We we had a bit of technical difficulty that caused us to miss the action prior to the river. But on a board reading , Erik Cajelais bet 15,000. Eli Elezra thought for quite a while, counting his chips, stacking his chips, shuffling his chips, counting them again, before finally folding.
After being the most active player at the table for the first hour, Peter Jetten has gone into a shell the past few levels. Eli Elezra, and Erik Cajelais seem to be battling every hand.
Peter Jetten raised it up to 5,000 and Eli Elezra re-raised making it 11,000. Action folded back to Jetten, who pondered his action for quite some time before making the call.
The flop came and Elezra fired out 18,000, allowing the chips to domino themselves to the felt. Once again, Jetten didn't not act right away. Instead he studied the board, he studied Elezra, and he studied both chip stacks. Finally he mucked, although he looked like it was making him sick to do so.
On the very next hand, with the board reading , Peter Jetten bet 6,500. Elezra wasted very little time making the call. The river was the , and Elezra slid out about 15,000. Jetten quickly called, Elezra turned over , and Jetten mucked, allowing the chips to be shipped over to our chip leader, Mr. Elezra.
Erik Cajelais moved all-in for his last 7,700 and Howard Lederer looked him up. Howard flipped over , and when he saw the pocket queens of Cajelais, he said "you're not supposed to be that good in that spot."
The board was fairly good for Cajelais, giving him quads. Cajelais is up over 15,000 now, but still in the danger zone.