Christoph Vogelsang won a smaller pot against Emil Patel while the American, now based in Finland, claimed smaller pots to maintain his stack. Patel then check-called a bet of 65,000 on the river of a board against Akin Tuna and the latter showed for the nut flush to scoop the pot.
From under the gun plus one, Diego shoved all in with his tiny stack after having forfeited the blinds the previous orbit. Ryan Riess called from one seat over and the rest of the table folded.
Ventura:
Riess:
The board ran out and Ventura doubled. One hand later, the Peruvian shoved again, this time for 254,000. Sergey Lebedev called after some consideration.
Ventura:
Lebedev:
The board came and the river card avoided a comeback story for Ventura, who was eliminated in 13th place for �29,610.
Rocco Palumbo opened to 45,000 from the button and Samuel Panzica as well as Jerry odeen then moved all in from the small respectively big blind, Palumbo folded.
Panzica:
Odeen:
The board ran out and they chopped. Palumbo opened the next hand and folded to a three-bet shove of Panzica, but recovered the losses by taking down two small pots.
Emil Patel leaned over to Christoph Vogelsang and asked the German how much he started the day with before open-shoving the small blind. Vogelsang then called off for 307,000 with the , Patel held . The board ran out and the German doubled.
One hand later, Patel raised to 45,000 from the button and Vogelsang three-bet to 130,000 out of the small blind. Patel then jammed and Vogelsang double-checked his cards before sending them into the muck.
The final day of the �10,300 High Roller is scheduled to begin at 12.30 p.m. with Russia's Sergey Lebedev leading with 1,522,000 in chips. Lebedev finished 10th in the �10,200 Single Day High Roller, and will be eyeing the �397,500 first prize, which would be his highest career cash to date.
Each player is guaranteed �29,610 in prize money for 13th place, and there is a whole host of big names are still in with a chance of usurping Lebedev's chip lead. These include former WSOP Main Event Champion Ryan Riess (1,174,000), French pro Davidi Kitai (512,000), Timothy Adams, (758,000), Rocco Palumbo (565,000) and Sam Chartier (458,000).
Bringing up the rear in the chip counts are Diego Ventura (157,000), Samuel Panzica (276,000) and Christoph Vogelsang (310,000) who will be looking for early double-ups to get back into contention as the tournament heads towards a conclusion.
Here are the chip counts and the seat draw ahead of the final day.
Table
Seat
Player
Nationality
Chip Count
1
1
Sam Chartier
Canada
458,000
1
2
Davidi Kitai
Belgium
512,000
1
4
Emil Patel
Finland
1,339,000
1
5
Christoph Vogelsang
Germany
310,000
1
6
William Arruda
Brazil
458,000
1
7
Akin Tuna
Germany
1,100,000
2
1
Sergey Lebedev
Russia
1,522,000
2
2
Diego Ventura
Peru
157,000
2
3
Ryan Riess
USA
1,174,000
2
4
Timothy Adams
Canada
758,000
2
5
Rocco Palumbo
Italy
565,000
2
6
Samuel Panzica
USA
276,000
2
7
Jerry Odeen
Sweden
596,000
Keep tuned to PokerNews.com for live updates from the �10,300 High Roller from EPT Dublin.