Justin Scott limped in from late position, Alfredo Fernandez limped in from the cutoff, Davor Lanini raised to 100,000 from the small blind, Scott called and Fernandez folded. The flop was and both players checked. The turn was the . Lanini bet 100,000 and Scott called. The river was the . Lanini check-called another 100,000.
Scott showed for a turned set and Lanini mucked. Scott was up to 1,720,000 after the hand while Lanini fell to 750,000.
It was an up-and-down day for Alexander Kostritsyn, though the deck dealt him more of the latter than the former. On his final hand he opened for 65,000 and Garrett Beckman called on the button. The flop came and when Kostritsyn checked, Beckman bet 90,000. Alex counted out his chips, arrived at 395,000, and moved all in.
Beckman spent about four minutes chewing it over before making the call, and found that his were ahead of Kostritsyn's . Beckman still had to sweat the turn and river but when the came he took down the pot. Kostritsyn shook everyone's hand, wished them all good luck, and walked away from the table.
Tiffany Michelle opened with a raise to 70,000 from early position before Dean Hamrick called on the button. The action was then with Kido Pham, who moved all in from the small blind for about 500,000 in chips.
Both opponents folded as Pham exclaimed, "Kids, don't try this at home!" as he flashed !
Chris Klodnicki raised to 165,000 from under the gun, and Albert Kim called behind him. The flop came . Klodnicki made a continuation bet of 100,000, and Kim called.
The turn brought the . This time Klodnicki bet 225,000. Kim called again.
The river was the . Klodnicki checked. "Oh my God," said Kim. "How ridiculous was that river? I check. You got aces?"
"Threes," answered Klodnicki, showing his .
"Wow," said Kim, grateful that his was good.
Kim now has 3.4 million, while Klodnicki has just a little over one million.
A few minutes ago, there was a moment when about three different conversations were going on at the feature table all at the same time.
Phil Hellmuth and Mike Matusow were joking around with Aaron Keay; Hellmuth started a brief argument with David Rheem; meanwhile Matusow broke into a third conversation with Sean Davis. Everyone seemed to be doing the talking and with the TD announcing the action over the microphone, it made it impossible for us to decipher what exactly was being said. Then we heard another player bluntly comment, “Guys, there’s a hand going on here!” which quickly put the conversations to rest.
After Cristian Dragomir had raised preflop and Phi Nguyen called in the small blind, the action heated up on the turn with the board reading . We believe Nguyen fired out a bet of around 100,000 before Dragomir made it roughly 300,000 to go. Nguyen moved all in and sent Dragomir into the tank. He eventually laid it down and Nguyen collected a nice pot to move to about 1.7 million chips.
Reggie Lyons raised to 67,000 from middle position, and Suresh Prabhu, sitting to his right, made the call. It folded to David Saab in the cutoff who carefully counted his chips, then pushed forward two tall stacks of orange T5,000 chips -- a reraise to 215,000. It folded back to Lyons who thought about it, then pushed his cards to the middle. Prabhu folded as well.
Saab slowly raised his hand up, revealing to the table one of his cards -- the -- before dragging the pot.
"I was tired of being blinded out," said Saab. He's still sitting with a little over two million.
On a flop of , Reagan Silber led out for 100,000, Matt Matros raised to 300,000, Silber moved all in and Matros called.
Silber:
Matros:
Matros led with two pair, but Silber held the nut-flush draw. That ceased to matter when the fell on the turn, making Matros a full house and leaving him drawing dead. The fell on the river and Silber was eliminated.