We arrived at Dan Buzgon's table and found an under-the-gun raise from Barry Leventhal to 15,000 and a call in middle position. Buzgon was in the big blind and took a few moments before pushing out his gray stack of T5,000 chips, covering both opponents.
Leventhal snap-called all in for 166,500, the middle-position player folded, and Buzgon saw that his was in dire straits against Leventhal's .
The board ran out , cutting Buzgon's stack to less than 20 big blinds.
Jamie Kerstetter continues to battle as we move through Day 2. She'd built a leading stack earlier in the afternoon, and although has taken a couple of hits since dinner is still sitting with a healthy amount of chips.
After losing to a short stack's all-in when her failed to hold against her opponent's , Kerstetter soon found herself vying for a larger pot against another all-in opponent. This time Kerstetter had , but it was her opponent showing up with .
The flop came in that latter hand, and by the turn Kerstetter was drawing dead. After those hands Kerstetter has slipped to about 165,000 — still an average stack with 75 left.
T.J. Crews began the day as our leader, but recently became one of those busting without quite making the final 63 and the cash. Crews joins the several who have hit the rail of late, including Chris Klodnicki and David Stefanski.
Right now the big board is showing 75 players remain — an even dozen off the money.
David Diaz opened to 8,000 under the gun and action foled around to the player in the cutoff who went all in for 28,500. A call from Diaz revealed , a slight underdog to his oppponent's .
Brandon Fish just knocked out another player, trimming the field further and inching everyone else one step closer to the money.
Up against an opponent all in for about 90,000 with , Fish held , and after the board ran out , Fish had scored the knockout and a healthy increase to his stack.
It folded around to Roland Israelashvili in the small blind who raised, then Zachary Hall reraised all in for 84,000 from one seat over. Israelashvili hemmed and hawed a bit, then let his hand go.
Israelashvili had built a leading stack earlier in Day 2, but after having slipped back down that hand left Israelashvili with but 59,000.
When the next hand saw a middle position player raise to 4,500, Israelashvili responded with an all-in shove from the button. The blinds folded, then the original raiser called, turning over to Israelashvili's .
"Eh, whaddya gonna do?" shrugged Israelashvili, who watched the cards come , and with the same stoic acceptance rose, bid the others good luck, and departed about 20 spots shy of the cash.