Pascal Lefrancois raised to 225,000 in the cutoff and Kristen Foxen three-bet to 675,000 on the button. Lefrancois called and they went heads-up to a flop of A♥10♥2♣.
Lefrancois checked to Foxen who continued with a bet of 525,000. Lefrancois countered with a check-raise to 1,300,000. Foxen just called and the J♦ rolled off on the turn.
Lefrancois moved all in as the bigger stack and Foxen called off her last 1,800,000 chips. Lefrancois turned over A♦10♦ for two pair and Foxen was in trouble with A♠K♥. The river was the 2♥ and Foxen could not improve as her tournament came to an end.
Jonathan Jaffe three-bet to 650,000 in the big blind and Mario Mosboeck called in middle position.
The flop came Q♣6♣2♥ and Jaffe led out for 400,000. Mosboeck then raised to 1,050,000 and Jaffe called.
The turn was the 8♥ and Mosboeck bet 2,060,000. Jaffe took about a minute before calling, turning over A♠2♦ without realizing Mosboeck still had a chip behind. Mosboeck then tossed in his last chip and showed K♥Q♥.
Mosboeck was ahead with top pair and poised for a double up going to the river, but Jaffe spiked trips with the 2♣ to send Mosboeck to the rail.
After the hand, tablemate Alex Theologis wondered what was the purpose of leaving a chip behind on the turn.
"In case the other guy turns his cards over and he can't beat it, he gets to keep the chip. Say he was bluffing and the other guy shows a set, he keeps the chip," Daniel Negreanu answered.
Elie Nakache bet 450,000 from the cutoff on a flop of 6♦9♥2♦ and Roland Rokita called in middle position.
The turn was the 10♥ and Nakache moved all in for 2,600,000. Rokita snap-called and turned over 10♠9♠ for two pair, while Nakache could only show A♦10♣ for top pair.
The river was the 2♥ and Rokita took the big pot to send Nakache to the rail.
Alexandra Botez moved all in for 900,000 from the button and Alisson Piekazewicz called in the big blind.
Alexandra Botez: J♠9♥
Alisson Piekazewicz: A♣5♦
The A♥3♦A♠ flop gave Piekazewicz trips and left Botez already drawing dead. The board ran out 6♠A♦ and Piekazewicz ended up with quads to seal the bustout.
"Alright, you take this one," Botez said on her way to collect her payout.
With roughly 500,000 in the middle the flop read J♠9♦8♦, and Pieter Aerts checked from the big blind to Alex Foxen in middle position who fired 265,000. Aerts tank-called.
The A♠ fell on the turn and Aerts check-jammed over a bet of 575,000 for about 3,000,000 and Foxen snap-called.
Pieter Aerts: 8♠7♠
Alex Foxen: Q♥10♥
Aerts ran into the nuts as Foxen flopped a straight and was unable to find a spade to stay alive as the A♣ paired the board on the river.
Aram Sargsyan moved all in for 710,000 from the button and Rainer Kempe put him at risk in early position.
Aram Sargsyan: A♦J♣
Rainer Kempe: A♣K♦
Sargsyan found himself dominated as the flop came A♠3♣2♠, giving both players top pair. The A♥ turn improved them to trips, but Kempe's king-kicker continued to play following the 4♠ river to send Sargsyan to the rail.
Anatoly Filatov shoved for 1,380,000 in the hijack and Alex Foxen made the call from the big blind.
Anatoly Filatov: K♣Q♣
Alex Foxen: A♠10♦
Filatov pulled out his phone to record as the dealer went to the 8♥8♠7♠ flop. "Wrong ones," Filatov said pointing at the spades instead of the clubs. The 10♥ turn and 7♣ river were no help as Filatov headed to the exit and Foxen continued to add to his stack.
The action folded around to Tomas Telek in the small blind who just limped in. David Peters was in the big blind with around 1,500,000 after coming into the day as one of the bigger stacks from the online portion of the event. Peters shoved his stack into the middle and was met with a snap-call from Telek.
David Peters: K♠10♥
Tomas Telek: A♣8♣
Neither player was able to connect on the 5♥3♥2♠J♦5♠ runout and the ace-high from Telek was good enough to send Peters to the rail.