Gary Pearce was the first player to bust in the money and he was followed by Antonio Rochira, Charles Akadiri, Jefferson Dike and Francisco Manuel Salvador Flores. The Spaniard got unlucky again after three-bet shoving for 140,000 with . Kevin Allen called with after putting his opponent on being rather desperate and made a back door straight on the board.
Martin Kollmann was all in for his last 104,000 with and got looked up by Lucio Pacifico with . The Czech would spike a set on the flop but the turn and river gave Pacifico a flush and sent Kollmann out in 40th place.
Tournament director John Scanlon has confirmd that this is the last level of tonight. This gives everyone enough time to head to the Aspers Skybar and enjoy the WPT playery party with DJ, drinks and giveaways that just started.
Xuan Nguyen, Nicholas Rossi, Mohammed Shahnowaz and Richard Dickison headed to the payout desk in order to collect their winnings. Dickisin was down to 102,000 chips and got it in preflop with against the of Matas Cimbolas. After a board of , the Lithuanian got excited.
"Give it to me. Who is next?" Cimbolas inquired and got a rather dry "probably you" from an opponent on the table.
Kelly Ann Saxby three-bet shoved for her last 120,000 out of the small blind and Paul Siliceo made the call with ace-jack. Saxby only had ace-five and two jacks on the flop left Saxby drawing dead after the turn.
Benjamin Stone, Vincent Luong and Alexandra O'Brien busted in short succession with the latter committing her last few big blinds on . She was called by an opponent with and the fell on the flop.
Laurence Essa min-raised and then faced a massive three-bet shove of Martin Spearing for 570,000 chips. The sheer amount made Essa curios and he was trying to make any sense out of it. He eventually called with and Spearing held . The board ran out to bust Spearing in a pot of more than one million.
Petrit Papushi was all in for 98,000 from early position and Ali Zihni tanked in the big blind. It was 82,000 chips more to call and he eventually made up his mind, tossed in the chips and flipped over . It was a flip against the of his opponent and the river of a board would save Papushi.