Rasmus Sihvonen Legacy Continues to Climb After Winning €555 Championship

by
Jason Glatzer
January 16, 2026
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Rasmus Sihvonen Legacy Continues to Climb After Winning €555 Championship
Rasmus Sihvonen

Players are gearing up for what promises to be an action-packed final weekend of the 2026 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker at Olympic Casino Lietuva.​

Defending Vilnius Ace Breaker Main Event champion Rasmus Sihvonen has been making quite the name for himself this week, adding the biggest title of the festival so far after winning the three-day €555 NLH Championship for €18,055 following a deal and a heads-up victory against formidable Lithuanian Algirdas Saveikis. This result, together with his 2025 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker Main Event victory for €28,760, would already be enough to cement Sihvonen’s legacy, but the Finnish crusher has been utterly dominating no-limit hold’em events this festival. Thus far, he is two-for-two in the multi-day events on the schedule, having previously shipped last weekend’s two-day €250 NLH Opening Event for €5,560.​

Two other trophies were awarded on Friday, further spreading the glory. Ukraine’s Volodymyr Bezverkhyi defeated Lithuania’s Egidijus Oleinik heads-up in the €200 NLH for €2,536, while Finland’s Jarmo Luokkala denied Lithuania’s Tomas Kovalenka in the €250 NLH Progressive Knockout for €1,462 plus bounties.​

Meanwhile, the €1,100 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker Main Event completed its final two of three opening flights with 151 entries so far, building a €143,450 prize pool and counting. Late registration will remain open for the first two 60-minute blind levels on Friday’s Day 2, with the action kicking off at noon, giving latecomers one last chance to jump into the spotlight. The poker.pro live reporting team will be on-site, covering the biggest hands, bad beats, and stories from the Main Event until a winner is crowned.​

The 2020 Kings of Tallinn Main Event champion, Johan Karlsson from Sweden, parlayed his 30,000 in opening chips into 228,000 on Day 1a to begin Day 2 with the chip lead. Jurgis Ragauskas (225,000), Evaldas Narmontas (211,000), Stepas Tindžiulis (207,500), WSOP bracelet winner Gediminas Uselis (204,000), and Vasilij Barna (202,500) also bagged more than 200,000 to set themselves up for deep runs on Day 2.​

Stay tuned as poker.pro continues to bring you all the key moments and stories from the 2026 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker, including live reporting of both the €555 NLH Championship and the €1,100 Main Event.

Sihvonen Defies Laws of Nature as he Wins €555 NLH Championship

Rasmus Sihvonen

The 2026 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker reached its halfway point on January 15, the festival’s sixth day, which featured the final day of the €555 NLH Championship. Eight players took their seats at noon, ready to battle it out for the €19,795 first-place prize. When the dust settled, a certain player would cement his status as the King of Olympic Casino Lithuania.

Variance? I Hardly Know Her!

The 2026 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker is the first OlyBet live poker event of 2026, taking place at Olympic Casino Lithuania, January 10-20. The atmosphere has been electric at the epicenter of Lithuanian live poker, and the festival could be considered a taste of the upcoming 2026 Kings of Tallinn, which will be held at Olympic Park Casino and Hilton Tallinn Park Hotel in Estonia.

While the €1,100 Main Event may be the one tournament during the 2026 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker that is the most intriguing one, the €555 NLH Championship was always destined to be one of the most popular events. It was a three-day affair with two starting-day flights, and the tournament wrapped up today in the most stellar fashion.

Vilius Zabarauskas

The poker.pro editorial office is on-site in Vilnius, and live reporter Christoffer Karlén covered the tournament from Day 2 and onwards. When late registration closed on Wednesday, the floor confirmed the number of entries to be 179, which translated to a €85,025 prize pool. All 20 players would be guaranteed a min-cash of €1,220, and at the top was a juicy €19,795 cash prize for the winner.

Day 2 wrapped up around 20:30 on Wednesday, with eight players bagging their chips for Thursday’s final table. The Day 3 contestants took their seats at noon, and the lineup featured some intriguing names, such as local players Vilius Zabarauskas, 2022 EPM €500 Main Event winner Algirdas Saveikis, and 2025 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker €555 Main Event champion Rasmus Sihvonen.

