Latest news with #PokerStarsEuropeanPokerTour


Wales Online
16-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Wales Online
The high stakes poker event that has been making millionaires for 20 years
The high stakes poker event that has been making millionaires for 20 years The PokerStars European Poker Tour has just celebrated its 20th anniversary, and the EPT Monte Carlo festival is still one of the most prestigious events on the calendar The view from Monte Carlo Bay Hotel & Resort during EPT Monte Carlo (Image: Tom Victor ) The European Poker Tour is celebrating its 20th anniversary, and the Monte Carlo tournament is a standout event in the poker calendar. During the recent PokerStars European Poker Tour event at Sporting Monte Carlo, commentator Joe Stapleton named it a quintessential experience for those looking to try their hand against top players. "I think that as far as the way that poker is regarded, there's different ways of looking at it," Stapleton told the Mirror. "Some people look at it as the World Series of Poker and a Vegas thing, some people look at it as a home game thing. "Some people look at it as a smoky room kind of thing. But some people look at it like the James Bond, tuxedos, Ferraris type of thing, and you get a little bit of that here. "And I think that's the sort of thing that is always going to be appealing - especially to people who haven't ever experienced it for themselves. I think Monte Carlo specifically is a great first experience for an EPT event." Even seasoned players like Noah Boeken, who attended the inaugural tournament in 2005, remain captivated by the event's atmosphere at the age of 44. Boeken, clearly still enamoured with the setting, shared his appreciation: "I love this room. I just sent my girlfriend a video of when the roof goes open at the start of the day and the end of the day when the curtains come up. It's beautiful. I love big spaces and this room is amazing." Article continues below Noah Boeken during EPT Monte Carl (Image: Danny Maxwell/Rational Intellectual Holdings Ltd 2025 ) Having clinched a title in Copenhagen during the tour's first season and pocketing €147,679 twenty years ago, Boeken is among the few from that time still participating. Reflecting on the early days, he said, "You'll always remember season one. "Rob Hollink won the first one here, a Dutch guy, a friend of mine. I won season one Copenhagen and that was on TV. "I remember they built a stage the same as they do now but there were 200 people watching. You can't imagine it now but back then it was like 'oh my god, the final's going on'." Boeken expressed his amazement at the longevity of the tour and his own journey within it, adding: "It's just amazing that this tour is still going on for 20 years and I'm happy to still be there. I used to be the youngest and now... I'm not the oldest but I'm not the youngest any more. As the tournament progresses, the stakes rise on day two, with players having invested €5,300 to compete, though some qualify for less through satellite events. The top 175 out of 1,195 will secure at least €8,500, while the champion stands to win a staggering million euros. Boeken managed to navigate a tense hour of gameplay, as the player count dwindled from 178 to 175. He clinched 129th place, pocketing just under $10,000 - marking his largest live cash win in 2025 so far, but a modest sum compared to larger earnings from earlier in his career. Joe Stapleton speaking at EPT Monte Carlo 2025 (Image: Danny Maxwell/Rational Intellectual Holdings Ltd 2025 ) Stapleton is set to join the live broadcast team alongside seasoned host James Hartigan. Hartigan started covering EPT Monte Carlo for PokerStars back in 2008 and describes his commentary role as akin to that of a commentator on Test Match Special, with the aim of enhancing the natural excitement of the players and gameplay while keeping viewers engaged. The poker tables often attract celebrated figures from various realms. Chris Eubank Jr has arrived for an exclusively organised cash game, and celebrities from sports and film circles have made appearances in previous years. "I remember Kevin Hart being here in 2017," Hartigan recounts. "Obviously we've had a lot of sports stars here over the years, Boris Becker, Rafa Nadal... we've had charity events here which people have come in specifically for, Neymar of course has played here for a few years. That's a huge part of poker, the fact that you never know who you're going to be sat down with, it's the only game in the world where you can be playing with elite professionals and celebrities and some bloke who lives three streets from you." A handful of poker professionals from the early days are still returning to the game. "I would say very few, but ironically what happened... you see people come and go, you see a few consistent faces, but post-pandemic you suddenly saw a lot of the faces you hadn't seen for maybe 10 or 15 years came back," Hartigan explained. "Because they had rediscovered poker online and then wanted to get back on the live circuit," he explains. "But there's one name who I'd always say is a consistent thread is Patrik Antonius. He lives here and jokes about the fact that he can literally walk to the venue, but he's also one of