Scotty Nguyen made it 1,400 from the button, and the big blind called.
They checked it all the way down the board, until Nguyen fired out 2,400 on the river, chuckling, "I don't bet, I can't win, baby!" His opponent called, and win had won -- he flipped over and his opponent just mucked.
Shannon Shorr
Shannon Shorr has doubled up to around 25-30,000 after successfully slow playing aces.
With the button raising it up preflop, Shorr thought for a moment or two before smooth calling from the small blind. After check-calling 3,000 on the flop, Shorr then checked the turn. His opponent checked behind.
On the river, however, Shorr wasted no time in pushing all in for a total of 9,225, which was duly called. Shorr flipped his bullets, his opponent mucked.
Bill Chen has enjoyed a second double up, just minutes after his last, closely followed by a dose of the old pocket rockets -- he's now managed to turn a dodgy 11,000 into a commanding 70,000 stack since the beginning of this level.
A gent on the cutoff raised to 1,675 preflop, and Chen called from the button. He called the cutoff's 2,700 on the flop as well. The turn came the and this time the cutoff checked. Chen bet 6,000, called by the cutoff, and when the cutoff announced all in on the river, "I call!" cried Chen and turned over for a flopped set. The cutoff mucked. Chen up to 56,000.
And then a few hands later, Chen was facing a preflop all in from an unknown opponent holding -- Chen was holding , which only improved on the board. Up to 70,000.
Cory Albertson is now on 98,000 after winning a monster three-way pot.
On an flop, the small blind checked, Cory Albertson led out for 4,200 and he button pushed all in. Without hesitation, the small blind also slid his stack across the line. However, before his chips had barely hit the middle, Albertson was shoving all in too! Mayhem!
Bill Jensen has eliminated a player, calling a button push with pocket tens from the blind. His opponent showed A-J, but a ten on the flop pretty much finished him off, the fourth ten on the river for quads merely rubbing salt, vinegar and anything else acidic into his already gaping wounds.
Alon Shahar has extended his chip lead to just under 150,000 in chips. He recently eliminated an opponent when his turned a flush. Also well stacked with over 100,000, tablemate Tom Antonucci was going to raise from the button with , but changed his mind at the last moment. He later regretted that decision.