When we got to the table, Adrian Mateos had already committed 290,000 to the pot preflop from early position and Bartosz Stasiewicz had called from middle position. The player in the big blind jammed for what looked like 1,600,000, Mateos shoved over the top, and Stasiewicz called to put both players at risk.
Mateos:
Stasiewicz:
Big blind:
Stasiewicz had the preflop advantage and both of his opponents needed help from the deck to survive. The board ran out which changed nothing, so Stasiewicz took the pot to bust both of his opponents and put his stack over the 5,000,000-chip mark.
With about 200,000 already in the middle and the board reading , Adrian Mateos was on the button and facing a decision for 120,000 from a player in early position. After a bit of time in the tank, Mateos eventually called. His opponent tabled for ace high and Mateos showed for a pair of tens to take the pot.
There was a substantial pot of about 500,000 already brewing and the board read when we got to the table. John Duthie checked from the big blind and Martin Jacobson checked behind from the hijack.
The turn brought the and Duthie bet 105,000. Jacobson called.
The fell on the river and Duthie bet 350,000. Jacobson went into the tank for about half a minute before he folded and Duthie took the pot.
All the action was complete and the cards were on their backs when we got to the table. The board read , partypoker Sponsored Pro Jan-Peter Jachtmann had tabled , and was already out of his seat. Philipp Gruissem was showing for a flopped set of sevens and told the PokerNews Live Reporting team that all the chips had gone in on the turn when Jachtmann made top two pair.
A few minutes later, Jachtmann informed us that he re-entered immediately and that he stacked another player set-over-set on his first hand at the new table, where he is now seated to Mike Leah's right. Jachtmann said he held against another player who held on a board and his hand was still best when the last card fell.
There were about 375,000 chips already in the pot and the board read when we got to the table. Dylan Linde bet 110,000 from the small blind and Ari Engel called from the hijack.
The turn brought the and Linde jammed for 464,000, puting Engel to a decision for a clear majority of his remaining chips. After a bit of time in the tank, Engel called to put Linde at risk.
Linde:
Engel:
Linde had the best of it by miles with trip aces and Engel was drawing dead. After the fell on the river, Linde took the pot to double up.