"You got a hand?" the big blind asked Nelson. Nelson's only response was to check a flop of
. The big blind's bet of 8,200 was enough to fold Nelson and take down the pot."I gotta win one time..." mused the big blind.
. The big blind's bet of 8,200 was enough to fold Nelson and take down the pot.
flop. Palovic dwelled up for a while, before passing. He claimed an overpair and a discussion broke out as to whether or not the all-in gent could have had a hand that was not pocket fours. Nevertheless, Palovic is still going strong on around 300,000.
and the soon-to-be-out gent pushed with pocket jacks. For some reason Nelson called, and three clubs came on the flop. An enticing jack fell on the turn, but the unfortunate all-in player failed to fill up on the river and he hit the rail in time for a leisurely dinner.
. Zipf held
.
. Poker players and journalists can't help but play the, "What's the sickest card that could come?" game, whether they're involved or not, and sometimes it actually does.
on the turn filled Spindler's gutshot straight draw and the
river was a resounding blank. Zipf's stack sailed away to a sheepishly-smiling Spindler, while he himself just sat in his chair, speechless. He was still sitting there in front of the empty space where his stack used to be when they dealt the next hand. Suddenly twigging he was out, he slowly, wordlessly, got up and wandered out.
. When the big blind checked, Nelson made a standard continuation bet, firing out for 9,000. The big blind called.
went check, check. It was the same thing for the river
. Nelson showed down jack-ten offsuit for middle pair... and his opponent had the same thing. With grins and laughs from each player, the dealer chopped up the pot.
. He may have sensed weakness; his opponent checked the
turn, inducing a bet of 30,000 from Saab. The perplexed opponent studied the board for a minute, then announced he was all in. Saab snap-mucked.
, but then passed when he was raised all in. Spindler is about to break the 300k chip barrier which has eluded all but a very few at any point today...
. After a few moments assessing the situation, his opponent decided that he had the odds to call for almost his whole stack -- and flipped a really not very good at all
.