UNIBET OPEN NEWS

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UNIBET OPEN ONLINE 2 – THIS SUNDAY!

11:13, May 13th, 2011

After the successful premier, the second Unibet Open Online is scheduled for 15th of May 2011 at 19.00CET

Just like our Unibet Open live events you can qualify for “Unibet Open Online 2” through our daily satellites from as little at as €2.00+0.20 or buy in directly for €300+€20.

There will be €25,000 guaranteed, 20 min blinds, 1 hour late registration. and points awarded for the yearly Unibet Open Leaderboard!
Click here for the satellite structure.

Where to find the satellite tournaments:

Log into the Unibet Poker software, click on “Tournaments” then “Unibet Open” or “All”.
You’ll now see the tournaments in the lobby.

The same satellite structure will apply for both Unibet Open Live and Unibet Open Online events.

To qualify for a Unibet Open Online event you need to play in one of the following:

  • Mon-Wed 22:00 CET: €55+5 daily UOO Final Satellite (use UO ticket or cash to buy-in)
  • Thu-Sun 22:00 CET: €100+10 UOO Final Satellite (use UO ticket or cash to buy-in)

See you at the tables!

Terms and Conditions:
• Each player may only win one seat to any Unibet Open ONLINE event
• All satellite qualifiers will receive a tournament specific ticket feeding directly to the next Unibet Open Online event.
• Tickets to the event are not transferable and may not be exchanged for cash.
• Tickets won to a specific event may not be exchanged for a package/seat to a future Unibet Open event.
• If you win a ticket and you’re unable to play the event, your prize will be forfeited
• €25,000 guaranteed prize pool.
• The top 10 finishing positions of the Unibet Open Online will be awarded leaderboard points towards the yearly Unibet Open Leaderboard. Check the Unibet Open website for further details: http://www.unibetopen.com/leaderboard/.
• Unibet reserves the right to change these conditions at any time.

ROGER ERSBERG WINS FIRST UNIBET OPEN ONLINE!

15:31, April 4th, 2011

Big congratulations to Roger Ersberg from Sweden who won the first Unibet Open online tournament!

Unibet Open Online 1 attracted 109 players and collected a total prize pool of €32700.

The top ten players were rewarded not only with a cash prize but also with points towards the 2011 Unibet Open Leaderboard.

TOP TEN of UNIBET OPEN ONLINE 1

POSITION FIRSTNAME LASTNAME COUNTRY Leaderboard POINTS Prize/cash
1 Roger Ersberg SE 40 9810.00
2 Alex Rousso UK 30 6540.00
3 Henrik Hecklen DK 25 4087.50
4 Tim Verbon NL 20 3106.50
5 Fredrik Linde SE 15 2616.00
6 Sjaak Verbon NL 12 2125.50
7 Daniel van Kalkeren NL 10 1635.00
8 Laurens De Smet BE 8 1308.00
9 Marcel Buissink NL 6 981.00
10 Jonas Jonaitis LT 5 490.50
32700.00

The Unibet Open season 2011 includes four live events (Malta, Barcelona, Dublin, Riga) and six online tournaments.

Unibet Open Online tournaments each have a guaranteed prize pool of €25 000 and are scheduled to take place between the live events.

The tournament is set up with a buy-in of €300 + €20, deep stack structure, 20 minutes blind periods and 1 hour late registration. – This is a great chance to earn lots of points for the yearly Unibet Open leaderboard.

When the season concludes after the last event of the year, in Riga, the top 10 players with the most points will get their share of the 5% Unibet Open Live events prize pool (estimated at over €100 000).

Next Unibet Open ONLINE – 15th May.

For more information, please visit: Unibet Open Online

UNIBET OPEN ONLINE – EVENT 1: SATELLITES ARE LIVE!

13:40, March 27th, 2011


First Unibet Open ONLINE is scheduled for 3rd April 2011!

Our brand new Unibet Open Online tournaments each have a guaranteed prize pool of €25,000! Every Unibet Open Online will take place between one of our four live events and have a buy in of €300+€20; this deep stack tournament will have 20 min blinds and one hour late registration. This is your chance to earn even more points for the yearly Unibet Open Leaderboard with an estimated €100,000+ prize pool!

Secure your seat now, by playing the satellites!

Click here for the satellite structure:

www.unibetopen.com/events/online-events11

Where to find the satellite tournaments:

Log into the Unibet Poker software, click on “Tournaments” then “Unibet Open” or “All”.
You’ll now see the tournaments in the lobby.

The same satellite structure will apply for both Unibet Open Live and Unibet Open Online events.

To qualify for a Unibet Open Online event you need to play in one of the following:

  • Mon-Wed 22:00 CET: €55+5 daily UOO Final Satellite (use UO ticket or cash to buy-in)
  • Thu-Sun 22:00 CET: €100+10 UOO Final Satellite (use UO ticket or cash to buy-in)

See you at the tables!

