The fourth day of the record breaking Battle of Malta Main Event Autumn Edition began with 36 hopefuls still in the hunt for a seat on the final table of nine players. It was a long day for both players and staff at Casino Malta and the Eden Arena at the Intercontinental Hotel, although it began quickly, with a spate of early exits. By the time the field had been whittled down to three tables, the pace began to slow, which is hardly surprising, given the slow structure and serious money up to top to play for.
Miguel Branco, who had gone into the day as chip leader will be disappointed with his 23rd place finish, however for defending champion Vasileios Zisis, it was bliss. He was at or near the top of the chip counts for most of the day and ended up taking a massive chip lead by the time they had reached the final table of nine. It must have been both an awesome and surreal experience for the Greek cash game pro, as he has now put himself in pole position to do the unthinkable and win back-to-back Battle of Malta Main Event titles.
Sporting a sponsored Novibet hoodie, Zisis dominated every table he was on throughout the day, never scared to tussle with his opponents and frequently testing them in tricky spots for their entire stacks. He had his fair share of luck also, including delivering a cooler to Marco Arcodia, to send the Sicilian to the rail on the final table bubble. Zisis has been there before and held his composure in the spring to win the €100,000 top prize. Now he could potentially triple his last win, with a €300,800 top prize on the line.
Zisis has more than double the chips of his nearest competitor in the United Kingdom’s Shervin Ghassemlou who ended the day with 32.15m. Ghassemlou had been quite short stacked throughout much of the day, but in the final few levels, when a lot of players were dodging action, he was getting involved in a lot of pots, taking significant chunks from Alessandro Siena, who had been vying with Zisis for the chip lead throughout most of the day. The last level of the day saw Siena, an Italian who resides in Malta drop back, finishing the day on 18.4mm despite having grown his stack to over 50m at one point.
Romanian Alexandru Fracasanu, who had gone into the day second in chips maintained his position near the top, bagging the third biggest stack of 25.25m. Kyriacos Papdopoulos is the most experienced player to make the final and the only one to have over $1m in lifetime live cashes (according to TheHendonMob database). He played a solid game, frequently getting involved in big hands with Zisis and finished the day on over 20m.
Ivaylo Eftimiov was one of the players who had already secured a decent payout on his starting day, when he picked up the €10,000 bonus prize for bagging the largest stack of his flight. He started the day as one of the chip leaders and in the early exchanges he briefly held the chip lead. He takes 13.65m onto the final, just less than Italian Pasquale Gregorio on 13.8m. Gregorio also got involved in a lot of pots with Zisis and at one point it looked like he might get the better of his Greek adversary, but the defending champ’s resilience prevailed in a number of key hands. Davide Iannaco on just over 10m and Cosme Gomez Martinez on just under 10m chips complete the final table line up. They were both short stacked throughout most of the day, but won some key double ups to remain in contention.
The televised final table starts at 2pm on Wednesday, Nov. 6. It will be streamed on a 30-minute delay, which means that coverage will begin at 2.30pm for those tuning in to follow the action. Jason Glatzer will host the commentary, which can be viewed on the Battle of Malta’s social media channels.
Blinds will begin on Wednesday with the conclusion of level 38, at 300,000/600,000 with a 600,000 big blind ante.
Position | Name | Country | Chips | Big Blinds |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Vasileios Zisis | Greece | 65,300,000 | 109 |
2 | Shervin Ghassemlou | England | 32,150,000 | 54 |
3 | Alexandru Farcasanu | Romania | 25,250,000 | 42 |
4 | Kyriakos Papadopoulos | Greece | 20,200,000 | 34 |
5 | Alessandro Siena | Italy | 18,400,000 | 31 |
6 | Pasquale Gregorio | Italy | 13,800,000 | 23 |
7 | Ivaylo Eftimov | Bulgaria | 13,650,000 | 23 |
8 | Davide Iannaco | Italy | 10,075,000 | 17 |
9 | Cosme Gomez Martinez | Spain | 9,550,000 | 16 |
Total | 208,375,000 | 349 | ||
Average | 23,152,778 | 39 |
Now let’s take a brief look at the side event action that took place on Tuesday 5th November.
Luxon Pay Super High Roller
The Luxon Pay €2,200 (€2,000+€200) Super High Roller was the final multi-day tournament of series to begin. Play began with only 14 players registered, but ten x 50 minute levels later, the field had grown to 96, creating a prize pool of €182,400. By the end of the day, 35 players remained, with Norwegian Kristian Dahl bagging the chip lead with 307,500. Greek Ioannis Oikonomidid lies in second with 296,500 and Italian Ettore Esposito’s 270,000 rounds up the top three.
Other players still in with a chance of winning the €48,440 first prize include Humberto Galindo and Joris Ruijs. Play resumes at 1pm on Wednesday.
Quigioco High Roller
The Quigioco High Roller was originally intended to be a two-day event, but having had 540 entries, this was an impossibility, as 29 players were left at the end of play on Monday. They returned on Tuesday afternoon and after a further hard fought day of play, it was Italian Candiso Cappiello who emerged victorious to claim the €100,000 first prize. He defeated Frederik Brink heads-up, who had to settle for a €66,770 payday, while Bulgarian Martin Tsvetanov took third for €43,720.
IPC 10K GTD
The first side event of the day on Tuesday was the €350 NLH IPC with a €10k guarantee. There was never any danger that this would create an overlay and in fact the total prize pool was almost twelve times bigger than the guarantee at €119,700. It could have been even bigger, but capacity was restricted to 400 entries and that is exactly the number of players who took part. It was win by Greek player Ammanouil Chalkiotis for €23,000. Carl Sahl from Seweden was second (€14,720) while Swiss Samuel Biland completed the podium (€10,640).
H.O.R.S.E
Tuesday’s €330 H.O.R.S.E saw many familiar faces saddle up for the equestrian sounding H.O.R.S.E mixed game tournament. Antoine Degiorgio, Sascha Manns, Richard Burke, Daragh Davey, Eirik Presttun and Eva Jiretorn were amongst the riders. Cowgirl Gia Carnestrom was also in the field, fresh from her victory in the Ladies event and she went close, but finished in 4th place, in the money. It was won by Bosnian Milos Vaskovic for €3,050. Serbia’s Predrag Kontrec was second (€2,110) and the UK’s Andrew Fleming finished third for €1,340.
White Knight
The final outing for the €150 (€130+€20) White Knight also took place on Wednesday, with 290 entries, to create a €356,815 prize pool. Norwegian Stein Naerland booked the win for €7,131. Andrzej Kepka took second (€4,770) and Axel Karlen was third (€3,490).
Dark Knight
It was also the last of the €200 (€170+€30) Dark Knight tournament on Tuesday. It was another busy one with 283 entries, creating a prize pool of €45,705. Sarah Chan from the UK secured tghe victory for €9,120. Marcin Milde was the runner-up (€6,090) and Eskil Kvanvold was third (€4,460).
Hyper Turbo
The final side event was the €150 (€130+€20) NLH Hyper Turbo. It had 102 entries and was wion by German Oliver Briesemeister for €3,260. Albanian Alen Riven was second (€2,230) and Greek Dimitrios Karagkounis exited in third for €1,460.
Full Results from all events can be found on the soon-to-be updated results page.