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Sun Jun 28 2009 08:01 GMT-70 | Posted by Shamus
Nguyen No More
Scotty Nguyen raised to 2,000 from under the gun, an opponent called from the cutoff, then the player in the big blind shoved all in for more than 30,000.
Nguyen called with his remaining chips -- 9,750 more -- and the third player called with his last 3,800, too.
Nguyen showed
, the player in the cutoff showed 
, and the big stack in the big blind 
.
The flop came

, and Nguyen was still good. But the turn was the
, giving the big stack a set. The river was the
, and two players, including Nguyen, were eliminated at once. -
Sun Jun 28 2009 07:56 GMT-70 | Posted by Shamus
Deeb Doubles
On a flop of


, the player in the small blind led for 4,000, Shaun Deeb raised all in for 15,900, and his opponent called.
Deeb showed
and his opponent 
. The turn was the
and river
, and Deeb now has 41,000. -
Sun Jun 28 2009 07:54 GMT-70 | Posted by Shamus
Peter EastgateEight Helps Eastgate
A player in middle position raised to 2,100, defending WSOP Main Event Champion Peter Eastgate reraised all in for 10,425 from the cutoff, and his opponent called.
Eastgate turned over
and his opponent 
. The flop was good to the reigning champ: 

. The turn was the
and the river
, and Eastgate doubles to 21,000. -
Sun Jun 28 2009 07:43 GMT-70 | Posted by Shamus
Aces for Allen
Allen Cunningham was just now in the enviable position of having an opponent all in who held

while Cunningham had 
.
The board came



, and another player is out. Cunningham is now up to 49,000. -
Sun Jun 28 2009 07:38 GMT-70 | Posted by Shamus
Caesar Never Saw It Coming, Either
Word is Phil Hellmuth is planning an elaborate Main Event entrance this weekend involving his dressing up as Julius Caesar in a chariot with a throng of models accompanying him. Would we expect anything less?
At the end of the previous level came a hand in which the button raised to 1,600 and Phil Hellmuth called from the small blind.
The flop came

. Hellmuth bet 1,500, the button raised to 4,500, Hellmuth reraised to 8,000, his opponent made it 18,000, and Hellmuth finally let it go.
His opponent turned over
as he dragged the pot. The usual hilarity ensued.
Hellmuth is now at 23,000. -
Sun Jun 28 2009 07:33 GMT-70Round: 8 Blinds: 400/800 Ante: 100
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Sun Jun 28 2009 07:30 GMT-70 | Posted by Shamus
Scotty NguyenTalk About Playing Position (Not Cards)
Okay, here's another one for the strange-but-true file.
Scotty Nguyen raised to 1,600 from the cutoff, and the player on the button reraised to 4,100. Nguyen made the call, then, before the flop was dealt, the player on the button asked the dealer if he could be dealt his second card.
That's right. He'd only been dealt one card. And he'd reraised Nguyen nonetheless!
The dealer dealt him his second card, then burned one and dealt the T-3-2 flop. Nguyen, who only had about 6,000 or so behind, instantly shoved all in, and his opponent folded.
"What if he shows one card and beats me?" said Nguyen afterwards, considering the possibility of his having folded to his opponent's preflop reraise. "Would be the most embarrassing moment in the last 27 years," he added. -
Sun Jun 28 2009 07:17 GMT-70 | Posted by Shamus
Check Before You Check, Sirous-ly
Sirous Jamshidi had been engaged in conversation with the player on his left while the table folded around to the small blind who completed. Jamshidi appeared to check, and the dealer put out the flop of


.
Jamshidi laughed and told his opponent he hadn't even checked his cards yet. The small blind made a continuation bet, and after looking at his hand Jamshidi quickly called. The turn was the
. The small blind checked, Jamshidi fired 2,000, and his opponent folded.
Afterwards, Jamshidi told the dealer he hadn't intended to check, but his preflop gesture had been interpreted as such. That the hand worked out probably made Jamshidi less interested in pursuing the point. He's now about about 52,000. -
Sun Jun 28 2009 07:09 GMT-70 | Posted by Shamus
Hellmuth Waits for Better Spot
Phil Hellmuth arrived late in the afternoon, and has since built up a stack.
Recently came a hand in which three players limped, including Phil Hellmuth from the cutoff, then the player on the button pushed all in for about 16,000. All folded back to Hellmuth who asked the dealer to count out his opponent's chips. Hellmuth considered for a half-minute, then folded his
face up.
Hellmuth is at about 40,000 at the moment. -
Sun Jun 28 2009 06:53 GMT-70 | Posted by Shamus
Tran Loses One
With the board showing



, J.C. Tran checked, his opponent bet 3,000 (about two-thirds pot), and Tran called. The river brought the
. Tran again checked, and this time his opponent fired 5,100. Tran took just a few seconds to make the call.
Tran's opponent showed
, and Tran patted the table to signal that it was good. Tran is at 44,000 right now.






