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Dutch Pro Mulder Crushes Wire-to-Wire for $476K With Brutal Full House To End Papo MC!

April 22, 2026 7 min Read

Teun Mulder Wins Debut GGMillion$ After Dramatic Finale – GGMillion$ Season 2026 Episode 15

This week’s GGMillion$ saw the chip leader at the start of play go wire-to-wire as he held off spirited competition on his way to winning a huge top prize of $476,561. Teun Mulder from the Netherlands was the champion, beating Alejandro ‘Papo MC’ Lococo heads-up to capture this week’s GGMillion$ crown.

Joining Jeff Gross in the virtual commentary booth this week was the No Limit Hold’em and Pot Limit Omaha legend Dylan Weisman. With over $8.6m in live earnings, the WSOP bracelet winner Weisman’s prowess at the poker felt is matched by few, with the American in 107th place on the all-time money list in his home country. He provided on-point analysis and entertainment in equal measure throughout the stream.

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Pre-Match Betting Odds

Heading into the action at the final table, two players were a considerable distance ahead of the rest. The Dutch player Teun Mulder began with the chip lead on 86 big blinds, and as such was rightly the betting favorite in the GGPoker client at odds of 3.62. Italian tournament regular Enrico Camosci was only marginally behind on 76 big blinds and was at odds of 4.26.

Behind the top two, the always entertaining Alejandro Lococo a.k.a. ‘Papo MC’ from Argentina had 61 big blinds and was backable at 5.06, with the German player Sebastian Gaehl (35BB/10.68) a juicy outside bet with a very playable stack. He was good value, certainly given the odds and his relatively large stack when compared to the bottom half of the leaderboard going into play. 

Russians Nikita Kalinin (28BB/10.0), Damir Gabdullin (22BB/17.92), and Ivan Ilichev (17BB/23.76) were all in the field, with the short stack being the second Italian at the virtual felt, Gaspare Sposato, who had just 15 big blinds and was available at odds of 20.04. Our outside tip for the win was another underdog in the Brazilian player Matheus Machado. With over half a million dollars in live earnings and over $4.4 million in GGPoker earnings, 24 big blinds was a decent starting stack and available at odds of 12.62.

Key Moments from the Felt

Play was initially a slow burn, as the tension rose over more than an hour with the blinds increasing at regular intervals. The first elimination came when Nikita Kalinin shoved ace-king into the pocket aces of Enrico Camosci, which held to bust the Russian in ninth place for $59,570. Shortly after, Kalinin’s countryman, Ivan Ilichev, joined him on the rail. Getting it all-in with ace-queen, only to lose to Mulder’s ace-eight when an eight came on the flop, sending Ilichev out with $77,253 in eighth place.

There was a heartbreaking defeat for our tip Machado in seventh place (2:30:30) when he got his chips into the middle as a big favorite in a coin flip. Holding pocket tens, the Brazilian contrived to lose to both Lococo and Gabdullin’s ace-king. An ace not only arrived on the flop but also on the turn, and Machado couldn’t catch the two-outer on the river to survive, cashing for $100,184 in seventh place.

It had been two hours, and only three players had busted but an unusual departure set the wheels in motion for a fast finish. It all started when Sebastian Gaehl shoved from the small blind with a suited king-five of spades, and Gaspare Sposato seemed to have an easy fold to make in the big blind with six-five of clubs. Incredibly, the short stack made the call and was quickly at risk for his tournament life. The runout couldn’t save his dominated hand, and the Italian left with $129,923 in sixth place as Jeff and Dylan were stunned in the commentary box.

“That’s crazy, that’s crazy!” said Dylan Weisman. 

“I am stunned by that call with six-high. I would never assume he’d call there.” Jeff agreed. “That was absolutely nuts.”