Terms and Conditions:
• Each player may only win one seat to any Unibet Open Online event
• All satellite qualifiers will receive a tournament-specific ticket feeding directly to the next Unibet Open Online event.
• Tickets to the event are not transferable and may not be exchanged for cash.
• Tickets won to a specific event may not be exchanged for a package/seat to a future Unibet Open event.
• If you win a ticket and you’re unable to play the event, your prize will be forfeited
• €25,000 guaranteed prize pool.
• The top 10 finishing positions of the Unibet Open Online will be awarded leaderboard points towards the yearly Unibet Open Leaderboard. Check the Unibet Open website for further details: http://www.unibetopen.com/leaderboard/.
• Unibet reserves the right to change these conditions at any time.

MATEUSZ MOOLHUIZEN WINS UNIBET OPEN MALTA 2011

12:47, March 14th, 2011

UOMalta-untitled-DSC_1561.jpg

The beautiful island of Malta was the scene for the very first Unibet Open of 2011, a brand new and unique location for the first of four stops on this year’s Unibet Open tour. Later in the year, we’ll be enjoying June in Barcelona, a marvellous late summer trip to Dublin and finally finishing off with a snowy Christmas in Latvia’s party capital Riga.

In Malta however, the event was all about the “D’s” – as in the Danish and the Dutch, who were far and away the most well represented nations coming into the two starting days. Players such as Unibet Open London winner Paul Valkenburg and bracelet winners Rob Hollink and Jesper Hougaard helped make up the field of 293 players spread over the two starting days.

Casualties came quickly during the first start day, some like Lithuanian Unibet Ambassador Andrius Tapinas who was knocked out when his pair of queens were cracked by Mattias Tikerpe’s jacks all-in preflop, got unlucky. Others like Hougaard, simply got to the river with good hands only to find they had been beaten, the Dane having flopped two pair against bottom pair only for the latter to backdoor into a flush.

The always watchable Micke Norinder amassed quite a healthy stack but had to really fight back hard when he lost a huge pot blind on blind to Thijs Wessels. The flop was with both players happy to get their entire stacks in, Norinder with while Wessels flipped for a pair and a flush draw. The put the Dutchman ahead of the Swede and the river changed nothing for a 64,000 chip pot which was huge at the time.

Famous faces were also around on Day 1b as EPT Monte Carlo champion Pieter de Korver put in an appearance that was brutally cut short when he ran kings into aces. Unibet’s Player of the Year for 2010, Simeon Naydenov, had a great start with set over set and was the early chip leader after just a couple of levels. However, it wasn’t to be for the Bulgarian and he lost a flip late in the day when he called off his stack with against Jorn Larsen’s . Lithuanian Matas Dilpsas finished the day with the overall chip lead, sitting on 155,900 just ahead of Adria Maria Balaguer of Spain who had 135,000.

Exactly 200 players had been eliminated after the start days leaving us with 93 returning to Day 2, of whom only 29 would actually get paid. Unibet Open Prague 2010 winner Henri Ojala was one of the first to be eliminated. He 4-bet shoved Q-T right into Johannes Jansen’s Aces and never even got a sniff of help from the board. As we reached the money the tournament got incredible tight and we had one of the longest bubbles in Unibet Open history.

In a spectacular turnaround, it was Michael Lundsgaard who was the bubble, having previously been one of the chip leaders. Having bluffed off much of his stack, he pushed with K-7 only to be called by Balaguer’s A-K meaning he was to be the last player to leave with nothing. The remaing stacks quickly fell into a push-bot routine as our remaining field was whittled down very quickly to the following final table:

1. Adria Maria Balaguer 933,000
2. Tobias Peters 631,000
3. Sampo Ryynanen 560,000
4. Mikkel Christensen 528,000
5. Rodolfo Gaddo 496,000
6. Mateusz Moolhuizen 440,000
7. Matas Dilpsas 386,000
8. Rene Freymann 309,000
9. Brian Linnet 148,000

Unibet Open London finalist Rene Freymann was the first to fall when his Big Slick ran into Mateusz Moolhuizen’s pocket Aces; Brian Linnet soon followed running a short-stacked K-2 into Rodolfo Gaddo’s Jacks. Soon after, Samp Rynanen took out former chip leader Dilpsas in a coinflip and we were down to six players in very quick time.

Balaguer (who lost a big flip to Rynanen) went out next before the relatively quiet Mikkel Christensen pushed blind on blind with into Moolhuizen’s Queens. Italian poker media and all-around nice chap Rodolfo Gaddo finished in 4th place leaving us with two Dutchmen and the lone Finn.

It was all going Moolhuizen’s way at this point – he was picking up the big hands and crucially get action – when Rynanen set him all in after a button raise. Moolhuizen snap-called with pocket Aces once more and Rynanen’s pocket Threes failed to spike an extra crab. Crippled, Rynanen made a final stand with Threes once more but this time Moolhuizen had A-Q and hit a lady on the flop to ensure an all-Dutch heads-up meeting against Tobias Peters.

