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2023 PokerStars EPT Cyprus

$5,300 EPT Main Event
Jours 6
Event Info

2023 PokerStars EPT Cyprus

Résultats
Gagnant
Main Gagnante
k8
Prix
$1,042,000
Event Info
Buy-in
$5,300
Prize Pool
$6,402,000
Entrants
1,320
Info Niveau
Niveau
36
Blinds
250,000 / 500,000
Ante
500,000
Info Joueurs - Jour 6
Entrants
7
Joueurs Survivants
1

Seat 5: Gilles Simon, 24, Netherlands - 8,075,000

Gilles Simon
Gilles Simon

As the winner of PokerStars’ first Dare to Stream competition, we were all able to witness Gilles Simon’s first foray into professional poker back in 2019. Back then, when he was predominantly known by his Twitch handle, “Ghilley”, Simon’s average buy-in (ABI) was a modest $10 – a far cry from the $25,000 buy-in PokerStars Players Championship (PSPC) he’d just won entry to.

Fast forward to 2023, and Simon (“TaxationIsTheft” on PokerStars) has enjoyed a breakout year in online poker, first cashing a $215 online event for a staggering $257k, then taking down his first World Championship of Online Poker (WCOOP) title with a $109 Phase win for $115k.

But what about those years in between? We don’t know as much about that period in Simon’s career by design. “I was like, OK, I’m young, and with this Platinum Pass, I have an opportunity to keep on growing and building myself as a poker player,” he says.

So Simon left Twitch behind and threw himself into studying and playing poker. He was taken in by a group of experienced players who coached him and backed him, rocketing his ABI up to $200. He moved to the poker hotbed of Vienna. And for the next two-and-a-half years, he put in the reps until the big scores arrived (and arrive they did).

But Simon has yet to capture a breakout live score, something he hopes to change here at EPT Cyprus. He says it would be “an insane win” to have on his poker resume.

Seat 6: Jose Gonzalez Sanchez, 36, Spain - 4,700,000

Jose Gonzalez Sanchez
Jose Gonzalez Sanchez

Jose Gonzalez Sanchez was born in Santander in the north of Spain, but he grew up in the Canary Islands and still calls Adego, located in Tenerife, his home. Now an EPT Main Event finalist, the last 19 months unfolded much differently than he'd expected.

Always a passionate but not professional player, Gonzalez Sanchez was ready to take a break from the game in March 2022. He travelled to the EPT Prague spring edition with that on his mind, thinking it would be his last poker trip for a while. Gonzalez Sanchez was planning to open a bar after that. "I have two daughters. I need to be responsible with money," he explained.

But he'd become a Eureka High Roller champion and bank a whopping €343,750. Gonzalez Sanchez's poker career only took off from there. He surrounded himself with some of the smartest brains in the Spanish poker community, who helped him improve. He singled out Gerard Rubiralta as the most important figure in his development — Rubiralta provided valuable advice via WhatsApp calls during breaks in the EPT Cyprus Main Event.

He is confident he's a much better player now than he was a year and a half ago. Since then, he has won numerous other tournaments, including CEP Barcelona for €90,000 and last month's Estrelas Malaga Main Event for another €91,960.

"It's surreal, I'm just enjoying this," the Spaniard said about his incredible run. But he still realizes how different his story could have been. "It's amazing to be in these venues, seeing these places, and thinking that this is your life," he said. "I'm never going to open the bar!"

Now a full-time poker pro, the game occupies most of his time. But Gonzalez Sanchez is also very much into music. With his crew, he makes rap. They're known as the Latin Hydro.

Seat 7: Andrea Dato, 44, Italy - 2,875,000

Andrea Dato
Andrea Dato

Andrea Dato has a long history with PokerStars events, from the Italian Poker Tour to the European Poker Tour. He cashed his first in 2010 on the IPT and was in the money in the last EPT Barcelona Main Event in August, finishing 60th. He has set a new mark with his final table appearance here in Cyprus.

Dato came to poker via Magic: The Gathering and gave up a career as an engineer to focus on poker more than 15 years ago. Since then, he has become one of the best-known Italian players, earning more than $1.8 million in live tournament earnings.

Having formerly played mostly cash games, Dato, a poker coach, says, “Nowadays, I consider myself a live tournament specialist. He was the tournament chip leader at the beginning of Day 5 and sits in sixth place heading into the final day. He aims to outperform his previous best, a fourth place at EPT Barcelona in 2014, earning him €362,000.

“I've gained a lot of experience since that EPT final table,” he says, stating that he has played at almost every EPT stop since then. “But the game has changed so much in 10 years, particularly with solvers. Before, poker was played with instinct and ego; that's less the case today – but live events are still beatable. I've been here before and like Cyprus, the location and the field.”

Final Day Seat Draw

TableSeatPlayerCountryChip CountBig Blinds
11Halil TasyurekTurkey7,825,00039
12Yannick SchumacherAustria6,050,00030
13Bjorn KozenkaiHungary2,575,00013
14Nikita KuznetsovRussia7,475,00037
15Gilles SimonNetherlands8,075,00040
16Jose Gonzalez SanchezSpain4,700,00024
17Andrea DatoItaly2,875,00014

$5,300 EPT Main Event

Jour 6 a débuté