2023 The Grand Big Wrap

�2,350 Main Event
Day: 3
Event Info

2023 The Grand Big Wrap

Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
aqqj
Prize
€132,400
Event Info
Buy-in
€2,350
Prize Pool
€660,440
Entries
316
Level Info
Level
30
Blinds
125,000 / 250,000
Ante
250,000
Players Info - Day 3
Players Left
1

Dorel Eldabach Runs the Hottest to Win 2023 The Grand Big Wrap �2,350 Main Event (�132,400)

Level 30 : Blinds 125,000/250,000, 250,000 ante
Dorel Eldabach winner
Dorel Eldabach winner

A busy festival for four card lovers has come to a conclusion at the King's Resort in Rozvadov. After several High Roller Events had already crowned a champion as part of the 2023 The Grand Big Wrap series in the previous days, all eyes were set on the conclusion of the 2023 The Big Wrap �2,350 Main Event.

Out of a field of 316 entries, only 16 hopefuls remained to battle for the biggest slice of the �660,440 prize pool. Ultimately, it was Dorel Eldabach who came out on top to earn a top prize of �132,400. He defeated Oswin Ziegelbecker in a short-lived heads-up duel with the Austrian taking home a consolation prize of �88,100.

It was no surprise that these two met in heads-up as they entered the final day first and third in chips. The always jovial Eldabach went on a wild ride with his uncanny ability to increase a stack in rapid fashion and traded hot with cold streaks with a smile on the face at all times. Meanwhile, Ziegelbecker accumulated his chips in a more conservative way.

Ultimately, Eldabach came out on top to finally secure a winner's trophy. Three years ago on GGPoker, he narrowly missed out on the victory in a $1,500 Pot Limit Omaha after losing a flip to Brad Ruben. While his live poker MTT cashes appear sparse on paper, he can usually be found at the high-stakes PLO cash game tables at King's Resort.

WSOP bracelet winner Sebastian Langrock and Tomasz Kozub also reached the final table but couldn't overcome the dominating performance of Eldabach.

2023 The Grand Big Wrap �2,350 Main Event Final Table Result

PlaceWinnerCountryPrize (in EUR)
1Dorel EldabachIsrael�132,400
2Oswin ZiegelbeckerAustria�88,100
3Ali BalciGermany�64,400
4Sebastian LangrockGermany�51,900
5Samuel AlbeckGermany�40,775
6Joao EstanislauPortugal�30,843
7Eran CarmiIsrael�22,653
8Tomasz KozubPoland�16,643
Dorel Eldabach and Oswin Ziegelbecker
Dorel Eldabach and Oswin Ziegelbecker

The final day had barely kicked off when the first pay jump was already secured. Tim Van Loo became the first casualty on the live stream table when he potted one-suited kings. Ali Balci flopped a straight and held to boost his stack right away. Tomasz Kozub then doubled through Seamus Cahill on the outer table, sending the Irishman to a shorter stack from which he would not recover anymore.

Cahill made two pay jumps, however, as the likes of Goran Urumovic, Jakob Madsen, Marco Di Persio and Quan Zhou ran out of chips before him. Di Persio's exit vaulted Joao Estanislau near the top of the leaderboard when both had kings and Estanislau hit a gutshot straight draw with his connected kickers.

Matthew Macioce then bubbled the unofficial final table when he got his short stack in with top pair and a gutshot. Kozub had the same top pair with a straight draw and superior ace kicker, which turned out to be the deciding factor.

Once the field combined to a single table, Adolf Buettner as the shortest stack flopped a king-high straight but Dorel Eldabach made broadway to regain the lead. However, it didn't take long for Eldabach to suffer a setback when his flopped bottom set ran into the top set of Oswin Ziegelbecker with the Austrian turning quads.

Kozub then went from one of the bigger stacks to busto and had to settle for eighth place. Ali Balci flopped a six high straight and bet all streets to get paid off by his opponent with two pair. That left Kozub very short and he was flushed away in the next hand.

Eldabach then also doubled Sebastian Langrock when his top two pair couldn't fade the combo draw of the WSOP bracelet winner. From there on, the action slowed down a lot and Ziegelbecker jumped into the top spot. The torrid run of Eldabach ended when he rivered a full house against Estanislau and then got it in with aces against the aces of fellow countryman Eran Carmi to flop the nut flush.

Estanislau didn't recover from the earlier setback and bowed out in sixth place with Ziegelbecker and Eldabach atop the leaderboard. The latter continued to gain momentum and knocked out Samuel Albeck when both got it in with top pair alongside straight and flush draws. Two blanks later, the minor kicker advantage turned out to be crucial for Eldabach.

Balci and Eldabach continued to lock horns on multiple occasions and that would backfire for the former, as he paid off Eldabach with just a rivered top pair. Balci came back with a double and instead, it was Langrock who sent his chips over to the high-stakes cash game player.

Sebastian Langrock
Sebastian Langrock

An ill-timed three-bet shove by Balci then sealed his fate when he ran into the kings of Ziegelbecker, who entered heads-up play as slight underdog versus Eldabach.

It took around 40 minutes from there on to determine a champion and the chips went in the middle on an ace-high flop. Ziegelbecker's top pair, broadway draw and nut flush draw was very much alive against the top two pair and inferior flush draw of Eldabach but the Austrian failed to improve.

Oswin Ziegelbecker
Oswin Ziegelbecker

That concludes the PokerNews live reporting from King's Resort but the next major events in Europe's biggest poker arena are just around the corner with a World Series of Poker Circuit stop and the 2023 WSOP Europe.

Tags: Adolf BuettnerAli BalciBrad RubenDorel EldabachEran CarmiGoran UrumovicJakob MadsenJoao EstanislauMarco Di PersioMatthew MacioceOswin ZiegelbeckerQuan ZhouSamuel AlbeckSeamus CahillSebastian LangrockTim Van LooTomasz Kozub