La Sengphet opened from middle position to 5,500 only to have Peter Mavro three-bet all in for 11,700 from the small blind with Sengphet making the call once the action passed back to her.
Sengphet:
Mavro:
The board was spread to see Mavro double though, but still remain very low on the leaderboard.
A short-stacked Harry Cullen has just seen his six big blind stack unable to boost itself upwards.
Consequently Cullen is now on the rail and will be unable to repeat his great performance at the recent WSOP-Circuit New Orleans Regional Championship where he pocketed $95,214 for his third-place finish.
La Sengphet opened to 5,500 from the cutoff only to have Peter Mavro move all in from the big blind for 25,700. Sengphet made the call to put Mavro at risk for the second time within as many orbits.
Sengphet:
Mavro:
The flop saw Mavro take the lead, and when the landed on the turn he was set for a double.
Unfortunately the poker Gods were planning a cruel twist of fate as the spiked on the river to send Mavro tumbling to the rail as Sengphet soared back up to 160,000 in chips.
Our current chip leader Jonathan Poche was recently moved to the same table as La Sengphet, who appears to be the second biggest stack. Both players have been mixing it up and playing aggressive, so we imagine there will be some fireworks from this table; however, we only need to lose three more players until another table redraw, so time is fleeting.
Bernard Lee has had a rough run of it as of late. He began the day around 70,000 but lost a few pots that dropped him down to 24,300. In a recent hand, action folded to Lee in the small blind and he moved all in. Choctaw Casino Champ and Main Event runner-up Traci Brown was in the big blind and contemplated the call. The problem was she only had about 30,000 herself. She must have decided to find a better spot and quietly mucked, letting Lee add a few thousand to his stack.
As we predicted, it didn't take long for two of our big stacks to mix it up. In a recent hand, Sam Barnhart limped under the gun and inspired La Sengphet to do the same from middle position. Both Stanley Quinn and Jonathan Poche came along in the blinds and four players saw a flop of .
Surprisingly, everyone checked and the was put out on the turn. Quinn bet 5,500, Poche flatter, Barnhart folded, and Sengphet woke up with a raise to 16,700. Quinn quickly got out of the way, but Poche decided to make the call. When the peeled off on the river, Poche checked and Sengphet fired out 40,700. Poche tanked before giving up on the hand.
Andrew Barber moved all in from the button for about 45,000 and Bernard Lee, who had less chips, called off from the small blind.
Lee:
Barber:
It was a race situation, but not after the flop fell . Barber had hit the ace to take the lead, which he kept as the hit the turn followed by the on the river. With Lee's elimination in 19th place, the remaining 18 players are redrawing tables.