He found himself all in with

against two opponents holding 
and 
, but when the board ran out 



, Stann had made a Broadway straight to move up to 19,500 chips.

against two opponents holding 
and 
, but when the board ran out 



, Stann had made a Broadway straight to move up to 19,500 chips.
, Guy Kenworthy called another player's all-in. His opponent showed
but Kenworthy tabled
.
.








and about 3,000 chips in the pot, John D'Agostino checked to his lone opponent, who checked behind. The river was the
and D'Agostino checked again, inducing a bet of 3,000 from his opponent. He thought it over briefly, then made the call. His opponent showed
; D'Agostino nodded, rapped the table, and mucked.
flop and that's when Joe Awada learned that his
was outkicked by his opponent's
. Awada had some hope for a chop but the board ran out
and he was eliminated.









, Grudi Grudev checked to his lone opponent, who bet 6,000. Grudev raised to 17,000 and was called.
hit the turn and Grudev, who started the hand with more chips, moved all in. His opponent had about 17,000 left and called all in. The players showed:
and Grudev couldn't beat his opponent's queen-high. He slipped to approximately 43,000 chips on the hand.