Moolhuizen started with a big chip lead, but Peters fought hard taking over the chip lead when Moolhuizen made a big bluff with just a gutshot on the turn. Just as we were settling in for the long run, two big hands occurred in quick succession. First Moolhuizen doubled up with A-K against K-T to regain the chip lead from his compatriot, then in a 3-bet pot and with the board reading all the money went in. Peters turned over but Moolhuizen was holding , needing just to avoid a six to win it all. The turn changed nothing and the river improved the chip leader to two pair on the river to secure the title!

Moolhuizen won €117,000 for his efforts while Peters couldn’t feel too bad about taken home €76,000 for his second place finish. The Dutch continue to dominate the Unibet Open – can they make it three in a row in Barcelona? You’ll have to tune in to find out!

1st       €117,000 Mateusz Moolhuizen
2nd      €76,000   Tobias Peters
3rd       €49,000   Sampo Rynanen
4th       €32,000   Rodolfo Gaddo
5th       €23,500   Mikkel Christensen
6th       €19,500   Adria Maria Balaguer
7th       €15,500   Matas Dilpsas
8th       €11,500   Brian Linnet
9th       €8,000 Rene Freymann
10th     €6,200 Jiri Ruprecht
11th     €5,300 Michiel Brummelhuis
12th     €4,300 Aleksej Zobov
13th     €4,300 Marina Adriaans
14th     €3,100 Lieuwe Zevenhuisen
15th     €3,100 Niels Vesterlund
16th     €3,100 Sebastian Haack
17th     €3,100 Thijsr Wessels
18th     €3,100 Teemu Vihla
19th     €3,100 Tim Verbon
20th     €3,100 Laurens De Smet
21st     €3,100 Thomas Svengard
22nd    €3,100 Koen Schiepers
23rd     €2,525 Soren Blanner
24th     €2,500 Ilkka Heikkila
25th     €2,500 Mikael Norinder
26th     €2,500 Johan Karlsson
27th     €2,500 Michal Ligocke
28th     €2,500 Gisle Olsen
29th     €2,500 Daniel Petersen

THIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCE TO QUALIFY FOR UNIBET OPEN MALTA!!!!

14:48, February 18th, 2011

_MAT1249.jpgSatellites finish soon!

Secure your seat now and join us at this most luxurious destination; where you can enjoy good quality poker and have lots of fun!

Last Sunday Final: 27th February 2011
Last Tuesday Final: 1st March 2011

In the latest issue of Inside Poker Business, the magazine has ranked the Unibet Open poker tour as the third best tour in the world, only just behind the two longest established tours – the EPT and the WPT – and ahead of the popular Asian Poker Tour and new NAPT.

The article in general looks at the growth of numerous poker tours, advocating the Unibet Open as a prime example of how a well-run tour can set itself on the map in an area that is becoming an increasingly crowded market. The magazine commented on the growth of the Unibet Open prize pools, from the $176,000 in Warsaw way back in 2007 to the latest event in London last year with its £409,500 ($659,265) which represents almost a four-fold increase.

Ewa Kwiatkowska, Head of Events at Unibet commented, “We have strived over the last three years to create an exceptional tournament, where there is a strong spirit and we consistently try to deliver an unforgettable experience to everyone who comes to a Unibet Open event. Our goal has always been to provide players with a tournament of the highest standards and to create a memorable and enjoyable experience. We try, at every event, to give each player not just a ‘poker tournament’ but an overall unforgettable ‘poker experience’. We are so happy to have created a fantastic sense of family occasion at every event and a real community amongst our players.”

With four brand new locations this year, the Unibet Open is showing no signs of slowing down into 2011. Remember, we also have six online events throughout the year as well, each €300+€20 with a €25,000 guaranteed prize pool!

Our first event starts in Malta on the 10th March. Hopefully we’ll see you there!

See the Interview here!

VALK OF FAME: PAUL VALKENBURG WINS UNIBET OPEN LONDON

22:10, December 7th, 2010

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Paul Valkenburg from the Netherlands has won Unibet Open London, hoisting the trophy after three hard-fought days of poker at London’s Grosvenor Victoria Casino.  He won £109,550, in the process dashing the high Bulgarian hopes resting on Simeon Naydenov (winner of the year’s Unibet Open Points Leaderboard), Yordan Mitrentsov and Dimitar Danchev, who all made the final table alongside him.

