A player limped in under the gun, and action folded to Thomas Hill's small blind. He raised to 30,000, and Robert Renner pushed all in from the big blind. The limper folded, Hill called.
Hill:
Renner:
The flop was worst-case scenario for Hill: . Renner now had him freerolled with the low locked up. The turn brought a , and some extra outs for Hill. A river ended that hope, and he's down to 2,000 while Renner has around 230,000.
Mickey Palermo just couldn't win a preflop all in. We think he might have been 0-for-4 on the ones we witnessed, and he just lost the only one you can't lose, the one where you have less chips.
Palermo:
Greg Drobnis:
A flop gave Drobnis a flush draw and Palermo top pair. The changed nothing, but the river gave Drobnis trips. He now has 200,000. Fifteen players remain and the blinds are 3,000-6,000.
After opening the pot for a raise to 3,600 holding , Alan Dworetsky watched as Paul Spitzberg moved all in over the top for a sizable reraise.
Undeterred, a third player in the hand decided to do the same, shipping his entire stack forward to complicate matters for Dworetsky.
After a semi-lengthy but understandable tank, the third player in the pot called the clock on Dworetsky, a move which frustrated and flustered the young grinder into eventually releasing his hand.
Showdown:
Spitzberg:
Third Player In:
"What?!" exclaimed Dworetsky, obviously shocked that the all-in move that forced him out of the hand was made with just ten-high. "Why?!"
Furthering the drama, the flop rolled out , giving both players a pair (as well as pairing Dworetsky's folded big slick). The dealer dropped the in on the turn, giving the unidentified player two pair and the lead, but the on the river reversed things, giving the pot to Spitzberg. Of course, Dworetsky's hand that went sailing into the muck minutes before would've been the winner, and he was understandably perturbed at the play that pushed him out.
A short-stacked player raised to 20,000, nearly all of his stack, from late position. Action folded to Joe Villella's big blind, and he put the player at risk.
Villella:
Short stack:
The flop came , giving Villella top pair, while the short stack's best hope was to spike a ten. A turn gave the short stack a pair, but the river ended his tournament life.
Villella's stack is nearing 300,000, while others are fighting to get to half of that.
Throughout the first few days of the Borgata Winter Poker Open, one player's striking resemblance to the wily Walter White had us hooked like Heisenberg's infamous Blue Sky.
Although he would only identify himself as "Mr. White" initially, the man in the black-brimmed porkpie hat eventually informed us that his name was Iverson Cotton Snuffer. And while that moniker may not strike fear into the hearts of men like Heisenberg did for five glorious seasons, poker players in West Virginia know Snuffer to be a very bad man indeed.
According to data compiled by the Hendon Mob Database, Snuffer is the 23rd all-time leading money winner in West Virginia, capturing more than $68,000 in just three years of play. As told by Snuffer, however, the amount of money he's taken from the tables in his home state just might fill a few barrels in the desert.
"I've scored way more than that internet says I have," he told us in between rounds. "If you count the smaller daily tournaments I've won around the state, I'd say I've got 'em for more than a couple hundred thousand."
Just like his alter ego from Breaking Bad, everything Snuffer does is for his family, and he made sure to let us know that his "beautiful wife Jamie, children and grandchildren" are his inspiration when competing on the felt.
As Snuffer told us, he was born with a deck of cards in his hand, and with his consistent play here in Atlantic City, we've no doubt that this tall tale is rooted in a grain of truth. Just like Heisenberg.