Jamie O'Connor raised to 27,000 preflop from under-the-gun. Harry Lodge then reraised to 68,000 a couple of seats behind him. It was passed around to Alexander Schilt in the big blind who four-bet all in for 300,000.
O'Connor folded and Lodge quickly called.
Lodge:
Schilt:
The flop came and Lodge flopped tens full but Schilt flopped quads! The turn and river changed nothing and Schilt doubled to 600,000 while Lodge was left with just 500,000.
Richard Milne raised and called a shove from Colin Marks. Milne had and was upagainst the of Marks. The flop was and Milne shot out in front. The turn was the and the river .
Jamie O’Connor is the most active player on the second feature table, raising nearly every hand to 32,000 when it is folded to him, and having decent success in either taking down the blinds and antes of winning the pot with a small continuation bet on the flop. Barry Greenstein is also doing a fair amount of stealing in position. Christopher Jonat is doing the most defending from the blinds. Alexander Schilt is sitting tight on his short stack Very few hands have gone past the turn this half hour with no big pots won or lost.
The action has slowed right down on both tables now as the tournament is just four eliminations from the final table. However, given that both tables are now six-handed, we're expecting things to happen very soon.
Harry Lodge opened for 25,000 and was raised by Christopher Jonat to 50,000. The small blind folded and Jamie O'Connor in the big blind cold four bet to 100,000. Lodge folded and Jonat immediately announced all in for 584,000. Jonat stood up and started talking. O’Connor looked puzzled and said “I should snap. The last time you started taking you had kings.” Jonat responded, “I have kings. You should probably fold.” O’Connor got an agreement to show if he folded and duly did so. Jonat did indeed have , O’Connor showed .
“You should have just clicked it back.” Said O’connor. “I would have spazzed it off." Jonat insisted, “I didn’t want the call. I’m enough of a fish. I didn’t want the sweat with my blood pressure.”