those few players who has just consistently remained competitive and relevant for all of those years, playing the highest stakes, still playing the super high rollers here. He is probably the person I associate with Monaco more than any other, partly because it's his home town but also because he still comes here and still plays the events here." Patrik Antonius has been a fixture on the European Poker Tour for 20 years (Image: Danny Maxwell/Rational Intellectual Holdings Ltd 2025 ) Antonius, the Finnish pro who clinched his first EPT main event in Baden in 2005, is among the contenders aiming to join the exclusive club of two-time winners. Victoria Coren Mitchell was the pioneer, securing her first win in 2006 and her second eight years later, with only two others achieving the same feat, yet no one has managed to win twice at the same location. Despite the high stakes, there's no shortage of eager participants, with the first events split into two sessions across Sunday and Monday. There were several past Monte Carlo champions in attendance, including Nicolas Chouity (who pocketed €1.7m for his victory in 2010), Steve O'Dwyer (€1.2m in 2013) and Adrian Mateos (€1.1m in 2015 and an additional €1.4m in the Super High Roller in 2022). The 2025 iteration of the Super High Roller is taking place just a stone's throw away in The Americas Room at the Monte Carlo Bay Hotel and Resort, where the atmosphere is decidedly more laid-back. Entry alone costs a cool €100,000, with over €2m up for grabs for the winner and €1.3m for the runner-up. Yet one of the newly minted millionaires - sporting merchandise from three different poker companies - blends in so well that you could easily mistake him for any ordinary European chap in his twenties if you bumped into him on the street. Of course, not all those vying for the big bucks are quite so inconspicuous. "There was one guy - I don't remember his name - he showed up to play the €100k Super High Roller one year and I heard that his boat had docked, he had no plans to play, he heard about it, he drove his Ferrari off the boat up to the front door and entered the event," Stapleton recounts. "I think he was out in seven or eight minutes, back in his Ferrari, back on the boat an hour later. That's the kind of story you don't really hear that often, especially in places other than this." Action from the €100k Super High Roller at the 2025 EPT Monte Carlo (Image: Danny Maxwell/Rational Intellectual Holdings Ltd 2025 ) Hartigan and Stapleton jest that, armed with their current knowledge as keen amateurs, they could have held their own in the 2005 Monte Carlo poker scene. At that time, even the top players only knew a fraction of what is known about the game today. "If you look at how it was then, it was cowboys, it was crazy people, it was people with money but people that didn't know much about poker - including the pros," Boeken recalls. "We were pros, we were better than the rest, but if you put us [in games] now with our skill levels from back then, we would stand no chance." However, one constant remains: the enduring appeal that keeps many returning. The European Poker Tour used to operate like a football season, running from September to May, culminating in a grand final in Monte Carlo. Now, it's just another stop on the tour, but being there makes it feel more than 'just another stop'. "I think, having won or final-tabled this event, any time you go back in that room the memories would come flooding back," Hartigan reflects. "Even if you bust day 1, even if it doesn't work out for you this time, it's still going to have a very positive memory to play in that space. "I think if you look at all of the stops on the EPT they all have their strengths, they all have their plus points, and that's why i can't give an answer to 'which is your favourite EPT, but I say it and i mean it when i say this is the best poker room we play in. James Hartigan at the poker table (Image: Danny Maxwell/Rational Intellectual Holdings Ltd 2024 ) "I call it the most beautiful poker room in the world, and it is. The fact that you have, and I know that for reasons of tv we often have to have the curtains closed and the roof closed, but the fact that you can have that view over Monte Carlo Bay, the fact that you can have that roof open like Blofeld's volcano, it's just amazing, it's an incredible experience." The final table took place on Saturday, guaranteeing each of the top eight players a six-figure prize. The game was won by Aleksandr Shevliakov, who home the seven-figure grand prize. Following this events, some participants will compete in other European tournaments, while others may take a break before heading to Vegas in the summer. One certainty was that a new champion would be crowned, as all previous winners were eliminated before the final day. Article continues below Those seeking a second victory will get their next opportunity in Barcelona in August, with additional EPT events lined up in Malta and Prague later in the year. The desire to win remains strong for some, as Boeken states: "I'm still chasing that second win but I'm going to get there one day." If you think you've got what it takes to sit down with the pros at the virtual tables, check out the PokerStars Spring Championship of Online Poker from May 11:


Daily Record
16-05-2025
- Sport
- Daily Record
Chris Eubank offers blunt opinion over Conor Benn rematch after iconic brawl
Chris Eubank Jr outpointed Conor Benn in their brutal grudge match last month, and the 35-year-old believes a rematch is "very likely" to happen later this year Chris Eubank Jr is optimistic that a rematch with Conor Benn will take place later this year. The 35-year-old secured a unanimous decision victory over his rival at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, in front of a crowd of 67,000, in their highly anticipated April bout and feels there's a strong desire for them to square off again. Plans for a second fight are already being discussed, with Saudi boxing chief Turki Alalshikh eyeing a September date, provided both fighters are in shape and willing. Despite rumours that Eubank might choose a different opponent, the buzz around a rematch persists. "The rematch is very likely to happen. The demand is there," Eubank Jr shared with Mirror Sport during the PokerStars European Poker Tour Monte-Carlo event. "The fight we put on last Saturday was something that won't be forgotten. People, they really fell in love with that performance - from both of us. So in all likelihood there will be a rematch at some point this year." Having faced numerous high-profile opponents throughout his career, Eubank Jr acknowledges that his recent win has opened up several possibilities, including a potential bout with Canelo Alvarez. However, regardless of his next move, Eubank Jr believes he's now in a better position for future negotiations, having learned from previous experiences. The Brighton-born boxer reflected on the business side of boxing, admitting he had made mistakes in the past by signing the wrong contracts and making poor deals. However, he believes he has gained valuable experience and now knows his worth as a fighter, reports the Mirror. "The business aspect of boxing is crucial, and I've got it wrong so many times throughout my life where people take advantage and to make the wrong deals, sign the wrong contract. But you live and you learn," he noted. "Now I'm experienced enough to know the things I should be doing, the things I shouldn't be doing, what I'm worth as a fighter, what types of contracts are good to sign and what types of contracts you should stay away from. I have an amazing team around me of people that are watching my back at all times, and I'm in an amazing position now. "After that performance [against Benn], all the doors are open. There's not a fight in boxing right now that couldn't be made. So that's a beautiful feeling to know you're in that position, you're in the driving seat, and these next 12 months are going to be incredible." Speaking at the Monte-Carlo Bay Hotel and Resort, where he was participating in a private poker game organised by PokerStars, Eubank Jr acknowledged that the €5,000 minimum buy-in was no longer a daunting amount for him, especially after his substantial earnings from the Benn fight. Instead, he viewed the trip as an opportunity for relaxation and enjoyment. "To a lot of people, they couldn't imagine playing with large amounts of money, risking losing that type of money, and that being something that's relaxing to them," he explained. "But when you've been in these environments for so long it does become therapeutic, it does become fun, it does become relaxing. "It becomes something you can do to take your mind off all the craziness that's going on in the other parts of your life. For me, poker is fun, it's truly enjoyable, it's a passion and I'm happy doing it, so it is a relaxing activity for me." Felix Schneiders, a PokerStars ambassador and seasoned player, is familiar with matching wits against top sports figures. Having ousted football legend Sergio Aguero from last year's EPT Monte-Carlo, he values poker's even playing field where anyone with a few thousand euros can compete - a common scenario in this swanky locale. "I just met Chris for the first time, I shook hands with him," he said. "To be honest I didn't know who he was because I'm not into boxing, not into football, not into cars, not into anything like that, so I don't know if I have the right topics at hand! But I'm just going to sit down and have some fun with the lads, I'm just going in there without any expectations apart from having fun. "Aguero, he sat down at my table [last year], I didn't know who he was, busted him. It was a very unfortunate spot for him - he had ace-jack, flopped a jack, I had queens and we got it in. After I busted him he shook my hand and I was feeling something is special about this guy, I don't know what. Then I sat down again and my neighbour said to me 'do you know who you just busted?' "I was like 'no I don't' and he went 'check him out on instagram'. He's got like 8 million followers - yeah okay, nice, good to know. That's the beauty of poker. That's what I like about the game." For those facing Eubank in Monte-Carlo, the boxer himself serves as a prime example of sitting down at the poker table and finding yourself just metres away from the most famous person you've ever met. However, even the boxer isn't immune to the thrill of sitting across from superstars. "I've