Wintry weather in the UK made several airports and train stations inaccessible at the start of the weekend, but that didn’t stop 103 players taking their seats on Day 1A in the well-insulated poker room in London’s Victoria Casino.  Among them were previous Unibet Open champion Dan Murariu, and UK stars such as JP Kelly, Nik Persaud and Toby Lewis.  Notable early clashes occurred between two of the most aggressive Polish players Pawel Chmiel and Maciej Rogacki who had the (mis)fortune to be sat one seat apart on the same table.  Fireworks were inevitable, and neither ended up making Day Two.  Nor did Murariu, despite a heroic comeback from 500 chips; he was eliminated by Iaran Lightbourne, one of the players in contention for the lead on the first day.

_MAT6673.jpgRunnar Lindepuu ended up at the top of the Day 1A survivors’ list (32 in all went through) and all first flight players now had a day off in London, plus the Unibet Open players’ party to look forward to.  A full weekend of side events was also on the cards, including the Maria Poker Ladies’ Event, won by Sarah Berry.  In fact the 24 hour card room at the Vic started out busy and only got busier, with cash games and supporters getting louder as the days wore on.

The tournament arena was nearly twice as full for the second flight, with 170 entrants sitting down to their 15,000 chip starting stacks.  One of the toughest fields seen at a Unibet Open Main Event, those trying to build an early stack had to navigate tables dotted with pros: James Akenhead, Neil Channing, Mats Rahmn, Praz Bansi, Andrius Tapinas and Jeff Duvall amongst them.  Day 1B was characterised by the aggression of players like Kenneth Dversnes and on the other side of the room Quoc Nguyen and Sean van Sluijs, who between them hoovered up most of the chips on the table they shared.  It was Jose Vicente Besalduch Traigueros, however, who finished with the biggest stack overall: 132,000, a good 30,000 more than Lindepuu.

The field of 81 had to be whittled to 31 before anyone would receive any return on their tournament investment, with the first payout of £2,865 being the first rung on the cash ladder which would end a day later with the awarding of six figures, sterling.  Yordan Mitrentsov, along with players like Atanas Georgiev, Sandip Pindoria and Dimitar Danchev, did not come back for the second day just to sneak into the money.  All four of these players built serious stacks as the blinds rose and the field thinned, and on the bubble although Pantelis Pavlis held a big lead, they were bunched right behind him and any of them were in with a shot at a very deep run.

The final table was set in just eight levels on Day Two, after a money bubble that could have been missed _MAT6881.jpgwith a blink.  It rarely happens that two players are eliminated on different tables at the same time on the bubble, but Atanas Georgiev and Mark O’Connor managed it here in London.  They left empty-handed, leaving the last few tables to play down with remarkable speed to just one.  Among those who’d coasted through their start days but just fell short of the final were Christopher Ulsrud (15th for £4,095), Ramey Shaio, Richard Stubbs and Sandip Pindoria (pictured), while Nicolas Irving finished 10th, winning £5,735 after running his A-Q into Simeon Naydenov’s A-K.

One player now had the cushion of a sizeable chip lead – double his nearest rival’s stack and over a million total: Naydenov.  The aggressive Bulgarian has already cashed four times this year on the Unibet Open tour, his best finish so far being 4th place in Varna for €47,280.  To top that, he was going to need to finish in the top three, and that he did.

At the start, the final table looked like this:

Seat 1: Rene Freymann (Germany) – 169,000
Seat 2: Kirit Patel (United Kingdom) – 311,000
Seat 3: Dimitar Danchev (Bulgaria) – 368,000
Seat 4: Johnny Hansen (Denmark) – 389,000
Seat 5: Pantelis Pavlis (Greece)  - 433,000
Seat 6: Yordan Mitrenzov (Bulgaria) – 390,000
Seat 7: Simeon Naydenov (Bulgaria) – 1,061,000
Seat 8: Jose Vincente Besalduch Traigueros (Spain) – 506,000
Seat 9: Paul Valkenburg (Holland) – 479,000

To win any tournament, once cards are on their backs everyone needs a little bit of luck.  The best player in the world can be outdrawn, or can win in eye-wateringly lucky fashion.  Simeon Naydenov certainly had his share of early good fortune, playing a game of chicken with Jose Vicente on a 7h-9d-5h flop, making the last high-pressure move all in with 6d-3d, instantly called by the Spanish player with his A-A.  He spiked the straight, however, and went on to break the two million chip barrier before anyone else even hit his start-of-day total.

Dimitar Danchev, on the other hand, stands out as a player whose 8th place represented a combination of bad luck and bad timing, with the blame for the loss of his reasonable stack falling less on his shoulders than the deck.  He doubled Freymann and then Patel (with As-Qc vs. 8-5 on a Q-8-5 all-spade flop) leaving him grinding a short stack.  This went in preflop vs. Simeon Naydenov, both players showing A-K.  However the slight difference in their hands (the suited vs. offsuit factor) made all the difference in the world in the end. Naydenov made a flush on the turn and sent his fellow Bulgarian to the rail.