Mindaugas Autukevičius

The first one to bid farewell from the final table was Mindaugas Autukevičius. Autukevičius had begun the final stage of the tournament as the shortest stack, and eventually, his top pair was out-kicked by Sihvonen. Autukevičius received €2,820 for his eighth-place finish, and it wasn’t too long before he was accompanied on the rail by Matas Kacinskas. He had entered the final table as one of the middling stacks, but he got crippled early as Valdemaras Apolianskas woke up with aces. Shortly thereafter, Apolianskas took the rest of Kacinskas’ chips, who went out in seventh place for €3,490.

The aforementioned Zabarauskas is no stranger to Olympic Casino Lithuania; he’s been visiting the casino for years, and according to his profile on The Hendon Mob, he has a few trophies from Vilnius’ biggest poker room. He eventually got his stack in the middle pre-flop with pocket queens against the Big Slick of Apolianskas. It was Ace-King’s turn this time, and Zabarauskas would prove to be alive with one sixth of a Big Blind. He was eventually forced all-in and couldn’t produce a miracle; he had to settle for a sixth-place finish and €4,480 in cash.

Ralf Mikk

With five players remaining, Saveikis still maintained the chip lead at the first break, but Apolianskas and Sihvonen were both breathing down his neck. Sihvonen would eventually take over the driver’s seat, as he eliminated Estonian Ralf Mikk in fifth place for €5,760. It was around then that things started to go south for Apolianskas. He lost some chips here, some chips there, and eventually, he was the shortest stack amongst the remaining four players. He moved all in for 10 Big Blinds with King-Five suited, but much to his displeasure, he was up against the pocket kings of Deividas Daubaris. Apolianskas still seemed thrilled, though, as he received €7,420 for his fourth-place finish.

Three players left, then, and Sihvonen was a slight chip leader. Saveikis and Daubaris were involved in some hands against each other, and Saveikis did a decent job chewing away on the Daubaris stack. Soon enough, Daubaris moved all in with Ten-Seven off-suit from the Small Blind, and was eliminated against Sihvonen’s Queen-Jack. Daubaris cashed for €9,520, and as heads-up was about to commence, Sihvonen had a 3-to-2 lead against Saveikis.

It would prove to be quite the intriguing heads-up affair. Perhaps 30 minutes into one-versus-one play, Sihvonen forced his opponent all-in on a relatively monotone board. Unlucky for the Finn, though, as Saveikis had turned the nut straight. Saveikis overtook the chip lead by the finest of margins, and considering the stacks now were quite even, the two contestants decided to make a deal. Sihvonen locked up €15,090 and Saveikis €14,910; they would continue playing for an additional €2,965 and the coveted trophy.

Sihvonen continued nibbling on his opponent’s stack, and eventually, the Finn found himself with 65 % of the chips in play. He got another opportunity to eliminate his opponent as he moved all in with Ace-Three suited, but Saveikis woke up with Ace-Queen and managed to double up with the superior kicker.

Rasmus Sihvonen

It looked like yet another comeback from Saveikis, who now had Sihvonen covered again. Eventually, the two players clashed all-in, and Saveikis was attempting to deny Sihvonen yet another title on Lithuanian soil. Much to Saveikis’ displeasure, though, his top pair was no good against the top set of Sihvonen. Saveikis survived with two mere Big Blinds, and three hands later, Sihvonen sent his final opponent to the rail, claiming the additional €2,965 and the trophy.

It’s just a matter of time before Olympic Casino Lithuania rebrands as “Sihvonen Poker Room”. One year ago, he won the €555 Main Event during the 2025 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker. A few months later, in May, he came scarily close to becoming the first-ever OlyBet Showdown Main Event back-to-back winner, as he finished second in the €1,100 Main Event during the 2025 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius.

Rasmus Sihvonen

Then, this week, Thursday’s trophy was the second one Sihvonen claimed; the other day, he won the €250 NLH Opening Event. On top of that, he finished second in a €250 NLH side event.

A few days ago, poker.pro journalist Christoffer Karlén wrote an article listing his personal top five OlyBet moments from 2025. On that list, he mentioned Sihvonen’s dominance; perhaps, “The Karlén Effect” is what secured Sihvonen yet another successful week in Vilnius?