played against all sorts of people around the globe," he shared. "Very high stakes, very private games, very famous individuals, and it's incredible that you get to meet and spend time with all these characters. In a normal world, you would never sit down and play with Bruno Mars, you wouldn't be in his company. "But poker brings all these diverse characters and personalities into one room, onto one table, and you get to spend time and converse and listen and learn. That is actually probably one of the most attractive things to me about poker. "It's not even about the money, it's about the people and the experiences and the stories." Some aren't just renowned figures; they're also skilled poker players in their own right. When pressed to identify his most formidable opponents, he doesn't hesitate to mention one standout: Neymar. "Most athletes that I've ever played with have been like myself, just action, gamble, but it's not like skill, it's just fun," he explained. "I've seen Neymar play very skilfully and been very impressed with how he plays when he wants to play well. "There are definitely times where he doesn't give a s*** about playing well and is just there to gamble, and those are the best games you can imagine, but he's a very, very good player." The fact that numerous top-tier athletes attend European Poker Tour events – from Aguero to Rafa Nadal to Brazilian icon Ronaldo – is no fluke, and Eubank notes the mental similarities between his sport and his hobby. "Boxing and poker are extremely cerebral activities," he observed. "You have to be extremely sharp, you have to have a very strong mentality to be able to perform at the highest levels of these two worlds. A lot of people wouldn't imagine this, but in my opinion boxing is 70 percent, minimum, mental. You've got to be able to deal with the pressure, the pain, the sacrifice, and with dedication. "And if you can't deal with all of that it doesn't matter how fast and strong and fit you are, you're not going to win. You'll crumble under the pressures of boxing, and it's exactly the same with poker - you can crumble under the pressure. "You can go all in with aces, somebody goes all in with kings, they hit a king, you lose your entire stack and 'oh my god I've just lost all this money, what am I going to do?' Some guys, they fall apart, they chase, they tilt off the rest of their stack and it's a disaster. "And some guys are able to keep composed, keep the game plan, understand that it's a part of the game and not let it distract you from playing the best poker you can play. They're very mental activities and the people with the strongest will and the most discipline, those are the guys who excel."


Daily Mirror
10-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Mirror
'My first £1million win took 25 years - it's not just a young person's game'
Barny Boatman is one of the most recognisable faces from poker's early days and secured the best score of his career after a quarter of a century playing around the world If you followed poker in the late 90s and early 2000s, you're probably familiar with Barny Boatman from his appearances on the iconic Late Night Poker show. While some of his poker opponents from those days have taken on different endeavours, with Victoria Coren Mitchell carving out a TV presenting career and Tony Bloom now the owner of a successful Premier League football club, Boatman has shown he can still compete with the best on the felt. Boatman was part of a quartet known as the 'Hendon Mob' alongside his brother - EastEnders actor Ross - and their friends Ram Vaswani and Joe Beevers. All four enjoyed six-figure scores during the 2000s, when poker experienced a period of mainstream growth known as the 'boom' era, with Beevers winning $1m when it was worth a little over £500,000, but they might have all given up on a million pound payday until Barny made a stunning comeback last year. Over the past decade, the godfather of British poker - now 69 years of age - has been more selective with which tournaments he plays. He spent a few years living in Spain before returning to London to care for his mother, though there were a few poker trips, usually to Las Vegas and Dublin, mixed in. Things changed when he won a little over £80,000 in a tournament in the Czech Republic at the end of 2023 and decided to head back out on the circuit. Two months later, he entered a PokerStars European Poker Tour event in Paris and finished first out of 1,224 entries to win £1.1million. A little over a year on from that experience, Mirror Sport sat down with Boatman at another EPT event in Monte Carlo. There, he explained his journey back to the top - and offered up his theory on why he can still more than hold his own against opponents young enough to be his grandchildren. "I think that one of the things I hope i'm reminding people of is that this is still the game that you love, that you play around the kitchen table, that you got involved in because it was exciting," he says. "And there's still a place for using your personality, using your people skills. "Of course you have to adapt, there are old-school players who kind of give up because they've got their game, i'd say it's a bit like somebody who's learned a bit of French and can