Showing , Barry takes two pair to the river against Steve Sung, whose upcards were . At the showdown, Sung revealed jacks in the hole and a second three, for two pair, which were good enough to beat Barry's sixes and sevens.
After a run of second-best hands, Barry is now down to 44,000 chips.
Michael Keiner was just dealt aces full of kings in the first five cards. Keiner bet on every street and was called the entire way by Steve Sung, who was showing . Sung mucked the river, and Keiner widened his chip lead to almost 200,000.
Showing , Steve Sung bet fourth, fifth, and sixth streets, and was called all the way down by Michael Keiner. Both players checked the river, and Keiner's tens were good enough to scoop the pot.
Nesbitt Coburn just eliminated Steve Sung in third place, setting the stage for a heads-up duel between Coburn and German superstar Michael Keiner.
Sung received $51,222 for his top-three finish.
After Sung's elimination, the tournament director informed our two finalists that ESPN would like to film a portion of their heads-up match and conduct a bracelet ceremony with commissioner Jeffrey Pollack.
Coburn and Keiner took a short break to consider their options -- we'll let you know what they decide on.
Nesbitt seemed to be the main voice behind the decision to continue play tonight. He even declined the opportunity to be filmed by ESPN tomorrow afternoon. The pair are separated by a little over 100,000, which isn't much considering the size of their stacks.
Stay tuned; we will have a new bracelet winner tonight...err...this morning.
In the first five or ten minutes of heads-up play, Coburn showed signs of grit, quickly catching up to Keiner's lead. Since then, it's been all Michael Keiner; he just took down the biggest pot of the tournament, worth over 200k, with Broadway (an ace-high straight), against Coburn's set of sixes.