2026 PokerStars Open Namur

€1,100 Main Event
Day: 5
Event Info
2026 PokerStars Open Namur
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
k6
Prize
€220,800
Event Info
Buy-in
€1,100
Prize Pool
€1,491,828
Total Entries
1,572
Level Info
Level
36
Blinds
150,000 / 300,000
Ante
300,000
Players Info - Day 5
Entries
9
Players Left
1
Players Left 1 / 1,572
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€1,100 Main Event

Day 5 Completed

Koen De Visscher Seals Career-Best Score and 2026 PokerStars Open Namur Main Event Win (€220,800)

Level 36 : Blinds 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante
Koen De Visscher
Koen De Visscher

The curtains have come down on the 2026 PokerStars Open Namur Main Event at Circus Casino Resort, and the nine players returning for the final table served up an epic battle of willpower and high-level poker strategies, with over 11 hours of play required before Koen De Visscher was crowned champion on native soil, defeating Austria’s Henrik Veldhoen heads‑up.

In truth, the real battle did not lie there, as De Visscher held a 10:1 advantage after eliminating British crusher Andrew Hulme in third, but in the four-handed confrontation that raged between the Belgian, Hulme, Veldhoen and David Docherty.

After Docherty came unstuck bluffing against Hulme, and was eliminated by the same foe shortly after, De Visscher, Hulme and Veldhoen would contest pot after pot, it taking over four hours for them to be separated.

De Visscher held the lead for the vast majority, but the right circumstances for two players to be willing to put significant chips in the middle at the same time just didn't seem to appear.

However, he ultimately got the job done, emerging as the last player standing in a 1,572-entry field, bagging the famous shard trophy and huge first-place prize of €220,800 in the process.

2026 PokerStars Open Namur Main Event Final Table Results

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1Koen De VisscherBelgium€220,800
2Henrik VeldhoenAustria€138,500
3Andrew HulmeUnited Kingdom€100,300
4David DochertyUnited Kingdom€78,000
5Dario QuattrucciItaly€60,000
6Stan van DijkNetherlands€46,000
7Nicolas BurtinFrance€36,000
8Sebastien GuinandFrance€28,000
9Lulei HuItaly€21,558
Final Table
2026 PokerStars Open Main Event Namur Final Table

The win reaffirms De Visscher hasn't lost his touch, with the former full-time pro having stepped away from the game in 2012 for at least ten years to focus on family and other interests. De Visscher became slightly jaded with the schedule, but has gradually returned to his first love since 2022.

Winner's Reaction

De Visscher secured a number of six-figure scores when he was playing full-time, but confirmed this was his biggest, and the fact it came with victory made it much the sweeter. "So happy, such a tough day, I played 2008-2012 pretty hectic, then stopped for ten years. I started coming back slowly from 2022-2023, mostly in France. This is actually the first time I've played in Belgium for ten years.

It was really tough. For me I was very tired, actually, I woke up at 3 a.m. and couldn't get back to sleep. The good thing for me was that we were so deep and I realized immediately this is going to take well into the night, so prepare for that. I knew it was going to be really tough, different profiles, player types, then some really good players at the end. Especially Andrew, he was the main guy that I knew would be giving me the hardest time, probably David as well. Stan I think would have been dangerous but I coolered him ace-king against ace-queen quite early, I'd heard he was really good, and it seemed the case, so I was glad he was gone."

On Hulme, the champion said "Me and Andrew really battled hard, not necessarily really big pots, but always stabbing, bluffing, raising. We both knew the ICM issues when Henrik got short. We played so many hands but we also didn't want to get it in light so sometimes, you have to play pretty strange in these spots. I think I handled it pretty well, but I ran really hot, I'm not going to lie. You have to, to win a tournament field size like this, any tournament really.

That's what happened today as well, I hit so many flops, so many hands. I never had a proper tough situation really, where they raise me with something mediocre, it just went my way. I picked my spots wisely and it turned out well.

It was obvious no-one was going to make a big mistake. Henrik got unlucky at points, and things just went my way. Winning the flip with Andrew was the key clearly, I think if I lose that we might be playing to 5 a.m.! I think it's a pretty standard call, but I really had to think because it was the first time he rejammed on me. But he was getting a bit shorter, and it was just too good to fold, and ace in the window."

