...And, another player is gone. This time, Steve Fung exited the tournament after getting out-flopped by Eric Hershler who raised to 4,500 preflop and got called by Fung from the big blind.
On a flop of , Fung checked and Hershler bet 9,500. Fung then raised all in for 53,000 and Hershler tanked before finally calling. Fung turned over while Hershler showed .
The on the turn and on the river didn't help Fung, who left in 50th place.
Just a few minutes ago, at approzimately 3:20pm, Matt "All in at 420" Stout found himself all in with pocket eights. He was up against two opponents. One of them held and the other held pocket jacks. The player holding the jacks had the most chips, with Stout having the least.
The board ran out and Stout was eliminated, while the player holding stayed alive.
After the flop was laid out , the first player checked and Amir Vahedi bet out 2,500. Everyone folded but the first player, who then moved all in for about 15,000 total. Vahedi made the call and showed . His opponent held . The turn and river were the and , respectively.
After a limper from middle position, Dwyte Pilgrim jacked up the price with a raise. Action folded over to Amir Vahedi in the big blind and he reraised to about 20,000 more. The limper folded and Pilgrim made the call.
The flop came down and Vahedi instantly put Pilgrim all in. Pilgrim quickly called.
"You got an overpair?" asked Dwtye as he tabled . Much to his liking, Vahedi showed .
Standing up from his chair, Dwyte exclaimed, "Come on! If this dude hits an eight I'm going to flip!"
The turn brought the . "No eight, no nine!" pleaded Pilgrim, standing a foot away from the table, awaiting the river card.
The river fell the and Pilgrim successfully doubled up. He was all in on the flop for 60,400 and now has over 130,000 chips.
After Amir Vahedi made it 8,000 to go from the cutoff, Michael "The Grinder" Mizrachi reraised to 100,000 from the small blind. Vahedi called and Mizrachi asked if he had a pair.
"Yes."
"You've got my favorite then. You're good," Mizrachi said as he tabled pocket fours, well behind Vahedi's pocket nines. The flop of didn't help Mizrachi, but the on the turn did. When the hit the river, Vahedi hit the rail and Mizrachi increased his chip lead.
David Daneshgar called a preflop all-in bet from a short-stacked opponent and he was happy to see his pocket kings were way ahead of pocket sevens. A king on the flop helped seal the deal, but Daneshgar still had to sweat the river when a seven hit the turn.