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2023 PokerStars EPT Cyprus

$5,300 EPT Main Event
Day: 6
Event Info

2023 PokerStars EPT Cyprus

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
k8
Prize
$1,042,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$5,300
Prize Pool
$6,402,000
Entries
1,320
Level Info
Level
36
Blinds
250,000 / 500,000
Ante
500,000
Players Info - Day 6
Entries
7
Players Left
1

Bjorn Kozenkai Eliminated in 7th Place ($162,925)

Level 32 : Blinds 100,000/200,000, 200,000 ante
Bjorn Kozenkai
Bjorn Kozenkai

Bjorn Kozenkai jammed for 2,475,000 from the cutoff and was called by Jose Gonzalez Sanchez called from the big blind.

Bjorn Kozenkai: K?10?
Jose Gonzalez Sanchez: A?10?

Kozenkai was dominated, and it remained that way following the 9?7?2? flop. The J? turn gave him a straight draw but the 3? river confirmed Kozenkai as the first bust out of the day.

Bjorn Kozenkai
Bjorn Kozenkai
Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Jose Gonzalez Sanchez es
Jose Gonzalez Sanchez
7,200,000
2,500,000
2,500,000
Profile photo of Bjorn Kozenkai hu
Bjorn Kozenkai
Busted

Pots for Tasyurek and Kuznetsov

Level 32 : Blinds 100,000/200,000, 200,000 ante

Halil Tasyurek opened from the cutoff to 400,000 with 5?5? and folded out the remaining players.

Nikita Kuznetsov and Gilles Simon limped in from the blinds with A?2? and K?7? respectively. The 9?6?5? flop checked through to the Q? turn. Both players checked again and did the same on the 9? river. Action checked through to showdown, and Kuznetsov's ace-high took in the pot.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Halil Tasyurek tr
Halil Tasyurek
8,330,000
505,000
505,000
Profile photo of Gilles Simon nl
Gilles Simon
7,680,000
-395,000
-395,000
Day 5 Chip Leader
EPT Main Event Champion
EPT 1X Winner
Profile photo of Nikita Kuznetsov ru
Nikita Kuznetsov
7,480,000
5,000
5,000

Level: 32

Blinds: 100,000/200,000

Ante: 200,000

Simon, Tasyurek Lead Into Final Day Of EPT Cyprus Main Event

Halil Tasyurek
Halil Tasyurek

The final day of the PokerStars European Poker Tour Cyprus $5,300 Main Event is upon as the seven remaining players return at 12:30 p.m. local time to battle for the $1,042,000 top prize.

Leading the seven hopefuls is Gilles Simon, a 24-year-old former streamer who has already locked up his biggest career cash. The same is true for Yannick Schumacher and Bjorn Kozenkai.

Jose Gonzalez Sanchez, who received a lease on life last night when he doubled with ace-jack to crack the queens of Halil Tasyurek, needs to finish fourth or better to best his victory in the 2022 Eureka High Roller in Prague for €343,750.

Tasyurek, a Turkish native who started playing poker in 2010, has also locked up his biggest score in what he calls a "dream spot" at the "best EPT I have ever attended."

Nikita Kuznetsov, meanwhile, will need to finish third or better to best his $445,892 score from 2021, while Italy's Andrea Dato will need to finish second or better to beat out his $481,299 score from a fourth-place finish in the 2014 EPT Barcelona Main Event.

EPT Cyprus Main Event Final Table Seat Draw

TableSeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
11Halil TasyurekTurkey7,825,00039
12Yannick SchumacherAustria6,050,00030
13Bjorn KozenkaiHungary2,575,00013
14Nikita KuznetsovRussia7,475,00037
15Gilles SimonNetherlands8,075,00040
16Jose Gonzalez SanchezSpain4,700,00024
17Andrea DatoItaly2,875,00014

Final Table Payouts

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1  $1,042,000
2  $652,200
3  $465,425
4  $358,075
5  $275,425
6  $211,850
7  $162,925
8Victor YugayUzbekistan$125,350
9Priit ParmastoEstonia$96,425

Day 6 should be shorter than Day 5, which extended past 12 hours of play as the field shrunk from 16 to seven. A lengthy seven-handed battle as the night wound down means that players will return to shallower stacks on the final day.

Action will pick back up Level 32. The blinds will be 100,000/200,000/200,000. Levels will continue to last 90 minutes in duration with 20-minute breaks at the end of each level.

PokerNews will be live reporting on a 30-minute delay as to avoid any spoilers with the PokerStars stream.

Stay tuned as the PokerNews live reporting team is on-site here at Merit Royal Diamond Hotel and Spa and will continue to provide updates as the first-ever EPT Cyprus Main Event closes out.