When the blinds hit 10k/20k, most of the remaining players felt the pinch.  All-in followed all-in, but every time the shorter stack’s hand either held or hit, meaning that seven players nearly made the dinner break.  Pantelis Pavlis, however, busted out in 7th when his A-2 was picked off by Simeon Naydenov’s board-hitting K-Q.  He took £13,515 for his performance here in London.

After the dinner break, the spotlight turned on Kirit Patel, as he took down pot after pot, only heading in the wrong direction briefly when doubling up Yordan Mitrentzov.  He busted Rene Freymann in 6th, and edged into second place, although he was not to keep hold of it for long.  Paul Valkenburg eliminated Johnny Hansen in 5th racing pocket eights against A-T, and started to get more involved.  A key hand for him had been a call for his tournament life with K-T when Naydenov set him in from the small blind; it turned out he was dominating the aggressive Bulgarian and that double through sent him on his way to eventual victory.

_MAT7677.jpgMitrentzov had more lives than a cat in this tournament, doubling up four-handed through Kirit Patel to drop the local player near the felt where he soon ran out of chips entirely.  His 4th place finish for £28,665 was an impressive one considering he had made it through more than one tight spot with a short stack.

Three-handed it was popular Paul Valkenburg earning applause from the rail as he took down several pots, including a critical double up which effectively ended Simeon Naydenov’s trophy hunt.  He went all-in preflop (a five-bet) and Naydenov found his A-Q did not stay ahead of Valkenburg’s K-J for long.  Down to the felt, he was out in 3rd for £48,115 soon thereafter, leaving Mitrentzov and Valkenburg heads up.

The Dutchman held a three to one chip lead at this point, and soon held the lot, when a cool A-K vs. A-J set up got their stacks in preflop.  A Jack on the flop sent the crowd crazy, but the King on the river increased the volume as this pair won the pot and the tournament for Paul Valkenburg.  The trophy, the £109,550 first prize and the delight of his friends are his rewards; congratulations to him and everyone who has made the Unibet Open poker tour 2010 such a success.

Final results:

1st: £109,550 – Paul Valkenburg
2nd: £72,685 – Yordan Mitrentzov
3rd: £48,115 – Simeon Naydenov
4th: £28,665 – Kirit Patel
5th: £21,705 – Johnny Hansen
6th: £17,610 – Rene Freymann
7th: £13,515 – Pantelis Pavlis
8th: £10,240 – Dimitar Danchev
9th: £7,780 – Jose Traigueros

BAD BEAT PACKAGE DURING UNIBET OPEN LONDON

15:49, November 22nd, 2010

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If you are unlucky enough to get a bad beat in the Main Event of Unibet Open London with “four of a kind deuces” or greater, and you are the first person to report it to the Tournament Director — a full package for any Unibet Open of your choice in the 2011 season worth €2500 is YOURS! **

**Please note, the package is only for the first person to report their Bad Beat to the Tournament Director, all normal Unibet and Unibet Open terms and conditions apply.

UNIBET OPEN MALTA 2011!

13:49, November 22nd, 2010

Satellites have just started – secure your seat now, by playing the satellites now!
Packages won through satellites are worth €2,500 and include:
• Accommodation for 4 nights
• Buy in to the event – €1500 + €150
• Spending money towards travel expenses (€300)
• Breakfast and dinner daily during the tournament

Qualify now!

_MAT5320.jpgUnibet Open in Valencia seemed to turn back the calendar to late summer, as the by turns balmy and stormy coastal city hosted one of the most hard-fought events of the year. The increase in starting stacks from 10k to 15k meant that the extra play on the two Day Ones pushed the felt-time to eleven hour-long levels, and gave the competitors the room to manoeuvre they’d been asking for. With the pressure off the stacks, tables stayed in roughly the same formation for most of the day, allowing players to get the feel for each other and really turn up the pressure pre and post-flop. The structure, €1,500 buy-in and of course excellent location drew a host of pros, eager qualifiers and the usual peppering of Unibet Open ambassadors. Players like Pieter de Korver, Jan Sjavik, Claus Nielsen, Joachim Buch and Maria Maceiras, who’ve been known to descend on the Unibet Open and take it more or less by storm, didn’t fare so well this time round – and it was a new selection of players who made it all the way to the final table on Day Three.

Both starting days ended with leaders head and shoulders above the pack, with the first day bringing Lassi Peltola and Joris Springael in as top finishers, but it was Day 1B which saw the much quicker growth of monster stacks, including those of Samlane Phomveha, Rudy Blondeau and Alberto Padilla, led with a margin of 30k by Atanas Gueorguiev with 200k. Gueorguiev had previously won the €500 side event at Unibet Open Prague, but was angling for a final in the Main Event. He got his wish eventually, but there were 94 other players who made the second day to get through first. While the start had been slow and measured, Saturday’s play which included the money bubble at 45 was frenzied – perhaps because they all knew that if their bid for tournament glory didn’t work out there was one of Unibet’s legendary parties to attend that evening. Tim van de Riet (along with what seemed like half a room full of players from the Netherlands) sailed through the second day along with Thomas Thang.

