Alexandre Mantovani opened to 60,000 and [Removed:426] weighed his options before three-betting all in for around 500,000. The remaining players all folded.
[Removed:426]:
Alexandre Mantovani:
Liyanage urged the dealer to put three kings on the flop, but none appeared on the runout and he was eliminated.
Meanwhile at this table, Jorge Hou has chipped up to more than four million.
In a three-bet pot, Todd Sekli and Hrayr Grigoryan went heads-up to a flop of . Sekli checked from the big blind and Grigoryan shoved all in for his last 250,000. Sekli asked for a count and eventually made the call.
Hrayr Grigoryan:
Todd Sekli:
Grigoryan was looking to hit a straight but Sekli was holding two of his outs. The on the turn and the on the river gave Grigoryan two pair but Sekli was the one to make a straight.
The floor had been called to table 632. The action was pre-flop with Gerald Cohen having raised to 55,000 and two other players folded behind him. However, Joshua Suyat sat directly to the right of Cohen and had not acted yet.
"If I call, that bet stands, right? Because I'm not changing the action?" he asked the floor and the floor agreed.
Suyat called and Cohen's bet stood. The remaining players folded and action was back on Suyat.
He then limp-raised all in and Cohen asked for a count. The shove was for 280,000, around half of Cohen's remaining stack, and after a short while he mucked his hand.
Zilong Zhang opened to 50,000 in middle position and Andrew Barfield called on the button. The two players saw a flop of and Zhang check-called a bet of 65,000 from Barfield.
The turn brought the and Zhang checked again. Barfield sized up a bet of 240,000 this time but Zhang stuck around to see the on the river. Both players tapped the table and Zhang turned over for top pair, good enough to win the pot.
Just moments earlier, Chanracy Khun was seen leaving the feature table as his Main Event run came to an end.
He had raised to 50,000 from the early position with the and William Nunley made the call with the from the middle position. Ramon Colillas three-bet to 180,000 from the button while holding the . Khun made the call but Nunley got out of their way.
The flop came for Khun to hit a set of nines. He checked and Colillas took some time before opting to continue with a bet of 185,000. Khun called to see the on the turn.
He quickly checked again and Colillas looked down at his stack and then decided to do the same. The completed the board for Colillas to hit the higher set. Khun checked for the final time. Colillas announced he was all-in for 510,000 and Khun snap-called to see the bad news to be left with 195,000.
A few hands later, Gaelle Baumann raised to 50,000 from under the gun and Khun defended his big blind. The flop came and Khun checked. Baumann put Khun all-in for his last 120,000 and he immediately called.
Chanracy Khun:
Gaelle Baumann:
The turn was the for Baumann to hit Broadway to leave Khun drawing dead while the completed the board.
Jacqueline Burkhart, who just moments before had said she was needed in Oregon tomorrow for work and would therefore need to run up a stack today to make it worth staying in the tournament, opened to 55,000 from the cutoff. The player in the small blind called while Matthew Bushell in the big blind moved all in. Burkhart called off for her tournament life and the small blind folded.
Jacqueline Burkhart:
Matthew Bushell:
"We're flipping," announced Burkhart as she took out her phone to film the proceedings. The flop came , propelling Bushell into the lead. "Jack for Jackie!" chanted Burkhart as she looked for an improbable comeback. No help came on the turn but the rolled off on the river to grant Burkhart her request and keep her tournament run very much alive.
Mark Egbert had gotten to his feet, clapping his hands together with joy after doubling up.
He was getting a double for his last 315,000 counted out having held on a board.
His opponent was Danny Lavoie, whose hand remained a mystery. That was until Egbert pulled out his phone and motioned for his opponent's cards to be turned face up. What were they?
Egbert now sits on around 700,000 which is less than half average.