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Looking Back at the European Poker Tour Part One: The Early Years

After 13 seasons, the European Poker Tour is set to close at the end of EPT Prague. The poker tour will be replaced by the recently established PokerStars Championship and PokerStars Festival events.

EPT Prague takes place Dec. 8 through Dec. 19, 2016. As is usually the case, the last EPT features many exciting events, highlighted by the €5,300 Main Event which runs Dec. 13 through Dec. 19. EPT Prague runs side-by-side with the Eureka Poker Tour Prague, which is also the last in its history. Here's a look at the major events on the schedule:

Dates Event
Dec. 8-10 €10,300 NLHE
Dec. 9-13 €1,100 Eureka Main Event
Dec. 11-13 €50,000 Super High Roller
Dec. 12-13 €2,200 Eureka High Roller
Dec. 13-19 €5,300 EPT Main Event
Dec. 14 €25,500 Single-Day High Roller
Dec. 17-19 €10,300 High Roller

With EPT Prague closing out a chapter in poker history, there is no time better to look back on its 13 seasons. Part One of the retrospective will focus on the early years in Seasons 1 through 5, Part Two will focus on the Berlin robbery, the effects of Black Friday and the "mega-schedule," and Part Three will focus on the later years in Seasons 9-13 when the number of venues was reduced with each offering more events, along with some general stats about the venues and EPT winners.

Here is a look at Seasons 1-5:

Season 1 (2004-2005): John Duthie Launches EPT

Prior to hitting it big in poker by shipping the Poker Millions in 2000 for £1,000,000 ($1,426,330), John Duthie was also known in the United Kingdom for directing television hits, including Burn It, As If and Clocking Off. Today, Duthie is even better known in poker circles for founding the EPT in 2004.

Looking Back at the European Poker Tour Part One: The Early Years 101Alexander Stevic

The first stop in EPT history was in Barcelona, with Casino Barcelona becoming the only venue for EPT events to take place during each of the 13 seasons. Sweden's Alexander Stevic finished on top of a 229 player field to win the inaugural EPT Main Event for €80,000 ($98,000).

However, Stevic managed an even bigger cash by finishing in third place in the season's finale, the €10,000 EPT Grand Final at Monte Carlo Bay Hotel & Resort for €178,000 ($236,920). Netherlands' Rob Hollink went on to win this event by outlasting 211 entrants to win €635,000 ($845,190). Similar to Barcelona, Monte Carlo went on to be a regular stop with the EPT ending each of the first 12 seasons in Monaco's biggest city.

United Kingdom's Ram Vaswani shipped the first EPT Main Event held in Dublin for €93,000 ($117,003), while Netherland's Noah Boeken struck gold in the first EPT Main Event in Copenhagen for DKr1,098,340 ($191,355). The three other stops during the inaugural season took place in London, Deauville and Vienna.

EPT Season 1 Main Event Winners

Date Event Entrants Main Event Winner Country Prize
Sept. 18-19, 2004 EPT Barcelona Open 229 Alexander Stevic Sweden €80,000
Oct. 9-10, 2004 EPT London 175 John Shipley United Kingdom £200,000
Oct. 23-24, 2004 EPT Dublin 163 Ram Vaswani United Kingdom €93,000
Jan. 29-30, 2005 EPT Scandinavian Open, Copenhagen 156 Noah Boeken Netherlands DKr1,098,340
Feb. 15-19, 2005 EPT French Open, Deauville 245 Brandon Schaefer United States €144,000
March 10-11, 2005 EPT Vienna 297 Pascal Perrault France €184,500
March 15-19, 2005 Monaco EPT Grand Final, Monte Carlo 211 Rob Hollink Netherlands €635,000

Season 2 (2005-2006): Patrik Antonius Wins in Baden, Jeff Williams Wins Grand Final

Looking Back at the European Poker Tour Part One: The Early Years 102Patrik Antonius

Most of the stops in Season 2 were identical to that of the inaugural season with the sole exception of the stop in Vienna, Austria, being shifted to outside the country's capital to Baden. Poker superstar Patrik Antonius won his only EPT Main Event title in his poker career in Baden when he finished on top of the 180 player field to bank €288,180 ($343,365). Less than a month earlier, he took third place in the EPT 2 Barcelona Open Main Event for €117,000 ($145,068). France's Jan Boubli scored his biggest win in his poker career in Barcelona when he outlasted the 327 entrants to win the top prize of €426,000 ($528,195).

