JP Kelly raised to 500 under the gun and ended up being three-bet to 800 after the player in the cutoff accidentally announced a raise. Kelly made the call and then both players checked the flop. When the hit the turn, Kelly bet 1,200, the cutoff called, and the was put out on the river.
At this point, Kelly checked and the cutoff fired out 3,075. Kelly tanked for a solid four minutes before making the call, only to muck when the cutoff revealed for a full house.
Well, McLean Karr got moved to table 31 but for your information we also got his chip count. Both Mark Teltscher and Gary Benson are nowhere to be found and PCA 2011 runner-up Ty Reiman just took Benson's old seat.
With about 6,000 in the pot and a board reading , Jim Collopy checked and his opponent on the button moved all in. Collopy snap-called off his last 6,000 and rolled over for a flush, which was good enough to win the pot.
On a flop chips came flying into the pot between Randy Dorfman and WSOP Main Event finalist Eoghan O'Dea. After the dust settled down both players were all-in and the showdown went as following.
Eoghan O'Dea
Randy Dorfman
The turn brought out the and the river was the sealing the deal and giving Dorfman the double up. Dorfman was all-in for a total of 9,875 and O'Dea was left behind with just 6,800 chips.
Action folded to an unknown player in the hijack and he promptly raised to 450. Joseph Cheong made the call from the cutoff, and the rest of the field got out of the way. When the flop fell , the hijack bet 500, Cheong called, and the dealer turned the .
This time the hijack check, Cheong bet 900, and the hijack called, bringing about the river. Once again the hijack check-called a bet, this time 1,725, and Cheong mucked. The hijack revealed for a flush, dropping Cheong to just 4,000.
The tournament staff have released the official numbers. Today's event attracted 92 entrants, six more than last year, who produced 331 rebuys and add-ons, making the total prize pool $423,000. That means the final table will be paid as follows:
We're not sure of the action, but we do know that Grant Levy got all in preflop holding only to run into an opponent's . The board did not deliver a king and Levy's day came to an end.