On a flop of , David Bonadio checked to Lucio Procopio who bet 3,100. Bonadio raised to 7,400 and Procopio made the call.
The hit the turn and Bonadio continued for 5,000, which Procopio called.
When the hit the river, Bonadio slowed down with a check. Procopio fired two green chips into the middle for a total of 50,000 and Bonadio tank-folded, saving his remaining stack of 26,000. Procopio showed him for a pair of fives as he scooped the pot.
In a multi-way pot, the big blind bet 6,000 on a flop of before Richard Seymour in early position raised to 15,000. Jorge Ribeiro in the small blind then shoved all in, the big blind folded, and Seymour called for another 20,000.
Richard Seymour:
Jorge Ribeiro:
Seymour needed to hit a flush to beat Ribeiro's flopped set but bricked the turn and river to hit the rail.
"The rich get richer," a tablemate said as Ribeiro was pushed the Super Bowl champion's chips.
David Gerassi was out of position in a three-way pot on a board of and called when one of the opponents bet 4,500, while the other player folded.
Gerassi led out for 7,200 on the turn and his opponent called. Gerassi led out again for 17,000 on the river and his opponent folded, sending another pot to one of the biggest stacks in the Amazon Room.
At a nearby table, a player was all-in for 17,100 in the one-seat and the dealer accidentally mucked his hand, leaving him at risk and without cards.
After a few phone calls and walkie-talkie conversations, the floor ruled that the player would have to forfeit 1,200 to the pot, with his hand being dead, but could take back the rest of his stack.
"That's the best-case scenario," one player at the table said. "They would never pull your hand from the muck."