deauville last month, but none of the trio cashed. Copenhagen is a different story, however, and now Decamps and Tregaro are cheering on their captain as he reaches his third major final table. Larcheveque's wife Yveta is supporting him from home in Riga, Latvia, where she is looking after the couple's five-month-old daughter Anastasia.

Seat seven: Petter Petersson, 28, from Malmo, Sweden - 407,000
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Petter Petersson has been playing poker full-time for five to six years, mainly online under the screen-name "Slaktarn". He is perhaps best known for beating Patrick Antonius in a $25,000 heads-up pot-limit Omaha tournament, but the taciturn Swedish player is now turning this attention to live events and has played in several EPT tournaments already. This is his best live result to date and although he is thrilled to make the final table, he says it was a pretty tough journey to get there. He is planning to compete in all the remaining EPT events this season.


Seat eight: Rasmus Hede Nielsen, 27, Copenhagen, Denmark - 1,031,000
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Rasmus Nielsen plays online as "Jungleras", named after a Danish comedy series. He has been playing poker professionally for two years and already accrued some great results with three major final tables finishes: fourth place here at EPT Copenhagen last season, second place in $1,500 no-limit hold 'em event at the World Series for nearly $400,000 and fifth place at the Master Classics in Amsterdam for €106,000. This year also began with a major triumph: the birth of his daughter Silja. Nielsen studied business at college but has primarily focused on poker since graduation.


Seat nine: Anders Langset , 23, Eidsvåg, Norway - 1,119,000

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The chip leader Anders Langset has made comfortable progress on his way to the final table of EPT Copenhagen. Langset is relatively new to the game and thinks that the total number of hands he's played online is around 3,000 and his only live experience comes from playing in the card room in the "Ocean Sands" casino in the Dominican Republic, where he has been holidaying for the past few months. Langset's father bought him into EPT Copenhagen and it is his first ever live tournament. Langset graduated in logistics from university and is planning to continue with his studies next summer. He is currently working as the manager of Norway's third-biggest cycling club. If he wins EPT Copenhagen, he plans to sail around the world with his friend.

***


Watch EPT Copenhagen S5: Final Table Intro on PokerStars.tv


EPT Copenhagen: Charge of the Nordics

Friday, February 20th, 2009

Eight hours ago their tournament hopes were alive. Now, the dream of EPT glory lies in ruins for 32 of 40 players who returned to Casino Copenhagen this afternoon for the business end of another great EPT event.

That we bring this news on the cocktail side of midnight is some indication as to how fast this day flew by. Finals here in Denmark have produced memorable moments; today will hopefully be just a forerunner to what's in store tomorrow - a frenetic and merciless scrap for every last chip by some of the game's best.

Today marked the latest example of Nordics renewing their claim to be the best and most fearless players of the thoroughbred poker breed - with seven of the eight finalists hailing from Danish, Swedish, Norwegian and Finnish shores; an unsurprising surge of local poker brilliance, alongside some EPT loyalists, trigger-happy young guns and the odd legend thrown in.

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Anders Langset

Anders Langset has the honour of leading the overnight chip list with 1.1 million after a solid day in the saddle. With an ever-expanding block of attack chips Langset, who has been playing poker for only three weeks, seemed unstoppable, able to toss in calls without the fear of crippling loss others had to endure - like the Frenchman Eric Larcheveque, today's miracle man, who never seemed to advance beyond 20 big blinds but finds himself with 205,000 tonight, enough for a guaranteed €80,364.

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A welcome sight in his second final is Peter Hedlund, a chatty EPT stalwart, who entertains at the table whether opponents like it or not. He lines up alongside Jonas Klausen who has narrowly missed two previous finals (12th in San Remo, 11th in Barcelona) and makes his first appearance seventh in chips.

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Peter Hedlund

Spare a thought for Mikael Lundell. He now knows how Klausen feels after departing in ninth place today, one place off the final for a second time, after being inflicted with the same cruel fate in the season five opener in Spain. Klausen has chance to put his demons to bed tomorrow, but Lundell's nightmares will go on.

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Mikael Lundell

Here's who'll be back:

Anders Langset, Norway, 1,119,000
Rasmus Nielsen, Denmark, 1,031,000
Jussi Nevanlinna, Finland, 894,000
Petter Petersson, Sweden, 407,000
Peter Hedlund, Sweden, 367,000
Jens Kyllonen, Finland, 366,000
Jonas Klausen, Denmark, PokerStars qualifier, 262,000
Eric Lachavaque, France, 221,000

But we lost a lot of good men out there.

If your fetish is for record breaking you no doubt had your eye on the Norwegian player Andreas Hoivold today. The winner in Dortmund on season three was on course for a potential second title, and would have taken a giant step closer had it not been for the seven-four (yep, seven-four) of Rasmus Nielsen, crushing Hoivold's five-three (yep, five-three).

The legions of PokerStars were great in number and in talent. Tony Mallandain, one of six qualifiers who made the money, busted in 21st place, €16,371 to the good, having won his seat in a freeroll. The steps qualifier Michael Aston, who pledged 5% of his winnings to Friends of Eastgate -- the charity set up by World Champion Peter -- was the unlucky 13th place victim of a poker mugging, his A-Q outdrawn by the K-J of Mikael Lundell.

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PokerStars qualifier Michael Ashton

Elsewhere Andrea Benelli missed out on a third EPT final of the season, exiting in 32nd place; while one of poker's elder statesmen, Thor Hansen, fell short of his first EPT final, departing in 17th place.