All and all, Sihvonen’s consistency is scary good, and as poker.pro is moving on to cover the €1,100 Main Event, it’ll be interesting to see if the Finn can extend his Lithuanian poker rampage.

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1 Rasmus SihvonenFinland€18,055
2 Algirdas SaveikisLithuania€14,910
3 Deividas DaubarisLithuania€9,520
4 Valdemaras ApolianskasLithuania€7,420
5 Ralf MikkEstonia€5,760
6 Vilius ZabarauskasLithuania€4,480
7 Matas KacinskasLithuania€3,490
8 Mindaugas AutukevičiusLithuania€2,820
9 Audrius NavickasLithuania€2,270
10 Mathies BoesenDenmark€1,880
11 Vasilij BarnaLithuania€1,880
12 Juris LiepinsLatvia€1,650
13 Viktorija RakejevaitéLithuania€1,650
14 Audrius StakelisLithuania€1,460
15 Stanislavs RussitsLatvia€1,460
16 Evaldas NarmontasNorway€1,330
17 Francesco De MartiniItalia€1,330
18 Algirdas ŠukysLithuania€1,220
19 Deividas ButnorasLithuania€1,220
20 Jurgis RagauskasLithuania€1,220

Volodymyr Bezverkhyi Wins €200 NLH

The €200 NLH attracted 44 entries to create a €7,106 prize pool with the top five players earning at least a €640 min-cash after Lithuania’s Erikas Fominas bubbled in sixth place. Poland’s Tomasz Deptula, (third – €1,280) Latvia’s Kristaps Kalva (fourth – €870), and Lithuania’s Vytautas Rybakas (fifth – €640) ran out of gas in the money leaving Ukraine’s Volodymyr Bezverkhyi heads-up for the title against Lithuania’s Egidijus Oleinik.

Bezverkhyi defeated his opponent to earn the trophy and the €2,536 top prize, while Egidijus Oleinik earned €1,780 for his runner-up performance.

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1 Volodymyr BezverkhyiUkraine€2,536
2 Egidijus OleinikLithuania€1,780
3 Tomasz DeptulaPoland€1,280
4 Kristaps KalvaLatvia€870
5 Vytautas RybakasLithuania€640

Jarmo Luokkala Wins €250 NLH Progressive Knockout

The €250 NLH Progressive Knockout witnessed 46 runners create €9,614 in prizes, including €4,600 in progressive bounties.

It was an international affair at the end, with the final five players competing for at least a €480 min-cash, all coming from different countries, after Lithuania’s Andrius Mažeika went home empty-handed in sixth place on the money bubble.

A Lithuanian was heads-up for the third time in a side event on Thursday after Sven Reimaa (third – €940 + bounties), 2025 WSOP Circuit Tallinn Main Event champion from Sweden Jenny Westerlund (fourth – €670), and Italy’s Maicol Darrigo (fifth – €480) collected their payout slips.

However, for a third straight event, an out-of-towner spoiled the dreams of the home crowd with Finland’s Jarmo Luokkala defeating Lithuania’s Tomas Kovalenka to win the trophy. Both players earned the €1,462 top prize from the prize pool. However, Luokkala’s bounty pull far exceeded anyone else in the event, having won the big final bounty at the end of the event.

PlacePlayerCountryPrize
1 Jarmo LuokkalaFinland€1,462
2 Tomas KovalenkaLithuania€1,462
3 Sven ReimaaEstonia€940
4 Jenny WesterlundSweden€670
5 Maicol DarrigoItaly€480

2026 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker Day €1,100 Main Event Chip Counts

Day 2 of the Main Event will begin with the 52 players who bagged chips during the first three opening flights from a field of 151 entries. The figures will continue to grow with late registration remaining open during the first two blind levels of Day 2, which is estimated to be slightly after 2 p.m.

Check out the chip counts from the 52 opening day survivors below, or head to the poker.pro live reporting for the seat draw and to follow the action throughout the event.

