Things have gone from bad to worse for Arnaud Mattern after his aces were cracked to leave him very short.
He was in the big blind with and facing an under the gun raise to 1,000 that picked up three callers. The Team PokerStars Pro three-bet to 3,750 which was enough to fold out the initial raiser, but not the first caller. Fabien Baldeli was two more seats along and had (initially) flat called with . He four-bet all-in for around 25,000 and was snap called by Mattern after the other players involved folded.
The board ran to make Baldeli top set. A shocked looking Mattern was making his exit when he was told by the dealer that he still had 6,000 chips to play with.
Arnaud Mattern is right back where he started after a diamond of a river scared him off a recent pot.
The hand began with an 1,150 open from the French Team PokerStars Pro. Two players called, but when Mattern made it 2,200 to see the turn on the flop, just Fabien Baldeli paid the price.
Both players checked the turn, but when the scary river fell and Mattern checked, Baldeli took the lead, making it 5,100.
Mattern mulled it over, but threw his hand away. Baldeli flashed and dragged the pot, as Mattern was left sitting on the same 30k he started this event with.
Ruben Visser misread his opponent, and as a result, his stack was cut in half.
The Dutchman, who came 8th at the recent PCA for $156,400, opened to 1,200 from the cut-off. Jean Marc Rigaill was in the small blind and three-bet to 2,500. Visser called to the flop where he also called a 4,500 c-bet.
The turn came and Rigaill fired again, for 11,000. Visser studied his opponent before he moved all-in. Rigaill called all-in for 17,875 and tabled .
"Ahhh, nice hand," said Visser who tabled the inferior , before the came to change nothing.
It's always easy to tell the pre-flop aggressors at this stage of a tournament as they often sit with massive stacks of green 25 chips in front of them, proving they've been stealing blinds and antes on a regular basis.
Kevin Vandersmissen is one such player, now sitting with even more green after picking up yet another pot on his way to a 90k+ stack.
This time he made it 1,550 from the cutoff and got two callers, neither of whom had the stomach to call his 2,875 continuation bet on the flop.
The following hand after doubling an opponent, Duhamel tangled in another big pot. It started with him raising under the gun and finding two callers, the second being Pierre Canali. The flop came down and Duhamel's continuation bet was called by both of his opponents.
It was when the hit the turn that the rest of Duhamel's chips would find their way into the middle with for an open-ended straight draw and flush draw. Canali wasn't going anywhere with and his set held through the river to secure the pot.