With eight levels in the books, it is Anh Lu who sits on top of the chip counts with 112,500 in chips. Here are a few of the other big stacks in the tournament at this time:
There's a lot of loud talking going on at one table, so much so that a player playing a cash game at an adjacent table asked the floor "do you sell headphones here? My earbuds aren't strong enough."
Moments later the floor would issue a warning to the person with the louder than life voice. Her name is Lucinda Martinez and she's having no problems letting people know what she thinks of them.
"I've seen you play poker. You suck," Martinez told Alex Outhred. The two had gone deep in a 2012 Wynn Classic event with Outhred finishing third and Martinez finishing second after delivering what Outhred said was a sick runner-runner beat on him. Outhred to his credit just laughed at Martinez.
Down to 16,000 in chips, Martinez moved all in first to act and found a caller from the quiet player in Seat 5. Martinez held and was up against . The table might have been silently rooting for Martinez's elimination so they could enjoy some peace and quiet but they are going to be stuck with her chatter a bit longer as she spiked a king on the river to double up.
A player in middle position limped in and the player in Seat 9 made it 3,500 to go. Patrick Panado called from the button and both players in the blinds called. The original limper joined in on the fun and we were off to a flop five-handed.
The flop came and it was checked to Panado who bet 6,000. Only the player in the small blind called.
The turn was the and the player in the small blind checked and Panado looked at his cards and made the same bet of 6,000. His opponent almost instantly grabbed his remaining chips and moved them into the middle. The dealer pulled the 6,000 and told Panado it would be an additional 20,400 to call.
Panado looked again at his cards and rubbed his chin while counting out the chips to make the call. He tossed them into the middle and turned over . He was behind his opponent's but would move into the lead when the hit the river.
"F***!" muttered his opponent, pushing his chair back and scowling at Panado. "How you call that hand?"
Panado, just sat there, and whispered to the player next to him after his opponent left "he acts like he's never been rivered before." That pot gave Panado the biggest stack in the room at the moment with 160,000.
Not much went right for Alex Outhred after a hot start and he found himself down to his last 14,000. He moved those chips all in with and was looked up by Gregg Fund who held .
"At least I'm live," said Outhred but he would fall further behind on the flop and would be drawing dead after the was flipped over on the turn. The river was an inconsequential and Outhred said "good game" and added "see ya tomorrow" as he left the table. Fund moved his stack up to 98,000 with that pot.
After losing a good chunk of his stack earlier to Patrick Panado, Nick Nardello found himself short and in desperate need of a double up. Imagine his delight when it was folded to the small blind who moved all in on Nardello's big blind and he looked down at . He snap called and was up against .
The flop came with an ace but it also held a king as the dealer fanned out . The turn was the locking the hand and double up for Nardello. The river was the and Nardello moved back up to 53,000 in chips.