February 2006 Archives

February 27, 2006 7:06 AM

PokerStars $1 million Guaranteed Results

It's not $1 million guaranteed every quarter. It's not $1 million guaranteed every month. It's a $1 million guaranteed every week. Sunday kicked off the $1 million guaranteed weekly tournament series and everyone who finished at the final table had at least a five-digit payday. The final two players cut a deal and both walked away with huge six-figure prizes. Here are your final table results.

PokerStars $1 million Guaranteed Final Table Results
(based on two-way deal that left $30,000 for first place)

1. McGinn1 (Fayetteville, NY) $192,138.72
2. x31xx (Stockholm, Sweden) $182,837.28
3. Ush0uldFold (Long Island, NY) $81,312.00
4. crimpster (Wilson, WY) $67,200.00
5. jotaele1 (Valencia, Spain) $54,835.20
6. Hoss_TBF (Philadelphia, PA) $42,336.00
7. BennyGutsy (West Haverstraw, NY) $32,256.00
8. ElmerFudd (Mechanicsburg, PA) $24,326.40
9. rod_favre (Umea, Sweden) $14,784.00

February 23, 2006 7:48 PM

$1 Million Every Week

For all of those who were still trying to get their head around the concept of a weekly $750,000 Guaranteed tournament on PokerStars, don't bother. The idea of guaranteeing $750,000 quickly became sort of passe as the number people in the Sunday $215 eclipsed 5000 players for two straight weeks. So, now the weekly guarantee is $1 million. Yep, a million dollar guarantee once a week.

This week is the regular monthly $530 for the $1 million guarantee. The week after that, the $215 will be a $1 million guarantee as well. For satellites, keep an eye on the Tourney/Satellites tab in the PokerStars game lobby.

See you on Sunday.

February 20, 2006 5:01 AM

PokerStars $750,000 Guaranteed Results

It was another huge Sunday with more than a million bucks in the prize pool. More than 5300 people showed up to play the biggest weekly tournament around. When it was over, the prizes were huge. And remember: Next week, it's $1 million GUARANTEED! Here are this week's final table results.

PokerStars $750,000 Guaranteed Results
(based on three way deal that left $20,000 for first place)

1. LS430 (Knoxville, TN) $84,506
2. lXlJASONlXl (Gainesville, FL) $100,888
3. topgun84 (Ballwin, MO) $121,329
4. flerin (Niantic, CT) $42,608.00
5. Mr Swatch (Charlottenlund, Denmark) $33,021.20
6. pittrounder (Las Vegas, NV) $26,630.00
7. DirtyTowel (Ann Arbor, MI) $20,771.40
8. trader13 (Benamaldena, Spain) $15,445.40
9. what is 7x6 (Stamford, CT) $9,586.80

February 17, 2006 12:58 AM

PokerStars Supernova update

PokerStars' VIP Club is now a month and half old and players are still working hard to become the elite among the elite. Membership in this elite club began with online stalwart and pro gamer, ElkY. Now there are eleven VIP Club Supernova players, including the players below who have agreed to reveal their identities.





ElkY
Tibirin
H@££INGGOL
Premier
PokerSavage1
cf tourney
jukeboxlo
Dariominieri
tralaira


Congratulations to the above players. The weekly Supernova freerolls begin in April. So, if you're close, you still have your chance.

Good luck!

February 15, 2006 12:04 AM

Lee Nelson joins Team PokerStars

They call him "Final Table." Lee Nelson, poker professional, noted author, and 2006 Aussie Millions champion has been making final tables for years. Now, he's a member of Team PokerStars. Click here to check out the team and learn more about its newest member.

February 13, 2006 6:41 AM

PokerStars $750,000 Guaranteed Results

There may have been $750,000 Guaranteed, but the prize pool was an unpredictable $1.1 million dollars! A startling 5506 people showed up to play in the event and battled for nine hours before the final cards hit the table. When it was all over, tens of thousands of dollars had been spread out among the final table players and two people walked away with more than $100,000 a piece. Here are your final table results.

PokerStars $750,000 Guaranteed Results
(based on two-way deal that left $20,000 for first place)

1. No10No10Ho! (New York, NY) $132,454
2. lollasen (Stavanger, Norway) $138,441
3. HASTINGS (Los Angeles, CA) $57,262.40
4. gbmantis (Waukesha, WI) $42,946.80
5. BigENJ44 (Newton, NJ) $33,036.00
6. aptwolf2 (Belleville, NJ) $26,208.56
7. Drdoom01 (Corrales, NM) $20,151.96
8. Telefonkiosk (Falkoping, Sweden) $15,306.68
9. Gakn29 (Ottawa, ON, Canada) $11,012.00

February 12, 2006 2:03 AM

EPT Deauville - final table report

Results

1- Mats Iremark (Swe) €480,000 (plus €10,000 buy in into EPT final in Monte Carlo)
2 - Mark Boudewijn (Hol) €259,000
3 - Kirill Gerasimov (Rus) €155,500
4 - Theo Jorgensen (Den) €118,300
5 - Ram Vaswani (Eng) €97,700
6 - Patric Martenson (Swe) €76,800
7 - Isabelle Mercier (Can) €60,800
8 - Stuart Nash (Eng) €43,500

Click here for full payouts.

Report

Someone will always win a poker tournament, but sometimes the quest for that win is precisely what costs the pursuer the chance.

A perfect example happened here in Deauville, where Mats Iremark, from Sweden, just won the €480,000 first prize on offer at the end of the latest leg of the EPT - essentially by not losing it. That is not a criticism, because the 23-year-old played some outstanding poker, barely putting a foot wrong for three days of competition. He played when he should have, got out the way when he was beaten, and he is now heading to the EPT Grand Final in Monte Carlo as the French Open champion. Richly deserved.


Mats Iremark: the centre of attention


However, the final table started this afternoon with the names of two players on most spectators' lips. Isabelle Mercier had been around the chip lead for much of the past couple of days and had knocked out Micky Wernick in ninth place last night to reach her first EPT final table. She's won a WPT event and is Canadian by birth, but having spent her poker education as manager of the Aviation Club in Paris, she's as much at home in France as anywhere in the world. They claim her as one of their own - and she has been desperate to show her obvious mettle on the European Poker Tour. She wanted this one. Boy did she want it.


Isabelle Mercier


Ram Vaswani, on the other hand, knows all about EPT final tables. In fact, having won the event in Dublin on season one and finished second in Copenhagen in the same series, Vaswani became the first player to sit around the beige felt for the third time. He was chip leader and flying - but there were a lot of immovable objects around the table for this irresistable force to collide with. And it took its toll.


Ram Vaswani: seeking an unprecedented second EPT crown


But, let's begin at the beginning. And it really was the beginning when Stuart Nash, a well-known face in the card rooms of London, came to the final table as the short stack and departed after just two hands. He moved in straight away and picked up the blinds and antes, then he moved in again and was knocked out. He had ace-king, but Theo Jorgensen, from Denmark, was going nowhere with his pair of queens and Nash was out the door.


Stuart Nash: two hands on television, the second his demise


We then plateaued. And we stayed on the flat for milessszzzzzzzz. The short-stacked Russian Kirill Gerasimov, and the Swedish duo of Patric Martensson and Iremark pushed in with great regularity and, when they were called, they doubled up. No one was giving an inch - although Mark Boudewijn, the Dutch master, Theo and Ram were stealing what they could, often from one another. We got to the dinner break with seven remaining - and everyone was in it.

But not for long. Just one round after the break, the blinds were gobbling up the small stacks and Isabelle, now falling into that category, was forced to push in with her pocket nines. Boudewijn couldn't pass his ace-king and when the ace hit on the turn, No Mercy was pleading for some from the river. It wasn't to be, and Isabelle was out.


Trouble on the cards for Isabelle


It looked for all the world that Mats would be following her pretty soon, especially when he found himself with too many chips to justify his previous all-in pre-flop tactics and raised just about three quarters of his stack, only to fold when Boudewijn called and then moved in in the dark. It seemed like a strange play at the time and left the hooded Swede staring at the abyss. But he soon found someone shoving him out of the way and jumping in himself.


Patric Martenson: telling us all about it


It was Patric Martenson, his countryman, and serial EPT money winner. Patric, that guy who sells cars, plays Monopoly and golf to a fearsome standard (see previous EPT final table biographies), was in big trouble with his king ten when Mats was all in with sevens. Another seven on the flop send Patric down to the felt and he was out in a three-way coup with Vaswani and Jorgensen. Ram ended up with quad sixes, enough to beat most hands, I'm sure you'll agree.

Ram had scarcely been below a million in chips all day, but crucially he had never been much higher either. In full flow, Vaswani is one of those exceptional players to watch; when he's called he always seems to have the goods, when he isn't, you just don't know. The word "class" often attaches itself to Crazy Horse, but sometimes class can be blasted.


Vaswani's number is up


Ram knows that there's really only one place to finish on the EPT and that is first. He went for it. He put his chips behind his obvious talent and tried to blow the field away. The key hand came when he raised from the button (no change there) and Theo Jorgensen moved in from the small blind. Ram and Theo had butted heads for much of the day and Ram decided to call this time, approximately 700,000, making a pot of 1,400,000 plus change. Ram had ace-jack and hadn't put Theo on the pocket jacks he now shows.

There was no improvement for the Hendon Mobster and he went out soon after when he couldn't make king-eight prosper against Kirill's ace-jack.

Kirill's story was arguably the most impressive. I don't think I have ever seen a short stack played so perfectly in any of these tournaments. When he won a pot mid way through the final table, Kirill had 270,000 in front of him and it was the most he had ever been sat with through three days of competition.

But no one could knock him out. He knew precisely when to push and when to fold. It was a delight to watch and he had a supporter in high places. "Kirill is one of the best players I have ever seen," whispered Thomas Kremser, EPT tournament director, in my ear during a break. Who was I to disagree? Kirill was still in the mix.


