The action was picked up with Matt Glantz all-in versus Scott Seiver and both players stood pat on the final draw.
It was the of Glantz's that took it down and secured his double up, while Seiver mucked before the dealer could show his hand with the all-in player, but he stated that he had an eight-seven low.
Prior to the second draw, Phil Hellmuth was already all-in for 50,000 and Dylan Linde looked him up with the slightly superior stack. Hellmuth patted while Linde took one. The same drawing action repeated on the last draw and Hellmuth tabled a . Linde had the but bricked with a as his final card.
Linde was left short and busted shortly after, Paul Volpe followed to the rail moments later from a different table.
On the three-way turn of , Jake Schwartz checked out of the small blind and Christopher Claassen bet in the big blind. Anthony Zinno called and so did Schwartz. The river was checked to Zinno and he bet, both opponents folded.
"Show me a bluff Zinno," Schwartz demanded and Zinno flashed the .
The hand was discovered as David Benyamine and his pocket was being pushed the pot against the all-in player Allan Le who had held . This hand eliminated Le from the tournament and catapulted Benyamine to 230,000 chips.
In the final hand before the break, Eli Elezra was all-in with his short stack. He caught plenty of paint and Prasetyo locked it up despite pairing his six to send Elezra to the rail right when all other players took a short break after the end of the first level.
A total of 93 entries created a prize pool of $867,225 and the top 14 spots will get paid at least $17,103 for the efforts. The winner can look forward to a payday of $248,350 and the coveted gold bracelet.