We caught up with Marc Goodwin and Jesper Hougaard looking down at an flop. Goodwin in the big blind position checked, and then called 400 from Hougaard in mid position.
The turn was the and Goodwin check-called 1,050 from Hougaard; Goodwin also check-called 2,600 on the river before mucking when Hougaard turned over .
"That's the one hand you've had all day," mused Goodwin.
"Nah," Hougaard told him, "It's just the first time I've had aces."
Goodwin claimed pocket jacks and dips to 26,000; Hougaard is up to around 35,000.
Juha Helppi has started his day off moving steadily up the scoreboard, and he's certainly using his chips here in the early going. We stood over Helppi's table for three hands and watched Helppi play all three from the three earliest positions.
On the first hand, Helppi raised to 400 and found four callers. One of them would bet out on a flop, and Helppi and the others passed.
The second hand saw Helppi make it 450 to go, and two players called this time, including Viktor Blom in the big blind. The flop came down , and a leading bet of 1,025 was good enough for Helppi to take it down right there.
On the last hand before we wandered off, Helppi opened with an under-the-gun raise to 400. Two callers came along again, and the table checked through the flop of . When the hit the turn, Steen Jensen bet 900 and won the pot.
Not the most exciting stuff in the world, but we're certainly keeping an eye on the active Helppi as he splashes around in the pond. He's got about 42,000 chips to work with so far.
Sometimes it is a blogger's dearest wish that someone would equip a particular table with a fast-forward button. Such a thing has not yet been invented, though, and so there is nothing for it but to stand patiently by the table while endless difficult decisions are made with the absolute maximum of delay.
There were four players in the hand when we arrived to see a flop. The gentleman in the small blind had bet out 600 and Niels Jensen had called. Jorn Walthaus, however, had raised to 2,100. Erik Tamm on the button flat-called, the small blind passed, and Jensen called. Three players to the turn.
Turn:
Jensen and Walthaus checked, very slowly, to Tamm. Tablemate Freddy Deeb yawned while Tamm decided what to do. Eventually he bet 4,400, and following a period of expressionless tankage from Jensen and a similar period of squinting at the board from Walthaus, both players called. Three players to the river.
River:
Again, Jensen and Walthaus checked. Tamm took his sweet time deciding what to do, while the other players at the table stared at the felt as if into the void. Finally he bet 8,500. Jensen insta-folded, the first time in the hand that anything insta had happened at all. Walthaus squinted for another minute or two, and eventually also made the fold.
This all took around 15 minutes to complete, but Erik Tamm picked himself up a very tasty pot at the end of it.
"I was caught bluffing. With aces," explained Stuart Rutter. He's up to a shade under 60,000 already, while table neighbour Pierre Neuville is down to just a few thousand.
It turns out that this was the result of an ugly kings-v-aces situation with Neuville on the button and Rutter in the small blind.
"It is the game," said a circumspect and gentlemanly Neuville as he contemplated his tiny new stack.
Jesper Hougaard opened the pot with a raise to 375 for the second consecutive hand, and for the second consecutive hand, Mads Andersen made the call from the blinds -- the small one this time.
Heads up, the flop came out . Andersen took the betting lead, flicking out a single red T1,000 chip. Hougaard took pause for a minute before announcing a raise to 2,600, and Andersen eventually made the call.
Fourth street brought the and a check from Andersen. Hougaard stacked together 3,400 chips and slid them forward, and Andersen reluctantly gave it up.
Hougaard is active in the early going, and he's plodded his way up to 34,000 as the first break approaches.
We picked up a heads-up pot as the dealer ran a flop of . Steen Jensen was first to speak, and he led out with a bet of 1,300. Viktor Blom didn't waste too much time calling, and the turn revealed the . Jensen gathered chips and fired again, 3,300 this time. Once more, the call came quickly from Blom.
The river was the , and both players checked it down. Jensen showed up for the nut trips, and Blom sent his cards into the muck. He's down to about 18,000 after two levels of sliding.