Mark Boudewijn tries to figure out Kirill Gerasimov


So was Theo Jorgensen, but a pause in play changed things for the worse for the throughly impressive Dane. He had ultimately had the better of Vaswani in their personal battle and now Jorgensen was aiming to follow Mads Andersen's Copenhagen success. But Mats Iremark came back from the break and found kings, moved in and Theo found ace-jack. He called and was crippled and was out soon after, busted with nine-six.


Theo Jorgensen: Dane looking for back-to-back Copenhagen wins


The miracle wasn't to be for Kirill, either. Even the rock-solid Muscovite could do little three-handed with neither chips nor cards and had to push with king-ten. He pushed straight into Mats Iremark's ace-jack and that was that.

All over for Kirill Gerasimov


We were left, then, with the two most steady players. Iremark had been moving steadily forward, gradually up to the heads-up chip lead having come to the table placed fifth. Boudewijn, however, had scarcely moved - and when he did, it was in the right direction. He was up to more than a million when he busted Mercier and he was still there now.

Heads-up poker is a peculiar beast and, call me controversial, but it does always come down to the cards. The players that make it to the final two on the EPT are no mugs and they know their aggressive play. They probably know their opponents by the end as well and they share many of the crucial skills. It goes this way and that and then there's a hand. The French Open was not much different.

Boudiwijn was in the lead when a raising war broke out with the board showing a jack and a queen. That's because each player had one of those and it was Mats with the lady. He actually made a straight, then survivied a flush re-draw, and he took all the initiative. He didn't look back.


Mark Boudewijn: leading from the front


When it came, it was an ace-three for the Swede, a jack-ten for the Dutchman. The money went in, the Dutchman went out. Hard luck to Mark Boudewijn, who played a blinder.

Mats Iremark just played better - and it's another title for the Nordics. The money is going back to Sweden.

Next stop Monte Carlo.

February 12, 2006 1:05 AM

EPT Deauville - final payouts


Mats Iremark - EPT Deauville champion


1- Mats Iremark (Swe) €480,000 (plus €10,000 buy in into EPT final in Monte Carlo)
2 - Mark Boudewijn (Hol) €259,000
3 - Kirill Gerasimov (Rus) €155,500
4 - Theo Jorgensen (Den) €118,300
5 - Ram Vaswani (Eng) €97,700
6 - Patric Martenson (Swe) €76,800
7 - Isabelle Mercier (Can) €60,800
8 - Stuart Nash (Eng) €43,500
9 - Mickey Wernick (Eng) €26,400
10 - Brian Gilbert (Eng) €26,400
11 - Stuart Fox (Eng) €20,800
12 - Martin Green (Eng) €20,800
13 - Ole Busborg Jensen (Den) €16,100
14 - Janne Airaksinen (Fin) €16,100
15 - Malcolm Gorse (Eng) €11,300
16 - Ken Johnson (USA) €11,300
17 - Jeff Sharpe (Eng) €8,800
18 - Julien Veyrac (Fra) €8,800
19 - Jerome Douieb (Fra) €8,800
20 - Lex Veldhuis (Hol) €8,800
21 - Julian Thew (Eng) €8,800
22 - Jerome Zerbib (Fra) €8,800
23 - Peter Roche (Ire) €8,800
24 - Bernard Greard (Fra) €8,800
25 - David Albertsson (Sweden) €6,400
26 - Emile Petit (France) €6,400
27 - Mike Hermes (USA) €6,400
28 - Paul Van Wijk (Holland) €6,400
30 - John Hewston (England) €6,400
31 - Thomas Fougeron (France) €6,400
32 - Dominique Mischi (France) €6,400
33 - Martin Pollak (Austria) PokerStars qualifier €4,800
34 - Willie Tann (England) €4,800
35 - Xavier Laszcz (France) €4,800
36 - Henrik Olander (Sweden) €4,800
37 - Roy Brindley (Ireland) €4,800
38 - Erik Van den Burg (Holland) €4,800
39 - Jacky Adda (France) €4,800
40 - Carlos da Silva (Portugal) €4,800

February 11, 2006 2:52 PM

Final table - blow-by-blow

1.45am -- This one is all over. The winner of the EPT French Open, Deauville, is Mats Iremark, from Sweden. Mark moves his final 800,000 or so in with jack-ten and Mats sees enough when he looks down on an ace. The three beside it is immaterial and although he needs to survive a flush draw on the river, he does and is the new champion. A short stack for much of the way, he is now th champion. Mark Boudewijn takes €259,000 for second.

1.30am -- We've possibly just seen the pot that will decide this one. Post flop, Mark bets, Mats raises, Mark moves in, Mats calls. There's a queen and a jack on the board and while Mark has the knave, Mats has the lady. Big swing and Mats is looking good for this.

1.15am -- Mark Boudewijn has changed gears now and has assumed the chip lead with a series of power plays. He's calling a lot pre-flop, then check raising and the like to steal consecutive 200,000 pots.

1.00am -- This heads up battle is swinging one way and then the next and we're still at the same chip count that they started at. That means Mats has about 2.8 million, nearly double Mark's 1.5 million.

The blinds have been raised to 40,000 and 80,000 for the heads up contest. Mats Iremark is ahead - he has approximately 2,900,000 to Mark Boudewijn's 1,500,000. It's Holland against Sweden.

12.40am -- That's the end of Kirill Gerasimov. He has played the short stack for three days but now moves in with king-ten and is called by the ace-jack of Mats Iremark. They both get help on the flop - a ten for Kirill, but the ace for Mats is dominant. That's that. The Russian takes €155,300 for third.

12.30am -- Theo Jorgensen is out. Mats Iremark raises under the gun and Mark Boudewijn re-raises all-in. Theo then sniffs a bit of value with his short stack and undercalls all-in. Mats gets out of the way and Mark shows ace-queen of diamonds. Theo has nine-six and is in all kinds of trouble when two diamonds come on the flop. He needs an off-suit nine or six (four outs) and they all miss. Theo Jorgensen, from Denmark, finishes fourth for €118,500.

12.20am -- Now it's Kirill's turn to double up and this time it's Theo on the receiving end. The Russian moves in with ace-four, Theo calls with ace-ten, but the four on the flop gives Kirrill a count of about 1,300,000, while the Dane is down to 500,000.

12.15am -- Theo doubles up after slow-playing aces. He's made to sweat because Mark is allowed in cheaply with his six-two of hearts and moves in when a fourth heart comes on the turn. The flush draw misses, however, and the aces are good.

12.05am -- There's a brief tournament break - and Mats Iremark obviously uses it to have a quick word with the dealer. He returns and not only picks up kings, but also finds a caller in Theo Jorgensen, who has ace-eight. Mats flops a set, but Theo has a straight draw by the time the river is due. It misses and Mats now assumes the chip lead.

11.40pm -- Down to four and chip counts are fairly even, with only Mark showing some distance from the pack. The blinds are high, so they'll have to play a bit, but we haven't seen many swings here and this could go on for a fair while yet. Here's the latest:

Mark Boudewijn (Hol) 1,569,000
Theo Jorgensen (Den) 1,193,000
Mats Iremark (Swe) 869,000
Kirill Gerasimov (Rus) 738,000

Blinds are going up to 30,000-60,000 with a 6,000 ante.

11.30pm -- Just listened in on Vaswani's television interview. The Crazy Horse is proud to be the first player to make three EPT final tables, but desperately wanted to be the first to win two. Ultimately he paid the price for the super-tight table, all of whom are content to move incrementally up the leaderboard. "I wanted to win it," Ram said. The 1.4 million pot against Theo Jorgensen was crucial, but Ram has vowed to be back for Monte Carlo next month.

11.15pm -- Ram has gone. He runs a king-eight into Kirill's ace-jack and although he picks up an open-ended straight draw on the flop, he misses all his outs and is, well, out. Ram takes €97,700 for fifth.

11.05pm -- The biggest pot of the tournament so far goes to Theo Jorgensen at the expense of Ram Vaswani. Ram raises from the button, Theo moves in for about 600,000 from the small blind. Ram dwells but calls, showing ace-jack. Theo has jacks and they survive a gutshot straight draw to double the Dane up and cripple the Hendon Mobster. Ram down to about 300,000 now; Theo about 1,200,00.

11.00pm -- Mats Iremark's charmed life continues, when he gets all his chips in the pot with eight-nine and Theo Jorgensen calls with ace-five. There are two eights and a nine on the board by the turn; a full house is good in anyone's money. He doubles up to 350,000 approx.

10.55pm -- see last post, only replace Theo with Kirill. The Russian raises pre-flop and Ram moves in from the big blind. He takes another pot of 200,000 plus change.

10.45pm -- Vaswani might be getting impatient here, having called several pre-flop bets, only to pass when it all goes in after the flop. The tactic has seen his drop down to third place. He just took a turn in the opposite direction when he re-raised all in pre-flop after Theo had made it 150,000 to play. Theo showed queen-ten and folded.

10.30pm -- Down to five players and the blinds are now up to 25,000-50,000 with a 5,000 ante. Chip counts are as follows:

Mark Boudewijn (Hol) 1,276,000
Theo Jorgensen (Den) 1,206,000
Ram Vaswani (Eng) 1,061,000
Kirill Gerasimov (Rus) 414,000
Mats Iremark (Swe) 412,000

10.20pm -- There is it for Patric. He goes. He's in the small blind and Ram Vaswani flat calls pre-flop. Patric pushes in, but Theo Jorgensen calls from the big blind, as does Ram. It seems likely they'll check it down, but no. A couple of checks follow the jack-high flop, with an eight and six also showing, but Theo bets when another six comes on the turn. Ram thinks and calls. The river is another six, meaning three are showing, and now Ram comes out betting. Theo folds, and Ram shows the case six for quads. That's it for Patric Martenson. He's our sixth placed finisher and takes €76,800.

