[user38449]
Annette Obrestad
Annette Obrestad threw a couple of power punches in a hand against Lars-Ola Svensson, on a board showing . She bet 4,300 on the flop and Svensson called. The turn brought the and Annette decisively shoved the remainder of her stack into the middle.
"Ok, I gamble. I call," said Svensson. Annette revealed for top and bottom pair, which made Svensson smile as he tabled .
[user38449]
The tournament clock has been paused while the dealers race off the $25 chips from the table. There are currently 98 players remaining and the average chip stack is 33,800.
The first level of play produced 24 eliminations, which amounts to 20% of the Day 2 starting field.
[user50492]
Ian Cox has busted a player during the first level with pocket Kings on a Jack high flop. His ooponent got all his chips in with pocket tens and failed to hit putting Ian up to 64,000.
Ben Grundy managed to get a double up with the bullets. He called a raise pre-flop and pushed a flop and got a caller from a player with . he now has 19,000.
[user38449]
Ian Cox
Moments ago, Philip Hardy was eliminated from the tournament after running his pocket kings into the pocket aces of Ian "Crapper" Cox.
The hand lifted Cox towards the head of the field, with right around 100,000 in chips.
Cox is on quite a roll as of late, having reached the final table in each of the last three live events he's played, most notably posting an 8th place finish at the EPT London in September.
[user50492]
Ben Grundy
The Milkybarkid, Ben Grundy, got most of his chips in as a big favourite pre-flop with versus but the hit the board to leave him short. He got the rest in with against but was unable to hit the three-outer himself to avoid elimination.
[user38449]
Noah Boeken
A crowd of reporters and spectators completely surrounded table seven, as Noah Boeken had moved all in on the turn against Antonio Lemos.
The board read and Lemos sat back in his chair with his arms folded, pondering a call for most of his chips.
The clock was called by another player at the table, prompting Thomas Kremser to join the mob and initiate a countdown.
"Just throw it away. I've got you," Boeken needled.
"At the end of the countdown, the hand will be killed," Kremser said.
"5 . . . 4 . . . 3 . . . 2. . . 1 . . . . ."
"Call!" snapped Lemos, with one second left on the clock. Boeken quickly flipped over the for a flush and Lemos angrily mucked his hand.
"Turn them up," Kremser instructed the dealer, who revealed Lemos' hand - the .
The hand left Lemos with just 4,500 chips while Boeken doubled through to roughly 80,000.