The board read when we found George Danzer contemplating his action after Juan Pablo Andreu moved forward a bet of 18,500. Danzer called to see the river which was the .
The PokerStars Team Pro checked and Andreu wasted little time betting 25,000. This bet caused Danzer to remove his sunglasses and go deep into the tank. Nearly three minutes passed while Danzer contemplated his action. Ultimately, he decided to let go his cards and Andreu picked up the pot. Andreu now has about 200,000 while Danzer has fallen to 90,000.
When our reporter arrived at the table, there was around 100,000 in chips already in the middle in a hand between Matt Berkey and Alexander Kuzmin. The board read , and there was 74,000 out in front of Kuzmin. Berkey had announced that he was all in, but he was late to arrive to his table and still had the majority of chips in his bag. Kuzmin, who had a little over 100,000 behind, needed to see how much Berkey had shoved for so requested that he count out his chips. The dealer then asked Berkey to remove his chips from the bag and stack them, which Berkey did, although this took a couple of minutes.
Berkey had Kuzmin well covered.
Eventually, Kuzmin called the clock on himself. With only a few seconds left, Kuzmin folded his hand with a shake of his head, and Berkey was awarded the pot.
After stacking up all of the chips, Berkey climbed to 498,000 and is the new chip leader.
All three Greenwood brothers, Max, Sam and Luc started Day 3 of the PokerStars Caribbean Adventure and if not for a jack on the board we would've lost the first one right now.
Max Greenwood, the oldest of the three and a WSOP bracelet winner, told us how he ended up all in with jacks versus Andre De Oliveira's kings.
"I spiked a jack," Greenwood said with an almost evil looking smile. Greenwood had a rough stretch late last night but this big pot made up for that right away.
Sam started the day as the Greenwood chip leader with 402,500 and Luc hoovers right around the 200,000-chip mark as of right now.
Picking up the action on a flop of , Shyam Srinivasan's bet of 7,300 was called by Jennifer Shahade. The turn fell and Srinivasan bet 17,200. Shahde stuck around, leading to the river which both checked.
Shahade tabled , Srinivasan mucked, and Shahade collected the pot.
Matt Stout opened to 5,500 from under the gun and Ben Warrington was his only caller. The flop came down and Stout continued out for 6,500. Warrington tossed forward a call and the hit the turn. Two checks allowed the to finish off the community cards.
Stout checked again and Warrington bet 8,000. Stout called but then mucked his cards after Warrington showed for the nut flush. Warrington picked up the pot and is off to a good start here, moving his stack up to about 135,000.
After a series of raises, James Johnston was all in for about 58,000 with against Marcel Luske's . The board ran out , giving Luske a full house to score the elimination.