Botond Barat raised to 175,000 with around 170,000 chips left behind. Fabian Brandes folded his small blind but Ferenc Deak made the call in the big blind.
Deak bet when the flop landed and Barat called with his last chips for the following showdown:
Botond Barat:
Ferenc Deak:
Barat had many outs for the double up but didn't find any throughout the turn and river and made his way to the payout desk to collect his $23,586.
Action was picked up when two players were all in on a flop of . Andriy Lyubovetskiy was the player at risk for his stack of roughly 800,000 and was called by Ferenc Deak.
Andriy Lyubovetskiy:
Ferenc Deak:
The turn and river did not improve Lyubovetskiy and he was eliminated in 9th place.
Ferenc Deak raised to 165,000 under the gun and found two calls with Amirhossein Shayesteh next to him and Fabian Brandes in the big blind.
The flop came and it was checked around to see a on the turn. Brandes checked to Deak who bet 390,000 this time, which was enough to make his opponents fold and collect the pot.
With 400,000 in the middle on a flop of , Leonid Yanovski bet 125,000 from the small blind and was called by Grzegorz Derkowski in the big blind,
Yanovski continued for 250,000 on the turn which was called by Derkowski. Yanovski put on the brakes on the river and checked. Derkowski pondered over his decision before ultimately checking.
Yanovski announced he had a pair of deuces, Derkowski turned over for a set.
Only one poker player in history — Phil Hellmuth — has reached the 11 World Series of Poker (WSOP) bracelet plateau. On Monday, Phil Ivey could join one of poker's most exclusive clubs.
As it stands, Hellmuth is the record holder with 16 bracelets, followed by Ivey, Johnny Chan, and Doyle Brunson tied at 10.
The $100k was originally scheduled to wrap up with the final table on Tuesday, airing on PokerGO, but PokerGO called an audible and decided to livestream the final table tonight. At the time of publishing, the remaining players were on a dinner break and will come back at 7 p.m. to play it down to a winner, who will receive $1,897,363. Coverage on PokerGO will resume at 8 p.m., along with PokerNews' live reporting updates.
With the blinds at 60,000/120,000, Ivey currently sits at 9,075,000, approximately 75 big blinds, good for second in chips. Aleksejs Ponakovs, an online poker crusher, is the chip leader at 14,450,000 and has been dominating play during Monday's Day 2 session.
In the first hand, the flop read when Thomas Morrison checked in the big blind before calling a bet from Leonid Yanovski for 100,000.
The turn brought the and this time Morrison check-folded after another bet from Yanovski for 300,000.
A few minutes after, the flop showed in a three way pot. Morrison checked in the small blind and so did Jamey Hendrickson in the big blind. Grzegorz Derkowski also checked and the fell on the turn. It checked to Hendrickson who bet 200,000 and it was enough to win the pot.
On the button, Jamey Hendrickson raised pot for 210,000 and Grzegorz Derkowski didn't take long from the big blind to announce all in. Hendrickson paid with a lower stack and they revealed their cards.
Jamey Hendrickson:
Grzegorz Derkowski:
Derkowski had the dominating hand, and found two pair on a board to rack the pot and bust Hendrickson in 8th place of the tournament.