Yes he did. He's our current chip leader as players waddle back in from the various restaurants surrounding the casino.
2011 PokerStars.net European Poker Tour Berlin
It'll be pleasant to get out of the now cramped and sweaty casino for 90 minutes.
Back soon.
You won't find him in this tournament any more - he's busto.
Saar Wilf opened for 25,000 and Nima Ahrary reraised an indeterminate amount - indeterminate because before we could count it, Wilf had reraised enough to cover Ahrary, who called all in.
Wilf: 

Ahrary: 

Board: 




Ahrary is no more, and Wilf muttered something about it being the first time he'd won a race in forever. He's looking good for the novelty - he's at 850,000.
Miltiadis Kyriakides has been knocked out after being all-in on a 

flop with 
. Joep van den Bijgaart pushed all-in behind him with 
and this was enough to force Luis Jaikel to fold 
face up.
The
gave Kyriakides even more outs and the
shipped the pot to Van den Bijgaart who now has 863,000.
Thorsten Schäfer, one of three chunky stacks on his table, has been involved in many a preflop scuffle (often with Kristijonas Andrulis, who looks like he's come out on the wrong side of a few of them). Markus Grewe, however, looks like he had his number a minute ago, when Schäfer predictably raised on the button, got three-bet and returned fire with an extra 84,000. Grewe sat still for a while before slowly pushing out yet another raise. Schäfer took one look at the big stack of blue 10k chips and threw his hand away.
"I've had that feeling so many times today," ruefully commented Andrulis.
Robert Schulz has been knocked out after he made his move with 
preflop and found Russian Ilya Gorodetskiy (who came 16th here last year) making the call with 
.
The board offered little in the way of support, coming 



.
Gorodetskiy now has 300,000.
Mathias Kuerschner shoved for exactly 100,000 from the cutoff, and on the button Thorsten Schafer made the call. The blinds got out of their way, and they were on the backs.
Schafer: 

Kuerschner: a somewhat desperate but still live 

"Slowly please," Kuerschner told the dealer - although there was no need, as the TV crew spent a minute or two arranging themselves, and Kuerschner got to enjoy the 10 second pause between flop, turn and river that the cameras require.
Board: 




Kuerschner duly busted out, and Schafer is at 800,000.
Ben Wilinofsky has doubled to the heady heights of 850,000 after being all-in on the turn of a 


board against Timo Pfützenreuter. The latter had a multitude of outs on the turn with 
but missed on the
river.
Timo Pfützenreuter dropped to just 110,000 as a result.
Christian Knese is our latest casualty, his 
no good against Darin Kramer's 
on a 

flop. The
turn and
river changed nothing, and Knese hit the rail.
The board read 


when the chips went in, Zoran Mitic all in with 
for a set and Mario Adinolfi holding 
for a flush draw.
River:
, bringing in the flush.
"Yes!" cried Adinolfi and banged the table. "I wanna win this tournament!" (Please imagine fantastic Italian accent - he sounded almost exactly like Wario saying "I'm-a gonna ween!" in Mario Kart.) "I'm not here for the money," he added.
Mitic is out, and Adinolfi is at 820,000.