Yesterday the third day of the EPT Berlin main event began with 102 players. The chip leader was EPT Copenhagen winner Anton Wigg with 695k, closely followed by EPT Snowfest winner Vladimir Geshkenbein. Both of them had one hell of a roller coaster ride during Day 3 but still made it through to Day 4 with decent stacks.
The new chip leader is Marc Wright from Cornwall, England. Wright overtook th[...] Read more » EPT Berlin: 24 players left - Englishman Marc Wright in the lead
Joined: Apr '09
Location: Portugal
Age: 44 (M)
Posts: 4827
The problem of being an early chip leader is that everyone will fear them until someone gets a good hand to try to attack their stack. If, on one side, they are strongest on the table, on the other side, they are the best place to go when you have the possibility to double your own chips. If chip leader don’t keep quiet looking for the game between others, they put their position and sometimes the game at risk. It’s always tricky!
Joined: May '09
Location: Spain
Age: 49 (M)
Posts: 1331
I agree fakiry.The other big stacks don´t play vs chipleader nothing except really great hands. And small stacks are waiting to double vs the chipleader. No easy decissions being chipleader and all of us want to be it.