With the board reading , Dario Minieri bet out 4,150. Garry Gates raised the action to 11,000 and Minieri announced all in. Gates snap called, tabling for a set of fives. Minieri flipped up .
The river brought the and Gates was able to score a double up, boosting him to 80,000.
An under-the-gun player raised to 1,700 and received calls from David "Devilfish" Ulliott in the cutoff and the player in the small blind. When the flop came down , the small blind checked while the UTG continuation bet 3,500. Devilfish was the only one to make the call and it was heads up to the turn.
The UTG continued his aggression with a bet of 8,000, which Ulliott quickly called as he chowed down on a bowl of salmon and rice. When the appeared on the river, UTG slowed down with a check, but quickly called Ulliott's bet of 8,500.
"Ace-king," the UTG player said as he tabled .
"Of course you have ace-king, buddy," Devilfish complained as he flashed his and sent it to the muck. Ulliott hasn't had much success here on Day 2b and is down to 28,000.
Well, we might not see a bigger pot than this over the next hour or so, perhaps not even at all today, but you never know what may happen.
It started with a wet looking flop of , one player bet 5,000, Ramdin made it 15,000 before another player check-raised all in for 41,000 total. The first player then moved all in for 120,000 and Ramdin snap-called faster than a cobra.
Player 1: for top pair and an open-ended flush draw
Ramdin: for the nut straight
Player 2: for the nut flush draw
Ramdin had both players covered and if his hand held he would move up to about 375,000 in chips - which would be far and away the chip lead at this point. The turn was the but the on the river was a card Ramdin didn't want to see.
The second player trebled up to about 140,000 with his nut flush while the other made a slight profit, moving up to 165,000. Ramdin lost more than half his stack but still has move than average with about 75,000 remaining.
Mike Matusow had been having a rough day, unable to get anything going it seemed, and in a hand that was a microcosm of his whole day, he has been eliminated. Matusow and Terrence Chan were heads up on a flop of . Chan checked to Matusow, and with about 3,500 in the middle, Matusow put out a bet of 3,000. Chan thought for just a few moments before putting out a stack that had Matusow covered. Matusow beat him into the pot with the call, and was in disbelief when he saw Chan's hand.
Chan:
Matusow:
When he saw Chan's hand, Matusow could only stare up at the ceiling for a few moments before tabling his hand. He would need one of the two remaining kings in the deck to survive, and he wouldn't get it on the turn, the . Rubbing salt in the wound, the river came the , giving Chan unnecessary quads. Matusow spoke briefly with the ESPN cameras, before quickly making his final exit out of the Amazon room for this WSOP.
A player in the cutoff raised to 1,400 and got one caller in Odette Tremblay from the button. The flop came and both checked. The turn was the . The preflop raiser bet 2,500, and Tremblay quickly called.
The river brought the . Tremblay's opponent fired a single orange chip for a bet of 5,000 this time, and after a few seconds Tremblay called. Her opponent showed , while she had . No pair for either, but Tremblay's cards were best and she dragged the pot.
A gentleman opened on the button, Jamie Kerstetter three-bet from the small blind, and her opponent four-bet shoved. Kerstetter called.
Button:
Kerstetter:
Kerstetter was dominated, but the flop gave her the nut-flush draw. The on the turn completed said flush, and her opponent was drawing dead. The completed the board, and Kerstetter chipped up to 125,000.
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Tournament Specifics:
Name: Exclsuive PokerNews Main Event
Date: July 17, 2011, starting at 2:00 PM EST
Game: NLH Freezout (password protected) ID#413428486
Buyin: $10+1
Prize: $20,000 added
Structure: starting @ 50-100, 15-min blinds
Starting stack: 30,000 chips
Password: PNLIVE
Payout: standard
Late reg: 120 mins
We were standing at the table next to Ted Lawson when we heard him yell in a not so happy tone. We walked over, and saw that he was the victim of a cooler flop that would send him home. We don't know the action, but the flop read . Lawson had , but he was drawing dead to runner runner straight flush, as his opponent had . The on the turn ended his day, and the river came a meaningless . Lawson entered the hand with over 50,000, but now he is on the rail, and his tournament has ended.
We don't know what the exact action was, but when we got to the table the small blind reraised a previous bet and made it 12,500. A player in late position then moved all in for 24,800 and Gaberiel Thaler flat called. Action was finally back on the small blind who moved all in for around 35,000. Thaler made the call and everyone flipped over their cards.
Thaler:
Small Blind:
Late Position:
Thaler was in an unbelievable spot as both his opponent's had each other's outs. Thaler was ecstatic as he was essentially on the verge of tripling up, because he only had the other two players covered by about 10,000. A crowd was growing of players from other tables came over to witness the rare spot Thaler was lucky to be in. The hand wasn't over though and Thaler hadn't won the hand yet. It was still possible for either of Thaler's opponent's to take the hand from him.
The dealer then spread out a flop which was just what Thaler needed, black cards and no chance for a run run straight. A turn made things a little more interesting as a river nine would now chop the pot between all players. With the landing on the river Thaler's second worst nightmare had come true he hit a straight, as did his two other opponents. Thaler didn't lose the hand, but he just chopped an almost guaranteed triple up with two players. Thaler was visible crushed as he walked away dejected and confused as the dealer split up all the chips equally.