Meanwhile, Jeff "yellowsub86" Williams became, at the time, the youngest champ in EPT history. At 19 years of age he shipped theEPT 2 Monte Carlo Grand Final for €900,000 ($1,084,036) after qualifying for the tournament through a satellite on PokerStars.

EPT Season 2 Main Event Winners

Date Event Entrants Main Event Winner Country Prize
Sept. 16-17, 2005 EPT Barcelona Open 327 Jan Boubli France €426,000
Sept. 30 – Oct. 2, 2005 EPT London 242 Mark Teltscher United Kingdom €280,000
Oct. 4-6, 2005 EPT Baden Classic 180 Patrik Antonius Finland €288,180
Oct. 29-30, 2005 EPT Dublin 248 Mats Gavatin Sweden €317,000
Jan. 19-22, 2006 EPT Scandinavian Open, Copenhagen 288 Mads Andersen Denmark DKr2,548,040
Feb. 8-11, 2006 EPT French Open, Deauville 434 Mats Iremark Sweden €480,000
March 7-11. 2006 EPT Grand Final, Monte Carlo 298 Jeff Williams United States €900,000

Season 3 (2006-2007): Victoria Coren, Roland de Wolfe and Gavin Griffin All Win

Season 3 expanded from seven stops to eight stops. Deauville was temporarily removed from the schedule, and in its place, stops in Dortmund and Warsaw were added.

Looking Back at the European Poker Tour Part One: The Early Years 103Victoria Coren


Victoria Coren went on to win the first of her two EPT Main Event titles in London when she outlasted a field of 398 players to win £500,000 ($941,513). During Season 3, Coren also provided televised analysis alongside Daniel Negreanu, Greg Raymer and lead commentator James Hartigan.

Less than a month later, Roland de Wolfe won his only EPT Main Event title in Dublin by outlasting a field of 389 players to win €554,300 ($696,970).

Another big name won the EPT 3 Monte Carlo Grand Final:Gavin Griffin. He notched the biggest win of his poker career by taking down the top prize of €1,825,010 ($2,434,060). The field in this event grew to 706 players, the largest in EPT history at the time.

EPT Season 3 Main Event Winners

Date Event Entrants Main Event Winner Country Prize
Sept. 13-16, 2006 EPT Barcelona Open 480 Bjørn-Erik Glenne Norway €691,000
Sept. 21-24, 2006 EPT London 398 Victoria Coren United Kingdom £500,000
Oct. 7-10, 2006 EPT Baden Classic 331 Duc Thang Nguyen Germany €487,397
Oct. 16-29, 2006 EPT Dublin 389 Roland de Wolfe United Kingdom €554,300
Jan. 17-20, 2007 EPT Scandinavian Open, Copenhagen 400 Magnus Petersson Sweden DKr4,078,080
March 8-11, 2007 EPT German Open, Dortmund 493 Andreas Høivold Norway €672,000
March 14-17, 2007 EPT Warsaw Open 284 Peter Jepsen Denmark zł1,226,711
March 28 - April 2 EPT Grand Final, Monte Carlo 706 Gavin Griffin United States €1,825,010

Season 4 (2007-2008): Bertrand Grospellier, Mike McDonald, Jason Mercier and Glen Chorny Victorious

Looking Back at the European Poker Tour Part One: The Early Years 104Bertrand "ElkY" Grospellier

Season 4 grew from eight stops to 11. Prague and Sanremo were added along with the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure (PCA), an event won by Team PokerStars Pro Bertrand "ElkY" Grospellier for $2,000,000, which was officially added as an EPT stop.

Grospellier's win was at the time the largest in EPT history, however, this was eclipsed later in the season when Glen Chorny outlasted a field of 842 players to win €2,020,000 ($3,196,354) in the EPT 4 Monte Carlo Grand Final. Even so, the 2008 PCA was the largest field size during the season and at the time in the history of the EPT Main Event with 1,136 joining the field in the Bahamas.

Mike McDonald became the youngest EPT Main Event winner, a record that stands to this day, when at 18 years old he won the second EPT event in Dortmund for €933,600 ($1,370,161).

Meanwhile, Season 4 was when Jason Mercier began to make a name for himself by shipping his first major live tournament he ever cashed in when he took down the EPT 4 Sanremo Main Event for €869,000 ($1,372,893). While Mercier never found himself in the winner's circle in an EPT Main Event in the future, he is currently in 13th place on The Hendon Mob's All Time Money List Current Rank with $17,414,702.

