
The fourth day of the Bombay High Stakes Week at the luxurious Bombay Club in Tallinn saw the biggest buy-in tournament of the series so far, as players had to dig deep in the pockets… €50,000 deep, to jump into the Bombay Big 50.
With the buy-in set so high, the field stayed small with seven entries, but that still created a hefty prize pool of €339,500. Only two places would be paid, with the winner set to take home €220,700 and the runner-up pocketing €118,800. With the top two paid and short-handed action, it was intense from the very start.
- Read more: Kaspar Kaisel Wins €25K Main Event at Bombay High Stakes Week
- Read more: Chess Grandmaster Ottomar Ladva Wins €10K Warm-Up to Kick Off Bombay High Stakes Week
- Read more: The 2025 Bombay High Stakes Week Kicks Off Today in Tallinn
- Read more: The 2025 Bombay High Stakes Week Brings the Action to Tallinn
Among those in early action were Norwegian businessman Morten Klein and chess grandmaster Ottomar Ladva, both made quick exits, but decided to fire a second bullet. To get their money back, they’d have to reach the heads-up. Klein didn’t get there as he exited in fourth, while Ladva stuck around to give himself a shot at another Bombay title.
Before that came into play, Thomas Santerne bowed out in fifth, leaving just a trio of high-stakes regulars: Kayhan Mokri, Ottomar Ladva, and Teun Mulder. But as it is, one of the three musketeers had to go home empty-handed. And somehow, that someone was Teun Mulder. Again.

Incredibly, the Dutch pro stone-cold bubbled for the third time in a row, having already missed the money by one place in both the €10,000 Turbo and the €25,000 Main Event earlier in the week. There must be something in the Tallinn air that just doesn’t vibe with Mulder’s mojo. A three-peat no one dreams of.
With Mulder out, it was down to Ottomar Ladva and Kayhan Mokri to battle for the Big 50 title. In the end, the Norwegian, who was probably the most active player this week, finally got to lift a trophy at the Bombay Club. Mokri triumphed over the Estonian Ladva, locking up his first-ever Bombay title and the massive €220,700 first-place prize.
Ladva added another solid score to his growing Bombay resume, earning €118,800 for second place.

Bombay High Stakes Week – €50,000 The Big 50 Final Results
Place | Player | Country | Prize |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Norway | €220,700 | |
2 | Estonia | €118,800 |
More Action Ahead
The action at Bombay High Stakes Week continues today with the €10,000 Fast Bounty event. No Limit Hold’em structure, eight-handed as always at Bombay Club, and capped at 64 players.
Half the buy-in goes into the bounty pool, and no gimmicks; Knock out a player, pocket a crisp €5,000. With 30,000 starting chips, 20-minute levels, and late registration + re-entry open until Level 11, you can expect the bounties to fly and the play to be fast and furious.