Lillian Chan opened with an early position raise to 31,000. It folded around to Norman Overdijk in the cutoff and he three-bet to 95,000. Action came back around to Chan and she thought for a bit before flat calling.
The flop was and Chan led out with a bet of 50,000.
"All of it!" snapped Overdijk without any hesitation.
Chan then went into the tank for about a minute. Eventually she stood up.
"I really don't like you right now, Norm," said Chan. "I think you're bluffing."
It was at this point that Overdijk turned around and shook his behind in Chan's direction while chanting "We don't bluff! We don't bluff!"
Chan opted to release her hand and Overdijk triumphantly showed for merely ace-high. Chan shot out of her seat, upset with herself for letting go of the hand. She's now down to about 205,000 while Overdijk is sitting on a cool million.
We recently caught up to see the aftermath of a hand where Kevin Huang called the all in of a shorter stacked player. Huang held against the short stack's .
The board came down and Huang was forced to ship about 230,000 to the other side of the table.
Trevor Martin peered down at his cards from under the gun and moved his last 230,000 all in before the flop. Another player at the table woke up with pocket aces and made the call.
Martin rolled over and was in dire need of help. The flop did not help him and neither did the on fourth street. The river, however, was the and as it smacked down on the felt the entire table went into a tizzy. With deuces full of eights, Martin was able to score a double up to about 485,000.