Just seven minutes into Day 6, Erick Lindgren got off to a great start with an early double. It began when Lindgren shoved all in from early position for 329,000 and cleared the field all the way around to Minh Nguyen in the big blind. Nguyen thought for a few moments before making the call.
Showdown
Lindgren:
Nguyen:
The ESPN cameras swarmed the table to capture the all-in moment of one of the biggest names remaining in the field. The atmosphere was tense, but alleviated when the flop gave Lindgren a pair of nines and increased his chances of winning the pot. The turn put an end to any further suspense as Nguyen was drawing dead.
The meaningless was put out on the river and Lindgren was all smiles with his early double.
A second early elimination from Table 314 to report, this one Carl Olson.
Olson was all in before the flop for his last 500,000 or so with and in a race with Feming Chan's . The five community cards came , and Chan's queens held. Olson is out, while Chan now sits with 1.12 million.
Ben Lamb's incredible run in 2011 continues to roll. Now that we're down to 137 players in the Main Event, Lamb is guaranteed at least 75 points in the 2011 World Series of Poker Player-of-the-Year Race, meaning he will finish the summer with a minimum of 734.05 points. That is especially significant since is vaults him in front of Phil Hellmuth (710.25 points) on top the POY Leaderboard.
Luckily for Hellmuth, the race will continue in October at the WSOP-Europe.
Mathew Frankland opened with a raise to 48,000 from middle position, and it folded around to Robert Peltecki who called from the small blind. Jared Vengrin folded from the big blind, and the two remaining players saw the flop come .
Peltecki checked, and Frankland continued with a bet of 250,000 -- more than the 157,000 or so Peltecki had behind. Peltecki quickly called with his remaining chips, showing for trip nines while Frankland had . The on the turn improved Peletcki to a full house and made the river no matter.
Peltecki moves up to 461,000 on that one, while Frankland falls to 1.285 million.
Bryan Follain opened the pot to 56,000 in early position, and Daryl Jace three-bet him from the button. It was 127,000 total, but Follain still wanted to play for more. He stacked together another raise and made it 247,000 total. Still not satisfied, Jace five-bet to 477,000 total. Follain moved all in over the top now, and Jace could not play. He snap-folded, in fact,
The action folded to Pablo Ubierna who moved all in for effectively 129,000 in the small blind. Jeff Becker called all in from the big.
Ubierna:
Becker:
Becker was behind, but the flop gave him kings and sixes. The on the turn was a brick, and so too was the on the river, doubling Becker to 285,000 chips.
We didn't catch the betting, but we do know that James Guinther was all in preflop for his last 380,000 and up against Martin Staszko.
Showdown
Guinther:
Staszko:
Guinther had gotten his money in good, but the flop quickly diminished any hopes he had of staging a comeback and making a run at the 2011 WSOP Main Event title. The turn officially left Guinther drawing dead, while the was put out on the river as a simple formality.
Guinther made his way from the Amazon Room while Staszko chipped up to 2.74 million.
We caught up to the action to see Alexander Debus all in and ahead with on a board of against the of John Hewitt.
The turn brought the and Hewitt would need one of the two remaining kings in order to send Debus home. Unfortunately for Debus, the struck the river, causing the table to gasp in unison.
"Oh wow...I folded a king," one of the other players at the table said. Debus could only stand there staring at the board and what possibly could have been had the deck complied.