get by and ordeer a drink and ask directions, and they go 'Alright, that's all the French I need'. That's never going to get you into a conversation about philosophy. "But why [poker] is fun is because there's always stuff to learn, there's always a new situation every day. You can learn a lot from solvers [poker strategy software], but things really stick in your head and you really understand them when they happen to you. And I have got a big database of experience, and that does count." Boatman points to poker as an equal-opportunities pursuit - as long as you're of legal gambling age and can afford to buy into a tournament, you can play against some of the best and most successful in the world. He is one of more than 1,000 players to do that in the main event in Monte Carlo, where some entrants have put in €5,300 for their shot at the €1m (just under £850,000) first prize and others have come through qualifying tournaments for a lot less. He doesn't make the money in the main event, but he does cash in several other tournaments during the multi-day festival, including a win in a smaller tournament for a first-place prize of around €20,000. It was far from his first cash in Monaco, though. Indeed, he made the money in the first ever EPT Grand Final in the very same city, back in 2005. "What I remember is how different it was and how exciting it was [when the EPT started]," he says. "Up until that time, the Americans had had it all their own way. "If we wanted to play in a really big event, we had to fly over to Las Vegas, probably sleep three in a bed or whatever, be jetlagged and have to deal with different rulings and with people saying 'English only at the table' when we spoke because they couldn't understand what we were saying! It always felt that we were literally playing away. "So to have something on our own doorstep which was of the scale, which was so inclusive, so exciting, it was like all of a sudden they were shining a big light on everything. Up until then we'd been playing small events, going all around Europe, maybe the same 120 people you'd see every week, and it wasn't necessarily particularly welcoming. "All of a sudden, because of the involvement of PokerStars they were bringing in a much wider demographic of people. They were offering people the whole experience of being in a beautiful city and all this, which they hadn't done before. "And also it was run by poker players and conceived of by poker players. [EPT founder] John Duthie was the guy, and he knew what he was doing, he knew what we wanted, so we felt we were in good hands." There's a case that, without that early growth, poker wouldn't be popular enough to still be paying out seven-figure prizes around the world. Boatman has certainly caught the bug once more, making the money in tournaments in four different countries this year alone, but he hasn't forgotten about what got him excited about this game long before his first recorded tournament score back in 1998. "We used to play in a game, the Archway game, where [me and Ross] used to live, and that's recently been revived," he says. "[The playwright] Patrick Marber is in that game and we'd play round his place or around my place, so we do play a bit. "I don't know anybody who started playing poker and then stopped. People love it. It's got everything - it's so social, it's so competitive and you can learn and improve."


Daily Mirror
10-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Mirror
Inside the multimillion-Euro poker tournament that sparks James Bond comparisons
The European Poker Tour has held events in Monte Carlo for 20 years and there are reasons why the billionaires' playground continues to attract big crowds year on year It's Tuesday morning in Monaco and a small crowd has gathered at the entrance to the Salle des Etoiles. The 'etoiles' in question, the stars embedded into the roof of the main poker room at Sporting Monte Carlo, are slowly fading out of view as the roof slides open, unveiling a beautiful view of Monte Carlo bay. It's the second day of the PokerStars European Poker Tour Monte Carlo, one of poker's most prestigious events, and one which poker commentator Joe Stapleton considers one of the best experiences for any poker player with a few thousand Euros to spare and a dream of playing the game with the world 's best. I'm due to interview him on the other side of the tournament venue at 10.45am, but we agree to wander down to reap the benefits of something that only happens once per day. 'I think that as far as the way that poker is regarded, there's different ways of looking at it,' Stapleton says. 'Some people look at it as the World Series of Poker and a Vegas thing, some people look at it as a home game thing. "Some people look at it as a smoky room kind of thing. But some people look at it like the James Bond, tuxedos, Ferraris type of thing, and you get a little bit of that here. 'And I think that's the sort of thing that is always going to be appealing - especially to people who haven't ever experienced it for themselves. I think Monte Carlo specifically is a great first experience for an EPT event.' It's not just the first-timers who find themselves standing and watching in awe. Noah Boeken was here for the first edition of the tournament back in 2005, and even now - aged 44 - he's excited to soak in the atmosphere. 