The action folded around the opponent in the hijack position who raised limped in, only to see Jackie Glazier move all for 11,800 from the cutoff. The hijack player made the call.
Glazier:
Hijack:
The board was spread , doubling Glazier up to around 24,000 in chips.
It's always fun to see people make good folds, unless your the person who was about to cooler them.
Camil Debsia recently got a taste of that feeling against Michael Tureniec. We caught action at the turn with the board reading Debsia had just checked, and was now facing a 2,400 chip bet from Tureniec.
He made the call and the hit the river. Debsia checked again and Tureniec led 5,200. This time Debsia came over the top for his entire stack and Tureniec went into the tank.
After a while he folded showing the for the smaller full house of the two obvious ones.
"Wow you folded a full house," said Debsia. "I wish you didn't," he added, turning over his for the bigger full house, proving Tureniec's read to be spot on.
Ben Savage went down-swinging out the door just before the break.
He found himself with just 15,000 after flopping trips and running into a flopped full house.
That cooler was closely followed by his elimination after running into .
The opponent promptly flopped a set and added insult to injury by catching a runner-runner full house on the turn and river.
Savage was in good company with Gary Benson left to enjoy the air conditioning in the media lounge, after failing to improve with against an opponent with .