Koen De Visscher
Koen De Visscher & Henrik Veldhoen

"My pro career was just very intense period of five years. It was really fun, and I had nice results, but I always sort of felt it was a tough life to do this full-time your whole life. So I traveled, did other things, I had two kids.

I have a different mindset now, I'm older, I don't know maybe because it is not the same financial pressure as before. And it's just so liberating that I can play the game when I want, and if I don't want to play for two months I don't. I might study a bit, I always studied a bit, but not grinding anymore. But I know I can hold my own in fields like this. I just want to say the structure is unreal for a 1k, it’s an EPT Main basically, you have so much time. I was down to ten bigs at one point and was thinking no need to panic.

I'm building a house, so this will probably help with the furniture for that and some holidays with the kids. I probably would have gone to Vegas 15 years ago but not now!"

Final Day Recap

Veldhoen led the final nine of the €1,491,828 prize pool event, with a narrow gap to Stan van Dijk and Nicolas Burtin, and it was a relatively quiet start to proceedings.

Matters started to get moving when short-stack Lulei Hu busted to the champion with an inferior ace, but that was the only elimination in the first session. On the first hand back after the break, Sebastien Guinand was a goner when he lost a flip to Dario Quattrucci.

Veldhoen was on the right end of a flip to bust Bartin to maintain his lead, but De Visscher hit the front when Quattrucci cold-four-bet-folded when the Belgian had kings, and he then picked up rockets shortly after.

Docherty doubled through van Dijk with cowboys after an ill-timed four-bet jam from the Dutchman. Shortly after, a brutal three-way cooler erupted resulting in three stacks hitting the middle preflop, and the demise of van Dijk.

De Visscher, van Dijk and Quattrucci all had strong aces, but De Visscher had the best of it, and Quattrucci was last. However Quattrucci found trips on the flop to triple, and De Visscher won a chunky side-pot against van Dijk.

Hulme had been very quiet thus far, being pretty much completely card dead, but that started to change in the next stint as he climbed the standings, helped by picking up quads.

Quattrucci's run would end in fifth when he ran nines into Docherty's aces, before De Visscher took a big three-bet pot against Docherty with two pair to establish a commanding lead, with Veldhoen also stretching ahead of Docherty and Hulme.

Docherty was left with crumbs and disposed of by Hulme, leaving De Visscher, Hulme and Veldhoen all evenly matched.

David Docherty
David Docherty

There followed an intense period of three-handed combat between a trio of accomplished players, none of whom seemed likely to make a serious mistake. The lead changed hands on numerous occasions, but Veldhoen began to be left behind after he bet into De Visscher holding the nuts.

Veldhoen sustained further damage when he ran into De Visscher's cowboys, but the right conditions for two parties to want to risk it all at the same time would just not arise. De Visscher eventually established a commanding lead again when a hero-call from Hulme backfired, but Hulme soon fought back.

Andrew Hulme
Andrew Hulme

Something had to give, and the key moment duly arrived when Hulme three-bet jammed versus an open from De Visscher, and lost a flip.

After taking the first few pots of heads-up play and leaving Veldhoen with crumbs, De Visscher sealed the title with king-high versus queen-high.

Veldhoen was also overjoyed with a career-best score, and after hugging the champion he vaulted down the stairs to be embraced by his GRND On Tour colleagues, who had been backing him vociferously throughout.

That concludes our coverage of this event, with the next PokerStars Open stop scheduled for Malaga, running from June 22-28, 2026, and be sure to check out PokerNews coverage of tournaments from all over the world.

Tags: Andrew HulmeDario QuattrucciDavid DochertyHenrik VeldhoenKoenKoen De VisscherLulei HuNicolas BurtinSebastien GuinandStan van Dijk

Koen De Visscher Wins 2026 PokerStars Open Namur Main Event (€220,800)

Level 36 : Blinds 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante
Koen De Visscher
Koen De Visscher

Belgian Koen De Visscher has secured a famous victory on home soil, taking the first-place prize of €220,800 and the trophy.