10.15pm -- It's short-stacked Swede against short-stacked Swede as Mats moves in and Patric calls. Patric has king-ten, but slightly more chips than Mats, who shows sevens. Another seven on the flop leaves Patric drawing dead by the time the blank turn is dealt. Patric on the ropes.

10.10pm -- A double up for Kirill, who is now up to 249,000 - the biggest number of chips he has so far had in the tournament. He's been playing the short stack like a demon. This time, he calls Mark's all in and is ahead all the way. Kirill has ace-ten, Mark jack-seven. An ace on the flop and river are nice, but are unnecessary in the grand scheme of things.

10.00pm -- Peculiar play by Mats Iremark resulting in more to the stack of Mark Boudewijn. The Swede makes it 249,000 to go from the cut off - leaving him about 120,000. Mark calls from the small blind (a drop in the ocean), then moves in in the dark. The flop, for the record, is queen high, but Mats dwells and folds. He looked for all the world pot committed, but shows ace-nine and is still in the game, just. Mark leads this one by plenty now.

9.30pm -- Bad news for supporters of Isabelle Mercier. She is no more. The blinds are now huge and she raised from the small blind. Mark Boudewijn re-raised from the big blind and Isabelle pushed. The Dutchman calls and flips ace-king. Isabelle has pocket nines. This time the race was won by the big slick when the ace turns. Isabelle is out. She cashes for €60,800.

9.20pm -- There's no option for the players now. They need to start moving. The blinds have just been put up to 20,000-40,000 with a 4,000 ante. I predict fireworks.

8.20pm -- That's the dinner break, with the stacks having levelled right out. Mark and Theo have joined the pack, while Ram has pulled away slightly. Here we have it:

Ram Vaswani (Eng) 1,373,00
Mark Boudewijn (Hol) 842,000
Theo Jorgensen (Den) 644,000
Patric Martenson (Swe) 438,000
Isabelle Mercier (Can) 412,000
Mats Iremark (Swe) 347,000
Kirill Gerasimov (Rus) 313,000

8.10pm -- It's a real grind at the moment, with no one prepared to make any moves. Raises are taking it down pre-flop and the stacks are levelling out. The only big pot of note is a 300,000 win for Vaswani, when his pocket fours make a full house when three kings are on the board. Mats attempts to represent better than his queen high. Ram buys none of that. Dinner break.

7.40pm -- Player all in, player doubles up. It's the story of the day so far. This time it's Kirill Gerasimov, whose pocket tens stay good enough against Mark Boudewijn's king-eight.

7.35pm -- Isabelle re-raises Ram Vaswani, moving in after Ram makes it 90,000 to go. She has about 150,000 more, which is too much for Ram and she picks it up.

7.28pm -- Patric now doubles up. He finds ace-queen and a caller in Theo Jorgensen. The battle of Scandinavia goes to the Swede; Jorgensen's king-eight can't outdraw the better pre-flop hand.

7.25pm -- Isabelle doubles up. She pushes from the small blind and is called in the big by Mark Boudewijn. Miss Mercier shows seven-six suited, Mark has king-queen. Lucky seven.

7.15pm -- The blinds are now raised to 30,000 and 15,000 with a 3,000 ante. Still seven players with chip counts as follows:

Mark Boudewijn (Hol) 1,273,000
Ram Vaswani (Eng) 1,118,00
Theo Jorgensen (Den) 789,000
Mats Iremark (Swe) 461,000
Patric Martenson (Swe) 282,000
Kirill Gerasimov (Rus) 161,000
Isabelle Mercier (Can) 159,000

7.05pm -- Five minutes left in this level as Ram puts Mats to the test. The young Swede raises 60,000 from the cut off, Ram makes in 200,000 with the button and everyone gets out of the way.

6.50pm -- Ram Vaswani has been the player making the moves here, but most have backfired so far. However, he just picked up a 280,000 pot when he moved in on a flop of 6-4-4 with two diamonds among them. Theo Jorgensen had raised pre-flop, and called Ram's re-raise, but laid it down for all his chips with that board.

6.40pm -- Isabelle Mercier is the short stack now and needs to double up. She gives it a try on consecutive hands, moving in both times pre-flop, and picks up blinds and antes. That will do, but she's only just around 100,000.

6.25pm -- Kirill involved again, this time moving in with ace-deuce. Ram is all but obliged to call, despite his meagre seven-four. But the Hendon man couldn't hit a flop if he dealt it himself and Kirill doubles up. He has about 150,000.

6.15pm -- Easy come, easy go for Kirill. He moves in from the small blind and is called by Patric Martenson in the big. Martenson is the all-in player, but has pocket sevens, which is all over Kirill's ten-deuce. No Brunson-esque help for that hand this time and Patric doubles up to about 400,000.

6.10pm -- Kirill Gerasimov is facing elimination when he's all in pre-flop with king-ten against Ram Vaswani's ace-queen. Flop and turn are no help, but the miracle ten on the river keeps the Muscovite alive. Another thump for Vaswani.

5.50pm -- Official chip counts at another brief break. You'll notice Mark Boudewijn has assumed the chip lead after a couple of beats for the always aggressive Vaswani.

Mark Boudewijn (Hol) 1,310,000
Theo Jorgensen (Den) 1,047,000
Ram Vaswani (Eng) 1,045,500
Mats Iremark (Swe) 399,000
Patric Martenson (Swe) 240,500
Isabelle Mercier (Can) 205,500
Kirill Gerasimov (Rus) 71,500

Blinds and antes are going up to 20,000 (big), 10,000 (small) and 2,000 (ante).

5.35pm -- Isabelle wins just more than 100,000 when her king-queen connects with a flop of Ad-Qc-4s. The ace precludes much betting, but Mark Boudewijn had raised pre-flop and mucks when Isabelle shows her pair of queens.

5.30pm -- Big double up for Mats Iremark. He calls Ram's big blind from the button, Ram raises. Mats moves in for about 200,000 and Ram calls. The Crazy Horse has pocket nines, Mats has ace-six. He rivers the ace to stay alive.

5.25pm -- Ram loses a 220,000 pot to Mark Boudewijn. Ram raises with his ace-three, Mark calls with pocket eights and even though Ram pairs his low card, it's not good enough.

5.15pm -- Isabelle Mercier takes a hit of about 150,000 when her king-jack can't beat Mark's ace-jack. The Dutchman takes it with ace high.

5.10pm -- Ram is quietly running this table now. Mats pops it up to 40,000 pre-flop, Ram calls from big blind. Flop shows 2h-Jh-6d and Mats bets 55,000. Ram calls. Turn and river bring 3h and 5s but there's no more betting and Ram's ace-six wins. Mats mucks his king-queen.

5pm -- Theo and Ram renew their acquaintance with Theo raising pre-flop and Ram calling the 45,000. The flop of 2h-8c-Jc "looks perfect for Ram" says one reporter with a good knowledge of Crazy Horse's play. Theo bets 80,000, Ram makes it 180,000 and that's that. Theo folds.

4.40pm -- Official chip counts:
Ram Vaswani (Eng) - 1,100,000
Theo Jorgensen (Den) - 1,008,000
Mark Boudewijn (Hol) - 960,000
Mats Iremark (Swe) - 502,000
Isabelle Mercier (Can) - 365,000
Patric Martenson (Swe) - 196,000
Kirill Gerasimov (Rus) - 173,000

4.30pm -- Top quality hands. Mats raises pre-flop, Isabelle calls and checks in the dark. Flop shows 4c-2d-Ac and Mats bets 30,000. Isabelle calls. The turn is a 9d, check, check. River is another ace and now Mats calls Isabelle's bet. She shows 4-7 for two pairs, aces and fours; Mats shows 9-3 for two pairs, aces and nines.

4.30pm -- Ram gets some chips back when he bets at a low flop and everyone folds. Kirill moves in on the next hand and picks up the value of Theo's bet, Isabelle's call and the blinds and antes. He shows ace-king.

4.20pm -- Chip leaders tussle for the first time. Theo Jorgensen raises 20,000 from button, called by Ram Vaswani in big blind. Flop shows 3s-5d-9s and Ram checks. Theo bets 40,000, Ram calls. Turn is 8s - the third spade on board - and, after Ram checks, Theo bets 65,000. Ram calls. The river is the innocuous looking Jh and Theo bets 150,000. Ram folds. Theo assumes chip lead.

4pm -- Anyone who has only ever watched poker on television will probably think the reporters have deserted their posts. Where are all the fireworks and coin flips? Anyone who has seen one of these final tables live, however, will tell you that the vast majority of poker at this stage takes place pre-flop. It goes fold, fold, fold, fold, fold, etc., with any raise usually picking it up. That's been the story so far.

3.30pm -- We have already lost one, on the second hand of the final table. Having picked up the blinds with a pre-flop raise on the frst hand, Stuart Nash moves in from the cut off on the second. This time he's called by Theo Jorgensen's queens and Stuart's ace-king does not improve. He takes €43,500 for seventh.

February 11, 2006 2:43 PM

Introducing the contenders

Seat 1 -- Ram "Crazy Horse" Vaswani, 37, (UK) 1,191,500 chips


Crazy Horse keeping cool

The Hendon Mobster has already cashed at four EPT events, made 3 final tables and won the 2004 EPT Dublin event. His total EPT winnings to date exceed €180,000. He was a huge chip leader at last month's EPT Copenhagen event but eventually busted out in 18th place.

Seat 2 -- Isabelle Mercier, 30, (Canada), 428,000 chips

Isabelle Mercier, representing Team PokerStars

Two years ago Isabelle packed up her job at the Aviation Club in Paris, sold all her belongings and began traveling the world as a poker pro. She quickly found success as the WPT Ladies Champion, earning her the tag 'No Mercy' Mercier. The former Montreal law student almost made the final table at last year's EPT Grand Final, finishing 10th. She'll be keen here to beat Anina Gundesen's sixth place in Copenhagen last month, the highest EPT woman's placing yet.

