Mishler:
Heimiller:
The board helped neither player as it came
. Mishler headed for the payout line while Heimiller stacked a pot which made him the dominating chip leader at just under 1,400,000.
. Mishler headed for the payout line while Heimiller stacked a pot which made him the dominating chip leader at just under 1,400,000.
. Heimiller led out for 100,000 and Courtney raised to 300,000. Heimiller moved all in and Courtney called. The players showed:
. The river was the meaningless
and Heimiller pushed about half his stack over to Courtney.
and both players checked. The turn brought the
and Sitron check-called Matros' 80,000 bet. The river brought the
and after Sitron again checked, Matros bet 150,000. Sitron snap-called and showed the
for the straight. Matros mucked and Sitron scooped another big pot.
and Biggar bet 150,000. "Is this it?" Daneshgar asked, which is what Biggar says (shouts) every time he gets involved in a hand. "Just go away," Biggar said.
but Daneshgar flopped a flush with
. Biggar needed the board to pair but instead it ran out
and Daneshgar doubled up to 800,000. Biggar is down to 260,000.
. Cole stared at the board for a bit while quickly shuffling his chips. He eventually tapped the felt. Sitron said "check" very quickly behind him and the
hit the turn. Cole led out for 260,000 and Sitron made the call.
fell on the river. Cole announced "six hundred thousand." He pushed out about 475,000 of his largest denomination chips leaving the yellows (T1000) behind. The call would have been for Sitron's tournament life or very close to it. He went into the tank and surveyed the situation for quite some time. After about nine minutes, Matt Matros called for a clock. Sitron politely asked who called the clock and Matros wasn't shy about quickly raising his hand.Level: 21
Blinds: 12,000/24,000
Ante: 3,000