Damon Cole opened to 3,000 from early position before another player moves all in for 57,000. Cole was covered but called quickly and showed ![]()
.
He was ahead of the ![]()
held by his opponent.
The board ran out ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
and Cole doubled up.
Damon Cole opened to 3,000 from early position before another player moves all in for 57,000. Cole was covered but called quickly and showed ![]()
.
He was ahead of the ![]()
held by his opponent.
The board ran out ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
and Cole doubled up.
There is 6,000 in the pot and the flop reads ![]()
![]()
.
Jerry Green just made it 15,000 to go and Mitch Semon raised all in for 25,500. Green called.
Semon showed ![]()
against the ![]()
of Green.
The turn was the
and the river was the
and Semon won the hand to earn a big double.
The flop was out, reading ![]()
![]()
, with four players in the hand. The first player checked and the next player moved all-in for 7,100. Babo Taylor called, and Deborah Garnes reshoved for 13,000. Everyone called and then checked down the turn and river, which came ![]()
.
Garnes tabled ![]()
and won both the main and side pots against her opponents ![]()
, ![]()
, and ![]()
.
A player opened to 1,000 in early position before Fred Mcadoo raised to 3,000. Charles "Woody" Moore called and so did the initial raiser.
The flop came ![]()
![]()
and the action checked to Mcadoo. He bet 7,000. Moore was the only caller.
The turn as the
and Moore bet 25,000. Mcadoo called for less, 21,100, and tabled aces. Moore showed ![]()
.
The river was the
and Macdoo held to double up.
The players are on a 15-minute break.
Danny Kilcrease came in from West Monroe, LA to play in the Southern Poker Open.
He has no recorded tournament cashes and has doubled his starting stack in the first few levels of play today.
Kilcrease has worked 30 years in Electrical Design, which he says he got into, "Just because," after he finished at a vocational school.
Vicksburg resident Greg James is enjoying himself in Flight D. He took a beat with pocket queens to come up short of a bag in Flight B, but James is taking it in stride today. In a hand, he carries himself like a true grinder: focused, measured, and stoic. But engage him in conversation, he's all smiles.
James is an 8-year veteran of the Vicksburg Fire Department and has been a medic for five. Married with six children, he divides his time between family, community service, and competition on the felt. The latter has added $95,121 to his bankroll via live tournament winnings.