and followed with another 7,000 after his opponent called and the turn fell
. That was the bet that won Luske the pot. He seemed to be in a celebratory mood."Just a straight," said Luske with a smile. He opened
and collected the pot.
and followed with another 7,000 after his opponent called and the turn fell
. That was the bet that won Luske the pot. He seemed to be in a celebratory mood.
and collected the pot.


. He found no matching queen on the
turn or the
river. Rahme remained seated at the table for a few moments after the pot was pushed to Berdah, seemingly oblivious to the fact that he had no more chips and was therefore eliminated from the tournament. Then without any prompting he stood up and quietly walked towards the door.
. Lawson's opponent raised to 2,800, a raise that brought a corresponding reraise by Lawson to 11,100. His aggressive opponent didn't take his foot off the gas. Instead he reraised all in. Lawson was significantly covered, as he had only 20,200 behind the 11,100 chips already on the felt. He took no action for about a minute and then folded his hand.
, with a significant number of chips already in the pot, Palovic bet 20,000. His one opponent thought things over for about a minute called and then mucked when Palovic turned over
for the flopped trip queens.
vs.
all in preflop situation. Fate waited until the river to deal the
blow which saw Runarsson shout, "Yes!" and then immediately follow it with, "Sorry."
, well behind Lee's pocket
which naturally held up on the board.
came good against Jack Tarabay's
on the
board. Sounds like there's been a lot of craziness on that table -- as Kein raked in the chips, tablemate John Tabatabai commented, "Three all ins in seven hands."