A player in middle position opened to 2,100 and action folded to Mayu Roca Uribe in the big blind. He popped it to 5,200, but was unable to shake his opponent.
The flop fell and Uribe bet 5,600. His opponent paused momentarily before raising all in with the bigger stack. Uribe called all in immediately for 19,000 and tabled . He was well ahead of his opponent's , but the spiked on the turn. A dejected Uribe shook his head as the river officially ended his tournament.
While we didn't catch the Luis Perez's final hand, we are happy to report that his twin brother, Carlos Perez, is going quite well with a stack of about 68,000.
We're not sure of the action as Table 25 is not easily accessible, but we do know that Juan Jose was recently eliminated from the LAPT-Colombia Main Event. From what we could piece together, Jose was all in with and up against the of an unknown opponent. We don't know when the money went in (though we imagine it was pre flop), but we do know the board read .
Prior to the last break, action folded around to an unknown player on the button and he raised to 2,000. Daniel Ospina was in the big blind and opted to defend, leading to the flop. Ospina then turned around and led out for 2,200, which the button quickly raised to 5,400.
Ospina made the call and then ended up check-folding to the button's 10,000 bet on the turn. With that, Ospina was down to approximately 15,000.
Two more levels are in the books which means it is time for the last 15-mintue break of the evening. When players return, they'll play two more levels before concluding for the night.
Sitting one table apart from each other are twins Luis Perez and Carlos Perez. However, Luis may not be there much longer.
We arrived at the table and found that he had three-bet from the big blind to what looked to be 5,100. The player on the button, the preflop raiser, four-bet shoved for 28,700 and Perez snap-called with . His opponent tabled and was behind, but nailed the board in just about every possible way when it ran out .
We didn't catch all the specifics, but we do know that an unknown player in Seat 4 was all in pre flop and up against Alex Manzano.
Showdown
Manzano:
Seat 4:
It was a race, and one that saw Manzano pull out in front when the flop paired his ace. Seat 4 was in need of some help, and received some when the gave him a flush draw. Manzano was way ahead on the flop, but he barely flinched as the spiked on the river. The Latin American Poker Tour Sao Paolo Champ is down to 25,000.