The flop was out and read and Aditya "intervntion" Agarwal raised an opponent all in and received a call. He held and would need to catch his double gutter as he was up against .
The turn came and river to make the straight for Agarwal and see his stack grow to 130,000.
Brent Horner has enjoyed an impressive comeback, and is now on a very comfortable 150,000 stack.
First of all he got involved in a blind-on-blind confrontation holding . He and his opponent saw a flop and all the chips went in -- his opponent was holding , the held up and he was up to 61,000.
Then Horner's kings versus queens put him up to 122,000, and a few small pots since then have put him up to 150,000.
Cory Carroll was heads-up with a player at the turn stage with the board reading . He check-called a 10,300 bet before the river came . This time he snap-called a 25,000 bet but mucked upon seeing the of his opponent. That put him down to 25,000.
Shortly afterwards he was up to 140,000 after making another snap call to a preflop all in bet. This time he held to his opponent's . The board ran .
Anthony Yeh raised to 5,500 on the button and when the gent in the big blind made it 20,500, Yeh moved all in. The big blind called all in and it went to the traditional showdown.
Yeh:
Big blind:
Board:
Yeh, who'd dropped a little in the first couple of levels of play today, is back up to 111,000.
While we weren't looking, sole man of the church registered in this event Michael Wernette busted out, he and his dog collar taking $2,839 home to the manse.
A player in mid position raised it up and found both blinds calling including David Chicotsky in the SB. The flop came and was bet by the MP player before Chicotsky moved all in. The big blind player then surprisingly called but the MP player folded.
Chicotsky tabled to the BB's . The turn came and river to confirm Chicotsky as the winner and the owner of a 90,000 stack.
Joe Sebok, hovering on a fairly lacklustre 20,000 or so for some time, has doubled up to 40,000. He pushed for his last to a 4,900 raise, got the inevitable call, and his stayed ahead of his opponent's all the way down the board.
Fellow poker journo Marty Derbyshire has just doubled up through Cory Carroll. Pretty standard as Derbyshire got it all in preflop with versus Carroll's . The board came . Good job for Derbyshire it was the diamonds that fell to put him up to 42,000. Carroll down again to 96,000.