14 Final Tables, Zero Wins — Until Now: Enrico Camosci Claims His GGMillion$ Crown

Enrico Camosci Finally Wins First GGMillion$ – GGMillion$ Season 2026 Episode 19
The Italian pro Enrico Camosci conquered this week’s GGMillion$ for his first-ever title in the format after previously drawing a blank across 13 final tables. Beating Austrian Josef Schusteritsch heads-up, Camosci’s win came at the end of a rollercoaster final table as part of the GG World Festival, where some unique plays made the action one of the most entertaining all season.

Pre-Match Betting Odds
As the final table of nine dealt for seats, regular host Jeff Gross and special guest co-commentator Shaun Deeb took some time to break down the runners and riders in this week’s GGMillion$. It looked very difficult to pick a winner, with the Italian player Enrico Camosci starting with a slim lead on just 61 big blinds. He was a 5.00 betting favorite in the GGPoker client, but his nearest challengers weren’t the only players hoping to upset those odds.
Austrian player Josef Schusteritsch was second in chips on 56 big blinds and was priced up at 6.38, with Vietnamese player ‘LinhLe96’ (49BB/8.02) close by. Uruguay’s Rodrigo Peceli (46BB/7.58) was shorter odds less than a three-bet back, with British player Gavin Andreanoff (43BB/8.72) also starting with well over half the chip leader’s stack.
Hungarian Tamas Adamszki (36BB/7.64) had been in great form in recent weeks and was our pick to win from a deep position in the field.
A little further back but still with playable stacks, Germany’s Caspar Engelien (31BB/9.66), Finnish pro Eelis Parssinen (24BB/11.62), and Russian Alexander Zubov (24BB/12.92) were all hoping that a good start to the final table would catapult them right back into contention in the congested field.

Key Moments from the Felt
There was an early exit for perhaps the most experienced player at the felt, as Eelis Parssinen got his chips in bad and never caught up. All-in with ace-jack from the big blind, he ran into Peceli’s ace-king. The board of 9-4-2-K-K had the at-risk German drawing dead to the river on his way to a cash worth $216,594 in ninth place.
A bit later on, in the second of three infamous GGMillion$ ‘Mystery Hands’, Tamas Adamszki proved that even a great hand can painfully be just not enough (1:17:47). When Enrico Camosci moved all-in on a board showing K-4-2-8-6 with mystery cards, we could see as viewers that Adamszki had a big decision to make for his tournament life holding king-queen. In the end, he clicked the call button to his doom, as the Italian chip leader at the start of play showed ace-king for a superior kicker, and that was enough to reduce the field to seven players as the Hungarian left with $279,708 in eighth place.
Shortly after, Camosci had another victim. German player Caspar Engelien got it all in pre-flop with pocket jacks, and the Italian snap-called with ace-king. A flop of Q-9-2 was safe for the German, as was the four on the turn, but the river was an ace, taking out Engelien for $361,555 in seventh and giving the overnight chip leader an additional twenty million chips.

Three short stacks battled to stay alive. Gavin Andreanoff doubled with an ace-ten beating an ace-queen, while Alexander Zubov also survived several orbits with the short stack. That left ‘LinhLe96,’ who was the next to leave, busting in sixth place for $467,699 (1:48:10). They moved all-in with an ace-high flush draw on the turn, and was called by Rodrigo Peceli holding pocket sixes. A third six came down as a reward on the river for that call, improving the Uruguayan’s hand to a full house and sending the Vietnamese player home.
Alexander Zubov was slightly unfortunate, busting in fifth place for $605,350. Gavin Andreanoff shoved with eight-seven of diamonds and was snap-called by the Russian with ace-jack of hearts. A flop of 4-2-2 with one heart seemed safe for the Russian player, but the seven of hearts on the turn flipped the script in Andreanoff’s favor. Still, Zubov was chasing an ace, jack, or a heart with a 34% chance of winning the hand according to the on-screen live odds. The offsuit six river sent Zubov home and put Andreanoff back in contention with a solid chip stack.

It was a long stretch without a bust-out, during which Peceli went from having a real shot, holding around one-third of the chips in play, to languishing at the bottom of the counts. (2:46:50) All-in with ace-queen, he was in great shape to double through Enrico Camosci’s king-queen, but the dominant hand looked less likely to win when the flop of T-9-8, which gave the Italian jacks to go along with kings as outs. The jack of hearts on the turn was the absolute gin card, protecting Camosci’s hand from redraws by giving him the straight flush draw to go with his made straight. Peceli was down to three kings as outs to save his tournament life. Sadly, it was an offsuit three that sent him to the rail with $783,861 instead.
Gavin Andreanoff busted three hands later in third place for $1,015,361 after his raise with jack-queen was only called by Camosci with ace-queen. A safe flop of T-2-2 caused Andreanoff to bet small, which Camosci called. A queen arrived on the turn, and Shaun Deeb couldn’t hold back.
“He gets gifted the turn to cooler Gavin where Gavin’s going to jam.”
The American wasn’t wrong, and an ace on the river confirmed that play was heads-up, with Camosci – Deeb’s pick in the dinner bet with Gross – owning a 3:1 chip lead over Schusteritsch. That lead improved to around 10:1 after a dominant start to the final battle. But Josef Schusteritsch fought back as the top two at the start of the final were the final two players fighting it out for the title. The Austrian’s resurgence began with a double-up with an ace-deuce, but he still had just 20 big blinds. Those he used to double again with king-ten beating Camosci’s ace-deuce, bringing his stack up to 50m chips.