The unlucky bubble was Daniel Filipovic who ran top pair of Queens into Day 1A’s big stack Juuso Aaltonen’s Aces. Aaltonen, a volatile Finn who’d busted one of the first players to leave back over 14 hours of play previously, looked for a long while like he’d be a deep-run contender, but didn’t make a final table appearance this time. Finishing in the money, but outside that special Day Three tenth spot were also Simeon Naydenov, Sander Braaksma, Nino Ryschawy, Kenny Nielsen and Koen de Visscher, with 11th place going to one of just a small handful of British players, Charlie Combes.

When the final table reconvened on Sunday, there were some early casualties as the blinds were on the increase – plus the short stacks were picking up some big hands. They did no good, however: Andre Joranger’s Jacks failed to hold against Jose Ramon Diez’ pocket Fours and he was the first one out, despite a fingernails-on-cliff-edge stack for Jose Luis Melia. He survived a couple of all-in confrontations but with just a couple of big blinds was picked off by Andreas Hofmann who found pocket Kings at the right moment to send him out in ninth.

It was around now that Andrei Grigoras started to appear in almost every pot – and on the right end of them too. A double through from Gueorguiev started a meteoric chip rise which included busting Tim van de Riet in 8th place with Tens against the Dutchman’s KQ suited (the suckout-re-suckout board causing him some degree of aggravation as the river finally ended the race in favour of Grigoras). Michael Schuerpf was more sanguine about his elimination in 7th, facing the wall as his pocket Sixes unsuccessfully took on Gueorguiev’s AT off.

However bad they felt, probably the harshest beat seen on the final table was that endured by Frenchman Yoni Houri, who found Aces at the same time as Grigori picked a bad spot to put pressure on the shorter stack. Grigori’s KQ suited looked in dire shape, but somehow managed to hit a straight by the river and the shell-shocked Houri (who’d built a stack well during a strong Day Two performance) headed out. Grigori didn’t win ‘em all, however, doubling up Andreas Hofmann’s Kings and propelling him into a position which would eventually end as runner up, while he himself finished in fifth place.

Right from the start it was Gueorguiev with the commanding stack and aggressive table presence who was widely picked _MAT5136.jpgfor the likely winner. But never in the bottom end of the rankings, Thomas Thang played a measured, confident game, and when he finally overtook Gueorguiev by busting Grigori, his chip lead was instantly cemented as a well-timed AK found the Bulgarian with a weaker Ace and a willingness to get it in preflop. This enormous pot propelled Thang to such a dominant chip position that the tournament was over within one level. Diez and Hoffman gamely gave it their all to double or bust, the latter eventually busting the former (effectively – he was down to less than a big blind after this) with a pair of Eights vs. A4.

By virtue of taking most of local hero Diez’s stack, Hofmann had closed the gap significantly on Thang, although the meaty blinds meant the pair were destined to collide head on as soon as they were both dealt good hands. It took only a few hands before they went to war, Thang’s pocket eights holding sway against the German’s AT offsuit and in the blink of an eye, we had our champion!

After four hard-fought days of poker, Danish Poker Federation President Thomas Thang was crowned the Unibet Valencia Open to a healthy cheering contingent of Danish supporters. He lifted his cheque for €138,080 and the Unibet Open trophy as the press crowded round him; it’s still a relatively early night in a city which stays up and parties late.
The next Unibet Open event will run in London from the 4th-7th December. Hope to see you there!

Final Table Results

1 €138,080 – Thomas Thang (Denmark)
2 €89,350 – Andreas Hofmann (Germany)
3 €59,560 – Jose Diez (Spain)
4 €43,320 – Atanas Gueorguiev (Bulgaria)
5 €33,840 – Andrei Grigoras (Romania)
6 €23,010 – Yoni Houri (France)
7 €17,060 – Michael Schuerpf (Switzerland)
8 €12,180 – Tim Van De Riet (The Netherlands)
9 €9,750 – Jose Luis Melia (Spain)
10 €7,310 – Andre Joranger (Norway)

UNIBET OPEN VENICE CANCELLED; LONDON ANNOUNCED

17:58, October 1st, 2010

IMG_2580.JPG• Venice is cancelled, London is the new destination for the last event of 2010
• Date has been changed: now 4th- 7th December (Saturday – Tuesday)
• Casino address: Grosvenor Victoria Casino
• Package value: €3200
• Buy-in : £1500 +150

Unfortunately Venice will be missing out on hosting the final leg of the Unibet Open tour this winter, but the ever-popular Vic will now take a turn to welcome qualifiers, pros and the best of British players to the last Main Event of 2010. Near the bustling center of the city, the casino is conveniently located right by several tube lines allowing easy access to one of the biggest and most exciting cities in the world for players to explore on their days off. Not that the last stop will be short on poker action, with a 24-hour card room spreading cash games round the clock and the usual hotly-contested side events planned for all four days.

