John-Robert Bellande raised from UTG before Mike Sexton moved all in for his last 1,700. A player on the button raised again before the BB and Bellande called. The flop arrived before Bellande bet and only received a call from the button, as he did when he bet the turn and the river also.
"I have a set," announced Bellande and he revealed .
Sexton then turned over for the flush and the main pot. The other player folded and Bellande took the side pot.
"Oh really?" said Bellande upon seeing Sexton's hand. "I would've much rather seen you walking away right now."
Barry Werthmann opened the pot with a raise from middle position, and both Jim Geary and Sam Farha called from the blinds.
The flop came out . The blinds checked, then both called when Werthmann made a bet. The turn card was the , and the action repeated with each player putting in a single big bet. The fell on the river, and Geary took control of the pot with a leading bet. Farha called, and Werthmann put his last 500 chips into the pot, calling all in.
Geary tabled , with Farha showing . Both players had run down their wheels on fifth street, making the nut low as well. Werthmann flashed a as he slipped his cards into the muck and headed toward the rail.
Farzad Bonyadi raised under the gun, and Jay Heimowitz three-bet in position. When it folded back around to Bonyadi, he made the call, putting himself all in.
Showdown
Bonyadi:
Heimowitz:
Bonyadi was in pretty bad shape, having both of his suits dominated by his opponent. The board ran out , and Heimowitz's aces up were the winner. He snagged that small pot, eliminating Farzad Bonyadi with just about 100 players left.
The clock now shows 99 players remaining in Event #18, meaning that we have lost 30 runners since play began about 90 minutes ago. We only lost 50 over the entire course of Day 1, and the eliminations have naturally picked up significantly as the limits have crept upward.
Chino Rheem and Phil Hellmuth just tangled in a hand. I reached the table with the board reading . Chino bet in to Hellmuth, who laid his hand down after flashing what he had to the table. I didn't catch a sight of it, but he said to Chino something like, "You had to fire every street to get me off it."
Chino tabled a deuce and needled Hellmuth by saying that was good.
Thang Luu -- who has won a bracelet in O8 two years in a row -- will not be winning his third today. He was all in on the turn in a pot against Brian Haack, and he came out on the wrong side.
Luu held versus Haack's . The board came out . When Luu got all in on fourth street, he was already drawing dead to his opponent's wheel.
Luu's results in O8 tournaments are phenomenal, but he has bowed out here on Day 2 of the big one.
Mike Henrich got the rest of his short stack into the pot before the flop, and he was called by Anthony Rivera and one other player.
The board would come out . Rivera bet out on the flop, folding the other player and isolating himself against the all-in Henrich. In the end, Rivera tabled . His tens full were plenty good enough to beat Henrich's , sending him out the door.
The turn was out giving us a board and we're heads-up between Mike Wattel and Bryan Devonshire. The former bets and then calls the latter's raise before the river came .
Wattel checked and then called a bet from Devonshire, but mucked upon seeing the for a set.