'I love this room,' he says. 'I just sent my girlfriend a video of when the roof goes open at the start of the day and the end of the day when the curtains come up. It's beautiful. I love big spaces and this room is amazing.' Boeken was one of the young bucks who won a title during the first season of the tour, He earned €147,679 for a victory in Copenhagen a full 20 years ago, and he's one of only a handful still standing from that era. 'You'll always remember season one,' he says. 'Rob Hollink won the first one here, a Dutch guy, a friend of mine. I won season one Copenhagen and that was on TV. 'I remember they built a stage the same as they do now but there were 200 people watching. You can't imagine it now but back then it was like 'oh my god, the final's going on'. 'It's just amazing that this tour is still going on for 20 years and I'm happy to still be there. I used to be the youngest and now... I'm not the oldest but I'm not the youngest any more.' Day two is when players get into the money. It has cost them €5,300 to take part, though some have qualified for less than that via satellite events, and the top 175 finishers - from a field of 1,195 - will lock up a minimum of €8,500. The winner? They'll leave with a cool million. Boeken is one of those to survive a tense hour or so of play as we slowly get down from 178 to 175. He makes sure not to go home empty-handed, eventually finishing 129th and winning a shade under $10,000 - his biggest live cash of 2025 so far but a drop in the ocean compared to some of the six-figure scores from earlier in his career. Stapleton, meanwhile, will be part of the live coverage, along with long-time host James Hartigan. It was back in 2008 that Hartigan reported on EPT Monte Carlo for PokerStars for the first time, and he has likened his task to a Test Match Special commentator, complementing the entertainment provided naturally by the players and the action while keeping the viewers interested. Sometimes that can be easy, too, with some big names from other worlds often taking to the felt. Chris Eubank Jr is in town for a specially-arranged cash game, while athletes and film stars have stopped by in years past. "I remember kevin hart being here in 2017," Hartigan recalls. "Obviously we've had a lot of sports stars here over the years, Boris Becker, Rafa Nadal... we've had charity events here which people have come in specifically for, Neymar of course has played here for a few years. That's a huge part of poker, the fact that you never know who you're going to be sat down with, it's the only game in the world where you can be playing with elite professionals and celebrities and some bloke who lives three streets from you." There are still a few poker pros from those early years who keep coming back, too. 'I would say very few, but ironically what happened... you see people come and go, you see a few consistent faces, but post-pandemic you suddenly saw a lot of the faces you hadn't seen for maybe 10 or 15 years came back. Because they had rediscovered poker online and then wanted to get back on the live circuit,' Hartigan adds. 'But there's one name who I'd always say is a consistent thread is Patrik Antonius. He lives here and jokes about the fact that he can literally walk to the venue, but he's also one of those few players who has just consistently remained competitive and relevant for all of those years, playing the highest stakes, still playing the super high rollers here. He is probably the person I associate with Monaco more than any other, partly because it's his home town but also because he still comes here and still plays the events here.' Antonius, a Finnish pro who won his first EPT main event in Baden, Austria in 2005, is among a bevy of players looking to join an elite group of two-time winners. Victoria Coren Mitchell was the first to do the double, winning her first in 2006 and her second some eight years later, with just two more players following suit, but no one has won twice at the same venue. That's not for lack of trying. Walking around the Salle des Etoiles during the opening days (there are so many entrants that day 1 is split over two flights on Sunday and Monday) I spot several former Monte Carlo champions including Nicolas Chouity (who won €1.7m for his first-place finish in 2010), Steve O'Dwyer (€1.2m in 2013) and Adrian Mateos (€1.1m in 2015 and another €1.4m in the Super High Roller in 2022). The 2025 edition of that Super High Roller is being played a short walk away in The Americas Room at Monte Carlo Bay Hotel & Resort, where the vibe feels a lot more relaxed. It costs €100,000 just to sit down, and there's more than €2m for the winner and €1.3m for second, but one of the new millionaires - clad in merch from three separate poker companies - is nondescript enough that you could comfortably dismiss him as just a random twentysomething European if you passed him in the street. Not that this is true of everyone playing for big money, of course. 'There was one guy - I don't remember his name - he showed up to play the €100k Super High Roller one year and I heard that his boat had docked, he had no plans to play, he heard about it, he drove his Ferrari off the boat up to the front door and entered the event,' Stapleton says. 