Checked to Boris Yanpolskiy, he bet 6,000 on a board of . Oleg Suntsov was the only caller. The turn was the and both players checked. The river was the . Suntsov called across the table, “You trapped me Mr Boris.” and checked.
Yanpolskiy shrugged and threw in a single 5,000 chip. Suntsov looked tempted by the price. “I’ll show.” Said Mr Boris. He was as good as his word when Sunstov folded and turned over
Max Droege bet 5,200 from the button and was raised by Boris Yanpolskiy in the big blind to 17,200. Droege made the call and they saw a flop of . Yanpolskiy led for 20,100 and Droege folded. Yanpolskiy flashed the Canadian online qualifier his . Droege nodded and said, “I had a good ace.” Yanpolskiy wanted to know how good, “Ace Jack?” he asked. Droege repeated that it was a good ace. “Ace ten?” Yanpolskiy continued. Your PokerNews reporter left the table before he went through the rest.
Karen Karamanov has joined the exodus out to the beach. He pushed his short stack in preflop with but found Erwan Pecheux behind him with . A board later and it was all over.
Samy Zakhary had moved all in for 65,800 on a board, Bernard Samaha made the call while Alexey Rybin folded.
Zakhary:
Samaha:
The turn and river changed nothing and Zakhary doubled up. Since moving tables, Samaha has lost at least one big pot to the super-aggressive Russian Rybin, Can he change the tide?
Erwen Pecheux was one of the shortest stacks coming back after the dinner but he's had a great level, increasing his stack six-fold and now has about 240,000. He's just eliminated Anzor Makthsev, the Russian held pocket kings but Pecheux's ace-queen spiked an ace on the flop of an board.
Andrey Chesnokov raised to 5,000 and got a caller in Artem Vezhnekov and the big blind. They saw a flop of Chesnekov bet 12,000 and Vezhnekov was his only caller. The turn was the and saw another bet from Chesnekov which Vezhnekov called. on the river and Chesnokov checked this time. Vezhnekov thought for a while and announced all in.
Chesnokov took his time and counted out the chips for a call. If he made it and was wrong he would be left crippled with only 30,000. Maybe the way the hand played out convinced him something fishy was up so he made the call. Vezhnekov tabled to gasps from the table and despair from Chesnokov, who mucked. He certainly wasn’t beating that full house.
Sergey Rybachenko gave us the details of Anton Astapau's exit from the tournament. After calling bets on the flop and turn of a board against Sari Haddad, Astapau then moved all in for his last 40,000 on the river after Haddad checked. Instantly called, Astapau showed only to find out he'd been pipped on the river by Haddad's .
Some tough decisions take time. A long time as it turns out.
On a flop of Pierre Sayegh bet 9000 from the big blind, Kemal Sevevi called as did Azad Jabrayiolov in the small blind. The turn was the . Bet again, 23,000. Sevevi gave him a long stare and made the call as did Jabrayiolov. The river brought the . Sayegh moved all in for 47,500 and Jabrayiolov went into the tank for a long time.
The fifteen minute break was called. All the other players left and still Jabrayiolov thought; the three of them waiting. Five minutes ticked by without the clock being called. He said he had a big hand and asked if he would show if he folded without getting a straight answer. Finally he folded. Sayegh showed him the for runner runner full house. “You’re so lucky.” said a visibly unhappy Jabrayiolov.