RankPlayerCountryChipsBig Blinds
1 Johan KarlssonSweden228,000152
2 Jurgis RagauskasLithuania225,000150
3 Evaldas NarmontasNorway211,000141
4 Stepas TindžiulisLithuania207,500138
5 Gediminas UselisLithuania204,000136
6 Vasilij BarnaLithuania202,500135
7 Edgaras GendvilisLithuania161,000107
8 Mitchell HynamEngland137,50092
9 Mantas UrbonasLithuania137,00091
10 Ignas VaitulionisLithuania134,50090
11 Justinas AdomauskasLithuania133,50089
12 Povilas JakutisLithuania133,00089
13 Lukas PeteškaLithuania132,50088
14 Deividas ButnorasLithuania130,50087
15 Jarmo LuokkalaFinland127,50085
16 Tomas BassusLithuania121,00081
17 Rokas BarzdžiusLithuania115,00077
18 Mindaugas KriaučiūnasLithuania114,50076
19 Toni JaervisaloFinland100,00067
20 Širak OganisianLithuania91,50061
21 Audrius NavickasLithuania81,50054
22 Sergejs PiratovsLatvia81,50054
23 Paulius JucysLithuania76,50051
24 Justas SemaškaLithuania72,00048
25 Deividas DaubarisLithuania70,00047
26 Valerij DobrinskijLithuania69,00046
27 Kęstutis JungevičiusLithuania69,00046
28 Paulius KatinasLithuania60,50040
29 Martynas RačinskasLithuania59,00039
30 Rišardas PaškevičiusLithuania55,50037
31 Vidar AssersenNorway55,00037
32 Jenny WesterlundSweden54,50036
33 Gediminas ZimaitisLithuania52,50035
34 Karolis SereikaLithuania50,50034
35 Kjell SternerSweden46,50031
36 Artūras DaukševičLithuania45,50030
37 Marius BareišisLithuania43,50029
38 Aurelijus SipavičiusLithuania43,00029
39 Jukka JuvonenFinland42,00028
40 Rokas SkridulisLithuania42,00028
41 Johan EkdahlSweden40,00027
42 Martin PiikEstonia37,50025
43 Vaidas LengvinasLithuania36,50024
44 Martynas MockeviciusLithuania34,00023
45 Vytautas LauruseviciusLithuania27,50018
46 Vladimiras MečkovskisLithuania26,50018
47 Edgaras TruskauskasLithuania25,00017
48 Audrius LaimelisLithuania20,00013
49 Matas KacinskasLithuania19,50013
50 Edgaras KausinisLithuania17,00011
51 Kornelijus SmilingisLithuania16,50011
52 Tomas MožeikoLithuania15,00010

2026 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker Schedule (Friday, January 16)

Players are gearing up for a big day with Day 2 of the 2026 OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Ace Breaker €1,100 Main Event, live reported at poker.pro, with the action kicking off at Noon.

While the Main Event won’t award a trophy until either late Saturday night or midday Sunday, players will have three other chances on Friday to go home a champion.

The €200 PL Sviten, which combines both five-card Omaha and five-card draw in the same game, kicks off at 2 p.m. A friendly crew of players are happy to walk through the rules and some basic strategy including the likes of The Festival Series founder Martin “Franke” von Zweigbergk and the Kings of Tallinn commentators Andreas “Wiseguy” Hoglund and poker.pro CEO Jason Glatzer. Speaking of The Festival Series, they will be bringing their special brand of poker to Vilnius in just a few months’ time, from May 28-31.

Those more interested in two-card poker will have two chances on Friday outside of the Main Event, including in the €350 NLH DeepStack Progressive Bounty at 3 p.m., followed by the €200 NLH at 7 p.m. While cash games will be running throughout the day and evening, the tournament schedule concludes at 10 p.m. with an €80 satellite guaranteeing at least two seats to the €1,100 Kings of Tallinn Main Event.

Check out today’s schedule below or head to the OlyBet Events website for the full schedule.

TimeEvent
12:00Event #16: €1,100 NLH Main Event Day 2, Plays 9 Levels Day 2
14:00Event #21: €200 PL Sviten, Five-card PLO & Draw, 6-handed
15:00Event #22: €350 NLH DeepStack Progressive Bounty, €100 Progressive Bounties
19:00Event #23: €200 NLH
22:00Event #24: €80 Satellite Kings of Tallinn Main Event, 2 x €1,100 SEATS GTD!

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