Liv Boeree raised to 1,100 from under the gun and was called by three players.
The flop came , and the action was checked around to the on the turn. It checked to the button, who bet 1,600, and Boeree was the only caller. The river brought the , and both players checked.
Some awesome moments can be created at a poker table. A hand that just went down in the Brasilia room is a pure testament.
Erich Maumann opened to 1,300 from early position. One seat over, Alex Louro three-bet, making it 5,000. Action then folded to Eric Berger in late position, and Berger cold four-bet to 12,000. It folded back around to Maumann, who five-bet to 25,000. Louro wasn't done either, six-bet jamming all in for about 32,000. Berger hadn't seen enough, so he seven-bet shoved over top for about 64,000, and Maumann, not wanting to miss out on the party, snap-called, having less.
Maumann:
Berger:
Louro:
An unreal collection of hands was displayed across the table, and Louro was in trouble.
The flop came , giving Maumann a flush draw. The draw was completed when the fell on the turn, surely giving him a lock on the hand.
His opponents were only drawing to a chop, which they had only one out and hope of hitting, the eight of hearts.
The dealer patted the table and swept out the , completing a straight flush on board.
All three pulled back their chips as the table and surrounding crowd were stunned at the ridiculous outcome.
"That was the craziest shit I've ever seen in my life," yelled one of the tablemates.
Niall Farrell opened from the cutoff, and Nacho Barbero called from the small blind.
The flop came , and both players checked. The turn brought the . Barbero bet 1,300, and Farrell called. The river was the , and Barbero checked. Farrell bet 1,650, and after a few moments of thought, Barbero called.
Barbero tabled for two pair, aces and jacks, but Farrell flipped over for Broadway to take the pot.
Tom Marchese had what looked like a four-bet to 8,500 in front of him in early position, and an opponent who'd raised to 3,200 in middle position called the four-bet.
Marchese bet 4,000 on the flop, then kicked it up to 10,000 on the turn. His opponent called both bets. When the hit the river, Marchese shoved for 16,150 effective. His opponent tanked for about two minutes and asked if Marchese would show.
The high-rolling reg did not respond, and he simply mucked his cards when his opponent folded moments later.
With a pot of over 8,000 already brewing on a board of , action checked to Amal Bounhara on the button, and she bet 3,000. She got one call from the player under the gun. The river was the , and both players checked.
Bounahra tabled for top pair, top kicker, but it was no good against her opponent's .