Seat 3 -- Mark Boudewijn, 41, (Holland) 911,500 chips

Mark Boudewijn: Dutch in Deauville

Mark's biggest win so far was $222,570 at the 2005 Five-Star World Poker Classic in Las Vegas - a win that completely outstripped all his previous winnings which totaled some €6,000. Mark, who lives in the famous cheese town of Gouda, is married with two children.

Seat 4 -- Kirill Gerasimov, 34, (Russia), 215,000 chips

Kirill Gerasimov: from Russia with chips

He may look exactly like Matt Damon but Moscow-born Kirill is substantially better at cards and has been a full-time poker professional for the last four years. Notable wins - on both sides of the Atlantic - include $500,000 at WPT Bellagio and cashing out at three 2005 WSOP events. He came fifth at this year's London EPT. He is married with a young son.

Seat 5 -- Patric Martenson, 19, (Sweden), 291,000 chips

Patric Martenson: EPT final table regular

Patrick (fourth placed at September's Barcelona EPT) only recently left high school but has already enjoyed notable successes. He is the current Monopoly champion of Sweden, owns one of the finest stamp collections in Europe and plays golf off a three handicap. He makes a good living from online poker and came to last year's Deauville EPT.

Seat 6 -- Stuart Nash (UK) 125,500 chips

Stuart Nash: cashing

This 50-something Brit is a big cash game player at the Vic but recently started focusing on tournament play. He's made five final table appearances in the last year, with his best result being second place (€61,000) in the European Poker main event in London.

Seat 7 -- Theo Jorgensen, 33, (Denmark), 809,500 chips

Theo Jorgensen: keeping a lid on it

The former dealer has been playing poker for 14 years, five of them as a professional. Mainly a live tournament and cash game player, his biggest win to date was €100,000 in the 2004 Seven Card Stud European Championships. The live tournament specialist lives in Copenhagen with his girlfriend Ivvona and nine-month-old daughter Maya.

Seat 8 -- Mats Iremark, 23, (Sweden), 397,000 chips

Mats Iremark: the second Swede in the mix

This cool and confident civil engineering student from Gothenberg is attending his first ever EPT but already believes has an edge over Ram Vaswani. He graduates this summer and plans to take a year off to play poker as a pro.

February 11, 2006 1:43 PM

Counting down

Hello again and welcome to the final day of the PokerStars EPT French Open from Casino Barrière de Deauville.

Eight players are left for the money and they will take their seats soon to discover the winner of €480,000 first prize. That player will also receive a €10,000 buy-in into next month's EPT Grand Final in Monte Carlo. It's a prize worth winning.

The names of the players in contention are ticking across the top of the screen, but here's a reminder for the impatient. They are:

Ram Vaswani (Eng) 1,191,500
Isabelle Mercier (Can) 428,000
Mark Boudewijn (Hol) 911,500
Kirill Gerasamov (Rus) 215,000
Patric Martensson (Swe) 291,000
Stuart Nash (Eng) 125,500
Theo Jorgensen (Den) 809,500
Mats Iremark (Swe) 397,000

They appear in seat order, with the number by their name their chip count. Ram Vaswani is ahead at the moment, with Stuart Nash the short stack. This is what they are playing for:

1 - €480.000 (plus €10,000 buy-in into EPT Grand final in Monte Carlo)
2 - €259.000
3 - €155.300
4 - €118.500
5 - €97.700
6 - €76.800
7 - €60.800
8 - €43.500

As we wait for proceedings to begin, here is a quick behind-the-scenes glimpse to what's going on here in Deauville.


The players are interviewed for the TV coverage



The table is prepared for action



The reporters report



The trohpy awaits its winner


We will have photos of all those contenders as soon as they are seated, as well as blow-by-blow action from the final table when it begins.

February 11, 2006 1:49 AM

Final table time - EPT Deauville


Isabelle Mercier: heading to the EPT Deauville final table


First things first, the final table for tomorrow's EPT French Open in Deauville will feature the following:

Ram Vaswani (Eng) 1,191,500
Isabelle Mercier (Can) 428,000
Mark Boudewijn (Hol) 911,500
Kirill Gerasimov (Rus) 215,000
Patric Martensson (Swe) 291,000
Stuart Nash (Eng) 125,500
Theo Jorgensen (Den) 809,500
Mats Iremark (Swe) 397,000

They will play for the following money:

1 - €480.000 (plus €10,000 buy-in into EPT Grand final in Monte Carlo)
2 - €259.000
3 - €155.300
4 - €118.500
5 - €97.700
6 - €76.800
7 - €60.800
8 - €43.500
This is how they got to where they are now:

Day two wrap

We began day two with a glance at the tournament situation; there were 100 players in the mix and a lot of money up for grabs.

At the top was the PokerStars qualifier Jerome Douieb, who had tripled up late in the day to catapult to the top of the list. We learnt more about the man known online as Chemovs here.

Chemovs wasn't the only qualifier in the mix; there were plenty more we introduced here.

One of those, named Ken Johnson, from Eagle Mountain, Utah, was on the move, tearing up the TV table alongside Ram Vaswani. His story is here.

He was up against two massive stacks in the field. Both Vaswani and Jon "Texas" Hewston were moving and shaking.

It was soon bubble time and, as every tournament reporter will tell you, it's harsh when it bursts. Jen Mason, who has reported on more poker tournaments than most, was this time the subject of the bubble story.

PokerStars was still well represented at this point, although there were some mighty stacks still. Click here for a gallery of qualifiers and leaders.

Then it all began to get a bit brutal. Players began falling like flies.

Until we were down to ten.

And then nine. Although it took some time.

After another hour or so, it was down to the final eight when Isabelle Mercier showed no mercy to Micky Wernick and the European rankings winner for 2005 was out on the television bubble.

February 11, 2006 1:38 AM

We have eight

Isabelle Mercier knocks out Micky Wernick to make the final eight. Full details imminent.

February 11, 2006 12:49 AM

One down, one to go

Brian Gilbert is our tenth placed finisher. He goes out with jack-ten to Mark Boudewijn's pocket nines. Nothing improves, but Mark didn't have to.

February 11, 2006 12:37 AM

Triple double up

Isabelle Mercier doubles through against Brian Gilbert, her queens making an unnecessary straight against the Englishman's ace-king.

Kirill Gerasimov comes from behind to follow the double up trend. He has king-jack against Mark Boudewijn's ace-two. He flops a king.

Patric Martensson is the latest short stack to double in size when his pocket sevens make trips against Theo Jorgensen's top-pair queens.

February 11, 2006 12:28 AM

Ten into eight

The table of ten is surrounded by at least ten supporters per player, plus the neutrals, randoms and other interested parties.

They are all waiting to discover who from this ten will progress. As yet, we haven't even seen a flop. It's cagey, to say the least.


Kirill Gerasimov, left, and Micky Wernick


Patrick Martensson, left, and Stuart Nash


Theo Jorgensen, left, and Mats Iremark


Ram Vaswani


Isabelle Mercier


Brian Gilbert, left, and Mark Boudewijn


A reminder of what they're playing for:

1 - €480.000 (plus €10,000 buy-in into EPT Grand final in Monte Carlo)
2 - €259.000
3 - €155.300
4 - €118.500
5 - €97.700
6 - €76.800
7 - €60.800
8 - €43.500
9-10 - €26.400

February 10, 2006 11:32 PM

The pseudo-final table

This is one of those ironies of the televised poker generation. We're down to one table in the real world, with ten seats around it, but in television land there are only eight places.


Battleground Deauville


That means we need to lose two players from the pseudo-final table before we get to the final table proper, the one that the viewers will see.

Those ten are these, in seating order:

1 - Ram Vaswani (Eng) - 1,160,000
2 - Isabelle Mercier (Can) - 152,000
3 - Brian Gilbert (Eng) - 410,000
4 - Mark Boudewijn (Hol) - 870,000
5 - Kirill Gerasimov (Rus) - 100,000
6 - Stuart Nash (Eng) 100,000
7 - Patric Martensson (Swe) - 220,000
8 - Micky Wernick (Eng) 160,000
9 - Theo Jorgensen (Den) - 840,000
10 - Mats Iremark (Swe) - 360,000

February 10, 2006 10:22 PM

Carnage continues

Nine have fallen from the list in the previous post. They're dropping quicker than I can type. The unlucky names are:

Julian Thew - Nottingham player tried to make queens beat aces. They didn't.
Lex Veldhuis - qualifier's big slick slipped into pocket kings
Jerome Douieb - overnight chip leader and PokerStars qualifier was last French player to be eliminated
Jerome Zerbib - penultimate Frenchman's two pair was not big enough
Stuart Fox - Englishman cunningly slipped away
Jeff Sharpe - tried to batter Ram with ace-jack. Ram calls with flush draw and hits
Jason Veyrac - the French qualifier known as Tintin slipped away
Malcolm Gorse - pushed with king-queen, called by ace-king. Goodnight FPP qualifier No 1
Ken Johnson - moved in with pocket eights, called by queens. Goodnight FPP qualifier No 2

Those remaining are typically sitting behind more chips than it's possible to lift, let alone count. Someone recently tried to count Vaswani's and stopped at about 800,000 when they became dizzy. Mark Boudewijn has about 480,000. Theo Jorgensen is somewhere between the two.

February 10, 2006 9:52 PM

Twenty-two for the money

Here's how it goes in the media centre. We run around the tables, count chips, do Google image searches for those few we don't recognise, then ask Rolf Slotboom of Poker Pages to fill in the gaps.