EPT Season 4 Main Event Winners

Date Event Entrants Main Event Winner Country Prize
Aug. 28- Sept. 1 2007 EPT Barcelona Open 543 Sander Lylloff Denmark €1,170,700
Sept. 25-29, 2007 EPT London 392 Joseph Mouawad Lebanon £611,520
Oct. 7-10, 2007 EPT Baden Classic 282 Julian Thew United Kingdom €670,800
Oct. 30 - Nov. 3 2007 EPT Dublin 221 Reuben Peters United States €532,620
Dec. 10-14, 2007 EPT Prague 555 Arnaud Mattern France €708,400
Jan. 5-10, 2008 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure, Paradise Island 1,136 Bertrand Grospellier France $2,000,000
Jan. 29 - Feb. 2, 2008 EPT German Open, Dortmund 411 Mike McDonald Canada €933,600
Feb. 19-23, 2008 EPT Scandinavian Open, Copenhagen 460 Tim Vance United States DKr6,220,488
March 11-15, 2008 EPT Warsaw Open 359 Michael Schulze Germany zł2,153,999
April 1-5 2008 EPT Sanremo 707 Jason Mercier United States €869,000
April 12-17 2008 EPT Grand Final, Monte Carlo 842 Glen Chorny Canada €2,020,000

Season 5 (2008-2009): Poorya Nazari and Pieter De Korver Break the $3 Million Barrier

One old stop returned in Deauville and a new one joined the club in Budapest, replacing Dublin and Baden in Season 5. The season began with Sebastian Ruthenberg shipping the Main Event in Barcelona for €1,361,000 ($1,941,401) followed by Michael Martin winning the Main Event in London for £1,000,000. Martin was perhaps overshadowed by EPT 4 Sanremo Main Event champion Jason Mercier, who won the EPT London £1 Million Showdown for £516,000 ($944,847).

Looking Back at the European Poker Tour Part One: The Early Years 105Poorya Nazari

As the season progressed, things got even bigger when Poorya Nazari won the 2009 PCA Main Event for a cool $3 million, the highest top prize in EPT history. Both the 1,347 player field and the $12,674,000 prize pool set new EPT records as well.

Nazari's big win is often forgotten, since this was also the year that Bertrand "ElkY" Grospellier won the PCA High Roller Event for $433,500 a year after he won the PCA Main Event.

While the 2009 PCA Main Event held the record for the largest field size throughout Season 5, its other two records were history by the time the season was on the books with the EPT 5 Monte Carlo Grand Final, generating a prize pool of €9,350,000 ($12,293,896). Pieter De Korver claimed the record-breaking top prize, which still holds to this day, of €2,300,000 ($3,024,167).

Meanwhile, Sandra Naujoks became the second woman to win an EPT Main Event title by winning the event in Dortmund for €917,000 ($1,159,541).

EPT Season 5 Main Event Winners

Date Event Entrants Main Event Winner Country Prize
Sept. 10-14, 2008 EPT Barcelona Open 619 Sebastian Ruthenberg Germany €1,361,000
Oct. 1-5, 2008 EPT London 596 Michael Martin United States £1,000,000
Oct. 28 - Nov. 1, 2008 EPT Hungarian Open, Budapest 532 Will Fry United Kingdom €595,840
Nov. 15-19, 2008 EPT Warsaw Open 217 João Barbosa Portugal €367,140
Dec. 9-13, 2008 EPT Prague 570 Salvatore Bonavena Italy €774,000
Jan. 5-10, 2009 PokerStars Caribbean Adventure, Paradise Island 1,347 Poorya Nazari Canada $3,000,000
Jan. 20-24, 2009 EPT French Open, Deauville 645 Moritz Kranich Germany €851,400
Feb. 17-21, 2009 EPT Scandinavian Open, Copenhagen 462 Jens Kyllönen Finland DKr6,542,208
March 10-14, 2009 EPT German Open, Dortmund 667 Sandra Naujoks Germany €917,000
April 18–23, 2009 EPT Sanremo 1,178 Constant Rijkenberg Netherlands €1,508,000
April 28 – May 3, 2009 EPT Grand Final, Monte Carlo 935 Pieter de Korver Netherlands €2,300,000

Stay tuned at PokerNews for parts two and three of the history of the EPT.

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