"I think that's a good flop," said Mark Tenner as he peeked back at his cards. Fabio Coppola had checked the flop to Tenner. After Tenner reconfirmed his hand, he bet. Coppola called.
Both players checked the turn. When the river was what seemed a blank, the , Coppola tried a bet of his own. Tenner raised it, inducing a fold.
Oops is probably all Scott Bohlman could say to himself. We missed the action on a board of on all streets except the river. There, Michael Keiner checked to Bohlman, who tried to buy the pot with a bet. Keiner snap-called with a full house, . Bohlman knew he was beat as soon as Keiner called.
"You got it," Bohlman said before Keiner tabled his cards. Bohlman is down to 50,000. Keiner is up to 320,000.
Danny Smith held on, and held on, and held on some more. Seemingly in the Dank Position since the start of Day 3 play, Smith outlasted 8 other players to make several pay jumps before finally knuckling under.
On his final hand, Smith was all in preflop with . Sirous Jamshidi was the player trying to take him out with . Smith hit a pair of tens on the flop, but after the turn blanked , Jamshidi rivered a pair of queens with the to take down the pot.
Michael Keiner raised under the gun only for Fabio Coppola to reraise from the cutoff. Pat Poels called on the button, and then James "Flushy" Dempsey four-bet from the small blind, leaving himself just two sad little orange 1,000 chips behind. Keiner got out of the way and the other two called.
Flushy's last chips went in on the flop, and Coppola and Poels checked down the turn and river.
Poels: flashed his hand briefly before mucking
Coppola: to scoop
Flushy: to send him to the rail