

. The turn was the
and David Plastik, sitting to Edler's left, made a sour face when he saw that card fall. The river was the
. Edler busted the player and Plastik said, "If I called with 7-4 off suit, I would have won.""I'm glad you didn't call," said Edler as he dragged the pot.
Bill "The Stunning One" Edler increased his stack to 186,000.
on the turn, completing a flush that beat the top pair held by the all-in player. No cameras, no fanfare, just one more bustout among hundreds that never make it to television.


, Matt Keikoan checks, the player in the cutoff bets 9,000, and Keikoan calls. The turn card is the
, Keikoan checks, his opponent bets 18,000, and Keikoan calls. The river card is the
, Keikoan bets 30,000, and his opponent goes into the tank for more than a minute. He eventually calls. 
for a busted flush draw that hit a runner-runner two pair. His opponent is shocked, and flips over his losing
. 
while her opponent held
. The flop was 

keeping Tran's aces in the lead, but giving her opponent a royal flush draw. The turn was the
, but the river was the
, eliminating Tran's opponent.

lost to Cliff Pappas' 8-8.
, the big blind bets 6,000, Alaei calls, and the third player folds. The river card is the
, the big blind checks, Alaei bets 12,000, and his opponent calls.
for trip aces, and his opponent mucks. Daniel Alaei wins the pot, increasing his stack to about 163,000.


for a higher set of kings. His opponent has just one out, but misses as the last two cards come 