World Series of Poker Europe – £10,000 No-Limit Holdem Main Event – Final Table – Part II
WSOP by James on October 3, 2008
And then there were three:
Stanislav Alekhin 4,143,000
John Juanda 2,335,000
Ivan Demidov 790,000
Little did we know at this point that there was still a lot of poker to be played.
A pair of pots allowed John Juanda to retake the chip lead. First, Stansislav Alekhin raised to 75,000 and Juanda reraised to 160,000. Alekhin made the call. The flop fell 2h-9d-2c and Alekhin checked to Juanda. Juanda checked as well. The turn fell the 4s and Alekhin checked to Juanda. Juanda bet out 260,000 and Alekhin made the fold. Two hands late, the two tangle again. Juanda raised to 70,000 and Alekhin followed along. The flop fell 8s-6d-7h and Alekin checked to Juanda who bet out 110,000. Alekhin made the call. The turn fell the 4h and Alekhin bet out 230,000. Juanda made the call. On the river of the 7d, Alekhin made a bet of 500,000. Juanda went into the tank for a bit while counting out a call. Finally he said, “I raise all in.” Alekhin folded and Juanda moved up to 3.5 Million in chips.
A while later, Ivan Demidov raised to 70,000. Juanda reraised to 215,000 and Demidov decided to move all-in. Juanda went into the tank for a while before finally calling. Juanda showed Ad-Js and Demidov Kh-10h. The flop gave Demidov the lead when it fell 10s-4d-3d. The turn gave Juanda a gutshot straight draw when the Qs fell. The river fell a harmless 3c and Demidov doubled up to nearly 2.2 Million in chips. Juanda fell back to nearly 2.4 Million.
At this point it was literally anyone’s game:
Stanislav Alekhin 2,634,000
John Juanda 2,381,000
Ivan Demidov 2,191,000
Play went back and forth for quite a while. After another couple of hours of play, the stacks were not significantly different, with Demidov only giving up about 200,000 in chips that were distributed between Juanda and Alekhin.

Finally we had a big showdown between John Juanda and Ivan Demidov. Juanda raised to 105,000 from the small blind and Demidov made the call from the big blind. The flop fell 8s-5d-3d and Juanda checked to Demidov. Demidov bet out 170,000 and Juanda made the call. On the turn, Juanda again checked to Demidov who bet out 450,000. Juanda then moved all-in and Demidov made the call for his tournament life. Demidov held Qd-10d for a flush draw and a gutshot straight draw. Juanda held Ad-Ac. Demidov had 12 outs to win the hand. Juanda missed each one as the Js fell on the river. Ivan Demidov finished in 3rd place and will receive £334,850. Ivan Demidov is the first player in WSOP history to make the Main Event final table of both the Las Vegas and Europe Main Event and the first to do it in the same year. Now we will get to see if he can improve on this finish when he goes for the Las Vegas Main Event title in November.
Going into heads up play, here are how the players stood in chips:
John Juanda 4,420,000
Stanislav Alekhin 2,850,000
At this point, many spectators started wondering how long that heads up play would last. Nobody had any clue of what was in store.
John Juanda had steadily chipped away at Alekhin’s stack for a while and was in a commanding lead of nearly 5.9 Million to 1.38 Million of Alekhin. Then the two entangled in a hand that saw Juanda raise to 80,000 and Alekhin reraise to 260,000 preflop. Juanda then moved all-in and Alekhin made the call. Juanda held Ad-2d and Alekhin held As-Qd. Alekhin took a massive lead in the hand when the 8s-9s-10s fell to give him a nut flush draw and a gutshot straight draw. The turn fell the Ah, which left Juanda needing a non spade deuce to win the bracelet. The river fell a harmless 5c and Alekhin doubled up to 2.85 Million in chips.
Back and forth, up and down the two players went over the next hour or so, with neither player budging much. In fact, Alekhin still held on to around 2.6 Million in chips before getting entangled in yet another big hand with Juanda. John Juanda just doubled the big blind on the button, making it 100,000 total. Alekhin reraised to 300,000 and both players saw the flop. The flop fell 10c-7h-5c and Alekhin bet out 350,000. Juanda moved all in and Alekhin made the call. Juanda held Qd-10d while Alekhin held Js-Jc. A turn card of the Jh sealed the deal for Alekhin and he doubled up to 4.6 Million in chips. Juanda was left with 2.66 Million in chips. Oh how quickly the tide can change.
Alekhin then went on a mad little rush, taking down the next five pots. Juanda had fell below 2 Million in chips. Then he made a preflop raise from the button to 100,000. Alekhin reraised to 300,000 and both players saw the flop. The flop fell 10c-4h-10h and Alekhin bet out 400,000. Juanda made the call. The turn fell the 2d and Alekhin moved all in. Juanda called and showed Ah-10s for trip 10’s. Alekhin showed pocket jacks. Alekhin would need one of two Jacks, or Juanda would double up. A jack did not fall on the river and Juanda doubled up to 3.35 Million in chips.
Then it was Juanda’s turn to be the aggressor and go on a little bit of a rush. Juanda proceeded to win 5 of the next six hands to move his way up to 4,240,000 in chips. Stanislav Alekhin was sitting on 3,030,000 in chips.
This was beginning to turn into one massive heads up battle. As you may remember, Andy Bloch and Chip Reese were in an epic heads up battle at the $50,000 H.O.R.S.E. event that became the longest heads up battle in WSOP history. This heads-up match looks like it might just challenge that record.
The rest of the action of the final table will be included in my next post. Stay tuned.






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