After the dealer consulted the structure sheet and informed everyone of the ante (25) and bring in (25), Jeff Lisandro brought it in with a , Vanessa Rousso completed (to 75) with a , and all folded to Lisandro who called.
Both picked up nines on fourth street. Rousso bet, and Lisandro called. Rousso caught an on fifth and Lisandro a , but he folded to Rousso's bet, showing another underneath as he tossed his cards away.
Players continue to arrive. We've now used up all of the allotted tables for Event No. 42, and new players are being seated as soon as tables being used for Event No. 39 ($1,500 No-Limit Hold'em) break on the other side of the room. Some new faces include Roy Winston, John Racener, Toto Leonidas, Bryan Devonshire, Jason Potter, Esther Taylor, Marco Johnson, Steve Billirakis, Rep Porter, Rob Hollink, Steve Wong, and Jordan Morgan.
We're also hearing that some players -- including Gavin Griffin, Robert Williamson III, Bill Chen, and Jerrod Ankenman -- are here and ready to play, but are having to wait until chips can be provided to them and seats made available. It certainly appears this $2,500 Mixed Game event has attracted many more entrants than were initially anticipated.
A player under the gun raised, and Marcel Luske called from the button. Both drew two cards on the first round, and both checked. On the second round, Luske drew one card and his opponent two. The UTG player checked, Luske bet, his opponent raised, Luske three-bet, and his opponent called.
Both stood pat on the end, and Luske's opponent check-called his final bet. The Flying Dutchman showed , and his opponent mucked.
Phil "The Chairman" Tom is here, as is Michael "The Grinder" Mizrachi, Carlos "El Matador" Mortensen, and David "The Mathematician" Sklansky.
Speaking of mathematicians, Bill Chen and Jerrod Ankenman did finally get seated -- right next to each other, in fact. Those two co-authored The Mathematics of Poker (2006), and thus are surely well-equipped to calculate the chances of that happening.
Just in case anyone -- players, dealers, jingle-brained reporters, etc. -- forgets which of the eight games is currently being dealt, large red placards at each serve as helpful reminders.
Each game is dealt for eight hands, then the game changes, meaning when one walks through the room, different games are simultaneously being played throughout the room.
We didn't catch the action, but Gavin Smith just picked up a huge pot in a pot-limit Omaha hand after making a ten-high straight. He's rocketed up to 23,000 already.
Tom Koral, who has already made two final tables at this year's WSOP, won't be doing so in Event No. 42.
After a middle-positioned player raisd to 150, Koral reraised to 550 from the button, the small blind called, and the original raiser folded. The flop came , and Koral's opponent led with a bet of 750. Koral raised to 2,050, his opponent reraised all in, and Koral called with the last of his chips.
Koral had pocket kings, but his opponent held for the flopped straight. No help came on the turn or river for Koral, and his day ends halfway through Level 2.
PokerNews' own Chris Hall was just involved in a decent-sized three-way Stud/8 hand.
Hall check-called the whole way, missing his low but hitting a queen-high flush on the end. A check-raise by Hall on the river got a call from both opponents, and as no one had a low he ended up taking the entire pot. He's at 11,000 now.