“He had like 8 million, man!” Deeb exploded.
“It’s never over!” Gross celebrated.
It wasn’t, but a brilliant small bluff from Camosci put him in the driving seat once more. Eventually, Schusteritsch’s tendency to flat call or check came back to bite him. With the Italian holding four-deuce and Schusteritsch having pocket queens, the Austrian called pre-flop to a flop of 6-5-2.
“This might be the hand.” Deeb predicted. (3:23:23) A bet from Schusteritsch was called by Camosci to the turn of an eight.
“Double-gutted…” teased Deeb. Another bet from Schusteritsch was called, and a deuce on the river was a killer blow for the Austrian, as Camosci made trips. Schusteritsch moved all-in, and Camosci called, finally winning on his first GGMillion$ title on his 14th GGMillion$ final table, earning the top prize of $1,705,063. Schusteritsch, brilliant too during the final table, was runner-up for $1,315,580.
This Week’s GGMillion$ Results – May 26th, 2026
“Duck, duck, goose, sending Enrico on the loose!” said Jeff Gross as the chips were in front of Enrico Camosci, this week’s first-time GGMillion$ champion. Gross asked this week’s special guest co-commentator Shaun Deeb what made sense to him about the final table and which aspects made his head spin.
“All of it made my head spin,” said Deeb. “I am on a completely different level of tournaments with these guys. I don’t know who’s higher. I’ve watched a few of these streams and feel like I can guess what’s usually going to happen but there were some crazy three-bets for value, crazy folds of really strong hands. We had an absolute blow-up of a chip lead, get a cooler then lose every hand. Online poker is still beatable guys!”
There was so much to unpick for Jeff Gross and Shaun Deeb during a superb final table full of entertainment at the GGMillion$. Jeff also asked if Shaun was looking forward to defending his WSOP Player of the Year title in Las Vegas this summer.
“For someone like me who is going to get top three a lot, there’s a ton of equity. I’m happy they’re rewarding Player of the Year. Hopefully I get top three, I really want to win and go back-to-back.”
Here’s how this week’s GGMillion$ players finished at the final table.
| Place | Player | Country | Prize |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Enrico Camosci | Italy | $1,705,063 |
| 2nd | Josef Schusteritsch | Austria | $1,315,580 |
| 3rd | Gavin Andreanoff | United Kingdom | $1,015,361 |
| 4th | Rodrigo Peceli | Uruguay | $783,861 |
| 5th | Alexander Zubov | Russia | $605,350 |
| 6th | ‘LinhLe96’ | Vietnam | $467,699 |
| 7th | Caspar Engelien | Germany | $361,555 |
| Tamas Adamszki | Hungary | $279,708 | |
| 9th | Eelis Parssinen | Finland | $216,594 |
Did Schusteritsch and Co. Check to Defeat Against Camosci?
Right from the early hands, Shaun Deeb highlighted how several players were betting too small or simply calling when applying pressure might have been the right play. This trend continued during a final table that was never timid but instead often left hands open to changing board textures post-flop where at other final tables the betting action might have ended pre-flop.
Late on, Josef Schusteritsch made a series of bets that were too small to scare off the eventual winner Enrico Camosci as the Italian continued to catch cards. No better example was in the final hand, where Schusteritsch tried to trap by slow-playing pocket queens and Camosci eventually caught the winning hand with four-deuce. Camosci was predicted to be ‘feeling the pressure’ at the start of the final table, but his opponents’ predilection for smallball betting or simply calling with monster hands like queens heads-up helped the Italian to keep risk low as he went for, and ultimately achieved, the reward of his first GGMillion$ title.
Watch all the action from this week’s GGMillion$ final table here:
2026 Week 18 2026 Week 20
About the Author: Paul Seaton has written about poker for over 10 years, interviewing some of the best players ever to play the game such as Daniel Negreanu, Johnny Chan and Phil Hellmuth. Over the years, Paul has reported live from tournaments such as the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas and the European Poker Tour. He has also written for other poker brands where he was Head of Media, as well as BLUFF magazine, where he was Editor.
* The pre-game pick is the sole opinion of the author. It in no way reflects or affects the outcome of the final table.
Edited by Shawn A.