Thanks to Rolf for the following table information for our final 22:

Table 1
Mats Iremark (Swe) 280,000
Patric Martensson (Swe) 46,000
Isabelle Mercier (Can) 152, 000
Malcolm Gorse (Eng) 240,000 (PokerStars FPP qualifier)
Martin Green (Eng) 115,000
Kenneth Johnson (USA) 145,000 (PokerStars FPP qualifier)
Lex Veldhuis (Hol) 100,000 (PokerStars qualifier)

Table 2
Janne Airaksinen (Fin) 53,000 (PokerStars qualifier)
Theo Jorgensen (Den) 410,000
Julian Thew (Eng) 200,000
Stuart Fox (UK) 230,000
Mark Boudewijn (Hol) 370,000
Jerome Douieb (Fra) 280,000 (PokerStars qualifier)
Kirill Gerasimov (Rus) 130,000
Jerome Zerbib (Fra) 200,000

Table 3
Ram Vaswani (Eng) 440,000
Jeff Sharpe (Eng) 165,000
Jason Veyrac (Fra) 98,000 (PokerStars qualifier)
Ole Busberg Jensen (Den) 195,000 (PokerStars qualifier)
Stuart Nash (Eng) 140,000
Brian Gilbert (UK) 140,000
Mickey Wernick (Eng) 160,000

February 10, 2006 9:31 PM

Falling like flies

There are 24 players left and we are playing tonight until we discover who are the eight that will comprise tomorrow's televised final table.

Among the players that are not Ram Vaswani, Theo Jorgensen, from Denmark, is leading the charge with about 420,000. Mark Boudewijn, from Holland, who has just appeared on our radar with a monstrous stack, is also in the mix. Of course, "Battering" Ram is going through this field like a knife through butter. He has more than 500,000.

The average (median) stack is 188,000.

The fifteen that have fallen most recently all cashed - and here's how much for:

25 - David Albertsson (Sweden) €6,400
26 - Emile Petit (France) €6,400
27 - Mike Hermes (USA) €6,400
28 - Paul Van Wijk (Holland) €6,400
30 - John Hewston (England) €6,400
31 - Thomas Fougeron (France) €6,400
32 - Dominique Mischi (France) €6,400
33 - Martin Pollak (Austria) PokerStars qualifier €4,800
34 - Willie Tann (England) €4,800
35 - Xavier Laszcz (France) €4,800
36 - Henrik Olander (Sweden) €4,800
37 - Roy Brindley (Ireland) €4,800
38 - Erik Van den Burg (Holland) €4,800
39 - Jacky Adda (France) €4,800
40 - Carlos da Silva (Portugal) €4,800

Those remaining are playing for:

1 - €480.000 (plus €10,000 buy-in into EPT Grand final in Monte Carlo)
2 - €259.000
3 - €155.300
4 - €118.500
5 - €97.700
6 - €76.800
7 - €60.800
8 - €43.500
9-10 - €26.400
11-12 - €20.800
13-14 - €16.100
15-16 - €11.300
17-24 - €8.800

February 10, 2006 8:57 PM

Leaders, qualifiers and both


Ole Busborg Jensen (Denmark): hours under the studio lights but the qualifier remains



(From left to right) Ram Vaswani, Ken Johnson, Greg Raymer: Hendon's Crazy Horse, Eagle Mountain's finest, feature table caller



Janne Airaksinen: Finnish qualifier aiming to hang around to the end



Theo Jorgensen (Denmark): lucky hat



Isabelle Mercier and Malcolm Gorse: Team PokerStars and FPP qualifier, respectively



Lex Veldhuis (Holland): another battling qualifier



Mike Pollack (Austria): qualifier eliminated shortly after this photo taken



Danny Ticer (USA): Texas gent, left, who crashed out four short of the money but who continues to charm Deauville


Don't forget, tournament payouts are here. We're down to 26 players, with the latest update describing the demise of John Hewston. He's gone.

February 10, 2006 8:12 PM

Hotting up - literally

Things are going great guns here in Deauville. Players are tumbling like skittles, the prizes are growing larger and the air conditioning has died in the press room. You can almost smell the excitement.

As for the poker, we are down to 32 players on four tables of eight. Here are (most of) their chip counts - you'll notice some very familiar names:

Jon Hewston (Eng) 400,000+ --
Theo Jorgensen (Den) 305,000 --
Jerome Douieb (Fra) 280,000 (PokerStars qualifier) --
Ram Vaswani (Eng) -- 275,000
Isabelle Mercier (Can) 225,000 --
Ken Johnson (USA) (PokerStars FPP qualifier) -- 210,000
Jeff Sharpe (Eng) 189,000 --
Malcolm Gorse (Eng) 145,000 (PokerStars FPP qualifier) --
Julian Thew (Eng) 135,000 --
Peter Roche (Ire) 130,000 --
Kirill Gerasamov (Rus) 128,000 --
Lex Veldhuis (Hol) 126,000 -- (PokerStars qualifier)
Julien Veyrac (Fra) 120,000 (PokerStars qualifier) --
Martin Greene (Eng) 119,000 --
Jerome Zerbib (Fra) 115,000 --
Mike Hermes (USA) 97,000 --
Ole Busborg Jensen (Den) (PokerStars qualifier) 89,000 --
Henrik Olander (Swe)
Patric Martensson (Swe) 62,000 --
Micky Wernick (Eng) 53,500 --
Bernard Greard (Fra) 52,000 --
Emile Petit (Fra) 47,000 --
Thomas Fougeron (Fra) 45,000 --
Jens Ogsaeter 42,000 --
Willie Tann (Eng) 35,800 --
Janne Airaksinen (Fin) 28,500 --
Stuart Nash (Eng) 23,000 --
Martin Pollak (Austria) (PokerStars qualifier) 21,000

Click here for details of tournament payout.

The next update will be pictoral.

February 10, 2006 6:24 PM

Walking into Texas

It's the cruellest spot in any poker tournament but, as everyone who has ever burst the bubble will tell you, someone has to do it. Those were the words uttered by Jen Mason a few moments ago when she called Jon "Texas" Hewston's massive re-raise when we were playing hand-for-hand poker. Forty-one players remained, 40 got paid. Jen, this time, is not among them.


Jen Mason and supporters nervously await a flop


She had ace-king and had raised. Hewston, who is behind a wall of chips, made the big move forward, and Jen called. Hewston showed his queens.


They call it walking back to Texas - walking into Texas more like


The flop, turn and river were no help. That was that for Jen.

It means everyone still playing is going back home in profit. We'll get the counts of those remaining as soon as we can. You can see what they are playing for here.

Unfortunately, Danny Ticer missed out by about five spots, but PokerStars qualifiers Ken Johnson, Janne Airaksinen, Lex Veldhuis, Julien Veyrac, Ole Busborg Jensen and Jerome Douieb are all in the money.

More details to follow.

February 10, 2006 5:17 PM

Approaching the money

Time for some raw data.

Number of players
Start: 434
Now: 51

Stack sizes
Start: 10,000
Current average (median): 87,000
Leaders: 250,000 (approx)

Tournament progress
Current level: 14
Big blind: 2,000
Small blind: 4,000
Running ante: 400

Chip counts:

John Hewston (Eng) 250,000
Ram Vaswani (Eng) 225,000
Jeff Sharpe (Eng) 215,000
Jerome Douieb (Fra) 210,000 (PokerStars qualfier)
Theo Jorgensen (Den) 210,000
Mats Iremark (Swe) 190,000
Claude Cohen (Fra) 150,000
Julien Veyrac (Fra) 131,000 (PokerStars qualifier)
Mike Hermes (USA) 125,000
Henrik Olander (Swe) 125,000
Micky Wernick (Eng) 95,000
Patric Martensson (Swe) 90,000
Ken Johnson (USA) 82,000 (PokerStars qualifier)
Martin Green (Eng) 81,000
Jennifer Mason (Eng) 73,000
Roy Brindley (Ire) 64,000
Bambos Xanthos (Eng) 55,000
Malcolm Gorse (Eng) 55,000 (PokerStars qualfier)
Willie Tann (Eng) 55,000
Julian Thew (Eng) 51,000
Ole Busborg Jensen (Den) 50,000 (PokerStars qualifier)
Janne Airaksinen 43,000 (Fin) (PokerStars qualifier)
Isabelle Mercier (Can) 41,000
Kirill Gerasamov (Rus) 41,000
Lex Veldhuis (Hol) 35,000 (PokerStars qualifier)
Thomas Fougeron (Fra) 28,000
Danny Ticer (USA) 24,000 (PokerStars qualifier)

Click here for details of tournament payout

February 10, 2006 3:24 PM

Movers and shakers

There have been some significant chip moves here - and three huge pots in particular that have given us the runaway chip leaders.

In the first, Ram Vaswani knocked out both Teddy Tuil and Sami Torbey, PokerStars qualifier, when he called two all-in raises with ace-king. Sami, who was shortstacked, moved in under-the-gun with ace-seven, Teddy came over the top for all his chips with pocket eights and Crazy Horse called immediately. The king on the river ended proceedings for those who dared to mess with the Hendon Mobster. He has more than 220,000.


Ram Vaswani: near the chip lead. Again.


The lead lasted about ten minutes, when Jon "Texas" Hewston shot his way to the front. His play was slightly more basic, calling a 90,000 pre-flop all-in re-raise with aces. His opponent had ace-queen and it was all over fairly sharply.


Jon "Texas" Hewston: not from Texas, shooting to the summit


Shortly after, Theo Jorgensen, from Denmark, knocked out Julian Gardner in a massive pot.

Ken Johnson, our qualifier from Utah, has moved up to around 95,000 and is now on Ram's left. The pair of them are going towards the television table fairly soon.

Chip count has now been updated across the top of the screen.

February 10, 2006 3:24 PM

PokerStars of the small screen

We have a new television star on the EPT. His name is Ken Johnson, a PokerStars qualifier, from Eagle Mountain, Utah.