A few hands later, there was a mystery hand (2:40:30), where the hole cards are hidden for all but one player, and in this instance, it was the Russian Damir Gabdullin. On a board showing 9-8-8-Q-A, Enrico Camosci’s cards were hidden but he had shoved, covering Gabdullin’s stack The Russian had a big decision to make with pocket jacks but eventually called it off, only to be shown Camosci’s hand of eight-seven for flopped trips, which eliminated Gabdullin for a cash of $168,489.

The final four playing for the title were the top four heading into the final table, with the big difference being the increased lead for Mulder, who had nearly 11 million chips of the 25.7 million in play. Enrico Camosci was the next to leave, the Italian cashing for $218,504 in fourth place when he three-bet with ace-jack of diamonds and saw Mulder shove with ten-eight in the same suit. Camosci was right to call it off but a ten on the turn (2:47:00) sunk him for an agonizing exit as Mulder’s bold pre-flop move saw Lady Luck reward him.

Three-handed play lasted some time, which only helped Mulder build up an even bigger lead, as the ICM implications of exiting in the bronze podium position compared to silver crippled both Alejandro Lococo and Sebastian Gaehl’s chances. Eventually, Gaehl’s king-nine was a shove, and the Argentinian called it off with a dominating ace-nine. No luck came on the board for the German who busted for $283,365 as Lococo held to head into the final duel with just under half of Mulder’s chip stack. 

Lococo attacked the heads-up battle with freedom, and that devil-may-care attitude helped him snatch the lead. That all changed in a brutal hand, which showed how cruel poker can be. A board of J-J-T-A had landed when Mulder, now the shorter stack, bet small with king-jack. ‘Papo MC’ shoved with ace-king, and Mulder’s trap was sprung, as the Dutchman snap-called and held through the three river to take a decisive 3:1 lead.

The final hand was just as cruel for Lococo. Mulder committed his chips with five-four suited, and the Argentinian (3:27:00) made the easy call with ace-ten. The board was awful for the at-risk player, coming down 5-4-4 to gift the Netherlands player the full house. A seven on the turn confirmed Mulder’s victory for $476,561, as Lococo had to be satisfied with $367,478 as runner-up.

This Week’s GGMillion$ Results – April 21st, 2026

An incredible conclusion gave Mulder not only his first GGMillion$ victory and one of the year’s biggest top prize payouts but a package to the Baha Mar where this year’s WSOP Paradise festival takes place. 

“What a battle and what a player – a pretty accomplished win!” said Jeff Gross in the commentary box.

“This was one of the coolest final table I’ve ever watched. We got to see some really high-level technical poker and also some straight-up gangster stuff from ‘Papo MC’,” said Dylan Weisman. 

It was a stirring final hand to end what was a dramatic final table, with the Dutch poker pro Mulder claiming his debut GGMillion$ title and almost half a million dollars up top.

Place Player Country Prize
1st Teun Mulder Netherlands $476,561
2nd Alejandro ‘PapoMC’ Lococo Argentina $367,478
3rd Sebastian Gaehl Germany $283,365
4th Enrico Camosci Italy $218,504
5th Damir Gabdullin Russia $168,489
6th Gaspare Sposato Italy $129,923
7th Matheus Machado Brazil $100,184
8th Ivan Ilichev Russia $77,253
9th Nikita Kalinin Russia $59,570

Was Mulder Lucky or Did Others Fail?

While Teun Mulder certainly owned the final table, others contributed to his victory by failing to challenge late in the game. ‘Papo MC’ may have brought some gangster moves, but he was too bullish at times to his own detriment. Dylan Weisman frequently said that a small bet would suffice when the Argentinian moved all-in, and those big moves eventually cost him the top prize, or at least a better chance at it. 

Others followed suit, but Mulder did experience some positive variance too, and holding king-jack on the board that came late to switch the lead heads-up was vital. The Dutchman certainly had the cards but knew all the right moves to instigate action, and it was that skill that saw the final table chip leader over the line in the end.

Watch all the action at this week’s GGMillion$ final table with Jeff Gross and Dylan Weisman right here: 

2026 Week 14                                          2026 Week 16

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.

 

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