Jaagup Luhakooder open jammed 56,500 from the button.
Alen Coralic, on the button, asked, "How much?"
After he learned the amount he quickly eyeballed how many chips he had and made the call.
Coralic was far ahead with against his opponent's . However, he was drawing very thin after the flop gave his opponent a set.
The on the turn and the on the river were unable to swing the pendulum back to Coralic and he was down to around 160,000 in chips after the hand. Meanwhile, instead of being on the rail, Luhakooder gets a much needed double and now has a six-figure stack.
We caught up with a hand after the flop came with about 20,000 in chips in the middle. Aleksei Smirnov check-called a bet from Johannes Park.
Smirnov then led out for 30,000 after the appeared on the turn and Park tanked for a minute before he called.
The put four diamonds on the board plus the chance for a straight flush. Smirnov thought before he bet 70,000 with about 65,000 behind.
Park then went into the tank for a few minutes before he called. Park looked relieved when Smirnov turned over for the king-high flush and then quickly turned over for a slightly better ace-high flush.
A player asked what he was thinking about saying that he had the nuts and not seeing the straight-flush possibility.
Kim Andre Espeseth entered the dinner break as one of the shorter stacks with around 53,000. Espeseth just three-bet jammed for 45,000 and got called by a player that turned over .
Espeseth was able to win a flip after the board ran out to double up to a six-digit stack.