Nikolay Evdakov opened to 2,500 from under the gun and Tony Guoga three-bet to 7,500 from the hi-jack.
Evdakov made the call, and then check-called a bet of 8,000 on the flop. The turn of the saw Guoga continue once again with a bet of 16,000 as Evdakov used his full time bank before calling.
The river of the went check, check as Guoga's wasn't enough to better Evdakov's .
Patrik Antonius raised to 2,500 from the cutoff seat. Howard Lederer reraised to 9,500 from the button and Sam Trickett four-bet to 21,000 from the big blind. Antonius folded and Lederer made the call.
The flop came down and Trickett bet 16,000. Lederer folded and cut his losses, dropping to 47,000. Trickett increased to 300,000.
James Obst raised to 2,500 from the hijack seat and Sorel Mizzi called from the button to see the flop come down . Obst checked and Mizzi fired 4,000. Obst check-raised to 13,500 and Mizzi called.
The turn card brought the and Obst bet 23,000. Mizzi made the call and this pot was getting big.
The river card was the and Obst fired 42,500. Mizzi moved all in and Obst mucked his hand.
Obst dropped back to 120,000 while Mizzi stormed his way to 250,000.
David Oppenheim opened with a pot-sized raise to 3,500 and Brendon Rubie gave him some action from the small blind by making it an additional 5,500 more - the exact amount Oppenheim had left remaining.
"I guess I call!" stated Oppenheim as he tabled his to be in commanding shape against Rubie's .
The board would be spread to see Oppenheim pushed the 19,000-chip pot as Rubie took a slight dip.
Billy Jordanou raised to 2,500 from early position. Daniel Cates called from the hijack seat and Jonathan Karamalikis called from the button. Everyone else folded and the flop came down and action checked around.
The turn card was the and action checked to Karamalikis. He fired 4,000 and Jordanou folded. Cates made the call.
The river card completed the board with the and Cates check-folded to a bet of 8,000 from Karamalikis, who improved to 155,000 in chips. Cates dropped to 120,000.
On a flop of , Tom Dwan fired out a continuation-bet of 6,000 with Tony Guoga folding next to act before David Oppenheim check-called from the small blind.
The turn of the brought about another check from Oppenheim before Dwan's timer counted right down until he dropped in a bet of 17,000.
"How much you got Tom?" asked Oppenheim to Dwan, as the kid known as durrrr responded saying his had roughly 47,000 behind.
With that response, Oppenheim slid his entire stack into the pot - somewhere in the range of 90,000 - as Dwan paused momentarily before committing his final 64,000 total.
Oppenheim:
Dwan:
With Dwan needing to fade a diamond, king or queen to stay alive, the river of the spiked on the river to ensure his double to 155,000 as Oppenheim was left with roughly just 30,000 in chips.