Ashley Warner opened with a raise 4,200 from the cutoff and Tristain Bain called on the button to see a flop. Warner check-called for 6,900, as the hit the turn.
Warner again checked and Bain fired another 11,200. Warner made the call once more as the completed the board. Warner checked and Bain moved all in to put Warner to a decision for his last 80,000 chips. Warner committed to the call with for just second pair which was good as Bain opened for just ace-high.
Easy come, easy go for Bain as he slips back to 80,000 with Warner climbing to 260,000.
The players are back from their dinner break and ready to keep playing here in the APPT Melbourne Main Event. There is 30 minutes remaining in the current level.
As you wait for the action, check out this off-the-felt challenge that Lynn Gilmartin put Grant Levy and Jai Kemp to during an earlier break:
Brendon Rubie just raised from the button, and Tony Tartaglia defended his big blind. The flop brought out , and both players checked.
On the turn the hit, and Tartaglia check-called a 4,000-chip bet. The river was the , and Tartaglia checked a third time. Rubie smoothly grabbed four chips, two black and two yellow ones betting 10,200. Tartaglia called almost immediately, but had to muck when Rubie showed .
We arrived on the scene with a board showing . German player Gunther Hornung was all in for 101,500 with around 60,000 chips in the middle. The action was on Grant Levy who looked pained as he was trying to make a decision.
After a while he announced the call, and Hornung turned over for a rivered full house. Levy mucked his cards, and he got knocked back down. Hornung is now one of the big stacks.
Two Brits just clashed in a big pot, and Sam Razavi came out on top. Grant Levy kicked things off by raising to 4,200, and Sam Razavi three-bet him to 11,000 right away.
Gunther Hornung, who just won a massive pot, called quickly as did Wayne Bentley who was in the big blind. Levy opted to fold. The flop brought out and Bentley checked. Razavi had 64,100 chips left, and he moved all in. Hornung folded quickly and the action was back on Bentley.
After some back and forth chatter Razavi said, "I'd appreciate a call." Bentley did just that right after those words left Razavi's mouth, and the following showdown took place.
Sam Razavi
Wayne Bentley
The turn was the , and the river the keeping Razavi's hopes alive. The Brit, winner of a UK and Ireland Poker Tour event and 2011 Aussie Millions finalist, clapped his hands in excitement as he's now up to 168,000 chips.