2010 NAPT Venetian
2010 NAPT Venetian Main Event
Day: 2
Players Left 1 / 872
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The first three cards in the middle were dealt the


and Mizzi fired 15,800. His opponent on the button made the call.The turn was the
and both players checked. The river completed the board with the
and both players checked again. Mizzi showed 
for ace high and his opponent tabled 
for a pair of eights. Mizzi slipped back to 112,000 after losing this pot.


with pocket kings. Potter held a combo draw with the 
. The turn was the
and the river the
which failed to complete any of Potter's draws. He nearly doubled his stack and now has over 200,000 chips.


. D'Angelo checked and Richey checked behind.The turn was the
and D'Angelo led for 7,500. Richey made the call. Fifth street landed the
on the felt and D'Angelo fired 11,000. RIchey again made the call.D'Angelo tabled

and RIchey held 
for a full house. Richey moved up to 225,000 while D'Angelo took a hit to 150,000.
Shak played a pot in position against one opponent. After the flop came down, Shak inadvertently bet 7,000 out of turn. His opponent was supposed to act first. The dealer told Shak that the 7,000 must stay in the pot, even after Shak's opponent moved all in for 52,000 and Shak folded. Shak protested that he didn't think that was correct, but the 7,000 went to his opponent anyway.
By the time a floor was summoned to the table, a flop was already out for the next hand. The floor ruled that Shak should have been entitled to the 7,000 but because the table was already on the next hand there was nothing he could do. Shak said that couldn't be right; the floor said he would bring a director over to the table.
A few hands later a director came to give a final ruling. Shak pointed out that neither he nor his opponent had played a single pot since the disputed hand. The director went over all the action with the whole table. He ruled that because Shak's opponent moved all in, rather than checking and allowing Shak's 7,000-chip bet to stand, Shak was entitled to pull the 7,000 back. Therefore 7,000 was returned from his opponent to Shak.
and was going to need a lot of help against his opponent's
. The board ran out
. After sending 106k across the stack, Graham was left with around 48,000.
Level: 13
Blinds: 1,200/2,400
Ante: 200
Dwyte Pilgrim - 270,000
James Mackey - 245,000
Nam Le - 420,000
Bob Lauria - 170,000
170,000 is a lot of chips at this stage of the tournament, but not when there are three massive stacks at your table. Luckily for Lauria and the other (shorter) stacks on Table 64, they're the next table to break.