266 players fought for the Unibet Open title the last time an event was staged here, in 2009, with Thanh Doan taking down the title and the £187,000 first prize. This year, with the continual growth of the tour and the introduction of higher starting stacks, expect a higher turnout and more of the fierce competition Unibet Open has become known for creating. To get a feel for the venue and the event as it was staged last year, check out the 2009 videos here.

Qualification is already underway online at www.unibet.com/poker; end the year in style with a trip to London and a shot at a Unibet Open title.

50% EXTRA CHIPS AT UNIBET OPEN VALENCIA!

00:58, September 10th, 2010

IMG_8935.JPGThe Autumnal leg of Unibet Open heads to another new venue for 2010 – Valencia – in the heart of the Spanish Mediterranean coastline, guaranteeing a return to the sun for the hundreds of players ready to take part in another superbly structured €1,500 No Limit Hold’em tournament. Playing host to the event will be the CIRSA Casino in the heart of the city, and those lucky enough to have won a package online at www.unibet.com/poker will find themselves in the superb four-star Hotel Sercotel Sorolla Palace, where they can relax by the pool when not competing in the Main Event or taking part in one of four side events (including a €500 Omaha tournament on Friday 8th October, and a Maria Poker Ladies’ Night tournament earlier on the same day).

Valencia itself, the capital of the Autonomous Community of Valencia and third largest city in Spain, is a fabulous town for sightseeing, with a mixture of the historic and the modern drawing holidaymakers to the region from all over the continent. From Roman and Arab ruins in the old quarter to the palaces, monuments and the futuristic City of Arts and Sciences, it is a town with a rich heritage as well as vibrant nightlife. An unconventional (so far) destination on the poker calendar, it is a friendly and beautiful location in which to spend any time not competing at the tables.

Unibet Open is not only known for its unique atmosphere, excellent parties and relaxing destinations, but also for its player-friendly structures which give everyone the best chance to prove their worth at the felt. In Valencia, starting stacks will be raised from 10,000 to 15,000 with one-hour levels allowing even more room to manoeuvre for pros and amateurs alike. With over 30 nationalities represented at the last event in Prague, there’s no wonder Unibet Open has been such a fast-growing and well-attended European tour this year.

The last final table saw Finn Henri Ojala play his way through 423 other contenders to take the title and €157,000 – qualify now for a chance to win a share of the prizepool at our next stop and join him on the Unibet Open leaderboard (visit the main page at www.unibetopen.com to view leaderboards or for more information on upcoming side events and past results). One month to go, and counting…

HENRI OJALA WINS UNIBET OPEN PRAGUE 2010 TITLE

19:52, August 8th, 2010

_MAT1618.jpgThe final nine players out of a starting 424 began play at 2pm on the fourth and final day here at the Golden Prague Poker Room, and by 6:30pm the winner had been decided – and it was young Finn Henri Ojala, who takes home the trophy and €157,000.  This is by far the fastest final table of a major live event we have ever experienced – and was in marked contrast to yesterday’s fierce (and slow) struggle to eliminate tenth place, which took over two levels to accomplish.

Today it seemed as though everyone had shifted gear overnight, and two hands after the players walked down the red carpet, draped in their countries’ respective flags, the first player was eliminated – Jaroslav Vajgl.  He moved in over a preflop raise by Benjamin Jensen with AQ, but found himself dominated by the Dane’s AK and exiting almost before his seat was warm.

The favourites at the start of the day were for many Perica Bukara and Jan Skampa, both of whom had built formidable stacks on Day Two, but the tide quickly shifted against the former when Nino Ryschawy doubled through him early on, which actually laid the foundation for his run all the way to heads up.  Laur Sibold was eliminated in 8th place after another preflop move from the big blind, but original raiser Jan Skampa looked him up after a long think with A9 which held against his suited JQ.  At this point the backers of EPT winner Skampa were probably confident, as with this exit he saw his chip stack grow to even more dominating proportions, but it was only to last minutes as Ryschawy’s sneakily played Aces finessed a squeeze from the aggressive Czech player and won him another double up.

It seemed as though someone had swapped about 20% of the deck with Aces in the following half hour, as two players succumbed to this hand.  First was one of a veritable horde of Dutch players who’d made it to Prague (and are often to be found circling Unibet Open events around Europe), Joost Mengerink.  He fell in 7th place when his shortstack shove hit the bullets of Perica Bukara, but Bukara himself was to crash AK into AA ten minutes later.  He exited in 6th place, in the process handing Henri Ojala a dangerous stack of over a million chips.  Relatively quiet thus far, Ojala was to go on to win the key pot of the tournament, and finally the event itself.  On the way he busted Benjamin Jensen (who looked for a while as if he would be a serious contender for the title himself) with Queens against Threes, Jensen along with Michal Maryska being the shorter stacks at the time.

