Inside the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino isn't the only place for you to satisfy your World Series of Poker appetite. WSOP.com is the leading online poker site in Nevada and has plenty of action running around the clock, seven days a week.
All summer long, a special promotion labeled Multi-Table Madness will be running from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m. PT each night. The promotion will select one random hand at a random cash-game table during those hours that will award every player dealt into the hand with a cash bonus up to $100.
What's more is that WSOP.com will be sweetening the prize by giving players as much as $100 more for each additional table they're playing at during the time of the drawing. That means if you're playing in four different cash games when your table is selected, you could walk away with up to $400 in bonus money.
For complete information regarding WSOP.com's Multi-Table Madness promotion, please click here.
We found Brian Brubaker calling what appeared to be a four-bet shove from Kyle Bowker before the flop.
Brubaker:
Bowker:
Everything looked good for a double for Bowker on fourth street: . The river meant he was done though, and he just silently and softly pounded the table with the bottom of his fist as he got up to collect his backpack.
Enrique Manuel bet 2,000 out of the small blind on fourth street on a board of . Jason Seitz pushed all in for 3,050 total, and a player behind made the call. Manuel called as well, and the river brought a . Manuel shoved for his last couple of thousand, and the third player in the pot made a disgusted fold, saying he turned a flush.
Manuel showed for the second nuts, and Seitz mucked his hand.
Eddy Sabat responded to a 450-chip opening raise from the player at the end of his latest table by bumping it up, making it 1,250 to see a flop.
His heavily stacked opponent promptly pushed all in for 6,500 effective. Sabat was left with a decision for all his chips and decided to pass, living to fight another orbit or two at the very least.
Alex Queen opened to 450 and was called by the cutoff and button. In the big blind, James Mackey moved all in for 4,925, and Queen folded. The cutoff pushed over the top, and the button got out of the way.
"You're good," Mackey said, turning over .
The cutoff, though, only held , meaning Mackey had solid equity with his overs.
"I'm happy to see that," Mackey said with a smile, clearly pleased he wasn't dominated.
The board ran out giving Mackey a pair of sixes for the double up.