Season 9 EPT Grand Final Main Event Day 2: Team PokerStars Pro Johnny Lodden On Top

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Johnny Lodden

Day 2 of the 2013 PokerStars and Monte-Carlo? Casino European Poker Tour Grand Final Main Event concluded on Wednesday after an exciting six levels of play that saw many of poker's hottest players rise to the top of the pack. At the beginning of the day, 268 hopefuls returned to felt, but that number was trimmed to approximately 110. Topping those advancing to Day 3 was Johnny Lodden with 605,200 in chips.

RankPlayerChips
1Johnny Lodden605,200
2Calvin Anderson472,600
3Noah Schwartz453,400
4Oleksii Kovalchuk414,200
5Steve O'Dwyer389,200
6Freddy Deeb350,200
7Daniel Negreanu340,100
8Jason Mercier321,900
9Goran Mandic310,000
10[Removed:17]296,900

Lodden held a big stack for most of the day, but during the last level he snatched the chip lead from the other frontrunners. On a board of 9?5?4?J?, Lodden led with a bet of 27,500. Mohamed Mamouni min-raised to 55,000, and Lodden made the call to see the Q? land on the river. Lodden checked and Mamouni quickly checked behind with QxJx for two pair. Lodden showed the 10?8? for a flush and raked in the pot.

The very next hand, Paul Volpe opened to 4,800 from under the gun, Victor Sbrissa called in middle position, Mamouni called on his left, and Lodden three-bet to 16,200 from the big blind. Volpe tanked for a bit and then folded, but Sbrissa said he saw Volpe's holdings while they were being tossed into the muck. The floor was called over, and they told Sbrissa to just resume playing. He did, immediately folding.

While Mamouni was in the tank, Sbrissa had a few words with Volpe. "I don't even know why you're mad at me," Volpe shot at him.

Mamouni eventually called, and the flop came down A?K?4?. "Great flop for you," Sbrissa said to Volpe out loud, enough for all to hear. Lodden then led out for 15,500, and Mamouni folded.

"You don't do that," Lodden told Sbrissa sternly. Volpe admitted that he had the A?6?, but didn't know how Sbrissa saw his hand. Despite the little spat, Lodden raked in the pot to move close to 600,000 in chips.

Athough the tournament hasn't reached the money just yet, the prize pool has been released. The eventual winner of this year's event will take home a pocket-bursting �1.224 million from the �5.31 million prize pool. The champion will also receive a brilliantly crafted watch by Slydeworth more than �5,000. The top 80 spots will be paid, with a min-cash worth �16,000.

Out of all that happened on Day 2, one thing is for certain: the EPT Grand Final will be crowning a brand new champion for 2013. Nicolas Chouity, the 2010 champ, was one of two former winners returning on Wednesday, but he fell during the first half of the day. Last year's winner, Mohsin Charania, was the only other former champion still alive, but his run came to an end in the final level of the night.

With the blinds at 1,200/2,400/300 in Level 14, Charania ran pocket nines into the pocket tens of five-time World Series of Poker gold bracelet winner John Juanda. The money went in preflop and five community cards weren't enough to save Charania. Juanda went on to finish with 181,300 in chips.

The biggest story of the day, though, was the success of some of the biggest names in the game. The top portion of the leaderboard was cluttered with superstars wielding big stacks when play wrapped up. Calvin Anderson (472,400), Oleksii Kovalchuk (414,700), Steve O'Dwyer (389,200), Freddy Deeb (350,200), Paul Volpe (256,500) and Andrew Lichtenberger (227,300) were just a handful of the big-name players to build large stacks.

Team PokerStars Pro was also very well represented. Daniel Negreanu (340,100), Jason Mercier (321,900), Jake Cody (223,300), Marcin Horecki (137,800) and Chad Brown (115,900) were a couple of those donning the red spade to finish out the day strong.

On the flip side were Team Pros Barry Greenstein, Marcel Luske, Humberto Brenes, Leo Fernandez, Angel Guillen and Vicky Coren �� all of whom were eliminated. Luske has been victorious in his last five events that he has cashed in, but he won't be winning this event one after falling at the hands of Luke Schwartz.

During Level 9 with the blinds at 400/800/100, the "Flying Dutchman" put in a big three-bet to 8,500 after Calvin Anderson had opened to 1,600 and Charbel Salloum flat-called. Action then folded to Schwartz in the big blind, and he four-bet to 15,000. Anderson and Salloum got out of the way, but Luske put in the call to see the A?6?3? flop. Schwartz fired enough to put Luske all in, and Luske stuck in his last 15,000 or so to put himself at risk. When the cards were tabled, Schwartz's A?K? was beating Luske's J?J?, and his hand held after the 3? turn and K? river.

Day 3 will commence Thursday at 12 p.m. local time in Monaco, and you can expect things to really heat up with the money bubble on the verge of bursting. Be sure to return right here to PokerNews for all of the live coverage from the first shuffle until the last hand of the night.

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