The most dramatic moment of the final was undoubtedly the threeway preflop all-in which followed where Ojala took on Maryska and Skampa with AQ, finding the main pot fought over by Maryska’s pocket Nines and Skampa’s dominating AK.  A Queen on the flop, however, was enough to scoop the lot for the Finn, and suddenly shift play from four-handed to heads up. It also shifted three quarters of the chips into Ojala’s stack, and he drove the action (while the Finnish supporters chanted about this very thing) until finally getting it in preflop with pocket Sixes against Nino Ryschawy’s AJ.  Ryschawy didn’t sit back during the brief heads up battle, however, doubling once when Ojala had gone into set-in mode on the button with Eight high, but in the end his chip disadvantage and the loss of all large key pots left him flipping for his tournament life.  He lost and accepted defeat (and his €101,000 payday) graciously, while Ojala, who doesn’t usually play live tournaments, or No Limit Holdem, instead favouring Omaha cash games online, took the title.

While we hear the whole Finnish contingent changed their flights when their friend made the final, in preparation for some serious celebration tonight, the atmosphere created by all competitors from 34 countries made the weekend fly by in a daze of competition, side event action and multinational partying.  The next chance to join in and take part at Unibet Open is in Valencia in October; hope to see you there!

Final Table Results:

1 €157.000 – Henri Ojala – Finland
2 €101.000 – Nino Ryschawy – Germany
3 €67.600 – Jan Skampa – Czech Republic
4 €48.800 – Michal Maryska – Czech Republic
5 €37.700 – Benjamin Jensen – Denmark
6 €25.800 – Perica Bukara – Serbia
7 €19.000 – Joost Mengerink – Holland
8 €13.500 – Laur Sibold – Estonia
9 €11.140 – Jaroslav Vajgl – Czech Republic

DAY TWO CONCLUDES

04:07, August 8th, 2010

_MAT0931.jpgDay Two at the Prague Unibet Open Main Event saw 86 players return to the Golden Prague Poker Room to fight to a final table.  It’s never easy to predict the flow of a tournament, and the ebb of players, but it seemed like the pace accelerated throughout the day and by the time the bubble burst (in the form of Philipp Hofbauer) the field was headed full tilt towards consolidating the chips in just nine players’ stacks.

The chip leader at the start of the day, Marius Bobinas from Lithuania, fought through most of the day but ultimately fell short of the final, while others who’d built an early lead took it all the way through the ten levels of play.  Among them were Henri Ojala, Perica Bukara and Jacob Andersen (playing his first live tournament, according to his father), while Daniel Pettersen, fourth at the start, finished in a respectable 12th place, winning €5,000.  54 players in total took home a cash prize, from €1,900 all the way up to €8,200 for the final table bubbler Dawid Pikul, who took tenth place but will not get to compete for the trophy tomorrow at 2pm.

Along the way there were several pivotal pots which cemented the fortune of some of the experienced players who’d made their way through most of the 424 total entrants in this year’s event, including a Jacks vs. AK race which ruined Joachim Buch’s hopes of making it a triple final table appearance.  Jan Skampa, the active young Czech player, was responsible for eliminating a number of others with decent stacks, building a huge one of his own.  Included in his bust-list were Sidsel Boesen, the runner up in this year’s WSOP Ladies’ Event, and right near the end of the day one-time chip leader Daniel Gomez Anadon, who added his enviable chip towers to Skampa’s with an AK vs. AA cooler six-handed.

As the tables dwindled to two, it was Perica Bukara along with Skampa who’d built stacks which were far ahead of the field, and both looked like they could top the million mark before the final nine were determined.  Three players exited within five minutes of each other (Rene Baranck, Simeon Naydenov and Lukasz Swiecki taking the 21st-19th spots respectively) which made it seem as though the rich would just simply continue to get richer while the shorter stacks would retain their double-or-bust mentality.  The pace was indeed maintained all the way to the pseudofinal (the Second Bubble where ten players are pooled on one table to play to nine), at which point a whole level was needed to finally see Martin Staszko finish in tenth and leave the final teble set for tomorrow like this:

Seat 1: Perica Bukara (Serbia) – 505,000
Seat 2: Michal Maryska (Czech Republic) – 330,000
Seat 3: Nino Ryschawy (Germany) – 250,000
Seat 4: Benjamin Jensen (Denmark) – 527,000
Seat 5: Joost Mengerink (Netherlands) – 366,00
Seat 6: Jaroslav Vajgl (Czech Republic) – 323,000
Seat 7: Jan Skampa (Czech Republic) – 984,000
Seat 8: Henri Ojala (Finland) – 449,000
Seat 9: Laur Sibold (Estonia) – 580,000

Join us tomorrow at 2pm when the final gets underway and one of these players will become the new Unibet Open Prague Champion, and take home €157,000 in prize money!

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