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Thor Hansen

But that's all behind us, now onto the final. We've witnessed a 4am finish (season 2), a come from behind upset (season 3) and a white knuckle four hour heads-up monster (season 4). This is the place of legend - you'd be mad to miss what surprises are in store for season 5.

Until then you wouldn't have thought it possible, but thousands and thousands of words of coverage from today's tournament can be unleashed by clicking on these innocent-looking hyperlinks.

Day three introduction
Michael Aston: chips and beer
Wrecking ball: Anders Langset
As flies to wanton boys
Eight down
Andrea Benelli downed
Thor Hansen handing out the lessons
Level 17 updates
Level 18 updates
Level 19 updates
Level 20 updates
Level 21 updates

Stuff in languages: German, Swedish, Danish, Norwegian or Finnish.

Stuff in moving pictures: PokerStars.tv.
Chip counts: Chip count page.
Prize-winners: Prizewinners page.

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***

Today was also a big day for some very worthy causes. The Team PokerStars Pro Joe Hachem has asked his friends in the poker community to help the plight of the some of his Australian countrymen and women, suffering as a result of the horrific bush-fires that have swept through his homeland. And by "friends in the poker community" he means YOU! <A href="Click here to read Hachem's open letter and learn about a terrific charity tournament on PokerStars, where you can play against Team PokerStars Pro and help the worth cause at the same time.

The World Champion and friend of PokerStars Peter Eastgate has also recently launched a new charity venture, called "Friends of Eastgate". Claus Nielsen, the President and CEO of the charity, told Kara Scott all about it.


Watch EPT Copenhagen S5: Eastagte's new charity on PokerStars.tv

And that, folks, is that. We'll be back tomorrow for the final.


EPT Copenhagen: Level 21 updates

Friday, February 20th, 2009

This post shows updates from level 21 of EPT Copenhagen, updated on a regular basis. The blinds are 6,000-12,000 with a 1,000 ante. Updates are brought to you by Stephen Bartley and Howard Swains.

You can find the most recent official chip count on the chip-count page. Prizewinners to date are on the prizewinners page. Today we will play down to a final table of eight.

11.45pm -- Your final eight

Here they are:

Anders Langset, Norway, 1,119,000 (seat 9)
Rasmus Nielsen, Denmark, 1,031,000 (seat 8)
Jussi Nevanlinna, Finland, 894,000 (seat 1)
Petter Petersson, Sweden, 407,000 (seat 7)
Peter Hedlund, Sweden, 367,000 (seat 2)
Jens Kyllonen, Finland, 366,000 (seat 3)
Jonas Klausen, Denmark, 262,000 (seat 4)
Eric Lachavaque, France, 221,000 (seat 5)

11.25pm -- Mikael Lundell eliminated; final table set
He's done it again. Mikael Lundell, who went out on the final table bubble in Barcelona, has once again departed in ninth - and it would take a harsh man not to feel sorry for him about that. He was very short when he moved all in pre-flop with Ad-10h and ran into the pocket nines of one of the big stacks, Jussi Nevanlinna. There was no help on a dry board and Lundell stood, shook his head, and left the tournament arena again. That's it, then. The final table is set.

The official chip counts are on their way, as is the full wrap of the day. Don't. Go. Anywhere. (Unless you really have to.)

11.20pm -- Scary
Mikael Lundell's stack is now "scarily short", to use the phrasing of Sverre Sundbo, currently commentating on EPT Live. He has about 10 big blinds, which is not M enough, or something. (There's considerably better analysis than that over at EPT Live.)

11.05pm -- Tight and nervy
This has been a very fraught passage of play. Mikael Lundell, perhaps fearing a similar fate to what befell him in Barcelona, when he bubbled the final table, has got involved in a couple of pots but has not been keen to get all his chips in. That's meant he's drifted down to less than 150,000 and is the man under threat. Rasmus Nielsen, on the other hand, is up at the top with more than a million.

10.50pm -- The long haul
This could be over in one hand; it could take two hours. Either way, why not kill some of that time in the company of Christian Saxin, who fell in 11th place today.


Watch EPT Copenhagen S5: Christian Saxin (English) on PokerStars.tv

10.40pm -- Nielsen back in the saddle
Rasmus Nielsen and Jens Kyllönen see a queen high flop and Nielsen checks, which allows the Finn to bet 40,000. Nielsen loves that: he pops it up about another 100,000 and Kyllönen folds. Nielsen shows A-Q to prove he's got the goods as well as all the chips.

10.30pm -- Hedlund hangs on
Peter Hedund keeps the barmen of Casino Copenhagen happy by hanging around in this tournament a while longer. He moves all in over the top of Rasmus Nielsen's opener, and Nielsen dwells and calls. Hedlund's all in is about 260,000 and he's in great shape with Ad-Qh versus Nielsen's Ac-Jh. The flop is 10h-2d-3c and after the turn of 5c Nielsen begins counting out chips to pass across. The 8d confirms it and the well-oiled Hedlund remains.

10.15pm -- The final furlong
Well, we're now down to a single table, with nine players (and the EPT Live cameras) seated around it. Something's got to give before we reach the official final table. And it's not going to be one of the EPT Live cameras.

Stay tuned, maybe on EPT Live if you fancy it, until we find our unlucky* ninth-placed finisher.

* Not that unlucky. He'll take €49,112.