Tags: Andrea DatoBjorn KozenkaiGilles SimonHalil TasyurekJose GonzalezJose Gonzalez SanchezNikita KuznetsovPriit ParmastoVictor YugayYannick Schumacher

Seat 1: Halil Tasyurek, 42, Turkey - 7,825,000

Halil Tasyurek
Halil Tasyurek

Every night for the past 13 years, Halil Tasyurek has dreamed of something like this - an opportunity to play on one of poker's biggest stages for staggering sums.

It's fitting that opportunity has come at a PokerStars event because that's where the 42-year-old from Ankara, Turkey, first started playing back in 2010. Turkish laws, unfortunately, now prohibit him from the virtual felt, but he enjoys live poker just as
much and is a regular here in Cyprus. "You can count me as a local," he says. "But this is not a biased comment. In my opinion, this is by far the best EPT I have ever attended. The tournaments, the food, everything is great."

For years, Tasyurek only played poker for fun while working in finance. Over time it led him to play semi-professionally, and two years ago, he left work entirely to pursue poker full-time. He's been travelling the poker circuit ever since, including visits to the EPT in Prague and Barcelona and a stint at the World Series of Poker (WSOP) in Las Vegas.

So far, the biggest score of his poker career happened in Cyprus, a fifth-place finish in a Merit Poker Main Event. But he's never had an opportunity quite like this one. "I am in the dream spot," he says.

Seat 2: Yannick Schumacher, 26, Germany - 6,050,000

Yannick Schumacher
Yannick Schumacher

Yannick Schumacher discovered poker when he was a student in Sheffield, in the United Kingdom, in 2017. Then, he used the long layoff due to the COVID-19 pandemic to improve his skills further, gradually moving up the online stakes. By November 2021, he was ready to explore the tables of Las Vegas and picked up a few small scores during his first World Series.

Before this trip to Cyprus, Schumacher had only modest results in Europe, but he has truly come out of the shadows with this Main Event performance. Despite being a short stack for a long time on Day 5, he took the lead during seven-handed play and consolidated the position with some tricky big-stack play, including a huge bluff with 3?2? on an all-club board. Only a cooler against Tasyurek pegged him back again later on.

Schumacher has already secured his biggest live score, comfortably surpassing the $70,700 he earned for finishing 53rd at the PokerStars Players Championship (PSPC) in the Bahamas in January. In common with many German poker pros, Schumacher now lives in Vienna, Austria, only leaving his computer to attend some poker live events occasionally.

Seat 3: Bjorn Kozenkai, 25, Hungary - 2,575,000

Bjorn Kozenkai
Bjorn Kozenkai

Formerly a football referee, Bjorn Kozenkai picked up poker in high school and played for fun. When he was 18, he started playing for real money. Now, the 25-year-old from Budapest is a coach and shareholder at BitB, one of the most renowned poker stables. Kozenkai used to compete in multi-table tournaments until two years ago when he felt he needed a change. He opted for Spin & Gos, but now he's ready to dive deep into the tournament fields again.

With just less than $70,000 in cashes, Kozenkai's live resume may seem modest. But he claimed he's only fired about 70 or 80 entries to live events so far, with an impressive one-in-four ratio for cashing. Here at EPT Cyprus, he's guaranteed his first six-figure prize.

Kozenkai says he is enjoying live poker. "These trips feel more like a recreation or holiday,” he says. “I'm a professional player, so it's, of course, serious, but it doesn't feel like work.”

And when he can, he combines work with a hobby - Kozenkai likes fishing not only at poker tables but also in lakes, rivers, and seas. "I caught a swordfish in Mexico for SCOOP," he says.

Seat 4: Nikita Kuznetsov, 28, Russia – 7,475,000

Nikita Kuznetsov
Nikita Kuznetsov

The 28-year-old professional player Nikita Kuznetsov is known as “Ebaaa11” on PokerStars – and it’s under that screen name that he has won two SCOOP and two WCOOP titles, in addition to landing a seven-figure score in another online
tournament.

Kuznetsov started playing when he was 18 and gradually improved to become one of the best tournament players from Russia. "I play only MTTs, no cash games," Kuznetsov said.

He has amassed more than $1.4 million in cashes in the live arena and is now at his second EPT Main Event final table. He made the final eight in Sochi in October 2020 but bowed out in seventh place. He's already topped that result here in Cyprus.

Kuznetsov claims he doesn't have any hobbies; it's all about poker for him. "No poker, no life," he says.

His next focus will be on the Winter Series, which he says he will probably play from Bosnia & Herzegovina.