Ken Johnson: television PokerStar


The 33-year-old qualified for the Copenhagen leg of this season's tour in a 300 FPP tournament, but couldn't find himself a passport in time to get to Denmark. There are special rules for special circumstances and he was able to switch to Deauville, where he made the second day with 32,750 in chips.

Back home, Ken runs a construction company and plays poker only recreationally ("my wife won't let me play for high stakes") driving into Nevada for live action, but staying at home to play on PokerStars. Now he's constructing a stack of chips - he's up to around 75,000 - and he's to the left of the tower belonging to Ram Vaswani.


Ram Vaswani: TV regular


Stay tuned to find out how this one goes.

February 10, 2006 2:27 PM

More qualifiers in the real world

As already mentioned, day two began with the pleasant surprise that Jerome Douieb, PokerStars qualifier, was leading the field here in Deauville. But he's not alone among those that have won their seat online who are still occupying a place around a "real" table in France.

Here are a few more:


Sami Torbey (France)



Julien Veyrac (France)



Ole Busborg Jensen (Denmark)



Lex Veldhuis (Holland)



Kevin Coleman



Ken Johnson (Utah, USA)



Malcolm Gorse (England)



Danny Ticer (Texas, USA)



Nick Chanas (Canada)

February 10, 2006 1:31 PM

Some more about Chemovs

Take a stroll into the Aviation Club de Paris and you're likely to notice a distinctive figure behind a vast pile of chips. His name is Jerome Douieb and he's leading the charge here in Deauville.


Jerome Douieb: a cultured front-runner


Take a stroll through the PokerStars rooms at any other time of the day and you're likely to notice a distictive virtual figure behind a vast pile of virtual chips. His name is "Chemovs" and he's leading the charge here in Deauville.

From now on, let's refer to our chip leader as Jerome "Chemovs" Douieb, PokerStars qualifier from Maison Laffitte, near Paris. He qualified for the EPT here last season and since then has been a big player at the site, winning a couple of multi-table tournaments, destroying the cash tables both online and off with the rest of his time.

That's when he's not indulging his other passion for the Sport of Kings, giving him another reason to visit Deauville for the regular August horse race meeting.

Plenty are backing Jerome as a winner here. We'll discover the true extent of his obvious pedigree throughout today.

February 10, 2006 12:52 PM

Day two begins

There was a hectic end to day 1B at the EPT French Open, both in the poker room and the media centre. Players were falling at the same rate as internet connections - and both were failing fast.

While the hope is that this is the last you will hear of the technology issues, the carnage will be sure to continue in the same vein around the tables - 100 players begin but only eight will remain when the lights go out; 40 will get paid. They are fighting for the following prizes:

1 - €480.000 (plus €10,000 buy-in into EPT Grand final in Monte Carlo)
2 - €259.000
3 - €155.300
4 - €118.500
5 - €97.700
6 - €76.800
7 - €60.800
8 - €43.500
9-10 - €26.400
11-12 - €20.800
13-14 - €16.100
15-16 - €11.300
17-24 - €8.800
25-32 - €6.400
33-40 - €4.800

Sitting atop the overnight leaderboard is Jerome Douieb, a PokerStars qualifier from France. He was leading his table a merry dance late last night, showing down some fearless bluffs that were even eliciting applause from those donating the chips. I remember one in particular, when, looking at a flop of five-five-nine, Kristian Ulriksen bet, the player to his left raised and Jerome reached for a stack of yellow 1,000 chips and tossed them into the pot.

Both players agonised before both folded and Jerome turned over pocket sevens to anguished cries from both his adversaries. We'll catch up with him later for more details - as well as all the action from this crucial second day.

Jerome has 143,000 chips, some 100,000 more than the median stack of 43,400.

February 10, 2006 6:16 AM

EPT French Open Chip Counts

Below you'll find the chip counts as players combine their flights and begin Day 2 of the European Poker Tour French Open. Let's all cross our fingers and hope the IT technicians have figured out the internet connection problems by the beginning of Day 2.

Jerome Douieb (PokerStars qualifier) 142,925
Claude Cohen 117,450
Theo Jorgensen 111,175
Frederik Hostrup 105,850
Tune Seidelin 99,775
Julian Gardner 99,200
Martin Green 89,125
Mike Hermes 84,600
Mats Iremark 84,500
Henrik Olander 83,500
Sami Torbey (PokerStars qualifier) 83,150
David Albertsson 75,100
Roy Brindley 73,925
Patric Martensson 73,325
Jerome Zerbib 73,100
Kristian Ulriksen 72,025
Jon Hewston 71,875
Brian Hansen 70,650
Bernard Greard 68,525
Torgny Andersson 67,450
Stuart Fox 66,600
Julian Thew 65,325
Julien Veyrac (PokerStars qualifier) 64,550
Isabelle Mercier (Team PokerStars) 63,650
Ram Vaswani 61,150
Jeff Sharpe 59,800
Ole Busborg Jensen (PokerStars qualifier) 59,200
Emile Petit 58,625
Peter Roche 58,375
Jennifer Mason 55,900
Torstein Iversen 52,625
Xanthos Charalambos 51,175
Willie Tann 50,150
Mickey Wernick 50,075
Patrick Bruel 49,350
Shelle Mullet 47,725
Lex Veldhuis (PokerStars qualifier) 47,050
Thomas 45,800
Stuart Nash 45,200
Kevin Coleman (PokerStars FPP qualifier) 45,125
Jacky Adda 44,975
Anders Henriksson 41,825
B. Gilbert 41,725
Jonathan Demsey 40,550
Bouya 38,450
Mischi 37,200
Thomas Fougeron 36,950
Teddy Tuil 36,100
Erik Van Der Bourg 35,875
Michel Alberti 35,825
Daniel Nilsson 35,800
Marc Naalden 35,150
Simon Zach 34,850
Marc Goodwin 34,000
Paul Van Wijk 33,675
Kenneth Johnson (PokerStars qualifier) 32,750
Jens Ogsater 32,150
R. Tykoczikosky 31,925
Xavier Laszcz 31,450
Michel Abecassis 31,000
Farzad Heyati 30,950
Paul Parker 29,700
Bjorn Glenne 29,675
Charlie Harvey 29,350
Lindon 28,500
Janne Airaksinen (PokerStars qualifier) 27,750
Henrik Gwinner 27,400
Nick Chanas (PokerStars qualifier) 23,600
Aleksander Liberg 23,225
Juan Florez 23,200
Malcom Gorse (PokerStars FPP qualifier) 21,975
Elie Marciano 21,500
Danny Ticer (PokerStars qualifier) 21,475
Andreas Berg 21,275
Ross Boatman 21,225
Mark Boudewijn 21,150
David O`Callaghan 21,000
Ryan Fronda 20,650
Robert Price 20,175
Jo Mrejen 19,900
Kirill Gerasimov 19,750
Carlos Da Silva 19,400
Mark Bolliger 19,000
Frode Fagerli 18,500
Alex Michaels (PokerStars qualifier) 18,125
Cametti 18,000
Carlos Lopez 17,400
Henrik Waltersson 16,925
Ken Powell 16,250
Tim Klarpas 16,150
Greg Mathias (PokerStars qualifier) 15,650
Bernt Grytdahl 15,325
John Falconer 15,100
Joep Durkstra (PokerStars qualifier) 15,050
Martin Pollak (PokerStars qualifier) 14,550
Benoit Clergeot (PokerStars qualifier) 14,350
Palmieri 13,700
Stian Godderstad 13,675
J. Kruijer 13,650
Nick Sherman 13,050

The average (median) stack is 43,400.

February 10, 2006 2:06 AM

Day 1B at an end

We have had a few technological problems here in Deauville - and they are far from resolved as I write.

The poker, however, is over, leaving the only heads being scratched belonging to the IT technicians. I've sneaked a couple of minutes on one of the only computers that has survived the information massacre to fill you in on a few key facts.

There are 44 players remaining, with the queue being led by either Julian Gardner, from Manchester, England, or Tune Seidelin, from Denmark. They are at the 99,000 mark. Martin Greene is close behind on 90,000.

Peter Roche, from Ireland, is on 58,375; Julian Thew is on 65,325; Willie Tann is close to 50,000. Micky Wernick, who won the European rankings last year, is also near to 50,000 and Jen Mason is sitting behind a similar stack.

Brian Hansen and David Albertson, on 69,000 and 75,100 respectively, will also be sleeping soundly.

Isabelle Mercier is still going strong, but we lost Anina Gundesen late on.

Apologies for the rather scant nature of the updates and lack of pictures. It's a miracle (and one that owes a lot to antesup.com) that we have this much information.

We hope it will be better tomorrow for Day Two.

February 10, 2006 1:27 AM

Problems in Deauville

Hello folks,

Very sorry for the lack of updates. There are serious connection issues here at the moment and no one, except for a mysterious handful, can get online.

At the very least, we hope to have end of day chip counts available soon, but details will have to wait for later.

We - and a raft of IT experts - are doing their very best.

February 9, 2006 10:53 PM

British and proud

You might have noticed it by the way I spell "colour" or "flavour" or my use of the word "cheers", but I am a Brit. English, to me more precise. So, allow me a moment to reflect in national pride when I mention that my countryman Martin Green is chip leader here, through the 100,000 mark and not looking anywhere but forward.


Martin Green: best of British


We've also just updated the scrolling chip count at the top, and you'll notice the ressurection of Kasper Nielsen, Danish qualifier. He vanished earlier, but is back now among a clutch still flying the PokerStars flag.


Kasper Nielsen: still alive


Also in the mix is Sami Torbay, who qualified for the London EPT on PokerStars, and Laurent Martin, a French qualifier here, who is in the mix with 29,000.

