Level: 6
Blinds: 300/600
Ante: 75
Level: 6
Blinds: 300/600
Ante: 75
Matt Frankland remains pretty active at his table, and hasn’t been deterred by the arrival of Jamie Burland. They have yet to tangle in any significant pots but Frankland is ready to battle it out with the others at the table.
On a flop of
Frankland faced a bet from the small blind which he just called. A
was the turn card and both players decided to check.
The small blind checked for a second time when the
appeared on the river and Frankland decided to make his move with a bet of 7000. His opponent looked at the board to make sure he replayed the hand correctly in his head, shrugged and called the bet.
Franklin showed the
for the nut flush and the small blind mucked with a slight grimace.
A few hands later, and with no player sat at the big blind, Frankland in the small blind called a 1200 bet from the button.
The flop was
Frankland elected to lead for 1800 and the button called.
The turn brought the
and Frankland again decided to bet, this time 4500. Again the button just called.
When the river brought the
Frankland took some time before checking to his opponent who took the initiative offered and bet 7000.
Frankland called and decided to show his
after his opponent showed him the better two pair,
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JP Kelly has bought in late here in the ISPT Wembley Main Event and has not got off to the best of starts having lost a decent sized pot to Nicolas Cardyn.
Kelly led for 2,200 from under the gun on a ![]()
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flop and Cardyn called from his seat in the hijack. The
completed a possible heart flush but Kelly did not slow down; instead, he increased his bet to 4,800. Cardyn asked for confirmation of the bet amount, possibly because it sounded like 2,800. Once armed with his new information, Cardyn raised to 12,200. Kelly face remained expressionless as he mucked his cards.
Cardyn is now rapidly approaching 200,000 chips in this tournament and is on a roll it seems.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
193,000
11,000
|
11,000 |
|
|
39,500
10,500
|
10,500 |
|
|
||
Joining the action on a ![]()
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flop, Jamie Burland had bet 9,000 from late position and saw Alain Fustin raise to 21,000 from two seats over. Burland, dressed impeccably in a shirt and tie, raised all in for 56,000. This all in bet sent Fustin into the tank for close to two minutes before he emerged with a call.
Burland turned over ![]()
and Fustin must have thought they were on the river because he initially slammed his cards onto the felt face down towards the muck before retrieving them and flipping them over. Fustin's ![]()
was not drawing dead, but it was drawing to just two outs. Those outs failed to materialise as the river was the
and Burland doubled up.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
112,000
63,000
|
63,000 |
Former WSOP Main Event Peter Eastgate has just arrived having bought in for today. The Danish champion of 2008 who took home over $9 million dollars as well as the most prestigious prize in poker, has sat down with a stack of around 50,000.
On the river of an ![]()
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![]()
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board, Richard Trigg check-raised Jean Miguel Larceda's 4,600 bet to 12,000 causing the latter to tank for several minutes before he eventually made the call.
"You win," said Trigg mucking.
Larceda showed ![]()
to win.
Level: 7
Blinds: 400/800
Ante: 100
Squeezed between Jamie Burland and Matt Frankland is amateur player Barrie Price.
Barry played the first qualifying Saturday at DTD, buying in for £260.
For a while he held the lead on day one, with the final tally showing he had 183,800, second only behind chip leader Juen Alban.
I’m about to grab a word with Barry when Tony G arrives and promptly takes his seat at the same table.
Barry tells me he’s had a rough day and is down to half his starting stack, about 9,0000.
“Tough table Barry?” I ask him.
“No, not really. I’ve seen them all on TV so I know pretty much how they play. I just need a few good hands now and I’ll be alright.” He replied with a smile.
Go get ‘em Barry.
Ross Boatman had to check-raise the turn and the river in order to fold out Richard Trigg.
Boatman opened for 1,600 from middle position, Trigg called in the cutoff and Erwann Pêcheux came along for the ride in the big blind. The trio shared a ![]()
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flop. Pêcheux checked its arrival and Boatman bet 3,500. Trigg, who was feverishly typing the WiFi password into his iPad, called. Pêcheux folded.
The turn was the
and Boatman checked its arrival. Trigg was in no mood for checking and he bet 5,000. Boatman then sprung into life and check-raised to 12,000. Trigg quickly called.
The river card was the
and Boatman checked again. Trigg bet again, making it 12,000 and Boatman asked how much Trigg had behind. Trigg spread out his stack (78,900) and no sooner had he done so Boatman check-raised again, this time to 35,000. Trigg looked puzzled by the fact he'd been check-raised twice and his cards hit the muck.
| Player | Chips | Progress |
|---|---|---|
|
|
145,000
95,000
|
95,000 |
|
|
78,900
36,100
|
36,100 |
|
|
||