Tony Dunst raised to 50,000 in the cutoff, Abraham Korotki defended his big blind, and the duo checked on a flop of .
The turn was the , Korotki led out for 75,000, and Dunst called.
The completed the board, Korotki checked, and Dunst fired out 225,000. The 2014 Borgata Spring Poker Open Champion instantly called, and Dunst showed for an ace-high flush.
Curt Kohlberg opened for a raise on the button, Byron Kaverman defended, and both players appeared to check on a flop of . Kaverman led out for 65,000 on the turn (), Kohlberg called, and the river was the .
Kaverman moved all in for 279,000, Kohlberg tank-called, and the former showed for two pair.
Tony Dunst raised to 50,000 on the button, Keven Stammen defended his big blind, and the flop fell . Stammen led out on the flop, betting 65,000, and the host of the WPT's Raw Deal made the call.
The river was the , and Stammen checked again. Dunst slid forward 325,000, Stammen tank-called, and Dunst rolled over for a whiffed flush draw. Stammen showed for a flopped pair of queens, and won the pot.
The flop read when we caught Tony Gregg contesting yet another pot during an especially active Day 4, this time dueling with Eric Afriat.
Afriat was in the cutoff and he fired out for 90,000, with Gregg flatting from the button. The arrived on the turn and Afriat continued his line, making it 140,000 to go, and once again the "End Boss" called to see the complete the board on the river.
Both players tapped the table and Afriat rolled over his with a flourish, standing up and pumping his fist as he did so. Gregg peered over from across the table and revealed his without saying a word, showing Afriat that his celebration had been a bit premature.
"Gahhh..." cried Afriat at the sight of Gregg's rivered two pair. "So bad today!"
Gregg never responded to Afriat's frustration, but Ryan D'Angelo spoke up, telling Afriat "I think there's a one month limit on complaining over beats after you win a big tournament."
The comment seemed to calm Afriat and he immediately broke into a wide smile, saying "that was a nice flop though," before retaking his seat. Like a true boss does though, Gregg didn't need to say a single word, and he let his cards do the talking.
Chris O'Rourke looked down at and moved all in. Keven Stammen re-raised it to 500,000. Everyone else folded and O'Rourke said "I'm going to need to hit a nine, aren't I" before Stammen turned over his cards. He would be correct as Stammen had .
"Need a nine or lots of diamonds," said O'Rourke, adding "I'm going to put a bad beat on Sweet Pea." He wouldn't place a bad beat on Stammen, however, as the board would run out .
"Good hand," said O'Rourke, a smile still on his face despite being eliminated.
Chris O'Rourke moved all in from early position and it was folded to Corey Hochman in the big blind. "How much?" asked Hochman. "171,000 dollars," said O'Rourke with enthusiasm.
"I call," said Hochman, turning over [8h. O'Rourke stood up and with flair turned over his hand... . He rubbed his hands together with glee.
The board ran out to give O'Rourke the double up. "Nice hand," said Hochman.
Justin Young was down to just over ten big blinds after the break and moved all in, finding no callers. He decided to try it again moments later and this time found a taker in Brock Parker.
The remaining players folded and Young turned over . Parker turned over and Yound nodded his head and said "fair enough."
The board would run out eliminating Young in 15th place. The consummate professional congratulated the rest of the table and headed off to do his exit interview with the World Poker Tour cameras.