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European
Poker Tour Wraps Up Stop in Sochi, Crowns Two Champions - 31st March 2019




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By
Earl Burton Perhaps
because of the remoteness of the location, perhaps because of the time of year
(winter), perhaps because of the plethora of tournament poker in the States of
America right now, the European Poker Tours stop in Sochi, Russia, didnt
get that much attention. The EPT did crown two new champions, however, in a High
Roller event and, naturally, the Main Event. Rushand
Iskandarov Wins High Roller In
the ?371,000 (roughly $5500 U. S. dollars) High Roller Event, 84 entries were
received. The final table was highlighted by Ramon Collilas, the champion of the
PokerStars Players Championship at the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure, and
Pete Chen, who final tabled the World Series of Pokers online High Roller
tournament last summer. But it was two men from Azerbaijan who were able to capture
the attention of the railbirds at the Casino Sochi that battled it out for the
title. Collilas
would depart in seventh place and Chen in fourth, but Ruslan Iskandarov and Elvin
Sarkarov would square off for what was an epic battle. Sarkarov started the heads-up
match with about a million-chip lead, but Iskandarov immediately switched that
situation within minutes of the opening salvos. Sarkarov wouldnt go quietly,
however, after he was able to get three streets of action out of Iskandarov when
Sarkarov had flopped a wheel straight and retake the lead. For
over three hours the duo would swap the lead before Iskandarov would be able to
assume command of the event. On a 5? 5? 7? flop, Iskandarov would check-call a
125K bet from Sarkarov. When a King came on the turn, however, Sarkarov wouldnt
take Iskandarovs offer for action as both men checked. A Queen completed
the board, which brought about the end of the tournament. For
the first time in the hand, Iskandarov opened with a 235K bet and Sarkarov moved
all in against him. Iskandarov wasnt fazed, however, as he immediately made
the call and turned up a 5? 2? for the flopped trips. All Sarkarov could show
was a 9-2 off suit complete air on the bluff as the championship
went to Iskandarov. 1.
Rushand Iskandarov, ?7,840,000 ($119,351) 2. Elvin Sarkarov, ?5,579,000 (84,935) 3.
Maksim Bukreev, ?3,650,500 ($55,575) 4. Pete Chen, ?2,807,000 ($42,734) 5.
Valery Yantsevich, ?2,222,500 ($33,835) 6. Sergey Kolyasnikov, ?1,739,500 ($26,482) 7.
Ramon Collilas, ?1,368,500 ($20,834) 8. Irshat Shaykhov ?1,071,000 ($16,305) For
Iskandarov, the win was a memorable one. A veteran of online battles for the past
four years, this was the first live event he ever played. To walk away with an
EPT High Roller trophy in your first soiree bodes well for the future for Iskandarov. Uri
Gilboa Becomes Oldest EPT Main Event Champion in History The
final day of the EPT Sochi Main Event began with only six players remaining (from
the 758 entries) after two members of the official EPT final table were eliminated
in the previous nights action. The beneficiary of that action was chip leader
Zakhar Babaev, who held a huge lead with his 9.03 million chip stack. It was the
oldest player left in the tournament, however, that would emerge victorious. Coming
from Israel, Uri Gilboa was in the bottom edges of the final table, sitting on
a fourth-place stack of 2.115 million chips, and patiently waiting for his chance
to come to him. That opportunity would come on Hand #43 when Gilboa, holding pocket
Jacks, was able to double up through Vyacheslav Mizun and moved into second place.
It was a distant second place, though, as Babaev continued to rule the table at
the time (Babaev had 9.18 million, Gilboa 4.69 million). It
seemed inevitable that Gilboa and Babaev would clash and, when it did, Gilboa
came out on the positive side. He chipped up through Babaev twice to pull within
three million chips, then took the lead on Hand #102 after Gilboa backdoored a
flush against Babaevs two pair. The duo would combine to eliminate their
competition and met for the heads-up battle with Gilboa holding a five million
chip lead over Babaev. The
key hand of the tournament was Hand #176. After erasing the deficit he faced and
taking a nice lead himself, Babaev and Gilboa would get it in pre-flop on the
hand that decided the event. Babaev had a nice A-9, nominally good in a heads-up
situation, but Gilboa had Big Slick and the edge. A King in the window (K-J-3)
pushed Gilboa further into the lead and a deuce on the turn left Babaev drawing
dead. Once the chips were counted out, Gilboa had been at risk in the hand and
the massive 21.09 million chips pushed his way left Babaev with only 655K in his
stack. The tournament ended on the next hand as Gilboas A-4 turned an unnecessary
two pair against Babaevs 8-4 to end the event. 1.
Uri Gilboa, ?27,475,000 ($412,125) 2. Zakhar Babaev, ?16,737,000 ($251,055) 3.
Maksim Pisarenko, ?11,865,000 ($177,975) 4. Ivan Ruban, ?8,953,000 ($134,295) 5.
Vyacheslav Mizun, ?7,091,000 ($106,365) 6. Sefarim Kovalevsky, ?5,390,000 ($80,850) 7.
Francisco Benitez, ?3,850,000 ($57,750)* 8. Dmitry Yurasov, ?2,625,000 ($39,375)* (*
eliminated the previous evening, part of official EPT final table records) According
to EPT statistics, the 61-year old Gilboa is the oldest ever Main Event champion
in the history of the circuit. Additionally, he is the first Israeli EPT champion,
another important first. (Poker
News Daily) 

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