Stay tuned for a recap of the day and an interview with the winner.

Tags: Koen De Visscher

Henrik Veldhoen Eliminated in 2nd Place (€138,500)

Level 36 : Blinds 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante
Henrik Veldhoen
Henrik Veldhoen

After relentlessly applying pressure in the first few hands, and taking them all, Koen De Visscher had left Henrik Veldhoen with 1,450,000.

Veldhoen jammed, and De Visscher called.

Henrik Veldhoen: Q2 All in
Koen De Visscher: K6

With the title on the line, Veldhoen needed help, and his rail were pleading for a queen below the stream table.

However, he bricked the J9599 runout, ending the contest and crowning Koen De Visscher as champion.

The players warmly shook hands and shared a bear hug, and De Visscher turned and started pumping his fists in celebration, clearly delighted to be the last player standing.

Veldhoen didn't seem to be too distraught after securing a new career-best score, a huge smile across his face as he ran down the stairs to be embraced by his boisterous supporters.

Tags: Henrik VeldhoenKoen De Visscher

Heads-Up Play Underway

Level 36 : Blinds 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante

The last two players standing have begun their final duel, with Koen De Visscher an overwhelming favorite.

Tags: Koen De Visscher

Andrew Hulme Eliminated in 3rd Place (€100,300)

Level 36 : Blinds 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante
Andrew Hulme
Andrew Hulme

Koen De Visscher opened to 800,000 from the button, and Andrew Hulme three-bet jammed from the big blind for 7,625,000, and looked concerned when De Visscher made a relatively quick call.

Andrew Hulme: 77 All in
Koen De Visscher: A10

It was a flip, but the ace was in the window on the A92 flop, and there was no two-outer on the J turn or 8 river.

Below in the cash game area, watching on the TV screen, Veldhoen's rail exploded with joy as their man managed to ladder to second, as shouts of "Henrik, Henrik" went up from the floor.

The tournament is now heads-up, and De Visscher has a huge advantage, but Veldhoen's rail certainly believe he can turn it around.

The players have been sent on a 20-minute break.

Tags: Andrew HulmeKoen De Visscher

Double for Veldhoen

Level 36 : Blinds 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante
Henrik Veldhoen
Henrik Veldhoen

Henrik Veldhoen was all-in for 2,425,000 and at risk against Koen De Visscher.

Henrik Veldhoen: Q10 All in
Koen De Visscher: 96

It was a fair fight, and although De Visscher went ahead on the 643 flop, Veldhoen found the 10 on the turn and the Q on the river to make two pair and double, as his large rail of supporters celebrated enthusiastically.

Tags: Henrik VeldhoenKoen De Visscher

Another One to De Visscher

Level 36 : Blinds 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante
Koen De Visscher
Koen De Visscher

Koen De Visscher limped from the small blind with JJ, and Henrik Veldhoen knuckled 42.

On the 762 flop, De Visscher check-raised to 800,000 in the face of a bet of 400,000 from Veldhoen.

Veldhoen called to see the 3 turn, where De Visscher fired out a bet of 950,000, forcing a fold from Veldhoen.

Tags: De VisscherHenrik VeldhoenKoenKoen De Visscher

Hulme Takes From De Visscher

Level 36 : Blinds 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante

Andrew Hulme limped AQ from the small blind, and Koen De Visscher checked 104.

The A107 flop and K turn were checked to the 5 river, where Hulme led out with a bet of 600,000, and De Visscher called, to be shown the bad news.

Tags: Andrew HulmeDe VisscherKoenKoen De Visscher

Two Pair For Hulme

Level 36 : Blinds 150,000/300,000, 300,000 ante
Andrew Hulme
Andrew Hulme

Andrew Hulme limped the small blind with 109, and Koen De Visscher checked J6.

On the J92 flop, Hulme check-called a bet of 300,000 from De Visscher.

The 10 rolled off on the turn, and Hulme check-called versus a bet of 1,000,000 from De Visscher.

The 7 river completed the board. Hulme checked once more, and De Visscher checked back.

Tags: Andrew HulmeKoen De Visscher

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