On the flop of , Joe Cada fired 1,200. His opponent raised all in for about 7,000 and Cada couldn't make the call, almost immediately mucking his hand. Cada started off the day with a nice, early boost to get to 30,000 in chips, but has since slid the other way. He's down below the starting stack now and sitting on 19,500.
After the hand, Cada went over to his agent Dan Frank and explained how painful it is for him to sit at his table. "Every hand takes over five minutes," he said.
One player checked the flop of to Dan Frank. He fired a bet of 1,625 and his opponent called.
The turn brought the and both players checked. The river completed the board with the and the first player checked. Frank fired 1,100 and his opponent called.
Frank tabled the , but his opponent tabled the for a better two pair. Frank slipped to 18,000 in chips.
Maridu Mayrinck opened to 850 from under the gun, and found a call from opponents on the button and the small blind.
The flop fell down and Mayrinck fired out 1,100 and produced a call from her opponent on the button as the small blind passed.
Mayrinck checked the on the turn, only to be faced with a 2,100-chip bet. Heading into the tank, Mayrinck took just short of sixty seconds before open-folding her face up to relinquish the pot and slip to 8,500 in chips.
Joe Cada limped in under the gun and was followed by the cutoff along with the blinds.
Cada fired out 800 on the flop and was called by just the cutoff before the land on the turn.
Cada tossed in blue 5,000-denomination chip while announcing a bet of 2,500. His opponent quickly mucked and Cada collected the pot to move to 19,600 in chips.
Five players saw the flop come down for the minimum. Victor Ramdin was in the big blind and fired a bet of 1,050 after the small blind checked. The next two players folded before the third player raised all in for about 6,000. The small blind got out of the way and then Ramdin let it go as well. The player that shoved in showed just the .