Nick Petrangelo opened to 2,000 in middle position. In the small blind, Alexandros Kolonias called, as did Pierre Neuville in the big blind. On the flop, Petrangelo continued 2,000 and both blinds called again.
On the turn, Kolonias checked, Neuville checked, and Petrangelo bet 9,600. Kolonias elected to call another street, Neuville folded.
Both players quickly checked the on the river. Kolonias showed for just a pair of tens, Petrangelo tabled and won the hand.
Initially, the PokerStars European Poker Tour app mentioned a 60-minute dinner break after level 8. That would be a little bit too early though, so the dinner break will now be after the completion of level 12. The late registration remains open till 20 minutes before the start of Level 10, which should be around 5:53 pm local time.
The PokerNews MyStack App is available for players here at the PokerStars EPT Malta, allowing players to directly update their chip count on the PokerNews Live Reporting page for their friends and family to see.
You can download the app for iPhone or Android now to get started. Then, create a new PokerNews account or update your current one to start updating your status immediately. Your followers can see all the live action that you're involved in.
Right after busting the �25,750 High Roller, the likes of Ramin Hajiyev, Oleksii Khoroshenin and Ole Schemion jumped right into the Main instead of opting for a day off after some intense high roller action. If you scratched yourself on the head why so many familiar high roller names entered the Main Event yesterday, worry no more because you'll find the answer today.
Why that is? It's really simple: today's �10,300 Single-Day High Roller tournament.
By entering Day 1a, they are able to enter today's �10,200 Single Day High Roller without missing a day of the Main Event.
The Single-Day High Roller starts at 12:30 and players will start with 100,000 in chips. Levels will have a duration of 30 minutes throughout with the first level starting at 500/1,000 (100-ante).
Last year, Steve O'Dwyer won the event for a staggering �327,030 after beating a field of 134 entries (99 uniques and 35 reentries), his 11th biggest score to date. We don't expect a field as big as the one last year as the international tournament schedule is quite busy at the moment, but we still anticipate an exciting day of poker.
PokerNews will be on the floor for coverage all throughout, from the first flop around 12:30 (3 hours from now) till the last river well after midnight.