On a flop, Randall Lack checked to pre-flop raiser Hector Dominguez-Depaz who bet 230,000. The third player in the hand Nghia Le called and Lack folded.
The turn was the and Dominguez-Depaz bet 525,000. Le called. The pair both checked the river. Dominguez-Depaz showed for a busted straight draw while Le took down the pot with
"I was thinking about folding the turn," said Le.
"You were calling a shove on the river though?" asked Dominguez-Depaz, and Le shook his head.
On the very next hand Alexander Haro raised to 130,000 from the cutoff and Dominguez-Depaz moved all in from the big blind for around 1,100,000. Haro called.
Hector Dominguez-Depaz:
Alexander Haro:
There was a sweat on the flop as it gave Haro a flush draw. The turn was the and the river completed Haro's flush and sent Dominguez-Depaz to the rail.
Mark Zullo opened on the button with a raise to 150,000. Action folded to the big blind where Ivan Luca called.
The flop was and Luca checked to Zullo who bet 130,000. Luca called.
The turn was the and both players checked. On the river, Luca put out a small bet of 105,000. Zullo didn't waste any time calling and Luca showed down his for aces full of threes. Zullo mucked so Luca was able to take down the pot early in the day.
Michael Feil raised to 125,000 from early position and was called by Barry Faecher in the big blind. On the flop of , Faecher checked and faced a bet of 110,000 by Feil, quickly check-raising to 300,000. Feil gave it some thought and called. The appeared on the turn and a bet worth 450,000 by Faecher forced a near instant fold from Feil.
While the storm outside may be over, the action inside the Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino will be nothing short of thunderous as Day 6 of the 2018 World Series of Poker Main Event commences at 11 a.m. Due to last night's impromptu ending, caused by the power outing, 109 players will return to play the 1 hour and 23 minutes left in Level 26 that got cut short.
For 108 of them, capturing poker's ultimate achievement along with the $8,800,000 first place prize would be a dream coming true. One remaining player already knows what's it like to live that dream, as 2009 champion Joe Cada (2,965,000) is still in the hunt to become the first multiple Main Event winner since the late Stu Ungar in 1997. On Day 5, Cada reminded everyone who he was and the 2009 champ be one to watch when cards go back in the air.
Cada has quite a hill to climb if he's to etch himself even more in poker's history. Chipleader Michael Dyer has distanced himself with 12,180,000 in chips, making him the only player to start over the 10M mark. Late on Day 5, Dyer was all in in a massive confrontation against Cliff Josephy. Dyer, holding ace-king, spiked a fortuitous ace on the river against Josephy's pocket kings to rocket himself up the leaderboard.
Following Dyer are three-time bracelet winner Brian Yoon (8,395,000), Jeff Trudeau (8,305,000), Hari Bercovici (7,650,000) and Belgian MTT specialist Bart Lybaert (7,530,000). There's still plenty of dangerous contenders left in the field, as the likes of Barry Hutter (5,695,000), Eric Froehlich (5,365,000), Ivan Luca (4,580,000), Shaun Deeb (2,610,000) and James Obst (1,730,000) will also take a seat of Day 6.
Another story brewing is the back-to-back deep run of Frenchmen Benjamin Pollak (5,715,000). Last year, Pollak finished in 3rd place, and with an already heavily padded stack the Frenchman is looking to become the first back-to-back final tablist since Mark Newhouse, something Michael Ruane just missed out on last year. Kelly Minkin is the sole remaining female left in the field and with 1,205,000 in chips, "The Illest" will have to spin it up from one of the shortest stacks in the room.
Follow along with these stories as the 2018 WSOP Main Event continues to develop with coverage right here on PokerNews. Cards are back in the air at 11 a.m. with 1 hour and 23 minutes remaining in Level 26 (30,000/60,000/10,000). Levels are once again 120 minutes each with a 20-minute break after each level.
Plan for today is to play down until 27 players are remaining. A 60-minute meal break scheduled around 7:30 p.m. Below's level plan is subject to change, as last-minute decisions can be made throughout the day.
Level
Duration
Small Blind
Big Blind
Ante
26
83 minutes
30,000
60,000
10,000
20-minute break
27
120 minutes
40,000
80,000
10,000
20-minute break
28
120 minutes
50,000
100,000
15,000
20-minute break
29
120 minutes
60,000
120,000
20,000
60-minute break (around 7:30 p.m.
30
120 minutes
80,000
160,000
20,000
20-minute break
31
120 minutes
100,000
200,000
30,000
20-minute break
32
TBD
120,000
240,000
40,000
Break when 27 players remain
The streaming schedule for today has revised hours and is as follows: