The small blind check-raised to 4,200 after Blake Bohn bet 1,700 from middle position on a board of . Bohn came back with 10,500, and his opponent called without much delay. On the river, the small blind fired out 9,000, and Bohn immediately announced all in.
"How much is it?" the player asked. Seeing it was at least 30,000 more, he chucked his cards.
Bohn allowed a neighbor to turn a card over: the .
Rich Monroe made it 1,200 to go from early position and got three-bet to about 3,000 by Lenny Herstein. A player in the cutoff called, and Monroe dumped his cards. On the flop, Herstein bet 7,000 and called the shove of his opponent, who had about 13,000.
Herstein:
Cutoff:
Both had flopped huge, but Herstein took a commanding lead on the turn, leaving his opponent with two outs to a better full house. The river was a brick.
We found Steve Le Peau all in for 12,350 into a pot that looked to be about half of that size after a flop of . A slew of folds followed, but the last player who had checked in front of Le Peau made the call.
Le Peau:
Opponent:
Le Peau needed to dodge running straight cards and diamonds, and he did so as the and completed the board.
In a single-raised preflop pot, action folded to the preflop raiser in middle position, who bet 1,025 on the . Rich Monroe raised to 3,000 from the big blind, knocking out the third player, and the preflop aggressor came back with 7,025. Monroe responded by putting him all in for about 40,000, and the player went into the tank.
"I know you've got about five bullets on you," he said. "Why am I not good enough to lay this down? I think you're full."
After another minute or two, he announced a call, saying "king me" as he showed .
His read was on, as Monroe tabled , and the board finished out with two bricks to send the pot to Monroe.