Among those we have lost are Luca Pagano, the Team PokerStars man, who never got many more than about 15,000 today. Also gone is Adrian Creagh, the qualifier from Bagshot, Surrey. Natasha Ellis and Karin Lundgren are also on the rail, the latter moving in with pocket fives and being called by a pair of queens on the button. The third queen on the flop was pretty harsh, the fourth was just unnecessary. Barny Boatman has also sailed out of town.

February 9, 2006 8:42 PM

Chip leaders

During the break we took some time to find out where the sizeable chip stacks were. There were four that stood higher than most - and now they are matched to their owners.

Here's one. Its owner is Isabelle "No Mercy" Mercier, from Canada and Team PokerStars.


Isabelle Mercier: surely familiar enough by now


Two more are beside one another, towards the far end of the room. They belong to Martin Green, of England, and Thierry Cazals, of Toulouse, France. They estimate their hoards are worth 52,000 and 58,000, respectively.


Martin Green, left, and Thierry Cazals


The fourth is in the hands of Kristian Ulriksen, from Norway. He's playing in the region of 48,000.


Kristian Ulriksen, the latest Nordic on the move


Supporters of Ralph Capone, Adrian Creagh, Alexios Assimakopoulos and James Paluszek, PokerStars qualifiers all, your players are still standing. As is George White, winner of the EPT competition on Challenge TV. There are surely more, but these few are definitely involved.

February 9, 2006 6:57 PM

Dinner break update

The players are taking a dinner break - and dinner is going to taste very sweet indeed for Isabelle Mercier. She's up to 47,200 since she arrived on the featured table, carving through anything thrown in her path. Anina Gundesen has also had her share of the fun for the television cameras and is pushing 28,000.

Dinner break chip counts are now scrolling across your screen.

When the players return, they will be on level 5, posting blinds of 150-300. There are 152 of them.

February 9, 2006 6:03 PM

Bring me sunshine

The inevitable PokerStars corner - where a bunch of qualifiers or familiar faces wind up next to each other - has, sure enough, developed in Deauville. The contenders today are George White, originally from Dublin but now living in London, Adrian Creagh, from Bagshot, England, and James Paluszek, from the United States.

They're joined today by a man we have come to see a lot of on the EPT - Luca Pagano, from Venice, Italy.


George White, left, and Luca Pagano: it's sunny in here


In terms of sunglasses, Luca has some competition from White (see above), while the best card cover award belongs to the swag bag of Paluszek (see below). Creagh just tried to take on Pagano at poker, but had to lay down his busted flush draw in face of heavy betting from the Venetian.


The card-cover of James "scammer" Paluszek. There are about 5,900 chips down there


Things are bubbling up quite nicely.

Meanwhile, the featured table has been switched and there was no one surprised to learn it will now feature Isabelle Mercier and Anina Gundesen. It's time for the ladies to slog it out in the spotlight.


Anina Gundesen and Isabelle Mercier continue their burgeoning friendship under studio lights



Click here for a full list of names and nationalities at the tournament.

February 9, 2006 5:30 PM

Some stories from the floor

Two of the first ladies of the EPT were drawn opposite to one another on table 10 this morning. Isabelle "No Mercy" Mercier, a fully signed up member of Team PokerStars, is three seats around from Anina Gundesen, sixth in Copenhagen after qualifying in a $13 re-buy tournament. That finish made Anina the top-placed female finisher in the EPT's two season history - and 400,000 Danish Kroner richer.


Anina Gundesen confers with Isabelle Mercier...


The early news is that Anina's record may be under threat - potentially either by herself or her table-mate. Anina is sitting with just over 25,000 ("How did you get those?" "Aces") while Isabelle is the likely tournament chip leader with more than 40,000.


...before Isabelle has some chip stacking to do


Victoria Coren, British journalist and broadcaster, is also in the field and just moved up to around the 20,000 mark after flopping trip fives and finding Iwan Jones with top pair to pay her off. Neil Channing, a well-known London-based pro, has just seen his tournament end when, according to him, the first trips he has seen in a major tournament for a year, ran into a higher set. Twos versus threes, for the record.

Meanwhile, the defeated and departed former World Champion Greg Raymer is back. He's calling the feature table and arrived just in time to see Patrick Bruel, French superstar, survive a flirtation with elimination.


Nervous moments for Patrick Bruel


Bruel was all in with jacks, his opponent calls with queens, but the jack on the flop kept the singing sensation in the mix.


Greg Raymer arrives in time to congratulate Bruel on his outdraw

February 9, 2006 4:43 PM

The thick of the action

It's still super early on Day 1B of this four-day event. We're in level 3, where blinds cost 75 and 150 of your starting stack of 10,000. The official information tells us that 209 players remain seated.


The ballroom, with TV table in the foreground


We have just taken our first sweep of the floor to gauge how some of the notable players are going and you'll now find their latest counts scrolling across the top of the screen. For those impatient few here is the information in more vertical form:

Bertrand "ElkY" Grospellier 22,000
Kaspar Nielson (PokerStars qualifier) 18,800
Val Lettieri (PokerStars qualifier) 5,900
Luca Pagano 9,400
Edgar Skjervold 8,275
Roger Gustavsson 10,300 (PokerStars qualifier)
Christian Grundtvig 7,800
Johan Wemmenhag (PokerStars qualifier) 14,300
Willie Tann 5,400
Neil Channing 7,400
Rob Hollink 10,600
Steve Vladar 19,500
Bengt Sonnert 10,800
Alexios Assimakopoulos 5,700
Tony Cascarino 7,200
Paul Parker 19,000
Surinder Sunar 19,000
Anina Gundesen 14,100
Isabelle Mercier 15,500
Adrian Creagh (PokerStars qualifier) 12,400
Birgitta Johansson 10,800
Ben Grundy 6,700
Julian Thew 6,300
Barny Boatman 18,200
David Colclough 14,800
Natasha Ellis 12,300
Janne Airaksinen 11,300
Stian Fredrik Thuv (PokerStars qualifier) 8,600
Brandon Sampson (PokerStars qualifier) 7,500
Iwan Jones 17,000
Victoria Coren 12,000
John Gale 12,000
Thomas Fougeron 17,000
Brent Russel (PokerStars qualifier) 11,900
Julian Gardner 8,800
Carlo Citrone 11,200
Patrick Bruel 4,000
Ralph Capone (PokerStars qualifier) 11,000
Gabriel Nassif (PokerStars qualifier) 13,900
Notable eliminations:
Greg Raymer,
Mads Andersen,
Christer Johansson,
Rory Liffey

February 9, 2006 2:51 PM

Thousands of words

The stars are out in force again today and, while most players now exhange the odd 100 in chips, rendering counts slightly ineffectual, here are a few photos of those competing in flight 1B.


Patrick Bruel: France's music megastar and owner of a World Series bracelet



Isabelle Mercier: Team Pokerstars



Julian Gardner: "The Kid", 2002 World Series runner up



Christer Johansson, WPT champion, over the shoulder of Val Lettieri, serial PokerStars qualifier from the United States



Edgar Skjervold: WCOOP winner and second place at EPT Copenhagen



David Colclough: European player of the year



Birgitta Johansson: more than a match for husband Christer



Adrian Creagh: PokerStars qualifier from Bagshot, England. Says hello to son Kieron



Anina Gundesen: top-placed female finisher in EPT history



Alexios Assimakopoulos: PokerStars qualifier from Athens, Greece (just call him Alex)



Carlo Citrone: professional from Newcastle, England



Iwan Jones: winner of the inaugural London Poker Open



Thomas Fougeron: French hope



Surinder Sunar: former WPT champion



Brent Russel: one of the Canadian contingent in Deauville



Johan Wemmenhag: one of eight players from Vasteras, Sweden, in town



John Gale: 2005 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure champion


The total number of entrants in EPT Deauville has been confirmed as 434. That means 225 play today.

February 9, 2006 1:55 PM

Fossilman first to the rail

This photo would, ordinarily, be of Greg Raymer. The 2004 World Champion, Team PokerStars member, etc., is over in France for the EPT. He's the main attraction, the first photograph on every blog and the man everyone wants to beat. Someone just has. On the second hand of the tournament. That player is Julian Thew.


Julian Thew: responsible


Julian finds aces and raises pre-flop. Greg calls with queen-ten of diamonds and two more come on the flop. Julian bets, Greg raises and Julian now decides to find out where he is, sticking in 3,000. Greg is as Greg does and answers Thew's question with the first all-in of the tournament. It turns out to be his last.

Julian now figures the Fossilman for the flush draw, but still has a decision to make. Raymer is known around the world for his aggressive play, making huge moves and fearless calls. Thew, albeit in a slightly smaller pond, has a similar reputation. He makes the call and Raymer does not improve on turn and river.


Greg Raymer: only the second photograph of the day


The Fossilman is an unfortunate relic in this tournament.

February 9, 2006 12:11 PM

Changing history

Good morning from Deauville. It's Day 1B of the EPT French Open, but before we begin, there are a couple of amendments to make from yesterday's coverage.

Firstly, apologies to Frederik Hostrup - he's still right up there, despite what I wrote late yesterday. Jon Hewston is too, but he did not overtake the Dane. As expected, Claude Cohen, of France, did turn out to be the chip leader, with Theo Jorgensen hot on his heels.

The full list is below, with the added identity of some PokerStars qualifiers who will be followed from here on.

