Andrew feldman raised from under the gun and then Dan Kelly reraised to 19,300. The original raise size was unknown. When action got back to Feldman, he moved all in and Kelly called.
Kelly tabled the , but was dominated by Feldman's . The domination lasted only until the flop came down and put Kelly in the lead. He now held the dominating position on the at-risk Feldman with two more cards to come.
The turn was the and the river the , not producing the help Feldman needed. Kelly increased to 270,000 by taking all of Feldman's chips.
With the board reading on the turn, Frank Kassela checked, Oscar Erixon bet 25,000 and Kassela moved out all his large denomination chips, setting Erixon all-in. He made the call.
Erixon
Kassela
The river was the and Erixon doubled to 190,000 with aces up. Kassela fell to 240,000.
Jared Jaffee raised on the button to 8,000. Shawn Buchanan reraised all in from the small blind before Dave Sands reshoved all in from the big blind. Jaffee folded.
Sands held the and Buchanan the .
The board ran out and Sands doubled up Buchanan.
"I can't win with ace-queen," said Sands after losing the pot. "It's f***ing unreal."
Sands dropped to 200,000 while Buchanan doubled to 145,000.
Phil Ivey opened for 11,000 from under-the-gun, Mclean Karr called from the cutoff, Ivan Demidov called in the small blind and Eugene Katchalov came along from the big blind.
The flop was . The action was checked to Ivey, who bet 24,000. Karr folded and Demidov raised to 59,000. Katchalov got out of the way, and Ivey moved all-in. Demidov called for his remaining 140,000 in chips.
Demidov
Ivey
That's what we call set over set, boys and girls.
The turn was the , the river was the and Demidov's tournament came to an end. Thanks to that cooler, Ivey has some serious chips to work with now-- he's up to 390,000.
Sam Trickett was in the small blind and Dmitry Vitkind in the big blind when the two saw a flop of after some preflop action. Trickett fired 29,000 and Vitkind called.
The turn brought the and Trickett checked. Vitkind bet approximately 45,000 and Trickett called. The river was the and Trickett thought for a bit before firing 100,000. Vitkind gave it up and Trickett was pushed the pot.
Trickett did not report his overnight chip count and that's why he was listed on the official list from Harrah's as having only one chip. He came into Day 2 with 507,000 and now is approaching the 600,000-chip mark. Vitkind dropped to 145,000.
Abe Mosseri and Richard Lyndaker got all the money in preflop after a raising war broke out between the two over on Table 371. Lyndaker held the , but was one-upped by Mosseri's .
The board ran out and Mosseri dodged elimination and doubled to around 350,000 in chips. Mosseri was all in for 172,600 preflop. Lyndaker was left with 135,000.
Dmitry Vitkind just saw his tournament come to an end when his were cracked by Tim Adams' . Adams turned a set on the board and sent Vitkind to the rail. He's up to 305,000.
From the cutoff seat, Phil Ivey raised to 11,000. Dan Kelly was on the button and three-bet to 30,700. Ivey made the call when action got back around to him and the two took a flop of .
On the flop, Ivey checked and Kelly fired 44,400. Ivey made the call. The turn added the to the board and Ivey checked. Kelly checked behind. The river completed the board with the and Ivey checked again to Kelly. Kelly fired a bet of 104,400 and sent Ivey into the tank.
A minute or so in, Ivey asked Kelly, "What's your name online?" Kelly didn't respond. Ivey then tanked for a little bit longer and made the call.
Kelly tabled the and Ivey mucked his hand.
"Good hand," said Ivey as Kelly raked in the pot to move up to 650,000 in chips. Ivey dropped to 230,000.