There appears to be an unusually large number of woman in today's field. Normally, it is rare to find more than one woman at the same table on a Day 1, as a few will be scattered throughout each section. Today, almost every table has at least one and we even spotted a couple of tables that had three.
An opponent opened to 150 from middle position and was called by both players in the blinds, including Jeffrey Papola in the big. The flop came down , and the action checked the the original raiser who continued for 300. Both players called.
The turn was the , the player in the small blind checked, and Papola tossed out 700. The original raiser tanked for a bit before moving all in for 3,075, the player in the small blind mucked, and Papola tank-called.
Papola:
Opponent:
Papola was drawing dead. The completed the board, and the pot was shipped to Papola's opponent.
We found Layne Flack calling a raise of 150 from the big blind preflop. The players were then awarded a flop where Flack's opponent bet out 350 after Flack checked, and Flack smooth called.
Flack checked again when the his on the turn, but this time when he was facing a bet of 625 he did not simply call, no he raised big. His opponent tanked for a few moments and then folded.
Christina Lindley was out of green 25 chips and was forced to throw in a black 100 chip for her big blind. Still shuffling the cards, the dealer asked the gentleman besides her to make change and added, "It might be your only chance to touch someone else's chips." The players at the table, although definitely surprised, seemed to love it and even the guy who made the change was having fun with it.
We have just found Martin Kabrhel, and he has 25,000 in chips. People are still buying into this tournament for 4,500. This amount at this level is simply staggering. Kabrhel has made runs in this years World Series already, just yesterday he cashed in Event #28 the $1,500 no limit event for $5,703 when he placed 76th out of a 2,500 person field. Kabrhel has the experience and the know how to keep this lead and put himself in great position to go deep in this tournament.