From under the gun, Doug Polk opened to 10,000 only to have Nick Petrangelo three-bet the hi-jack to 32,000. With the action on Bill Klein in the cutoff, he made it 103,000 to go.
Polk folded, but Petrangelo called as the flop landed .
Petrangelo checked and Klein continued for 76,000 with Petrangelo calling as the turn landed the and he checked once again.
Klein moved all in for 378,000, and after a moment of pause, Petrangelo called.
Petrangelo:
Klein:
With Klein flopping top set, he would need to fade one of the final kings in the deck to remain alive.
The dealer delivered the on the river, and Klein doubled through to over 1.1 million in chips as Petrangelo was left crippled with just 24,000; good for nearly 5 big blinds.
Dan Smith bet 9,000 from the button on a flop, and David Peters raised to 24,000 from the big blind. Smith called, seeing an turn. Peters bet 36,000 and Smith called right away. On the river, Peters moved all in for 74,500. Smith took some time but called, and his was no good against .
Catching the action on the flop of , Nick Petrangelo moved all in for 42,500 from the big blind and was called by Justin Bonomo.
Jason Mercier then raised to 131,000 in the cutoff as Leon Tsoukernik folded the button. With the action back on Bonomo, he back-raised to 310,000 and Mercier instantly folded.
Bonomo:
Petrangelo:
With Petrangelo drawing to a flush, the on the turn would now open outs to a gutshot straight.
However, when the river landed the , Petrangelo would be sent to the rail as Bonomo soared up to nearly 1.4 million in chips.
Tony Guoga opened for 14,000, and Dan Shak called on his left in the cutoff. David Peters reraised to 55,000 in the big blind, chasing away Guoga. However, Shak was quick to announce all in. Peters called just as fast for about 330,000.
Peters:
Shak:
"He hasn't missed an all in yet," Shak said.
"Jack's coming," Guoga said confidently. "Nobody had a jack."