only gets a quarter of the pot against another player's
.Board:
only gets a quarter of the pot against another player's
.
flop and and chip leader Mark Tenner to his left flat-called.
turn and Tenner called, and it wasn't looking good for Flushy.
against Dempsey's
. We all had a good sweat when two spades hit the flop,
, but the board bricked out from there with no possible low. Dempsey's queens were good enough for a double-up.
board and got himself called.
river, leaving himself just 40,000 behind, and Schlein called, but they chopped the pot and no change to the stacks.
, Boudet check-called a single bet from Bohlman.
turn. When the river fell
, Boudet check-called another bet. Bohlman opened
. He had flopped two pair, tens and deuces, then rivered a bigger two pair, aces and tens. Boudet disgustedly flashed
X, having turned sixes and fours and rivered aces and sixes. Aces and tens was a winner.
after Schlein bet. Schlein called to the
turn, then called after Hua again bet.
and put a fourth Broadway card on the board, Hua slowed down and checked. His frustration was readily apparent in the way he mucked his cards after Schlein bet.
flop, and James Dempsey raised a goodly proportion of his tiny stack. "Put it all in," urged Keiner, indicating that he intended to reraise to cover; all the chips indeed went in, and they were on their backs.
and O'Dell bet. Both opponents called.
turn O'Dell bet again. This time only Jamshidi called, prompting O'Dell to check the river
after Jamshidi checked. Jamshidi called a straight six,
. It was good for a scoop, as O'Dell's flopped trip sixes
, never improved.
. La showed two pair,
, and no low. His opponent, Mark Tenner, turned up
. Tenner made a bigger two pair, aces and tens, and also had no low. He therefore got all of the pot and sent La to the rail.


. The
on the turn was a sweat card, giving Schlein some hope of making a spade flush, but he missed with the
river. Neither player had a qualifying low; the whole pot went to Smith courtesy of his set of aces.