Teun Mulder dominated the 10,000��������� High Roller at GGPoker from start to finish. The Dutch pro turned a massive chip lead into a wire-to-wire victory, pocketing $476,561 plus a 10,000����������������� Live Paradise. Out of 243 entrants who built a $2,357,100 prize pool, only Mulder stood tall after two days of brutal play.
The final table kicked off with nine players chasing glory. Teun Mulder entered with 6 million in chips, good for 86 big blinds, towering over the field. Enrico Camosci sat close behind at 77 big blinds, while Alejandro Lococo held third with 61 big blinds.
All nine locked in at least $59,570. Tension built as blinds climbed. Commentators Jeff Gross and Dylan Weisman called the stacks deep, promising a grind.
Mulder stayed calm. He picked spots to build his edge.
Here are the starting chip counts:
| Player | Chips | Big Blinds |
|---|---|---|
| Teun Mulder | 6,053,124 | 86 |
| Enrico Camosci | 5,380,742 | 77 |
| Alejandro Lococo | 4,277,445 | 61 |
| Sebastian Gaehl | 2,470,301 | 35 |
| Nikita Kalinin | 2,012,074 | 29 |
| Matheus Machado | 1,695,941 | 24 |
| Damir Gabdullin | 1,554,095 | 22 |
| Ivan Ilichev | 1,256,414 | 18 |
| Gaspare Sposato | 1,111,864 | 16 |
Brutal Bustouts Thin the Field Fast
Early action flew quick. Nikita Kalinin shoved ace-king but ran into Camosci’s pocket aces. He bowed out ninth for $59,570.
Ivan Ilichev followed in eighth. His ace-queen shove lost to Mulder’s ace-eight when an eight hit the flop. Ilichev took $77,253.
Matheus Machado hit seventh. Pocket tens looked strong until Lococo and Gabdullin woke up with ace-kings. Aces on flop and turn ended it. Machado earned $100,184.
Gaspare Sposato made a bold call in sixth. He put in his stack with six-five offsuit against Gaehl’s king-five suited. No help came. Sposato got $129,923.
Each bust ramped up pressure. Players felt the heat.
Drama Peaks with Top Four Battles
Damir Gabdullin fell fifth. He held pocket jacks on a tricky board but Camosci had trips with eight-seven. Gabdullin pocketed $168,489.
Enrico Camosci, once second in chips, crashed out fourth after shoving ace-jack suited into Mulder’s ten-eight suited. A ten on the flop spelled doom. Camosci banked $218,504.
Three-handed play turned wild. Sebastian Gaehl shoved king-nine from the button. Lococo called with ace-nine suited and held firm. Gaehl grabbed third for $283,365.
Heads-up pitted Mulder against Lococo. Lococo grabbed a brief lead but Mulder struck back on a jack-ten-jack-ace board. His king-jack beat Lococo’s ace-king. Mulder took a 3-to-1 edge.
Crushing Final Hand Seals Mulder’s Glory
The end came swift. Lococo limped ace-ten offsuit. Mulder jammed five-four suited from the small blind and flopped a full house on five-four-four. Lococo called all-in but a seven on the turn locked it. Lococo earned $367,478 for second.
Mulder’s path showed pure skill. He led Day 1 with nine left and never looked back. This marked his first GGMillion$ win.
Day 1 drew stars like Mikita Badziakouski, Simon Mattsson, and Pavel Plesuv, all cashing in the top 25. Barak Wisbrod bubbled the final table, missing big money.
Mulder now eyes live events with his Paradise ticket. His style mixes aggression and patience, perfect for high stakes.
Poker fans love these stories. Online fields pack talent, and one hot run changes lives. Players dream of satellite paths or direct buys leading here. GGPoker’s weekly event keeps the action hot, with millions guaranteed.
Teun Mulder’s masterclass proves chip leads matter, but closing seals legends. What a ride. This win boosts Dutch poker pride and reminds grinders that dominance pays off huge.
This tale of grit and cool heads under fire leaves you pumped.