Carmine Santoro ran into Doug Zimmerman's all in preflop.
After a board of bricks, he hit the rail, Zimmerman chipped up to half a million and they are redrawing for seats at the final three tables with just 30 players remaining.
Just before the break, Larry Carney opened under the gun for 37,000. Rick Block made the call and Peter Raimondi defended his big blind.
The flop came and after checks from Raimondi and Carney, Block bet 41,000. Both players called. The turn brought the and it checked around.
Raimondi led the river for 70,000 with heaps in the middle already.
Carney folded, but Block pushed in, having Raimondi covered. Tortured by the decision, Raimondi stood from his chair and mulled it over for several minutes, eventually making the call for his tournament life with for the flush.
This time Block wasn't bluffing as he rolled over for the boat, busting Raimondi and leaping into the chip lead.
Jeff Kocz pushed all in and Larry Carney called all in for less. It was a classic race with Carney on versus Kocz' .
Carney held on a board, leaving Kocz with a chip and a chair.
He got it in the very next hand with . A short stacked Joseph Palumbo ended up all in as well with and Doug Zimmerman sent them both to the rail when his made a pair.