Wednesday, 15th May 2024 02:14
Home / Uncategorized / EPT Copenhagen: Chip counts and changes at dinner

As the dinner break looms a look at the chip counts has few big swings on show, but Frenchman Nicolas Levi looks to be ahead…

Nikolas Levi – France — 28 K
Markus Golser – Austria — 17 K
Michael Tureniec – Sweden — 14 K
Mads Andersen – Denmark — 12 K
Jan-Olav Sjåvik – Norway — 12 K
Rob Hollink – Holland — 12 K
Gunnar Råbe – Sweden — 12 K
Frederik Hostrup – Denmark — 12 K
Dustin Mele – PokerStars Passport winner – United States — 12 K
Tomas Brolin – Sweden — 11 K
Johan Storåkers – Sweden — 10 K
Theo Jörgensen – Denmark — 9 K
Andy Black – Ireland — 9 K
Micke Norinder – Sweden — 8 K
Luca Pagano – Team PokerStars Pro – Italy — 7 K
Christian Grundtvig – Denmark — 7 K
Peter Hedlund – Sweden — 7 K
Anders Berg – Norway — 6 K
Tom McEvoy – Team PokerStars Pro — 6 K
Casper Hansen – Denmark — 6 K
Ramzi Jelassi – Sweden — 6 K
Sören Kongsgaard – Denmark — 3 K
Hans-Martin Nakkim – Norway — 3 K
William Thorson – Sweden — 2 K

That was then but a lot can happen in the space of a few hands. Team PokerStars Pro Tom McEvoy knows that only too well. With about 7k he found pocket queens and was all-in when he was called by A-T. Like Tony G and fellow Team PokerStars Katja Thater earlier on Tom was crushed by a wicked river – an ace, seeing him to the rail shortly before dressing for dinner.

To say William Thorsen’s exit was interesting would be missing the point – it could have won Understatement of the Year at the Scandinavian Poker Awards. It was one of those stories that take a while to tell – you want to get the mood right and throw in a couple of red herrings.

Five people limped to see the K-T-9 flop. The important bit to note was that the king and nine were spades. There was betting all over the place – a gun fight with bullets flying everywhere. The big blind bet, Thorsen called, the button made it 2,500, the small blind moved all-in, the big blind folded (perhaps he was the only one left alive to tell the tale) and Thorsen called the all-in. So did the button player who showed Q-J of spades.

The big blind showed K-T for two pairs, Thorsen pocket nines for a set. The turn changed all that and should have been called the flip. A ten of spades that made Thorsen a full house, the big blind a bigger full house and filled the straight flush for the button player. We don’t know his name just yet, but suspect he’s called Merlin.

Related Articles

Latest Articles

Study Poker with Pokerstars Learn, practice with the PokerStars app