Scott Baumstein opened to 11,500 in early position and Noah Schwartz raised it to 30,500 from the button. Baumstein took several minutes before deciding to fold.
"Show me and I'll show you," said Schwartz to his table mate. Baumstein took him up on it and showed . "Wasting my time with that sh**," laughed Schwartz as he turned over .
"I wasn't thinking about calling," answered Baumstein.
"Wasting my time. Payout Table 10," joked Schwartz and then telling the floor "he took two minutes out of my life with ace ten. He should get a penalty for that."
In a hand that went into the break, Noah Schwartz fired a bet of an unknown amount from the cutoff with the board reading , and Markus Ross made it about 100,000. Schwartz called after some thought, and the river prompted Ross to bet his last 68,500. Schwartz called, and Ross showed for a pair of kings on the river. Schwartz had , also a pair of kings, but his kicker played, while Ross played the five.
On hands at adjacent tables, Stefano Terziani and Liv Boeree were eliminated within seconds of one another. Terziani was the first to go when he got it all in with on a flop and was called by Ambrose Ng who held . The turn was the keeping Terziani in the lead but the on the river gave Ng the queen high straight and the pot.
Boeree was all in and at risk with against John Patgorski and his . The flop gave Boeree some chop hope as it came and the PokerStars Team Pro asked the dealer to give her a nine for that chop. The cameras gathered around and it was not to be as the turn was the and the river was the to send the popular Boeree to the rail.
Owen Crowe was all in for 83,000 with against the held by David Eldridge.
The flop fell , giving Eldridge a commanding lead with a set of sevens. Crowe was drawing to running aces and he was half way there after the turn, but the river officially locked up the pot for Eldridge.
Jonathan Duhamel opened to 13,000 from the button and Robert Schiffbauer three-bet all in for 85,000 from the small blind. Noah Schwartz folded the big blind and Duhamel plopped out calling chips.
Duhamel:
Schiffbauer:
The flop came down , keeping Duhamel's ace high in the lead. The Team PokerStars Pro paired his ace on the turn after the hit the felt, but this also gave Schiffbauer outs to make both a Broadway straight and a spade flush. Nothing materialized for Schiffbauer, though, as the completed the board on the river. Duhamel scooped the pot and now has a stack of 240,000.