Kevin MacPhee's year has been nothing short of amazing with two WSOP bracelet wins, but he won't be adding a WPT title to it here in Prague. One of our Czech colleagues just informed us that MacPhee ended up all in for about 40,000 chips with versus the of Valdemar Kwaysser.
The board brought a king to secure MacPhee's elimination, and Kwaysser's now in a much better spot to battle the other top pros on Table 1.
Polish pro Remi Wyrzykiewicz started the day as one of the big stacks, but he's already gone after busting to chip leader Josh Cranfield. From our WPT colleague we heard that Wyrzykiewicz four-bet over Cranfield's three-bet, and he made the call.
The flop brought out and Cranfield check-called a bet. On the turn, when a hit, the same thing happened and the river brought another jack.
Wyrzykiewicz ended up all in for his tournament life on the river, but he was sent to the rail by Cranfield's for a full house. Cranfield now sits on a massive 260,000-chip stack after qualifying for this tournament online for just £12.
Dylan Linde started the day with a small stack, but he already managed to double up. Linde ended up all in with and he got called by sixes, and the American pro managed to hit one of his overcards to stay alive.
A little while later Linde found a straight to bust a short stack holding a set, and he now sits on 65,000 chips.
With a flop showing we caught Timur Margolin all in for his tournament life worth 16,700 with action pending. Ben Heath was in the tank as we arrived on the scene, with Stephen Wookhead left behind him with 5,000 chips already in the pot.
After a while Heath folded, and Wookhead tossed in the call.
Wookhead:
Margolin:
The board ran out , and Margolin raked in the pot for a much needed double up after a rough start of Day 2.