'I think he was out in seven or eight minutes, back in his Ferrari, back on the boat an hour later. That's the kind of story you don't really hear that often, especially in places other than this.' Hartigan and Stapleton both joke that, with the knowledge they have now as enthusiastic amateurs, they could be more than competitive in a 2005 Monte Carlo field. Back then, even the best poker players knew just a fraction of what they do now 'If you look at how it was then, it was cowboys, it was crazy people, it was people with money but people that didn't know much about poker - including the pros,' Boeken says. 'We were pros, we were better than the rest, but if you put us [in games] now with our skill levels from back then, we would stand no chance.' One thing that's consistent, though, is the willingness of so many to keep coming back. The European Poker Tour used to run like a football season, from September to May, with Monte Carlo branded as the grand final. These days it's just another stop on the tour, except it isn't really 'just another stop' when you're there. 'I think, having won or final-tabled this event, any time you go back in that room the memories would come flooding back,' Hartigan says. 'Even if you bust day 1, even if it doesn't work out for you this time, it's still going to have a very positive memory to play in that space. 'I think if you look at all of the stops on the EPT they all have their strengths, they all have their plus points, and that's why i can't give an answer to 'which is your favourite EPT, but I say it and i mean it when i say this is the best poker room we play in. 'I call it the most beautiful poker room in the world, and it is. The fact that you have, and I know that for reasons of tv we often have to have the curtains closed and the roof closed, but the fact that you can have that view over Monte Carlo Bay, the fact that you can have that roof open like Blofeld's volcano, it's just amazing, it's an incredible experience.' When I land back in London, the tournament is still going. The final table is scheduled to take place on Saturday, with each of the top eight finishers locking up a six-figure payday. After that, some of the players will take part in other European tournaments, while others might take some time off before going to Vegas over the summer. One thing's already guaranteed, though - there will be a new name on the trophy, with all the previous winners falling by the wayside before the penultimate day. Those going after a second win will have their next chance in Barcelona in August, with further EPT events scheduled for Malta and Prague before the end of the year, and the appetite will always be there for some. As Boeken puts it: "I'm still chasing that second win but i'm going to get there one day."


Daily Mirror
08-05-2025
- Sport
- Daily Mirror
Chris Eubank Jr gives honest verdict on Conor Benn rematch after brutal fight
Chris Eubank Jr beat Conor Benn in front of more than 60,000 fans at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and a number of fans have been calling for a rematch between the pair Chris Eubank Jr believes a rematch with Conor Benn is 'very likely' to happen this year. The 35-year-old beat his compatriot by unanimous decision at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in front of 67,000 spectators in their long-awaited April fight, and is confident the appetite is there for the pair to go toe-to-toe once more. Details of a rematch have already been shared, with Saudi boxing supremo Turki Alalshikh hoping for a September fight if both men are fit and ready. And, despite speculation over Eubank opting for a different opponent, talk of another meeting isn't going away. 'The rematch is very likely to happen. The demand is there,' Eubank Jr tells Mirror Sport at the PokerStars European Poker Tour Monte-Carlo. 'The fight we put on last Saturday was something that won't be forgotten. People, they really fell in love with that performance - from both of us. So in all likelihood there will be a rematch at some point this year.' The 35-year-old has taken on plenty of top opponents over the course of his career, and recognises plenty of options have been put on the table thanks to his victory over Benn. A match-up with Canelo Alvarez has been touted, but whatever happens next, Eubank believes he's in a stronger position for negotiations after learning from past mistakes. 'The business aspect of boxing is crucial, and I've got it wrong so many times throughout my life where people take advantage and to make the wrong deals, sign the wrong contract. But you live and you learn,' he says. 'Now I'm experienced enough to know the things I should be doing, the things I shouldn't be doing, what I'm worth as a fighter, what types of contracts are good to sign and what types of contracts you should stay away from. I have an amazing team around me of people that are watching my back at all times, and I'm in an amazing position now. 