These Australians do talk very fast, but the general gist of it seems to be that there was a raise and a reraise ahead of Grace, who smooth called, as did the gent on the button. The original raiser called too, making it a four-way pot to the
flop. The action checked around to Grace who bet; the button was the only caller.Grace bet out on the
turn as well and his opponent called. The river was a
and Grace bet again -- and this time his opponent folded, showing pocket queens. Grace declined to show, and declined also to tell any bloggers what he was holding...
. Winamax pro Aurelien Guiglini was first to act, and he led out with a bet of 600. He only had to beat Ricardo Sousa, but the Portuguese pro quickly made the call. The turn brought the
and a check from both players, and the
hit the river. After another check from Guiglini, Sousa flicked a red chip into the pot for a bet of 1,000. Guiglini called, and Sousa tabled
. "The nuts?" he asked, certain his hand was good. It was; Guiglini picked his cards up off the table, stared at them, and returned them to the muck.
flop and then called another 1,000 on the
turn. Mr. Opponent must have thought Christmas had come early as he bet 5,000 on the
river and Thater called. He flipped
. A very disappointed-looking Thater flashed him an ace, and drops down to 24,000.
and at least 10,000 was sitting in front of Neuville. His all-in opponent turned over
for the nuts, and Neuville sadly looked at what appeared to be a king-high flush before handing his cards back to the dealer.
flop and then called a bet of around 1,500 from his opponent in the cutoff. He check-called another 2,750 on the
turn. Both players checked the
river, and whatever Roux was holding could presumably not beat his opponent's