Day 1A Chip Counts

Claude Cohen 117,450
Theo Jorgensen 111,175
Frederik Hostrup 105,850
Mike Hermes 84,600
Henrik Olander 83,500
Roy Brindley 73,925
Patric Martensson 73,325
Jon Hewston 71,875
Stuart Fox 66,600
Ram Vaswani 61,150
Jeff Sharpe 59,800
Ole Busborg Jensen (PokerStars qualifier) 59,200
Torstein Iversen 52,625
Charalambos Xanthos 51,175
Stuart Nash 45,200
Jacky Adda 44,975
B. Gilbert 41,725
Jonathan Demsey 40,550
Erik Van Der Bourg 35,875
Daniel Nilsson 35,800
Marc Naalden 35,150
Marc Goodwin 34,000
Paul Van Wijk (PokerStars qualifier) 33,675
Kenneth Johnson (PokerStars qualifier) 32,750
R. Tykoczikosky 31,925
Xavier Laszcz 31,450
Michel Abecassis 31,000
Charlie Harvey 29,350
Henrik Gwinner 27,400
Nick Chanas 23,600
Aleksander Liberg 23,225
Juan Florez 23,200
Malcom Gorse (PokerStars qualifier) 21,975
Elie Marciano 21,500
Danny Ticer (PokerStars qualifier) 21,475
Andreas Berg 21,275
Ross Boatman 21,225
Mark Boudewijn 21,150
David O`Callaghan 21,000
Ryan Fronda 20,650
Robert Price 20,175
Kirill Gerasimov 19,750
Carlos Da Silva 19,400
Frode Fagerli 18,500
Alex Michaels 18,125
Cametti 18,000
Ken Powell 16,250
Tim Klarpas 16,150
Greg Mathias (PokerStars qualifier) 15,650
Bernt Grytdahl 15,325
John Falconer 15,100
Joep Durkstra 15,050
Martin Pollak 14,550
Stian Godderstad 13,675
J. Kruijer 13,650
Nick Sherman 13,050

February 9, 2006 1:41 AM

Day 1A - the end

The night has closed in, the 57 remaining players have departed into the darkness and Day 1A at the PokerStars EPT French Open is over.


Darkness fall on Deauville


After a late-night swing on table two, it seems as though John "Texas" Hewston (71,875) might have taken that table's chip lead from Frederik Holstrup. The Dane's stack has dwindled since the last check. He's still got plenty, but not so many that he can't fit them all in his end-of-day envelope. Instead it's "Texas" (who isn't from Texas but in actual fact is British) who has that problem.

The Swedish duo of Patric Mortensson and Henrik Olander, as well as Dane Theo Jorgensen (110,000), will probably also feature near the top of the official list, alongside the battling Brit, Ram Vaswani. The home contingent is rightly behind Claude Cohen, who has more than 115,000 and might be the chip leader, as well as Michel Abeplassis (31,000), who have both made up for the departure of both Robert Cohen and Pascal Perrault.

Roland de Wolfe, WPT Paris champion, went out shortly before the lights, hitting top pair with his king-ten but watching in despair as his adversary's four-flush made five on the end. David Pomroy, third placed finisher in the EPT Dublin event, followed him out, his ace-king outdrawn by ace-queen.

Kiril Gerasimov, the fearsome Russian player, remains in the field, as does Torstein Iversen (52,000), from Norway. More British players of note include John Falconer, Ross Boatman and Johnathan Dempsey. Bambos Xanthos, the London-based Cypriot player, is still in the bunch, while Mark Naalden (36,000), from the Netherlands, doesn't quite have the monstrous pile he finished with in Copenhagen, but he is alive.

Of the qualifiers, let's hear it for Danny Ticer (21,475) and Ken Johnson (33,000), both from the United States and both coming back on Friday, as well as Malcolm Gorse (21,975), who's FPPs continue to stretch to a whole lot of poker. I am confident we will unearth further PokerStars qualifiers when the full list is published later. We'll highlight them and follow them from here on.

If you are just tuning in, you can catch the re-run of the following coverage by clicking the links below:

Up with the big stacks - introducing John Hewston and Theo Jorgensen

Leading the charge - Frederik Hostrup, Henrik Olander and Ram Vaswani

Danny boy - Danny Ticer, qualifier from Texas

The way it goes - two depart, Ken Johnson moves upward

Making the news - are they journalists or are they poker players?

A familiar tale - Marc Naalden and Patric Mortensson

A couple of introductions - PokerStars qualifiers on the make

Getting real in Deauville - Malcolm Gorse, FPP qualifier

Delightful Deauville - what it looks like

February 9, 2006 12:25 AM

Up with the big stacks

We're into the final level of the evening, with blinds at 600-1200 and a running ante of 100. Of the 209 players who started today, 69 remain, with an average stack of 30,289.

Frederik Hostrup just raised his arms in the air to declare himself the first player to reach 100,000 in chips - and who am I to rain on his parade. He's right.

These two need not worry about scratching the felt either:


Theo Jorgensen (Denmark): 90,000 or more



John "Texas" Hewston (England): 63,000

February 8, 2006 11:30 PM

Leading the charge

Whatever happens here or at the Grand Final in Monte Carlo in March, this season's EPT has belonged to the Nordic players. Players from Denmark, Sweden, Finland and Norway have written all of the stories and taken most of the cash.

Surprise, surprise, they're at it again in Deauville. The Day 1A chip leader looks like it's this man: Frederik Hostrup, from Denmark.


Frederik Hostrup and his chirping chips


At least Frederik is entertaining his table as he runs all over it. As the stack of chirping chip grows, so does the conversation and the Dane is smiling pleasantly as he bludgeons his way through the field. He's playing today for Pokerteam Denmark, but asks me to tell you that he's a regular on the PokerStars tables as Mr Swatch. He's busy with about 75,000 chips right now, but keep a look out for him. He might have some extra money to throw around by Saturday night.

Another familiar Scandinavian player is Henrik Olander, from Sweden. Henrik gave a poker masterclass at the final table of the EPT event in Dublin last year, eventually bowing out in second place after he ran into Mats Gavatin (also from Sweden, of course). Henrik has about 44,000.


Henrik Olander: back with another stack


And finally a non-Nordic player, but one who hardly needs any introduction. Ram Vaswani, Hendon Mobster, EPT champion, etc., is back with the chips. Ram has about 55,000 in that stack.


Ram Vaswani: single handedly taking on the Nordics


Some more notable eliminations: the past hour has seen the demise of Noah Boeken, Simon Young and Patrick Antonius.

February 8, 2006 10:21 PM

Stack attack

We're now down to fewer than 100 players and they're posting blinds of 300 and 600, with a running ante of 50. It's level eight, in other words. The average stack is just over 20,000.

As far as we can see, the chip leader is Fredrik Hostrup, from Denmark, who plays on PokerStars as Mr Swatch. Marc Naalden is hot on his heels - and on the same table - with round about 54,000.

And, as it must be, we have lost some. Those include Tiffany Williamson, Pascal Perrault, Xuyen Pham, Cecilia Nordenstam, Alex Bowler (PokerStars qualifier), Marcel Luske, Carlos Mortenson, Martin Wendt.

We just heard the familiar roar that shouts "big pot" echo across the ballroom. Three players all-in pre-flop: there are one pair of aces, and two pairs of kings. Only on the internet, huh?

Here's a selected chip count, timed at 11pm. We've got three hours left.

Frederik Hostrup 65,000
Henrik Olander 28,500
Marc Naalden 54,000
Michel Abeplassis 36,000
Malcolm Gorse (PokerStars qualifer) 31,300
Joseph Shechter (PokerStars qualifier) 39,500
Marc Telstcher 19,000
Roy Brindley 38,000
Patrik Antonius 34,000
David Pomroy 5,2000
John Falconer 16,000
Robert Cohen 6,000
Patric Mortensson 37,000
Roland de Wolfe 34,500
Simon Young (Team PokerStars) 6,300
Philip Hilm 5,800
Ross Boatman 11,000
Noah Boeken 27,000
Ram Vaswani 48,000
Torstein Iversen 35,500
Danny Ticer (PokerStars qualifer) 30,000
David O'Callaghan 15,500
John Caldwell 7,800
Peter Eichhardt 15,000
Ken Johnson (PokerStars qualifer) 30,000
Dave Clayton 7,000
James Dempsey 45,000

February 8, 2006 9:19 PM

Danny boy

Danny Ticer is another one of those PokerStars FPP qualifiers. And he's a qualifier of some pedigree. Last year he won two seats at the World Series of Poker on PokerStars and now here he is in Deauville, France, having snapped up another package with his poker-playing prowess.


Danny Ticer: from Texas to Normandy, France


And Deauville is not just round the corner for Danny, either. He's from a small town called Jacksonville, in east Texas, and is actually making his first visit outside the United States. Right now, he's sitting with round about 15,500 in chips but has been card dead for more than an hour.

Like long-haul flights, however, these poker tournaments take time and, to stretch this analogy, he's not even through the first bad movie and bag of pretzels yet. He's still looking strong, nowhere near the emergency exit, with hours left yet to snap up something valuable from the in-flight store.

We'll be watching.

February 8, 2006 8:59 PM

The way it goes

It's the law of poker tournaments: as players leave, stacks grow. You can't have one without the other.

We've lost both George Baldwin ("he had a higher pair than I did") and Daniel Nelson. However, the karmic pendulum has swung towards Ken Johnson, another PokerStars qualifier from Utah, who has around 33,500 and is going well.


Ken Johnson: from Utah and PokerStars


James Dempsey, from England, is also around the 33,000 mark. James recently attempted to break a poker marathon world record, sitting down and playing heads-up poker non-stop for 69 hours straight at London's Gutshot club. He fell seven hours short, but make a stack of money for charity and is likely to slip back into the well-moulded marathon-attempting seat again soon.


Carlos Mortenson, left, and James Dempsey


Perhaps he might ask today's neighbour along for an hour or two. It's Carlos Mortenson, 2001 World Series of Poker champion.

February 8, 2006 8:18 PM

Making the news

If you're not writing these days, you're playing poker. And if you're a writer and you're a poker player, you're probably going to spend some time writing about poker. You couldn't resist it even if you tried.

So it is that lurking somewhere in the monstrous fields now de riguer at these high-stakes international events, there will be a certain number of journalists, looking for the