'After that performance [against Benn], all the doors are open. There's not a fight in boxing right now that couldn't be made. So that's a beautiful feeling to know you're in that position, you're in the driving seat, and these next 12 months are going to be incredible.' Eubank Jr is speaking at the Monte-Carlo Bay Hotel & Casino, where he is taking part in a private poker game organised by PokerStars. The €5,000 minimum buy-in is certainly a sum he can afford, after his seven-figure purse from the Benn fight, but the trip is about fun and relaxation as much as it is about making money. 'To a lot of people, they couldn't imagine playing with large amounts of money, risking losing that type of money, and that being something that's relaxing to them,' he says. 'But when you've been in these environments for so long it does become therapeutic, it does become fun, it does become relaxing. 'It becomes something you can do to take your mind off all the craziness that's going on in the other parts of your life. For me, poker is fun, it's truly enjoyable, it's a passion and I'm happy doing it, so it is a relaxing activity for me.' PokerStars ambassador Felix Schneiders is another of the players in the game, and he's no stranger to pitting his wits against elite athletes. He knocked Sergio Aguero out of EPT Monte-Carlo last year, and enjoys that poker allows you to sit down on level footing with anyone else who has a few thousand euros in their pocket - which in this part of the world is a lot of people. 'I just met Chris for the first time, I shook hands with him. To be honest I didn't know who he was because I'm not into boxing, not into football, not into cars, not into anything like that, so I don't know if I have the right topics at hand!' he says. 'But I'm just going to sit down and have some fun with the lads, I'm just going in there without any expectations apart from having fun. 'Aguero, he sat down at my table [last year], I didn't know who he was, busted him. It was a very unfortunate spot for him - he had ace-jack, flopped a jack, I had queens and we got it in. 'After I busted him he shook my hand and I was feeling something is special about this guy, I don't know what. Then I sat down again and my neighbour said to me 'do you know who you just busted?'. I was like 'no I don't' and he went 'check him out on instagram'. He's got like 8 million followers - yeah okay, nice, good to know. That's the beauty of poker. That's what I like about the game.' For Eubank's opponents in Monte-Carlo, the boxer himself is a prime example of sitting down at the felt and finding yourself metres away from the most famous person you've met. But the boxer isn't immune from getting excited about sitting down opposite superstars himself. 'I've played against all types of people all around the world,' he says. 'Very high stakes, very private games, very famous people, and it's amazing that you get to meet and spend time with all these characters. Because in a normal world you would never sit down and play with Bruno Mars, you wouldn't be around the guy. But poker brings all these different characters and personalities into one room, onto one table, and you get to spend time and speak and listen and learn. 'That is actually probably one of the most attractive things to me about poker. It's not even about the money, it's about the people and the experiences and the stories.' Some of them aren't just big names, though - they're talented poker players in their own right. And when asked to name his toughest opponents, he barely misses a beat before replying with a single name: Neymar. 'Most athletes that I've ever played with have been like myself, just action, gamble, but it's not like skill, it's just fun,' he says. 'I've seen Neymar play very skilfully and been very impressed with how he plays when he wants to play well. There are definitely times where he doesn't give a s*** about playing well and is just there to gamble, and those are the best games you can imagine, but he's a very, very good player.' It's no coincidence that plenty of elite athletes make it along to European Poker Tour events - from Aguero to Rafa Nadal to Brazilian legend Ronaldo - and Eubank recognises the mental parallels between his sport and his pastime. 'Boxing and poker are extremely cerebral activities,' he says. 'You have to be extremely sharp, you have to have a very strong mentality to be able to perform at the highest levels of these two worlds. 'A lot of people wouldn't imagine this, but in my opinion boxing is 70 percent, minimum, mental. You've got to be able to deal with the pressure, the pain, the sacrifice, and with dedication. And if you can't deal with all of that it doesn't matter how fast and strong and fit you are, you're not going to win. 'You'll crumble under the pressures of boxing, and it's exactly the same with poker - you can crumble under the pressure. You can go all in with aces, somebody goes all in with kings, they hit a king, you lose your entire stack and 'oh my god i've just lost all this money, what am I going to do?'. 'Some guys, they fall apart, they chase, they tilt off the rest of their stack and it's a disaster. And some guys are able to keep composed, keep the game plan, understand that it's a part of the game and not let it distract you from playing the best poker you can play. They're very mental activities and the people with the strongest will and the most discipline, those are the guys who excel.'