�50,000 No-Limit Hold'em
Day 1 Completed
�50,000 No-Limit Hold'em
Day 1 Completed
The 2022 PokerStars European Poker Tour presented by Monte-Carlo Casino?? continued with the �50,000 No-Limit Hold'em, and after a bit over twelve hours of play, Pascal Lefrancois emerged as the victor following a heads-up deal with Seth Davies at the Monte-Carlo Sporting complex on the French Riviera.
The event attracted 34 entrants to create a �1,649,340 prize pool, with the lion��s share going to Lefrancois who claimed the PokerStars Spadie along with a top prize of �505,774, while Davies took home �442,606 for his deep run.
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Pascal Lefrancois | Canada | �505,774* |
2 | Seth Davies | USA | �442,606* |
3 | Mike Watson | Canada | �247,400 |
4 | Yuri Dzivielevski | Brazil | �189,670 |
5 | Daniel Dvoress | Canada | �148,440 |
6 | Timothy Adams | Canada | �115,450 |
*denotes heads-up deal
Mikita Badziakouski, Mikalai Vaskaboinikau, and Laszlo Bujtas finished third, fourth, and fifth, respectively in the �100,000 Super High Roller earlier today before entering this tournament looking to make another run. However, it wasn��t to be as they would all fall short of the money.
Matthias Eibinger won this event at the previous EPT Monte Carlo way back in 2019 and was looking to defend his title. He made the final table of nine but couldn��t improve queen-ten against king-nine and hit the rail.
PokerStars Ambassador Sam Grafton made a deep run, but wasn��t able to get to the final six for the money. He got his stack of just under ten big blinds in with suited queen-jack but lost to ace-king for an eighth-place finish.
Badziakouski was the next to go out in seventh, bursting the money bubble. He lost nearly all of his chips with ace-ten against Davies�� king-queen, and lost his last chip on the next hand.
That elimination put the remaining six players in the money, and soon after, Lefrancois would make a nut flush that would propel him to the top of the leaderboard on his way to victory. Lefrancois continued to add to his stack in a hand where Timothy Adams ran ace-jack into ace-king, which eliminated Adams in sixth.
Daniel Dvoress, runner-up of the �25,000 Single-Day High Roller only a few days ago, was the next player to make his exit in fifth place. He got his chips in preflop against Davies and flopped two pair, but Davies made a flush on the turn and held to eliminate him.
Yuri Dzivielevski, winner of the �25,000 Single-Day High Roller, just missed out on another podium finish as he finished in fourth when he found himself in a similar situation to Adams by running his ace-jack into ace-king. This time Davies was on the winning side, and that put him close to Lefrancois at the top of the leaderboard.
Mike Watson had quickly earned a couple of ladders and was looking to spin up his stack, but soon, the rest of his chips went in on the river against Lefrancois. Lefrancois had a better kicker and sent Watson to the rail in third.
Immediately after Watson was eliminated, Lefrancois and Davies agreed to a deal to forego heads-up play. Lefrancois held over double the chips as Davies, and thus received the higher amount and the PokerStars Spadie which comes with the title.
Stay tuned as the PokerNews team brings you more coverage from the French Riviera, including the upcoming �25,000 High Roller and the ongoing EPT Monte Carlo �5,300 Main Event.
The two remaining players agreed to a deal before heads-up play began to end action for the night.
Seth Davies will receive �442,606 as he had 1,080,000 chips, while Pascal Lefrancois takes the trophy and �505,774 as he had 2,320,000 chips.
The two remaining players are agreeing to a deal for the remaining prize pool to end play for the night.
Pascal Lefrancois will receive the trophy and �505,774, while Seth Davies will receive �442,606.
Stay tuned for a recap of the day.
Mike Watson limped the small blind and Pascal Lefrancois checked his option.
Both players checked the flop to the turn. Watson check-called a bet of 75,000.
The completed the board, Watson checked, and Lefrancois put in enough chips to cover Watson's stack of approximately 270,000. Watson thought about it and ultimately called.
Watson showed , but Lefrancois tabled to take the pot with his superior kicker, eliminating Watson in third place for �247,400.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Pascal Lefrancois |
2,320,000
825,000
|
825,000 |
Seth Davies |
1,080,000
-365,000
|
-365,000 |
Mike Watson | Busted | |
|
Level: 20
Blinds: 20,000/40,000
Ante: 40,000
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Pascal Lefrancois |
1,495,000
-75,000
|
-75,000 |
Seth Davies |
1,445,000
-35,000
|
-35,000 |
Mike Watson |
460,000
110,000
|
110,000 |
|
The trio of remaining players are now on a 15-minute break.
Yuri Dzivielevski jammed for approximately 500,000 and Seth Davies called.
Yuri Dzivielevski:
Seth Davies:
Dzivielevski needed to improve upon his inferior kicker, but the flop left him drawing slim. Needing running cards to stay alive, the and completed the board and he made his exit in fourth place for �189,670.
"Good job, Seth," Mike Watson said, as he received two ladders in a short amount of time courtesy of Davies.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Pascal Lefrancois |
1,570,000
145,000
|
145,000 |
Seth Davies |
1,480,000
470,000
|
470,000 |
Mike Watson |
350,000
-25,000
|
-25,000 |
|
||
Yuri Dzivielevski | Busted |
Daniel Dvoress shoved on the button for 430,000 and Seth Davies called in the small blind.
Daniel Dvoress:
Seth Davies:
The flop hit both players as it gave Dvoress two pair but gave Davies a flush and straight draw. The turn completed the flush, and the river failed to improve Dvoress to a boat, eliminating him in fifth place for �148,440.
Player | Chips | Progress |
---|---|---|
Seth Davies |
1,010,000
285,000
|
285,000 |
Daniel Dvoress | Busted | |
|