

A straight draw turned into a well concealed back door flush towards the end of the day, and I happily sat down at the TV table on the second day with 56,000 chips. With the tricky young Hungarian Peter Gelencser determined to use his big stack to control the proceedings, I was happy to cower away a little from the action, without having the usual worry of the blinds attacking my stack. Suddenly, a pair of aces, a flutter of excitement which made me forget to show them to the hole cam, and the big blind calling to see the K-8-7 flop. After the chips flew in, I was happy to see the Russian's K-J and happier still to see the turned 7 reduce his outs. Then, like a dagger to the heart, the dealer slowly peeled a king on the river to deny me the big stack I had craved.

With a blank on the river, Tony very gracefully got up and began his TV interview, whilst I took in the shock of what had happened. But wait, a re-count confirmed that Tony still had a 2,000 chips left, and he rushed back on. When he put his paltry stack of chips into the pot with 9-7 on the next hand, to be finally eliminated by Mark Herron's 4-4, it did not seem unreasonable. A very interesting comparison came the next day, however. Peter Gelencser, who had played great poker from the start, lost a race in a massive pot to leave him with less than a big blind's worth of chips. However, he waited patiently to find a hand for his remaining 1,400 chips, and then patiently again with his doubled and re-doubled stack. Three races later, he suddenly had a playable stack again, and this brilliant recovery lasted all the way into the final table, and a third placed finish.
The drama had left me with a much healthier stack of 96,00 chips to take into the third day, which would see the field cut down to the last 24 money places. In the same seat on the TV table, I now had Gelencser on my right, and enough chips to try to take him on. His re-raise out of the big blind seemed fairly standard, and I made the decision to play my hand like a set, whether I hit or not. The flop of K-7-6 was a definite miss, but gave me an opportunity to represent A-K, and my re-raise of Peter's bet created a big pot. It would be my first big mistake; his further raise all-in deflated my confidence and my stack.

The fifth day's final table would be the prize for the eight survivors, and the beginning action was tense. I found pocket jacks against an early position raiser, Michael Johansson, and flat called to see a 9-6-2 flop. I definitely believed the Swede had a strong starting hand, and was hard pressed to find the best way to play my hand. A bet out may make my doubts about my hand too clear, so I opted for the more expensive check raise. His all-in was immediate, and leaves me still wondering whether or not I got an honest answer from him before I threw my hand away.
After an expensive level without any strong starting hands, I was down to the last 16 with 95,000 in chips. I found my first playable hand in a pair of aces, and raised to find one flat caller in position. The flop of T-9-4 looked a decent one, and I hoped for action with a pot-sized 30,000 bet. I willed my Danish opponent to push all-in, but his eventual flat call had me feeling anxious. With a 4 pairing the board on the turn, and few chips left in front of me, I still had hope that my hand may be good. My all-in was called immediately, my heart dropped, and my suspicions confirmed as my opponent slammed down his pocket tens. 16th place seemed a cruel one at the time, being just before the big money and big action of the final table, but I recovered my spirits to watch the fifth day's final table. The whole day's action would have made a great poker tournament just by itself, and ended with German Andreas Krause finishing runner up, and the little known Branimir Brunovic completing a perfect Monday to Friday working week by taking the crown.