Charles Indyg was all in UTG for his last 1000, Soheil Shamseddin raised from middle position, David Sklansky re-raised from the button, and Shamseddin called. The flop was . Shamseddin checked, Sklansky bet and Shamseddin folded. Sklansky turned up the while Indyg held the and would need an ace or a king to survive. There was no help for Indyg with the on the turn and the on the river, and he was eliminated in 38th place.
Sklansky's stack was up to 105K after the hand. Shamseddin sits at 68K.
Christopher Lamell raised from the button, Casey Peters re-raised from the small blind, Lamell raised for the rest of his chips and Peters called. Lamell showed the while Peters held the . The final board was -- Peters' jacks held and Lamell was eliminated in 40th place.
A middle-position player called, the button raised, and Nhu Huynh was all in in the big blind for his last 3000. The flop was , The MP player checked, the button bet, the MP player raised and the button folded.
The MP player turned up while Huynh held the . The turn was the , the river was the and Huynh was eliminated in 41st place.
It was finally determined that on Table 63, 27,000 chips were mistakenly added to Michael Banks' stack during the color-up. They were returned to Gary Styczynski and we are back in action at the $1,500 limit hold'em event.
Blinds are up to 2,000-4,000 with betting limits of 4,000-8,000. The average stack is 60,600. 45 players remain in the field.
Our re-start is still delayed while Tournament Director Jack Effel and the floor staff address a color-up issue on Table 63. Gary Styczynski returned from break to find only 21,000 of his approximately 48,000 stack remaining. From what the players and staff can tell, the correct amount of chips is sitting on their table, but were improperly distributed among its players after the color-up. They are currently discussing going to the security cameras to determine the error.